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1 May 1807
B2 8
(2) (8)
Letter V
VIII. Appeal list mutilated
English Review Chambers
II. Finance Supply
Thus much, my Lord, as to the masses of Appeals flowing from Scotland and England respectively into the House of Lords.
I come now to the masses of Appeal flowing out of the supreme local Courts of judicature in the two kingdoms respectively into receptacles other than the House of Lords: receptacles intermediate between these supreme local Courts and that ultimate seat of judicature. Here of such intermediate Courts of Appeal the numbers are - for Scotland, 0: for England as above 3: the King's Bench in its appellate capacity, with its 8 Judges to hear under the name of Writs of Error, appeals from the Common Pleas: the Exchequer Chamber with its 8 Judges to hear under the like name appeals from the King's Bench: a Court differently composed, under the same name of the Exchequer Chamber, also with 8 Judges, 4 of them the same, 4 of them different from those of the other Court of the same name, to hear under the same name, appeals from the Court of Exchequer.
So much as to the manufactories of delay; now as to the produce: viz. the comparative amount of it.
Taking the four Courts in Westminster Hall as standing all of them in their respective capacities of Courts of original jurisdiction on the same level, and with the Court of Session in Edinburgh, let us observe the number of appeals of all sorts sent out of the several respective Courts: a distinction being made, but not any exception, grounded on the nature of the Courts into which they were sent, viz. the ultimate receptacle the House of Lords, and the respective intermediate receptacles.
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