Elucidations to Tables IX X XI

At the close of the first of the two periods comprized in these accounts, came the Union between Great Britain and Ireland; stated[?] by the Statute 39 & 40 G.3.c.67 2 d July A o 1800 antecedently to the Irish Emancipation Act 23 G.3.c.28, of the appeals called Writs of Error, such as were presented from the Irish Court of King's Bench used to be presented - not to the Scotch House of Lords, nor to the Irish Exchequer Chamber, but to the English Court of King's Bench. By the act ('. 2.) all appeals of both denominations were forbidden to be received by any English Court, from any Irish Court. In consequence, the Writs of Error, which till then had gone from the Irish King's Bench, to the English King's Bench, went thereforward to the Irish House of Lords. When, by Article 8 th of Union, the state &[?] judicature came to be fixed, the superordinate jurisdiction, of the English King's Bench over the Irish King's Bench, was not restored[?]: but all such appeals , of either sort, as, during the period of emancipation, had gone to the Irish House of Lords, were, without exception, (consequently those that, before the emancipation had gone to the English King's Bench) made over to the House of Lords of the United Kingdom.