Residents turn to circuit courts to solve disputes
Special mobile public hearings in Wuhan help people save money and time
After the bailiff found a high point to place the national emblem, judge Lei Zhang started a special hearing to solve a conflict between a monkey keeper and a manager at a scenic spot situated in the northwestern part of Huangpi district in Wuhan, capital of Hubei province.
The scene was set for a circuit trial, a type of mobile court proceeding. Lei, a judge from the Lijiaji People's Court in Huangpi, has been conducting such trials since last year.
Lei sat on a small stool, sandwiched between defendant Zhang, the manager, and plaintiff Zhao, the monkey keeper, along with an assistant judge and a clerk who managed to sit by the edge of the stool to take notes.
The special public hearing that took place at the site — known as a monkey mountain, where visitors can view primates moving around freely — on a hot summer day attracted not only many curious onlookers, but also Zhao's monkeys, who watched from behind.
Previously, Zhao had brought Zhang to court when they failed to reach an agreement on the relocation of Zhao's monkeys.
A few months back, Zhang invited Zhao to bring his monkeys to the site to perform and help attract more visitors. But in May, Zhang asked Zhao to leave after she decided to build an amusement park at the site.
Zhao wanted to have more time so that he could find a temporary shelter for his monkeys. Some of them had been pregnant, and Zhao hoped to move away from the monkey mountain after the babies had been born.
Lei decided to conduct an on-site hearing to mediate when he learned that Zhao had to take care of the monkeys every day, making it difficult for him to search for another place.
After extensive mediation in the circuit court, the months-long dispute between Zhang and Zhao was finally resolved. Zhang agreed to extend Zhao's departure deadline, and Zhao left after the monkeys delivered their babies by the end of June.
Zhao said he had accepted an invitation by another scenic spot for his monkeys to perform.
Lei said he has gotten used to holding such trials.
"The court hearing venue can be in a field, a factory workshop, a village house, or a scenic spot. Wherever the national emblem is, the circuit trial can be held, and this is the circuit court," Lei said.
According to Lei, his court has organized 15 circuit trials since last year. Such trials can help parties save money and time.
Usually, judges, judicial assistants and clerks carry China's national emblem in their cars, driving to remote villages to host a court hearing, he said. "It's actually more like mediating for residents and promoting legal education," Lei said.
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