Dictionary Definition
committal
Noun
1 the official act of consigning a person to
confinement (as in a prison or mental hospital) [syn: commitment, consignment]
2 the act of committing a crime [syn: perpetration, commission]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The act of committing
- The act of entrusting something to someone
- The act of committing someone to confinement; an order for someone's imprisonment
- The act of perpetrating an offence
- The act of committing a body to the grave at a burial or to the furnace at a cremation
Extensive Definition
In law, a
committal procedure is the process by which a defendant is charged
with a serious offence under the criminal
justice systems of all common law
jurisdictions outside the United
States. The committal procedure, sometimes known as a preliminary
hearing, replaces the earlier grand jury
process.
In most jurisdictions criminal offences fall into
one of three groups:
There are less serious (summary)
offences which are usually heard without a jury by a magistrate. These are roughly
equivalent to the older category of misdemeanors (terminology
that is now obsolete in most non-U.S. jurisdictions).
There are intermediate offences which are
indictable
(equivalent to an old-style felony) but which can be heard
summarily. For instance, theft is usually a serious offence. If
however the charge is that the defendant stole a packet of biscuits
worth only a very small amount, it would probably be heard by a
magistrate. In the UK, these are known as
either-way
offences, and can only be heard summarily with the defendant's
consent.
Finally, there are serious matters which must be
dealt with in the higher courts, usually before a jury. When one is
charged with an offence of the third type, a preliminary hearing is
first held by a magistrate to determine whether there is sufficient
evidence to warrant committing the defendant for trial. That is,
whether there is sufficient evidence such that a properly
instructed jury could (not would) find the defendant guilty. It is
a very low-level test, although stricter than the grand jury
procedure. The majority of committal proceedings result in a
committal to trial.
In some jurisdictions the prosecuting
authority may directly present a defendant for trial regardless
of the result of the committal proceedings by filing an ex
officio indictment. Equally, the prosecuting authority usually
has the power to stop any prosecution by entering a Nolle
prosequi. In many jurisdictions the right of a defendant to
cross-examine
witnesses during the committal is reliant on the defence
establishing that it is in the interests of justice or to
illuminate some relevant point. The defence rarely calls witnesses
at a committal.
Though the majority of committal proceedings
result in trial, the majority of committal proceedings for those
accused of rape does not result in trial in the UK, something that
campaigners have tried to change for decades.