Online Encyclopedia

UNIVERSITY COURTS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 780 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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UNIVERSITY COURTS  , in the

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English
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universities of Oxford and Cambridge, courts of inferior jurisdiction, administering principles of justice originally founded on the
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canon and
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civil law, but now defined and limited by the
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common law (see particularly Ginnett v . Whittingham, 1886, 16 Q.B.D . 769) . At Oxford the judge of the chancellor's court is the
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vice-chancellor, who is his deputy or assessor; the court has had since 1244 civil jurisdiction, to the exclusion of the king's courts, in all matters and suits wherein a scholar or privileged person of the university is one of the parties, except in actions
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relating to
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freehold . It had also, from 1290 downwards, jurisdiction of all injuries and trespasses against the peace, mayhem and felony excepted, but since the
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Summary Jurisdiction Acts this is possibly no longer exercisable, but the chancellor, vice-chancellor and the vice-chancellor's deputy are justices of the peace for Oxford, Oxfordshire and Berkshire, where scholars are concerned, and exercise this jurisdiction under the Summary Jurisdiction Acts . By the Oxford University Act 1854 the vice-chancellor's court now administers the common and
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statute law of the
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realm . The criminal jurisdiction of Cambridge University in cases where any person not a member of the university is a party has ceased, and its jurisdiction over
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light
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women, which was founded on a charter and statute of Elizabeth, was taken away in 1894 by a private act of that
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year (c . 6o), and an act of 6 Geo . IV. c . 97, dealing with them and applicable till then only to Oxford University, was extended to Cambridge University . Previous to 1891, women of light character, who had been convicted of consorting with or soliciting members of the university in statu pupillari, were detained in a house of correction called the spinning house, but in that year a conviction was held
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bad (ex parte Hopkins, 1891, 61 L.J.Q.B . 240; see also, however, Kemp v .

Nevin, 1861, to C.B.N.S . 523) .

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