Counselor, what's the difference between protest and appeal?

1. Appeal refers to a litigation request that the parties and their legal representatives put forward to the people's court hearing the case and the people's court at a higher level to re-handle the legally effective judgment, ruling or conciliation statement. There are two purposes of appeal: one is litigation appeal, which refers to the behavior that the parties in criminal and civil litigation think that the legally effective judgment or ruling is wrong and appeal to the people's court or the people's procuratorate according to law, requesting retrial and revision. Second, non-litigation appeal means that citizens complain to the relevant departments because of the unfairness or deviation of administrative law enforcement, and complaints to the leading organs cannot be called "complaints".

2. Protest refers to the litigation activities in which the people's procuratorate considers that the judgment or ruling made by the people's court is indeed wrong and submits a retrial request to the people's court according to law.

3. Appeal refers to the activity that a party refuses to accept the first-instance judgment, ruling or review decision made by the people's court within the statutory time limit and files a retrial with the people's court at the next higher level.

Appeal refers to the behavior of citizens or legal persons who think that the result of handling a problem is incorrect, but state the reasons to the relevant state organs and ask for re-handling. Generally, the final judgment is appealed (in administrative proceedings, if the people's court does not act, the plaintiff applies to the people's court at the next higher level for appeal).

Appeal refers to the activity that the parties submit the first-instance judgment or ruling of the people's court that has not yet taken legal effect to the people's court at the next higher level for trial within the statutory time limit. (This word is used in the second case of administrative management)

Prosecution is the act of bringing a lawsuit to the court and asking the court to hear the case. (This word was first used in administrative law)

Protest refers to the activities that the people's procuratorate considers that the effective judgment or ruling of the people's court is wrong and submits it to the people's court for retrial. It is an important form for the people's procuratorate to supervise the trial activities of the people's courts. (There are two situations to start administrative litigation retrial: one is that the people's court decides to retry, and the other is that the people's procuratorate protests. The appeal of the parties is only the source of materials that cause retrial, and it does not necessarily lead to retrial procedures. )

The understanding of the image can also be:

This is the first time that the prosecution has asked the court to handle it.

The appeal is against the judgment of the first instance and requires a second instance.

Protest means that the procuratorate refuses to accept the judgment and asks for a second trial or retrial.

The appeal refused to accept the second instance and demanded a retrial.