fbpx
Wikipedia

Bailiff of Jersey

The Bailiff of Jersey (French: Le Bailli de Jersey) is the civic head of the Bailiwick of Jersey. In this role, he is not the head of government nor the head of state, but the chief justice of Jersey and presiding officer of Jersey's parliament, the States Assembly. The Bailiff is also the President of the Royal Court. It is similar in role to the Bailiff of Guernsey.

Bailiff of Jersey
Incumbent
Sir Timothy Le Cocq[1]
since 17 October 2019
AppointerMonarch of the United Kingdom,
at the recommendation of the Jersey Government
Term lengthAt His Majesty's Pleasure, at least until retirement (70)
FormationAt least 1204
First holderPhilippe L'Evesque (first attested)
DeputyDeputy Bailiff of Jersey
Sir Michael Birt (Bailiff from 2009 to 2015) with sculpture of Lord Coutanche (Bailiff 1935–1962) behind.

The position of Bailiff was created shortly after the Treaty of Paris 1259 in which the king of England, Henry III, gave up claim to all of the Duchy of Normandy but the Channel Islands. In 1290, separate bailiffs for Jersey and Guernsey were appointed.

History

The position of Bailiff in Norman law predates the separation of Normandy in 1204.[2] When the Channel Islands were granted self-governance by King John after 1204, legislative power was vested in 12 jurats, the twelve "senior men" of the island. Along with the Bailiff, they would form the Royal Court, which determined all civil and criminal causes (except treason).[3]

Any oppression by a bailiff or a warden was to be resolved locally or failing that, by appeal to the King who appointed commissioners to report on disputes.[citation needed] In the late 1270s, Jersey was given its own Bailiff (the first record of someone holding the position is in 1277) and from the 1290s, the duties of Bailiff and Warden were separated. The (Sub-)Warden became responsible for taxation and defence, while the Bailiff became responsible for justice. While probably originally a temporary arrangement by Otto de Grandison, this became permanent and the foundation for Jersey's modern separation of Crown and justice. It also lessened the Warden's authority relative to the Bailiff, who had much more interaction with the community.[4]

In 1462, the occupying French Governor de Brézé issued ordinances outlining the role of the Bailiff and the Jurats.[5]: 38  It may well be during this occupation that the island saw the establishment of the States. Comte Maulevrier, who had led the invasion of the island, ordered the holding of an Assize in the island. Maulevrier confirmed the place of existing institutions, however created the requirement for Jurats to be chosen by Bailiffs, Jurats, Rectors and Constables.[6] The earliest extant Act of the States dates from 1524.[7]

Peyton was also against democracy in the form of the States and the freedoms of the Courts in Jersey. In 1615, Jean Hérault was appointed Bailiff by the King, having been promised the role by Letters Patent in 1611. Peyton disputed this appointment, claiming it was the Governor's jurisdiction to appoint the Bailiff. Hérault asserted it was the King's jurisdiction to directly appoint the Bailiff. An Order in Council (dated 9 August 1615) sided with Hérault.

Hérault took this to claim the Bailiff was the real head of government and took steps to assert the precedence of the Bailiff over Governor: he ordered his name to be placed before the Governor's in church prayers and was the first Bailiff to wear red robes (in the style of English judges). To back his claims, he cited that in the Norman administrative tradition, the Bailiffs had "noone above them except the Duke".[8]: 96–7 [2] Though the Privy Council did not agree with Hérault's extreme position on the precedence of the Bailiff, on 18 February 1617 it declared that the "charge of military forces be wholly in the Governor, and the care of justice and civil affairs in the Bailiff." This secured for the Bailiff precedence over the Governor on justice and civil affairs.[2]

By 1750, the Bailiffship had de facto become a hereditary position in the de Carteret family. Absences of the de Carterets and all other high-ranking posts left Charles Lempière, the Lieutenant Bailiff, in effective full control over the island. Lempière was a Parliamentarian, but by temperament was autocratic. His family had significant power with a number of high-ranking roles in the island and he issued ordinances and quashed protest through his court.[8]:195

After the 1948 States reforms, Jurats were removed from the States, now only sitting on the Royal Court (and the Licensing Assembly). The reforms declared that the Bailiff shall be the judge of the law, and the Jurats the "judge of fact".[8]: 278–9 

Appointment

The Bailiff is appointed by the Crown through Letters Patent after consultation with the Island. They serve at His Majesty's pleasure, usually until an age of retirement as specified in their Letters Patent, unless they resign earlier.[9]

Roles

Ex-Bailiff Sir Philip Bailhache divides the role of Bailiff into four 'headings' –

  1. President of the Royal Court
  2. President of the States
  3. Ancillary functions deriving from the Presidency of the Royal Court
  4. Ancillary functions deriving from the Presidency of the States

The full list is expanded on in detail below, but the functions can be summarised as --

  • Chief Justice and President of the Royal Court
  • Speaker and President of the States Assembly
  • Chief citizen of the island
  • President of the Licensing Assembly
  • Official conduit between the Government and UK Government
  • Licensor of public entertainment
  • Ceremonial functions: keeper of the Royal Mace, custodian of the island's seal

The Bailiff is the Chef Magistrat of the island and presides over the Royal Court and the Court of Appeal. They sit in court with at least two jurats. They are a judge of law but not generally a judge of fact. Instead, the jurats normally decide the facts in civil and the sentence in criminal cases. The Bailiff appoints - but alone cannot suspend or dismiss - the Judicial Greffier (the clerk of the court). The Bailiff can also issue search warrants.[2]

In the States, the Bailiff is the President (Speaker) of the Assembly. This position has been in place from the origins of the States in the 16th century, particularly because the States began as a consulting body of the Royal Court and the Bailiff was the President of the Court. The Bailiff has a vote in the event the States is equally divided, but traditionally uses it to preserve the status quo.[2] In the Chamber, the Bailiff's seat is 18 cm (7.1 in) higher than the Lieutenant Governor's to emphasise the Bailiff's higher position in regard to the island's civil government.[9] Through this presidency, the Bailiff is the island's chief citizen (hence the island is known as a Bailiwick). They are the official channel of communication between the island authorities and the UK Government, though this has altered since the development of ministerial government and the creation of the role of Chief Minister. The Bailiff is President of the Emergencies Council, which was established in 1990.[2]

In addition to these two roles, the Bailiff presides the College of Electors, who appoint the Jurats, and he presides over the Licensing Assembly, the remains of a body which once exercised considerable administrative authority, but now only has the powers to grant alcohol licences. Furthermore, the Bailiff has powers over public entertainment. All public entertainment - such as music festivals or the Battle of Flowers - can only take place by permission of the Bailiff. This is done on consultation with public services and standards of public decency.[2]

The Bailiff is also the keeper of the island's Royal Mace the custodian of the island's seal, first granted by Edward I in 1279.[2]

Future

The dual role of the Bailiff as head of the judiciary and President of the States has been criticised. The 2000 Clothier report (into the Machinery of Government) argues against the dual role on the grounds that –[10]

  • No one should hold political power unless elected (the Bailiff is unelected) and the Speaker of a parliament cannot be non-political
    • Consequently, the States cannot remove the Bailiff, as he is appointed by Letters Patent
  • No one involved in making laws should be involved judicially in a dispute based upon them.
  • The States President makes decisions about who should and should not be allowed to speak, but the Bailiff cannot then determine challenges to those decisions in the Royal Court.

Such calls for the separation of the office's powers are longstanding: in 1859, writer Helier Simon called a potential separation "desirable".[2] The report therefore recommends that the Bailiff is removed as President of the States and that the States should elect their own Speaker.[10]

The dual role has been defended on the grounds that the modern position of Bailiff is held in good temperament. Criticims do not account for the independence in action of successive Bailiffs and therefore the supposed conflict in the lack of separation of powers only exists in theory, and not in practice.[10] Ex-Bailiff Sir Philip Bailhache argues that, if the States Presidency were removed from the jurisdiction of the Bailiff, the Bailiff could no longer be described as the island's chief citizen.[2]

Holders

The list of bailiffs is only reliably traceable from Philippe L'Evesque's appointment in 1277, although earlier bailiffs are mentioned and the office may date from before 1204.

14th century

  • Jean de Carteret 1302
  • Philippe Levesque 1309
  • Colin ? Hasteyn 1315
  • Henry de St. Martin 1318
  • Guillaume Longynnour c. 1324
  • Herny de St.Martin c. 1324
  • Pierre Ugoun (Ygon) c. 1324
  • Lucas de Espyard c. 1324
  • Pierre de la Haye c. 1324
  • Philippe de Vyncheleys c. 1324
  • Nicolas (or Colin) Hasteyn c. 1332
  • Philippe de Vincheleis c. 1332
  • Matthieu Le Loreour c. 1332
  • Pierre de la Haye c. 1332
  • Guillaume Brasdefer c. 1332
  • Guille Hastein (or Hastings) 1348
  • Roger de Powderham 1351
  • Guille Hastein (or Hastings) 1352
  • John Cockerels 1356
  • Raoul Lempriere 1362–1364
  • Richard de St. Martin 1367–1368
  • Richard le Petit 1368–1369
  • Richard de St. Martin 1370
  • Richard le Petit 1371
  • Richard de St. Martin 1372–1374
  • Thomas Brasdefer 1378–1391[11]
  • Giefrey Brasdefer 1396–1401[11]

15th century

  • Colin le Petit 1402–1403[11]
  • Guillaume de Layc 1405–1406[11]
  • Thomas Danyel 1406–1425
  • Jean Bernard 1432, 1436–1444
  • Jean Lempriere 1434–1438
  • Thomas de la Cour 1435
  • Jean Payn 1444, 1446
  • Regnauld de Carteret 1446–1451
  • Jean Poingdestre 1452–1453[11]
  • Nicolas Morin 1459–1468
  • Jean Poingdestre 1468–1477
  • Guillaume Hareby 1479–1481, 1484–1485
  • Clement Le Hardy 1486–1493
  • Jean Nicolle 1494
  • Thomas Lempriere 1495–1513, 1415?

16th century

  • Helier de Carteret 1513–1515
  • Helier de Carteret 1516–1523
  • Helier de Carteret 1529–1560
  • Hostes Nicolle 1561–1564
  • John Dumaresq 1566–1583
  • George Paulett 1583–1586
  • John Dumaresq 1586–1587
  • George Paulett 1587–1591[11]
  • John Dumaresq 1591–1594
  • George Paulett 1594–1614[11]

17th century

18th century

 
In this caricature of 1873, Bailiff of Jersey Jean Hammond (left) greets the newly arrived Lieutenant Governor with the question: "Your papers, please?"

19th century

  • Thomas Le Breton 1826–1831
  • Jean de Veulle 1831–1848[11]
  • Thomas Le Breton 1848–1857
  • Jean Hammond 1858–1880[11]
  • Sir Robert Pipon Marett 1880–1884
  • George Clement Bertram 1884–1898
  • Edouard Charles Malet de Carteret 1898
  • William Venables Vernon 1899–1931[12]

20th century

 
Lord Coutanche, Bailiff 1935–1962

21st century

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Heath, Richard. "New Bailiff sworn in". www.jerseyeveningpost.com. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Bailhache, Philip (n.d.). The Cry for Constitutional Reform – A perspective from the Office of Bailiff. Jersey Law (jerseylaw.je). Retrieved 3 June 2022.
  3. ^ "History of the States Assembly". statesassembly.gov.je. Retrieved 20 January 2021.
  4. ^ Platt, Colin (2009). A concise history of Jersey : a new perspective. Societe Jersiaise. ISBN 0-901897-46-9. OCLC 705959744.
  5. ^ Lempriére, Raoul. History of the Channel Islands. Robert Hale Ltd. ISBN 978-0709142522.
  6. ^ Bisson, Mike. "Constitution - theislandwiki". www.theislandwiki.org. Retrieved 15 March 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ Balleine's History of Jersey, Marguerite Syvret and Joan Stevens (1998) ISBN 1-86077-065-7
  8. ^ a b c Syvret, Marguerite (2011). Balleine's History of Jersey. The History Press. ISBN 978-1860776502.
  9. ^ a b "The Bailiff of Jersey". statesassembly.gov.je. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
  10. ^ a b c Clothier, Cecil et al. (2000). Chapter 8: The Bailiff. In: Report of the Review Panel on the Machinery of Government in Jersey, p. 32-35. States of Jersey (gov.je). Retrieved: 3 June 2022.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Jersey's Bailiffs through the years". Jersey Evening Post. 3 February 2015. Retrieved 1 July 2020.
  12. ^ "William Venables Vernon - theislandwiki". www.theislandwiki.org.
  13. ^ "Charles Malet de Carteret - theislandwiki". www.theislandwiki.org.
  14. ^ "Europe | Jersey | Michael Birt is to become bailiff". BBC News. 12 March 2009. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  15. ^ "Jersey Bailiff William Bailhache sworn in". BBC. Retrieved 6 February 2015.

External links

bailiff, jersey, also, jersey, courts, jersey, bailiff, channel, islands, jurat, norman, advocate, judiciary, jersey, list, been, suggested, that, bailiff, channel, islands, merged, into, this, article, discuss, proposed, since, june, 2022, french, bailli, jer. See also Law of Jersey Courts of Jersey Bailiff Channel Islands Jurat Norman law Advocate and Judiciary of Jersey list It has been suggested that Bailiff Channel Islands be merged into this article Discuss Proposed since June 2022 The Bailiff of Jersey French Le Bailli de Jersey is the civic head of the Bailiwick of Jersey In this role he is not the head of government nor the head of state but the chief justice of Jersey and presiding officer of Jersey s parliament the States Assembly The Bailiff is also the President of the Royal Court It is similar in role to the Bailiff of Guernsey Bailiff of JerseyIncumbentSir Timothy Le Cocq 1 since 17 October 2019AppointerMonarch of the United Kingdom at the recommendation of the Jersey GovernmentTerm lengthAt His Majesty s Pleasure at least until retirement 70 FormationAt least 1204First holderPhilippe L Evesque first attested DeputyDeputy Bailiff of JerseySir Michael Birt Bailiff from 2009 to 2015 with sculpture of Lord Coutanche Bailiff 1935 1962 behind The position of Bailiff was created shortly after the Treaty of Paris 1259 in which the king of England Henry III gave up claim to all of the Duchy of Normandy but the Channel Islands In 1290 separate bailiffs for Jersey and Guernsey were appointed Contents 1 History 2 Appointment 3 Roles 4 Future 5 Holders 5 1 14th century 5 2 15th century 5 3 16th century 5 4 17th century 5 5 18th century 5 6 19th century 5 7 20th century 5 8 21st century 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditThe position of Bailiff in Norman law predates the separation of Normandy in 1204 2 When the Channel Islands were granted self governance by King John after 1204 legislative power was vested in 12 jurats the twelve senior men of the island Along with the Bailiff they would form the Royal Court which determined all civil and criminal causes except treason 3 Any oppression by a bailiff or a warden was to be resolved locally or failing that by appeal to the King who appointed commissioners to report on disputes citation needed In the late 1270s Jersey was given its own Bailiff the first record of someone holding the position is in 1277 and from the 1290s the duties of Bailiff and Warden were separated The Sub Warden became responsible for taxation and defence while the Bailiff became responsible for justice While probably originally a temporary arrangement by Otto de Grandison this became permanent and the foundation for Jersey s modern separation of Crown and justice It also lessened the Warden s authority relative to the Bailiff who had much more interaction with the community 4 In 1462 the occupying French Governor de Breze issued ordinances outlining the role of the Bailiff and the Jurats 5 38 It may well be during this occupation that the island saw the establishment of the States Comte Maulevrier who had led the invasion of the island ordered the holding of an Assize in the island Maulevrier confirmed the place of existing institutions however created the requirement for Jurats to be chosen by Bailiffs Jurats Rectors and Constables 6 The earliest extant Act of the States dates from 1524 7 Peyton was also against democracy in the form of the States and the freedoms of the Courts in Jersey In 1615 Jean Herault was appointed Bailiff by the King having been promised the role by Letters Patent in 1611 Peyton disputed this appointment claiming it was the Governor s jurisdiction to appoint the Bailiff Herault asserted it was the King s jurisdiction to directly appoint the Bailiff An Order in Council dated 9 August 1615 sided with Herault Herault took this to claim the Bailiff was the real head of government and took steps to assert the precedence of the Bailiff over Governor he ordered his name to be placed before the Governor s in church prayers and was the first Bailiff to wear red robes in the style of English judges To back his claims he cited that in the Norman administrative tradition the Bailiffs had noone above them except the Duke 8 96 7 2 Though the Privy Council did not agree with Herault s extreme position on the precedence of the Bailiff on 18 February 1617 it declared that the charge of military forces be wholly in the Governor and the care of justice and civil affairs in the Bailiff This secured for the Bailiff precedence over the Governor on justice and civil affairs 2 By 1750 the Bailiffship had de facto become a hereditary position in the de Carteret family Absences of the de Carterets and all other high ranking posts left Charles Lempiere the Lieutenant Bailiff in effective full control over the island Lempiere was a Parliamentarian but by temperament was autocratic His family had significant power with a number of high ranking roles in the island and he issued ordinances and quashed protest through his court 8 195After the 1948 States reforms Jurats were removed from the States now only sitting on the Royal Court and the Licensing Assembly The reforms declared that the Bailiff shall be the judge of the law and the Jurats the judge of fact 8 278 9 Appointment EditThe Bailiff is appointed by the Crown through Letters Patent after consultation with the Island They serve at His Majesty s pleasure usually until an age of retirement as specified in their Letters Patent unless they resign earlier 9 Roles EditEx Bailiff Sir Philip Bailhache divides the role of Bailiff into four headings President of the Royal Court President of the States Ancillary functions deriving from the Presidency of the Royal Court Ancillary functions deriving from the Presidency of the StatesThe full list is expanded on in detail below but the functions can be summarised as Chief Justice and President of the Royal Court Speaker and President of the States Assembly Chief citizen of the island President of the Licensing Assembly Official conduit between the Government and UK Government Licensor of public entertainment Ceremonial functions keeper of the Royal Mace custodian of the island s sealThe Bailiff is the Chef Magistrat of the island and presides over the Royal Court and the Court of Appeal They sit in court with at least two jurats They are a judge of law but not generally a judge of fact Instead the jurats normally decide the facts in civil and the sentence in criminal cases The Bailiff appoints but alone cannot suspend or dismiss the Judicial Greffier the clerk of the court The Bailiff can also issue search warrants 2 In the States the Bailiff is the President Speaker of the Assembly This position has been in place from the origins of the States in the 16th century particularly because the States began as a consulting body of the Royal Court and the Bailiff was the President of the Court The Bailiff has a vote in the event the States is equally divided but traditionally uses it to preserve the status quo 2 In the Chamber the Bailiff s seat is 18 cm 7 1 in higher than the Lieutenant Governor s to emphasise the Bailiff s higher position in regard to the island s civil government 9 Through this presidency the Bailiff is the island s chief citizen hence the island is known as a Bailiwick They are the official channel of communication between the island authorities and the UK Government though this has altered since the development of ministerial government and the creation of the role of Chief Minister The Bailiff is President of the Emergencies Council which was established in 1990 2 In addition to these two roles the Bailiff presides the College of Electors who appoint the Jurats and he presides over the Licensing Assembly the remains of a body which once exercised considerable administrative authority but now only has the powers to grant alcohol licences Furthermore the Bailiff has powers over public entertainment All public entertainment such as music festivals or the Battle of Flowers can only take place by permission of the Bailiff This is done on consultation with public services and standards of public decency 2 The Bailiff is also the keeper of the island s Royal Mace the custodian of the island s seal first granted by Edward I in 1279 2 Future EditThe dual role of the Bailiff as head of the judiciary and President of the States has been criticised The 2000 Clothier report into the Machinery of Government argues against the dual role on the grounds that 10 No one should hold political power unless elected the Bailiff is unelected and the Speaker of a parliament cannot be non political Consequently the States cannot remove the Bailiff as he is appointed by Letters Patent No one involved in making laws should be involved judicially in a dispute based upon them The States President makes decisions about who should and should not be allowed to speak but the Bailiff cannot then determine challenges to those decisions in the Royal Court Such calls for the separation of the office s powers are longstanding in 1859 writer Helier Simon called a potential separation desirable 2 The report therefore recommends that the Bailiff is removed as President of the States and that the States should elect their own Speaker 10 The dual role has been defended on the grounds that the modern position of Bailiff is held in good temperament Criticims do not account for the independence in action of successive Bailiffs and therefore the supposed conflict in the lack of separation of powers only exists in theory and not in practice 10 Ex Bailiff Sir Philip Bailhache argues that if the States Presidency were removed from the jurisdiction of the Bailiff the Bailiff could no longer be described as the island s chief citizen 2 Holders EditThe list of bailiffs is only reliably traceable from Philippe L Evesque s appointment in 1277 although earlier bailiffs are mentioned and the office may date from before 1204 14th century Edit Jean de Carteret 1302 Philippe Levesque 1309 Colin Hasteyn 1315 Henry de St Martin 1318 Guillaume Longynnour c 1324 Herny de St Martin c 1324 Pierre Ugoun Ygon c 1324 Lucas de Espyard c 1324 Pierre de la Haye c 1324 Philippe de Vyncheleys c 1324 Nicolas or Colin Hasteyn c 1332 Philippe de Vincheleis c 1332 Matthieu Le Loreour c 1332 Pierre de la Haye c 1332 Guillaume Brasdefer c 1332 Guille Hastein or Hastings 1348 Roger de Powderham 1351 Guille Hastein or Hastings 1352 John Cockerels 1356 Raoul Lempriere 1362 1364 Richard de St Martin 1367 1368 Richard le Petit 1368 1369 Richard de St Martin 1370 Richard le Petit 1371 Richard de St Martin 1372 1374 Thomas Brasdefer 1378 1391 11 Giefrey Brasdefer 1396 1401 11 15th century Edit Colin le Petit 1402 1403 11 Guillaume de Layc 1405 1406 11 Thomas Danyel 1406 1425 Jean Bernard 1432 1436 1444 Jean Lempriere 1434 1438 Thomas de la Cour 1435 Jean Payn 1444 1446 Regnauld de Carteret 1446 1451 Jean Poingdestre 1452 1453 11 Nicolas Morin 1459 1468 Jean Poingdestre 1468 1477 Guillaume Hareby 1479 1481 1484 1485 Clement Le Hardy 1486 1493 Jean Nicolle 1494 Thomas Lempriere 1495 1513 1415 16th century Edit Helier de Carteret 1513 1515 Helier de Carteret 1516 1523 Helier de Carteret 1529 1560 Hostes Nicolle 1561 1564 John Dumaresq 1566 1583 George Paulett 1583 1586 John Dumaresq 1586 1587 George Paulett 1587 1591 11 John Dumaresq 1591 1594 George Paulett 1594 1614 11 17th century Edit Jean Herault 1614 1621 11 William Parkhurst 1622 1624 Jean Herault 1624 1626 Philippe de Carteret 1627 1643 Michel Lempriere 1643 Sir George de Carteret 1st Bt 1643 1651 Michel Lempriere 1651 1660 Sir George de Carteret 1st Bt 1660 1661 Sir Philippe de Carteret 1st Bt 1661 1662 Philippe de Carteret 1662 1665 Edouard de Carteret 1665 1682 Sir Philippe de Carteret 2nd Bt 1682 1693 Edouard de Carteret 1694 170318th century Edit In this caricature of 1873 Bailiff of Jersey Jean Hammond left greets the newly arrived Lieutenant Governor with the question Your papers please Sir Charles de Carteret 3rd Bt 1703 1715 11 John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville 1715 1763 Robert Carteret 3rd Earl Granville 1763 1776 Henry Frederick Lord Carteret 1776 182619th century Edit Thomas Le Breton 1826 1831 Jean de Veulle 1831 1848 11 Thomas Le Breton 1848 1857 Jean Hammond 1858 1880 11 Sir Robert Pipon Marett 1880 1884 George Clement Bertram 1884 1898 Edouard Charles Malet de Carteret 1898 William Venables Vernon 1899 1931 12 20th century Edit Lord Coutanche Bailiff 1935 1962 Charles Malet de Carteret 1931 1935 13 Sir Alexander Coutanche created Lord Coutanche in 1961 1935 1962 Cecil Stanley Harrison 1961 1962 11 Sir Robert Le Masurier 1962 1975 11 Sir Frank Ereaut 1975 1985 11 Sir Peter Crill 1986 1994 Sir Philip Bailhache 1994 200921st century Edit Sir Michael Birt 2009 2015 14 Sir William Bailhache 2015 2019 15 Sir Timothy Le Cocq 2019 present 1 See also EditList of Lieutenant Governors of Jersey List of Bailiffs of Guernsey List of Seigneurs of SarkReferences Edit a b Heath Richard New Bailiff sworn in www jerseyeveningpost com Retrieved 17 October 2019 a b c d e f g h i j Bailhache Philip n d The Cry for Constitutional Reform A perspective from the Office of Bailiff Jersey Law jerseylaw je Retrieved 3 June 2022 History of the States Assembly statesassembly gov je Retrieved 20 January 2021 Platt Colin 2009 A concise history of Jersey a new perspective Societe Jersiaise ISBN 0 901897 46 9 OCLC 705959744 Lempriere Raoul History of the Channel Islands Robert Hale Ltd ISBN 978 0709142522 Bisson Mike Constitution theislandwiki www theislandwiki org Retrieved 15 March 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Balleine s History of Jersey Marguerite Syvret and Joan Stevens 1998 ISBN 1 86077 065 7 a b c Syvret Marguerite 2011 Balleine s History of Jersey The History Press ISBN 978 1860776502 a b The Bailiff of Jersey statesassembly gov je Retrieved 13 May 2022 a b c Clothier Cecil et al 2000 Chapter 8 The Bailiff In Report of the Review Panel on the Machinery of Government in Jersey p 32 35 States of Jersey gov je Retrieved 3 June 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Jersey s Bailiffs through the years Jersey Evening Post 3 February 2015 Retrieved 1 July 2020 William Venables Vernon theislandwiki www theislandwiki org Charles Malet de Carteret theislandwiki www theislandwiki org Europe Jersey Michael Birt is to become bailiff BBC News 12 March 2009 Retrieved 3 April 2013 Jersey Bailiff William Bailhache sworn in BBC Retrieved 6 February 2015 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bailiffs of Jersey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bailiff of Jersey amp oldid 1121122240, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.