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Report on the Judicial Establishments of New South Wales
Report on the Judicial Establishments of New South Wales
Report on the Judicial Establishments of New South Wales
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Report on the Judicial Establishments of New South Wales

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"Report on the Judicial Establishments of New South Wales" is the second report by English judge and royal commissioner John Thomas Bigge on the situation in the colonies. His inquiry started as several wealthy landowners, mainly John Macarthur, complained about the governorship of Lachlan Macquarie. The latter was famous for his policies of remediating ex-convicts back into society, creating a lack of a cheap and free workforce for the landowners. In this report, Bigge focused upon a defamation action launched by Samuel Marsden to argue against the appointment of emancipated convicts to positions of magistrates and jurors. Bigge thought these policies promoting emancipists by Macquarie were "inexpedient and dangerous."
LanguageEnglish
PublisherDigiCat
Release dateAug 10, 2022
ISBN8596547166610
Report on the Judicial Establishments of New South Wales

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    Report on the Judicial Establishments of New South Wales - John Thomas Bigge

    John Thomas Bigge

    Report on the Judicial Establishments of New South Wales

    EAN 8596547166610

    DigiCat, 2022

    Contact: DigiCat@okpublishing.info

    Table of Contents

    [ On the state of the Criminal and Civil Judicature of New. South Wales, and Van Diemen's Land ]

    State of the Police of New South Wales, and Van Diemen's. Land.

    [ Observations on the Port Regulations ]

    ADDENDUM.

    EARL BATHURST TO GOVERNOR MACQUARIE.

    [Enclosure No. 1]

    [Enclosure No. 2.]

    [Enclosure No. 3.]

    [Enclosure No. 4.]

    THE END

    [On the state of the Criminal and Civil Judicature of New South Wales, and Van Diemen's Land]

    Table of Contents

    The statute of the 27 Geo. III. c. 2. which was passed for the purpose of enabling his Majesty to establish a court of Criminal Judicature on the eastern coast of New South Wales and parts adjacent, after reciting that his Majesty had by two several orders in council, dated 6th December 1786, judged fit to declare and appoint the place to which certain offenders therein named should be transported, to be the eastern coast of New South Wales, or some one or other of the islands adjacent, enacted that it should be lawful for his Majesty, by his commission under the great seal, to authorize the person to be appointed governor, or lieutenant-governor, in the absence of the governor of such place as aforesaid, to convene from time to time, as occasion might require, a court of judicature for the trial and punishment of all such outrages and misbehaviours as if committed within this realm would be deemed and taken, according to the laws of this realm, to be treason or misprision thereof, felony or misdemeanor. The court to consist of the judge advocate, to be appointed in and for such place, together with six officers of his Majesty's forces by sea or land.

    By the letters patent, dated the 2d April 1787, it was provided that a court of criminal jurisdiction should be established within the colony or settlement aforesaid, meaning thereby the places to which his Majesty had already appointed by his order in council that felons should be transported. The constitution of the court was conformable to the directions of the statute, and it was declared to have the power that is given under that statute to proceed in a more summary way than was used within the realm according to its known and established laws.

    In consequence of the establishment of Norfolk Island as a receptacle for convicts, and the difficulty of finding a sufficient number of officers there to constitute a criminal court according to the directions of the statute, a special authority was given to his Majesty by the statute of 35 Geo. III. c. 18, to empower the lieutenant-governor of Norfolk Island to hold criminal courts in that dependency, consisting of the judge advocate of that place, and only four military or naval officers.

    The jurisdiction and constitution of the criminal court in New South Wales has received no alteration whatever since the date of the letters patent of the 2d April 1787, for those of the 4th of February of the year 1814, only recite that part of the former patent that related to the construction and appointment of the criminal court, but made no change either in its construction mode of procedure, or in the extent of its jurisdiction. This extent remains limited at present by the orders in council of the 6th December 1786, and comprises the whole eastern coast of New South Wales and the islands adjacent; for your Lordship will observe, that his Majesty was authorized by the statute of the 27 Geo. III. c. 2, to establish courts of criminal jurisdiction in any part of the eastern coast of New South Wales, or some one or other of the islands adjacent, to which he had been pleased to direct, by an order in council, that convicts should be transported.

    Doubts appear to have arisen as to the application of the term islands adjacent, and whether they comprehended any other than those that were adjacent to the eastern coast. The insular position of Van Diemen's Land, the only island to which convicts have been sent since the establishment of Norfolk Island, had not been ascertained till several years after the statute was passed, and it was found to be adjacent to the southern and not to the eastern coast of New South Wales.

    After consulting Mr. Judge Advocate Wylde and Mr. Justice Field upon this point, and having found that although a criminal court had never been held in Van Diemen's Land, yet that capital offences committed there had at all times since its establishment been tried by the criminal court at Sydney, I did not consider that the terms to which I have alluded were sufficient to prevent the continued exercise of criminal jurisdiction over Van Diemen's Land, and Mr. Judge Advocate Wylde on my suggestion proceeded thither accordingly, and held criminal courts in the year 1821.

    Such were the powers under which the criminal courts have exercised jurisdiction in New South Wales and its dependencies. No power however was given by the 27 Geo. III c. 2, or any subsequent statute, to authorize his Majesty to establish any form of civil judicature in New South Wales, although a declaration was made both in that Act of Parliament, and in the first commission that was granted under the privy seal on the 2d April 1787, of the necessity of establishing in it a colony and civil government, and although the form of civil judicature that was traced and established in that commission was as great a departure from the laws and usages of the realm of England as that of the criminal judicature.

    The authority therefore under which the civil judicature of New South Wales and its dependencies have hitherto, and still continue, to exercise their functions, is derived solely from the commissions that have been issued under his Majesty's letters patent.

    The alteration that was effected by the last commission and letters patent, dated the 4th February 1814, considered of a separation of the civil and criminal judicatures, that had previously been united under the presidency of one person holding the office of judge advocate, and of the appointment of three new civil courts, two of which, viz. the Governor's Court in New South Wales, and the Lieutenant-Governor's Court in Van Diemen's Land, were instituted for the trial of all causes where the sum in dispute should not exceed 50l. sterling.

    The first of these is composed of the judge advocate of the territory of New South Wales, and two inhabitants appointed by the governor.

    The second is composed of the deputy judge advocate of Van Diemen's Land and two inhabitants, who are appointed by the lieutenant-governor of that dependency.

    Another alteration consisted of the establishment of the Supreme Court, composed of one judge, appointed by commission under his Majesty's royal sign manual, and two of the magistrates of the colony, appointed by precept under the hand of the governor, or in his absence of the lieutenant-governor.

    The Supreme Court takes cognizance of all causes wherein the cause of action exceeds the sum of 50l. sterling, exercises the powers of a court of equity, and also that of granting probates of wills and letters of administration. The powers and constitution of the Criminal Court of New South Wales underwent no alteration at the time of issuing the new letters patent in the year 1814, and they remain altogether in the same state in which they were first constituted by the letters patent of the year 1787.

    The Governor's Court, as established under the new patent of 1814, was not opened until January 1816, in consequence of the long illness of Mr. Judge Advocate Bent. At his death, which vas an event that appears to have excited universal regret in the colony, Mr. F. Garling, one of the solicitors that had been authorized to proceed thither to practise in the courts, was appointed by Governor Macquarrie to the office of judge advocate. The Governor's Court was then opened for the first time in the month of January 1816, and Mr. Garling, adopted the rules of practice and the scale of fees that had been drawn up and fixed by Mr. Judge Advocate Bent, and that are to be found in the Appendix.

    The mode of procedure introduced by these regulations was more complex than befitted the limited jurisdiction or the nature of the functions of the Governor's Court and soon after his arrival in the month of October 1816, Mr. Judge Advocate Wylde made certain alterations, both in the proceedings as well as in the fees, that have had the effect of simplifying the practice and of adapting it more nearly to the purpose for which the court was originally intended, the easy recovery of small debts.

    Amongst these regulations is a government and general order, issued by Governor Macquarrie at the instance of the judge advocate and the judge of the Supreme Court, and dated the 17th of June 1817, whereby the days for assembling the several courts in New South Wales were declared to be fixed; and those of the Governor's Court were to take place on the first days of the month of January, April, July and October in each year.

    These periods or sittings have been denominated terms in the regulations of the Governor's Court, and are declared to extend to twenty-four days after each day of assembling. The days of the sitting of the court in each week being Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.

    For the purpose of giving the utmost summary effect, as was declared, to the jurisdiction of this court, subsequent orders have been issued, by which it was to be held, according to its own directions and notice, at the towns of Paramatta, Windsor and Liverpool; and courts have occasionally been held at two of these places, whenever a sufficient number of causes was entered to justify that proceeding. With a view to give further facility to the recovery of small debts, the Governor's Court has been assembled on one day in every month for the trial of causes under 5l.

    Pursuant to the several rules that have been adopted by Mr. Judge Advocate Wylde, and sanctioned by the members of his court, it is competent to any person, delivering to the clerk and registrar of the judge advocate's office, a note in writing, containing the nature of his demand, accompanied with an affidavit of debt if it exceeds 10l. to cause a warrant to be issued to the defendant, requiring his appearance on the day upon which the writ is returnable. Upon presenting these demands to the clerk and registrar of the Governor's Court, such instructions are given as enable him to give a short and technical description to the demand, and a note and entry of it is made by him in a book kept in his office. If the defendant appears and denies the debt on entry of the plaint for trial, it comes on before the court to be heard, or in failure of the defendant's appearance it is heard ex parte.

    It was ordered in the month of March 1817, that in all causes where the sum in dispute should exceed 10l. both parties should be assisted by solicitors, who were entitled to receive for that assistance the sum of one guinea, which was to be increased in case they had been retained for the suit, but not to exceed the sum of two guineas for assistance in court. This order was subsequently altered by one bearing date the 6th November 1818, wherein it was ordered that any person should have liberty personally to plead or defend a suit, but should be only assisted in the examinations of their witnesses by the solicitors of the court. This order is now known to be the subsisting one, otherwise the ambiguity, with which a subsequent order, dated on the 11th March 1819, and again repeated on the 15th November of the same year was expressed, leaves it doubtful to what part of the cause the assistance of the solicitors was intended to be limited.

    By the return of causes that have been tried in this court from the month of October 1816 to the end of October 1819, it appears that six hundred and ninety-seven causes exceeding 5l. in amount have been tried there, in which sums amounting to 13,827l. 15s. 3d. have been recovered; and that the greatest number of causes tried in any one year amounted to three hundred and eighty-four. The number of causes not exceeding 5l. in value, tried within the same period, amounted to five hundred and twenty-four; and the greatest number in any one year amounted to two hundred and twenty.

    It further appears, that upon complaints of the higher amount that have been issued from the month of October 1816 to the end of the Easter sittings of the year 1820, one thousand one hundred and thirty-seven summonses have been issued, and seven hundred and twenty-five causes have been tried; and in those of the smaller amount, five hundred and ninety-one summonses have been issued, and three hundred and eighty-two causes have been tried.

    The business in the Governor's Court has been in some degree diminished by the fleet of a proclamation that was issued by Governor Macquarrie at the suggestion of Mr. Justice Field on the 21st November 1815, whereby the same power that is given to magistrates in England by the statute of the 20 Car. II. c. 19, to decide questions arising upon wages and contracts for labour in husbandry, and under the sum of 10l. is extended to the magistrates of New South Wales.

    The persons who have been selected and appointed by Governor Macquarrie to act as members of the Governor's Court have consisted of the principal merchants of the town of Sydney; and when the court has been held at Paramatta and Windsor, the magistrates at those places or of the neighbourhood have performed the duty, with the exception of the instance to which I have already had occasion to allude, of the appointment of Mr. Richard Fitzgerald.

    In cases where either of the assistant members have been found to have an interest in a cause, they have declined taking a part in the proceedings; and the course pursued by the judge advocate, in ordinary cases, has been, to state to them the application of the law to the points that occur in each ease, but to refrain from giving his opinion upon the facts until those of the two members had been declared. Differences of opinion between the judge advocate and the assistant members have not been frequent, and the questions that are generally presented to the decision of the court are of a very simple kind.

    It is the opinion of Mr. Judge Advocate Wylde, as well as that of Mr. Justice Field, that there exists a very strong inclination amongst the emancipated convicts in New South Wales, to prefer the employment of solicitors who belong to that class; and Mr. Wylde has been given to understand by information proceeding indirectly from some of them, that the business in the Governor's Court would have been greatly increased if they had once more been permitted to conduct it.

    The causes to which he as well as Mr. Justice Field have attributed this disposition have unquestionably had their effect in producing it; but I think that the want of activity in the solicitors that are now practising, and their general incompetence to discharge the duties of advocates, together with the expense that their employment occasions, have materially contributed to diminish the quantity of business in the Governor's Court.

    The fees of this court that are payable to the judge advocate and registrar have been considerably reduced from the scale at which they were fixed by the regulations of Mr. Judge Advocate Bent in 1815, and that were acted upon by Mr. Garling during the period in which he held that office, but they still bear a very high proportion to the amount of the sums recovered.

    By the first schedule of fees that was proposed by Mr. Judge Advocate Wylde, and approved by the members of his court, the charge made in his office for the summons and examination only of a complaint for the recovery of a sum not exceeding 1l., was 7s. 6d.; and at Windsor and Paramatta it was 8s. 9d. The first charge was reduced, upon the suggestion of Governor Macquarrie to the judge advocate in the year 1819, to the sum of 5s.; it continues at that rate at present; and for causes above 1l. and not exceeding 3l. it amounts to 10s.; and for causes above 3l. and not exceeding 5l. it amounts to 12s. 6d.

    The average amount of fees taken in the judge advocate's office in causes above 5l. is stated by the clerk and registrar to amount to 2l. 5s. 6d.; and in the Appendix is an account furnished by his order, to the magistrate's clerk at Windsor, for fees due upon a cause tried there, not exceeding 15l. the amount of which is 4l. 4s. 6d. including a charge for an extra fee in coming to Windsor, that is not authorized by any known rule of the court, and amounting to 1l. 1s.

    The fees taken by Mr. Judge Advocate Wylde upon the proceedings of his court, together with those that arise in his office upon detainers and giving certificates of no detainers, those that arise upon the registry of deeds and upon notarial business, are received by his clerk, Mr. J. J. Moore, to whom he allows a sum sufficient to augment the annual salary of 80l. that he derives from the parliamentary estimate, to that of 300l. Per annum. The respective amounts of these fees are stated in the returns made by Mr. J. J. Moore; and the aggregate amount that has been received from the month of October 1816 to the 24th June 1820, is stated by him to have been 3,896l. 17s. 10d.

    The circumstances that prevented the opening of the supreme court of civil jurisdiction having been detailed in the evidence that has been submitted to the Parliamentary Committee on Gaols, I do not think it necessary to repeat them. The injury that was sustained by individuals from the want of any tribunal in which causes o a larger amount than 50l. could be tried, was very great; and it did not cease to operate from the suspension of the functions of the Governor's Court at the end of the year 1814, till the arrival of Mr. Justice Field in February 1817.

    The causes that have been tried in the Supreme Court from that period, until the end of the month of December 1820, have not been numerous; for including those tried at Van Diemen's Land on the first circuit made to that dependency by Mr. Justice Field in 1819, and amounting to twelve, they do not exceed one hundred and sixty-five. Two-thirds of these causes appear to have arisen upon simple contact debts, and upon notes or bills, and very few have occurred in which any difficult questions have arisen.

    The causes entered in the equity jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, in the same period, amounted to forty-three, out of which thirteen have been heard and decided, and thirty were still pending in the year 1821. The number of judgments entered up on warrants of attorney and confessions have amounted to one hundred and sixty. The mode of proceeding in the Supreme Court in New South Wales, is similar in every respect to the forms of the courts of common law and equity in England. The pleadings in each cause are engrossed on parchment, and are delivered to the judge before the trial. The court is composed of the judge, and two magistrates appointed by the governor, one of whom and the judge are sufficient to constitute the court.

    The changes in the members of the Supreme Court have not been numerous: no change would have been practicable without occasioning considerable inconvenience to magistrates in the country, until the appointment of two new magistrates, Captain Piper and Doctor Harris, in the month of March 1819.

    The clerk of Mr. Justice Field, Mr. J. Gurner, acts as registrar of the court, and as judge's marshal. In the year 1819 five solicitors practised before the Supreme Court; two of them, viz. Mr. Garling and Mr. Moore, were appointed by your Lordship to proceed to New South Wales in the year 1814, and the former received a salary of 300l. per annum from the period in which he ceased to act as judge advocate; and Mr. Moore received in the month of November 1819, the arrears of his salary, that had been suspended from the 23d February 1816.

    Mr. Wylde, who received an appointment from His Majesty to the office of clerk of the peace and solicitor to the crown, practises as a solicitor in the Supreme Court, but has abstained from practising in the Governor's Court. Mr. Amos, who was regularly bred and admitted an attorney of the Court of King's Bench in England, arrived in the colony in the year 1817, and was admitted and continued to practise in the courts of New South Wales until the month of August 1819, when he was ordered to be struck off the roll of attornies of the Supreme Court.

    Mr. Norton, who received a professional education in England, arrived in the year 1818, with his family, and has been admitted to practise. Upon the suspension of Mr. Amos, in the month of August 1819, an order of court was made, by which George Crossley, who had formerly been a convict, was permitted to proceed as the attorney of all such clients of Mr. Amos, as had suits depending before the Supreme Court; and all the papers and securities of such clients as signified their desire to continue their suits under the management and direction of G. Crossley, were to be delivered to him. At a later period, and on the republication of the rules of the Supreme Court on the 31st May 1820, it was ordered, that parties should be at liberty to prosecute or defend suits in person, without the intervention of an attorney or solicitor; but that the pleadings in every suit should be signed by one of the attornies or solicitors of the court, who should be entitled to make a charge for their signatures as well as for instructions. Under these regulations, which were made at the instance of Mr. Smith Hall, Mr. Eagar has been allowed to appear in the Supreme Court on his own behalf, and to conduct his own suits; and Crossley has continued to conduct most of those that

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