College of Justice

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The College of Justice refers to the supreme courts of Scotland, and their associated bodies. The constituent bodies are the Court of Session, the High Court of Justiciary, and the Accountant of Court's Office.[1] Its associated bodies are the Faculty of Advocates, the Society of Writers to Her Majesty's Signet and the Society of Solicitors in the Supreme Courts of Scotland.

The College is headed by the Lord President of the Court of Session, who also holds the title of Lord Justice General in relation to the High Court of Justiciary, and judges of the Court of Session and High Court are titled Senators of the College of Justice.

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[edit] History

The College was founded in 1532 by King James V following a bull issued by Pope Clement VII on 15 September 1531. It provided for 10,000 gold ducats to be contributed by the Scottish bishoprics and monastic institutions for the maintenance of its members, one half of whom would be members of the "ecclesiastical dignity".[2]

The Parliament of Scotland passed an Act on 17 May 1532 authorising the creation of the college with 14 members, half spiritual, half temporal, plus a president and the Lord Chancellor. The college convened for the first time on 27 May 1532, in the royal presence.

Supplementing the 14 ordinary lords, who were called Senators, were an indefinite number of supernumerary judges called extraordinary lords.

Scots law
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Law of Scotland

The founding members of the College of Justice were:

the Lord Chancellor, Gavin Dunbar, Archbishop of Glasgow
the Lord President, Alexander Myln, Abbot of Cambuskenneth
Richard Bothwell, Rector of Ashkirk
John Dingwell, Provost of Trinity College
Henry White, Rector of Finevin
William Gibson, Dean of Restalrig
Thomas Hay, Dean of Dunbar
Robert Reid, Abbot of Kinloss
George Ker, Provost of Dunglass
Sir William Scott of Balweary
Sir John Campbell of Lundy
Sir James Colville of Easter Wemyss
Sir Adam Otterburn of Auldhame and Redhall, King's Advocate
Nicholas Crawford of Oxengangs
Francis Bothwell of Edinburgh (brother of Richard)
James Lawson of Edinburgh
Sir James Foulis of Colinton (He was added at the first meeting of the court when the king added him as a "Lord of the Session".

The College at its foundation dealt with underdeveloped civil. Contrary to belief it never dispensed justice in criminal matters as that was an area of the law reserved to the King's justice, through the justiciars (hence the High Court of the Justiciairy) or the Barony Courts which existed at this time. There was little legal literature. Acts of the Parliament of Scotland and the books of the Old Law as well as Civil and Canon law texts were about all to which the pursuer and defender could refer. It was only after the establishment of the court that this situation improved, with judges noting their decisions in books of practicks.

The Treaty of Union 1707 with England preserved the Scottish Legal System. Article XIX provided "that the Court of Session or College of Justice do after the Union and notwithstanding thereof remain in all time coming within Scotland, and that the Court of Justiciary do also after the Union ... remain in all time coming."

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ PDF-file - "The Supreme Courts are made up of: the Court of Session, the High Court of Justiciary and the Accountant of Court's Office" - Scottish Court Service, accessed 12 March 2007
  2. ^ The 1531 bull stipulated that of the senators "media pars in dignitate ecclesiastica constituta omnino esse debeat"; a March 1534 bull of Pope Paul III added "'pro uno Presidente semper prelate ecclesiastico". Baird Smith, David (1912), "The Reformers and divorce", The Scottish historical review (Glasgow: James Maclehose & Sons) 9: 12-13, http://www.archive.org/details/scottishhistoric09edinuoft 

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