<P> Other specialised courts of the Queen's Bench Division include the Technology and Construction Court, Commercial Court, and the Admiralty Court . The specialised judges and procedures of these courts are tailored to their type of business, but they are not essentially different from any other court of the QBD . </P> <P> Appeals from the High Court in civil matters are made to the Court of Appeal (Civil Division); in criminal matters appeal from the Divisional Court is made only to the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom . </P> <P> The Chancery Division (housed in the Rolls Building) deals with business law, trusts law, probate law, insolvency, and land law in relation to issues of equity . It has specialist courts (the Patents Court and the Companies Court) which deal with patents and registered designs and company law matters respectively . All tax appeals are assigned to the Chancery Division . The head of the Chancery Division was known as the Vice-Chancellor until October 2005, when the title was changed by the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 to Chancellor of the High Court . The first Chancellor (and the last Vice-Chancellor) was Sir Andrew Morritt, who retired in 2013 to be succeeded by Sir Terence Etherton . In 2016, Sir Geoffrey Vos succeeded Sir Terence as Chancellor on the latter's appointment as Master of the Rolls . Cases heard before the Chancery Division are reported in the Chancery Division law reports . In practice, there is some overlap of jurisdiction with the QBD . </P> <P> From October 2015, the Chancery Division and the Commercial Court (England and Wales) have maintained the Financial List for cases which would benefit from being heard by judges with suitable expertise and experience in the financial markets or which raise issues of general importance to the financial markets . The procedure was introduced to enable fast, efficient and high quality dispute resolution of claims related to the financial markets . </P>

What cases does the chancery division deal with
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