Juries Act 1825
The Juries Act 1825, also known as the County Juries Act is an Act of Parliament
Long title | An Act for consolidating and amending the Laws relative to Jurors and Juries. |
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Citation | 6 Geo 4 c 50 |
Territorial extent | England and Wales |
Dates | |
Repealed | 1971, 1972 |
Other legislation | |
Repealed by | Courts Act 1971 (except ss.1, 27, 29, 50) Criminal Justice Act 1972 (ss.1, 27, 50) |
Status: Partially repealed | |
Text of statute as originally enacted | |
Revised text of statute as amended |
Selected clauses
Qualifying for jury service
The following requirements qualified an individual for jury service (section 1):
- Male
- Between 21 and 60 years old
- At least one of:
- Owning land worth at least £10 a year if rented
- Having a lease of at least 21 years length of land with an annual rental value of at least £20
- Being a householder paying the poor rate on a property that has at least fifteen windows and an annual rental value of at least £30 (Middlesex) or £20 (elsewhere in England)
In Wales the qualifications were scaled to three-fifths of the above values.
Exemptions from jury service
Various groups were exempted from jury service by section 2:
- Peers of the realm
- Judges
- Church of England clergy
- Roman Catholic priests
- Persons whose only occupation was as a protestant preacher (or preacher and schoolmaster)
- Practising lawyers
- Officers of the courts
- Coroners
- Jailers
- Physicians and surgeons
- Apothecaries
- Officers of the Army and Royal Navy
- Maritime pilots
- Staff of the Royal Household
- Officers of HM Customs and Excise
- High sheriffs, high constables
- Parish clerks
Juries restricted to British subjects only
Service on a jury was restricted to natural born subjects of the Crown by section 3.
Special juries
Section 31 listed qualification for service on special juries. They were required to be one of:
- A person entitled to be addressed as esquire
- A person of 'higher degree' (i.e. upper class)
- A banker
- A merchant
Juries de medietate linguae
Section 47 reiterated that foreigners were entitled to have one-half of a jury judging them to consist of fellow foreigners. Those foreign jurors had to be available in the area where the trial was held, but were otherwise exempted from the qualifications required of jurors at the time (such as owing land).
In force
Only section 29 remains in force. It requires challenges by the Crown to the composition of juries to only be made for cause.
References
- The citation of this Act by this short title was authorised by the Short Titles Act 1896 (c. 14)