College of Justice explained

Court Name:College of Justice
Established:1532
Jurisdiction:Scotland
Location:Edinburgh
Type:Executive selection
Authority:Judges are appointed by the monarch on the recommendation of the First Minister, who receives recommendations from the Judicial Appointments Board for Scotland[1]
Chiefjudgetitle:Lord President and Lord Justice General
Chiefjudgename:The Rt Hon Lord Carloway
Termstart:2015
Termend2:2029
Chiefjudgetitle2:Lord Justice Clerk and President of the Second Division of the Inner House
Chiefjudgename2:The Rt Hon Lady Dorrian
Termstart2:2016
Termend4:2032

The College of Justice (Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic: Colaiste a' Cheartais) includes the Supreme Courts of Scotland, and its associated bodies.

The constituent bodies of the national supreme courts are the Court of Session, the High Court of Justiciary, the Office of the Accountant of Court, and the Auditor of the Court of Session.[2] [3] [4] Its associated bodies are the Faculty of Advocates, the Society of Writers to His 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.

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".[5]

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.

The founding members of the College of Justice were:

The College at its foundation dealt with underdeveloped civil law. It did not dispense 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 Justiciary), the Barony Courts and the Commission of Justiciary. The High Court of Justiciary was only incorporated into the College of Justice in 1672.

Initially, there was little legal literature. Acts of the Parliament of Scotland and the books of the Old Law as well as Roman Law 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 .

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."

See also

References

  1. Web site: Judicial Appointments - How are judges appointed?. Judiciary of Scotland. Judicial Office for Scotland. 27 May 2012. Edinburgh. 14 February 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210214201441/https://www.judiciary.scot/. dead.
  2. http://www.scotcourts.gov.uk/docs/you_and_us/recruitment/SCS%20An%20Introduction.pdf PDF-file
  3. Web site: Expenses and Funding of Litigation Bill Auditor of Court Provisions. 14 June 2016. scottishciviljusticecouncil.gov.uk. Scottish Civil Justice Council. 6 May 2017.
  4. Court of Session Act 1821. 38. act. 1821.
  5. The 1531 bull stipulated that of the senators "Latin: media pars in dignitate ecclesiastica constituta omnino esse debeat"; a March 1534 bull of Pope Paul III added "Latin: pro uno Presidente semper prelate ecclesiastico".
  6. "One of the nine advocates appointed at the institution of the College of Justice. Dalrymple of Hailes, Bt., Sir David, An Historical Account of the Senators of the College of Justice of Scotland from its Institution, Edinburgh, 1849, p.63.

External links