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Forgery and the Twelve Judges in Eighteenth-Century England
by
McGowen, Randall
in
Attorneys
/ Common law
/ Criminal law
/ Criminal prosecution
/ Defense counsel
/ Forgery
/ FORUM: FROM THE TWELVE JUDGES TO THE COURT FOR CROWN CASES RESERVED
/ Indictments
/ Judges
/ Judicial power
/ Legal objections
/ Statutory law
/ Trials
2011
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Forgery and the Twelve Judges in Eighteenth-Century England
by
McGowen, Randall
in
Attorneys
/ Common law
/ Criminal law
/ Criminal prosecution
/ Defense counsel
/ Forgery
/ FORUM: FROM THE TWELVE JUDGES TO THE COURT FOR CROWN CASES RESERVED
/ Indictments
/ Judges
/ Judicial power
/ Legal objections
/ Statutory law
/ Trials
2011
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Do you wish to request the book?
Forgery and the Twelve Judges in Eighteenth-Century England
by
McGowen, Randall
in
Attorneys
/ Common law
/ Criminal law
/ Criminal prosecution
/ Defense counsel
/ Forgery
/ FORUM: FROM THE TWELVE JUDGES TO THE COURT FOR CROWN CASES RESERVED
/ Indictments
/ Judges
/ Judicial power
/ Legal objections
/ Statutory law
/ Trials
2011
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Forgery and the Twelve Judges in Eighteenth-Century England
Journal Article
Forgery and the Twelve Judges in Eighteenth-Century England
2011
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Overview
In his thoughtful and informative article on the twelve judges and judicial
review, James Oldham illuminates an important if little-studied corner of
eighteenth and nineteenth-century judicial practice. For centuries judges in
criminal (and civil) cases had reserved questions that presented peculiar
difficulties related to procedure or the interpretation of statute to the
consideration of their colleagues. We seldom glimpse much of the substance or
form of these deliberations. They were private and informal discussions,
although by the eighteenth century the participants in these meetings observed
well-understood conventions. Oldham outlines what these rules and practices
involved. Decisions, for instance, did not have to be unanimous. The majority
opinion took on the force of precedent, even though the deliberations often
survived only in unpublished notes or the memories of the judges. Oldham gives a
strong reading to this practice. Judges not only determined which cases would be
referred to their colleagues, they exercised considerable discretion in ruling
on the objections that had been raised. He views this process as offering
another example of the power of the judges to shape the character of legal
proceedings in early modern England. They were not only correcting procedural
mistakes that arose during a trial; they were actively interpreting statute. In
doing so, they demonstrated their decisive role in controlling the operation of
criminal justice over the long eighteenth century.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
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