Short Title: | Liberties Act 1850[1] |
Parliament: | Parliament of the United Kingdom |
Long Title: | An Act for facilitating the Union of Liberties with the Counties in which they are situate. |
Statute Book Chapter: | 13 & 14 Vict. c. 105 |
Territorial Extent: | England and Wales |
Royal Assent: | 14 August 1850 |
Status: | Repealed |
The Liberties Act 1850 (13 & 14 Vict. c. 105) was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that provided a mechanism to enable the various liberties or independent jurisdictions in England and Wales to be merged into the geographical counties in which they lay.
Throughout England and Wales there were numerous liberties which were for historic reasons, to varying degrees, independent of the administration of the authorities of the county in which they lay. By the nineteenth century it had become clear that their continued existence was causing inefficiencies in local government and frustrating the effective administration of justice. Liberties generally had a commission of the peace and gaol distinct from those of the county, and the Inspectors of Prisons, in their annual report of 1850 noted:
The Act applied to any liberty that possessed a separate commission of the peace, be they divisions of a county, counties of a town or city or sokes.
The justices of the peace of any liberty, or of any county in which a liberty lay, were given the right to prepare a petition seeking the union of the liberty with the county. Notice of the resolution to prepare the petition was to be published for three successive weeks in both a London newspaper and one circulating in the county involved. The petition was to lay out the reasons for the proposed union, and to set out in detail the arrangements for taking over the property of the liberty, and the payments to be made, or continued employment by the county of those holding franchise or office in the liberty.
If the petition was approved by the Privy Council, a notice to that effect was to be published in the London Gazette. The notice would detail the areas involved, and the parishes formerly in the liberty would be annexed to existing hundreds and petty sessional divisions of the county.
Following the union:
Where municipal boroughs incorporated under the Municipal Corporations Act 1835 had been granted a separate court of quarter sessions, they were expressly exempt from the legislation.[2]
Notices of the following unions of liberties with counties were published in the London Gazette: