An appeal is a challenge to a result: a finding of guilt, a sentence, or both. In Victoria, an appeal from the Magistrates' Court is made to the County Court, and there are strict time limits. The first question in any appeal is not how to run it, but whether it is worth running, and that calls for honest advice.
An appeal from the Magistrates' Court to the County Court is a de novo appeal, which means a fresh hearing. The County Court is not reviewing the magistrate's reasoning for error; it hears the matter again and reaches its own decision. An appeal can be against conviction, against sentence, or against both. The right to appeal is governed by the Criminal Procedure Act 2009, and an appeal must generally be lodged within 28 days of the decision, although an application can be made to extend that period.
Appeals from a trial in the County Court or the Supreme Court are different. Those appeals go to the Court of Appeal, they are based on identifying an error rather than a fresh hearing, and they require the court's leave. For those matters Tringali Lawyers works with experienced Counsel.
Because a Magistrates' Court appeal is a fresh hearing, it is also an opportunity: material that was not before the magistrate can be put before the County Court. But an appeal is not without risk, and the honest assessment of prospects, including the risk that a sentence is not reduced, comes first. Tringali Lawyers gives that assessment plainly before any appeal is run.