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Serjeant-at-law

A Serjeant-at-Law (SL), commonly known simply as a Serjeant, was a member of an order of barristers at the English and Irish Bar. The position of Serjeant-at-Law (servientes ad legem), or Sergeant-Counter, was centuries old; there are writs dating to 1300 which identify them as descended from figures in France before the Norman Conquest, thus the Serjeants are said to be the oldest formally created order in England. The order rose during the 16th century as a small, elite group of lawyers who took much of the work in the central common law courts.

Lord Lindley, the last English Serjeant-at-Law

With the creation of Queen's Counsel (or "Queen's Counsel Extraordinary") during the reign of Elizabeth I, the order gradually began to decline, with each monarch opting to create more King's or Queen's Counsel. The Serjeants' exclusive jurisdictions were ended during the 19th century and, with the Judicature Act 1873 coming into force in 1875, it was felt that there was no need to have such figures, and no more were created. The last appointed was Nathaniel Lindley, later a Law Lord, who retired in 1905 and died in 1921. The number of Irish Serjeants-at-law was limited to three (originally one, later two). The last appointment was A. M. Sullivan in 1912; after his 1921 relocation to the English bar he remained "Serjeant Sullivan" as a courtesy title.

The Serjeants had for many centuries exclusive jurisdiction over the Court of Common Pleas, being the only lawyers allowed to argue a case there. At the same time they had rights of audience in the other central common law courts (the Court of King's Bench and Exchequer of Pleas) and precedence over all other lawyers. Only Serjeants-at-Law could become judges of these courts until the 19th century, and socially the Serjeants ranked above Knights Bachelor and Companions of the Bath. Within the Serjeants-at-Law were distinct orders: the King's Serjeants, particularly favoured Serjeants-at-Law, and within that the King's Premier Serjeant, the Monarch's most favoured Serjeant, and the King's Ancient Serjeant, the oldest. Serjeants (except King's Serjeants) were created by Writ of Summons under the Great Seal of the Realm and wore a distinctive dress, the chief feature of which was the coif, a white lawn or silk skullcap, afterwards represented by a round piece of white lace at the top of the wig.

Although the Serjeants are extinct as a class of advocates, the title The Serjeant-at-Law in the Common Hall is still given to the judge generally known as the Common Serjeant of London.

History

Early history

The history of Serjeants-at-Law goes back to within a century of the Norman Conquest; Alexander Pulling argues that Serjeants-at-Law existed "before any large portion of our law was formed", and Edward Warren agrees that they existed (in Normandy), supporting him with a Norman writ from approximately 1300 which identifies Serjeants-at-Law as directly descending from Norman conteurs; indeed, they were sometimes known as Serjeant-Conteurs.[1][2] The members of the Order initially used St Paul's Cathedral as their meeting place, standing near the "parvis" where they would give counsel to those who sought advice. Geoffrey Chaucer makes reference to the Serjeants in the Canterbury Tales, General Prologue, writing:

A serjeant of the law, ware and wise,

That often hadde ben at the parvis,
Ther was also, full rich of excellence.
Discreet he was and of great reverence,
He sened swiche; his wordes were so wise,
Justice he was ful often in assise,
By patent, and by pleine commissiun;
For his science, and for his high renoun,

Of fees and robes had he many on.[3]

Firm evidence for existence of legal serjeants in England dates from the reign of Henry III. As such it is the oldest royally created order; the next is the Order of the Garter, created in 1330.[4] Serjeants at Law existed in Ireland from at least 1302, and were appointed by letters patent.[5] Henry de Bracton claimed that, for the trial of Hubert de Burgh in 1239 the king was assisted by "all the serjeants of the bench", although it is not known who they were.[6] By the 1270s there were approximately 20 recorded Serjeants; by 1290, 36.[7] This period also saw the first regulation of Serjeants, with a statutory power from 1275 to suspend from practise any Serjeant who misbehaved (enacted as chapter 29 of the Statute of Westminster 1275).[8] The exclusive jurisdiction Serjeants-at-Law held over the Court of Common Pleas slowly came about during the 1320s, squeezing the size of the bar until only a consistent group reappeared. From this period, Serjeants also began to be called in regular groups, rather than individually on whatever date was felt appropriate.[9]

Rise

During the 16th century the Serjeants-at-Law were a small, though highly respected and powerful, elite. There were never more than ten alive, and on several occasions the number dwindled to one; William Blendlowes bragged that he had been "the only Serjeant-at-Law in England" in 1559.[10] Over these 100 years, only 89 Serjeants were created. At the time they were the only clearly distinguishable branch of the legal profession, and it is thought that their work may have actually created barristers as a separate group; although Serjeants were the only lawyers who normally argued in court, they occasionally allowed other lawyers to help them in special cases. These lawyers became known as outer or "utter" barristers (because they were confined to the outer bar of the court); if they were allowed to act they had "passed the bar" towards becoming a Serjeant-at-Law.[11]

Despite holding a monopoly on cases in the Court of Common Pleas, Serjeants also took most of the business in the Court of King's Bench. Although required to make the Common Pleas their principal place of work, there is evidence of Serjeants who did not; one, Robert Mennell, worked entirely in the North of England after his creation in 1547 and was not known in Westminster, where the Common Pleas was located.[12] This was also a time of great judicial success for the Serjeants; since only Serjeants could be appointed to the common law courts, many also sat in the Exchequer of Pleas, a court of equity.[13] This period was not a time of success for the profession overall, however, despite the brisk business being done. The rise of central courts other than the Common Pleas allowed other lawyers to gain advocacy experience and work, drawing it away from the Serjeants, and at the same time the few Serjeants could not handle all the business in the Common Pleas, allowing the rise of barristers as dedicated advocates.[14]

Decline and abolition

The decline of the Serjeants-at-Law started in 1596, when Francis Bacon persuaded Elizabeth I to appoint him "Queen's Counsel Extraordinary" (QC), a new creation which gave him precedence over the Serjeants. This was not a formal creation, in that he was not granted a patent of appointment, but in 1604 James I saw fit to finally award this. The creation of Queen's (or King's) Counsel was initially small; James I created at least one other, and Charles I four. Following the English Restoration this increased, with a few appointed each year. The largest change came about with William IV, who appointed an average of nine a year, and following him approximately 12 were created a year, with an average of 245 at any one time.[15]

Every new Queen's Counsel created reduced the Serjeants in importance, since even the most junior QC took precedence over the most senior Serjeant. Although appointments were still made to the Serjeants-at-Law, the King's Serjeant and the King's Ancient Serjeant, and several Serjeants were granted patents of precedence which gave them superiority over QCs, the Victorian era saw a decline in appointments. The rule that all common law judges must be Serjeants was circumvented: anyone chosen to be a judge would be appointed a Serjeant, and immediately thereafter a judge.[16] In 1834 Lord Brougham issued a mandate which opened up pleading in the Court of Common Pleas to every barrister, Serjeant or not, and this was followed for six years until the Serjeants successfully petitioned the Queen to overturn it as invalid.[17]

The Serjeants only enjoyed their returned status for another six years, however, before Parliament intervened. The Practitioners in Common Pleas Act 1846, from 18 August 1846, allowed all barristers to practise in the Court of Common Pleas.[18] The next and final blow was the Judicature Act 1873, which came into force on 1 November 1875. Section 8 provided that common law judges need no longer be appointed from the Serjeants-at-Law, removing the need to appoint judicial Serjeants. With this Act and the rise of the Queen's Counsel, there was no longer any need to appoint Serjeants, and the practice ended.[19]

The equivalent Irish rank of Serjeant-at-law survived until 1919. Alexander Sullivan, the last Irish serjeant, spent the second half of his career at the English Bar, and as a matter of courtesy was always addressed as Serjeant.

Organisation

Serjeant's Inn

 
A plaque marks the site of Old Serjeant's Inn in Chancery Lane.

Serjeant's Inn was a legal inn restricted to Serjeants-at-Law. It operated from three locations, one in Holborn, known as Scroope's Inn, which was abandoned by 1498 for the one in Fleet Street,[20] which was pulled down during the 18th century,[21] and one on Chancery Lane, pulled down in 1877.[22] The Inn was a voluntary association, and although most Serjeants joined upon being appointed they were not required to.[23] There were rarely more than 40 Serjeants, even including members of the judiciary, and the Inns were noticeably smaller than the Inns of Court.[24] Unlike the Inns of Court, Serjeant's Inn was a private establishment similar to a gentlemen's club.[25]

The Inn on Fleet Street existed from at least 1443, when it was rented from the Dean of York. By the 16th century it had become the main Inn, before being burnt down during the Great Fire of London.[26] It was rebuilt by 1670, but the end finally came in 1733. The Fleet Street Inn had fallen into a "ruinous state", and the Serjeants had been unable to obtain a renewal of their lease. They abandoned the property, and it returned to the Dean.[27]

The property on Chancery Lane consisted of a Hall, dining room, a library, kitchens and offices for the Serjeants-at-Law. This Inn was originally known as "Skarle's Inn" from about 1390, named after John Scarle, who became Master of the Rolls in 1394. By 1404 it was known as "Farringdon's Inn", but although the Serjeants were in full possession by 1416 it was not until 1484 that the property became known as Serjeant's Inn.[28] Newly promoted Serjeants had to pay £350 in the 19th century, while those promoted solely to take up judicial office had to pay £500.[29] The Hall was a large room hung with portraits of various famous judges and Serjeants-at-Law, with three windows on one side each containing the coat of arms of a distinguished judge. Around the room were the coats of arms of various Serjeants, which were given to their descendants when the Inn was finally sold.[30] When the Fleet Street Inn was abandoned, this location became the sole residence of the Serjeants.[31] With the demise of the order after the Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873, there was no way to support the Inn, and it was sold in 1877 for £57,100. The remaining Serjeants were accepted into their former Inns of Court, where judicial Serjeants were made Benchers and normal Serjeants barristers.[32]

Call to the Coif

The process of being called to the order of Serjeants-at-Law stayed fairly constant. The traditional method was that the Serjeants would discuss among themselves prospective candidates, and then make recommendations to the Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. He would pass these names on to the Lord Chancellor, who would appoint the new Serjeants. This was intended to provide a way to select possible judges in a period where political favouritism was rampant – since only Serjeants could become judges, making sure that Serjeants were not political appointees was seen to provide for a neutral judiciary.[33] Serjeants were traditionally appointed by a writ directly from the King. The writ was issued under the Great Seal of the Realm and required "the elected and qualified apprentices of the law to take the state and degree of a Serjeant-at-Law".[34] The newly created Serjeants would then assemble in one of the Inns of Court, where they would hear a speech from the Lord Chancellor or Lord Chief Justice and be given a purse of gold. The Coif was then placed on the Serjeant's head. The Serjeants were required to swear an oath, which was that they would:

serve the King's people as one of the Serjeants-at-law, and you shall truly counsel them that you be retained with after your cunning; and you shall not defer or delay their causes willingly, for covetness of money, or other thing that may turn you to profit; and you shall give due attendance accordingly. So help you God.[35]

The new Serjeants would give a feast to celebrate, and gave out rings to their close friends and family to mark the occasion. The King, the Lord Chancellor and other figures also received rings.[36] The major courts would be suspended for the day, and the other Serjeants, judges, leaders of the Inns of Court and occasionally the King would attend.[37] Serjeant's Inn and the Inns of Court were not big enough for such an occasion, and Ely Place or Lambeth Palace would instead be used.[38] The feasts gradually declined in importance, and by the 17th century they were small enough to be held in the Inns. The last recorded feast was in 1736 in Middle Temple, when fourteen new Serjeants were raised to the Coif.[39]

Robes

 
An example of a coif

The traditional clothing of a Serjeant-at-Law consisted of a coif, a robe and a furred cloak.[40] The robe and cloak were later adapted into the robe worn by judges.[41] The cut and colour of this robe varied – records from the King's Privy Wardrobe show judges being instructed to wear robes of scarlet, green, purple and miniver, and Serjeants being ordered to wear the same.[42] In 1555 new Serjeants were required to have robes of scarlet, brown, blue, mustard and murrey.[42] By the time the order came to an end the formal robes were red,[43] but Mr. Serjeant Robinson recalled that, towards the end days of the order, black silk gowns were the everyday court garb and the red gown was worn only on certain formal occasions.[44] The cape was originally a cloak worn separately from the robe, but gradually made its way into the uniform as a whole. John Fortescue described the cape as the "main ornament of the order",[45] distinguished only from the cape worn by judges because it was furred with lambskin rather than miniver.[45] The capes were not worn into court by the advocates, only by the serjeants.[46]

The coif was the main symbol of the Order of Serjeants-at-Law, and is where their most recognisable name (the Order of the Coif) comes from.[46] The coif was white and made of either silk or lawn. A Serjeant was never obliged to take off or cover his coif, not even in the presence of the King, except as a judge when passing a death sentence. In that situation he would wear a black cap intended to cover the Coif, although it is often confused with the coif itself.[46] When wigs were first introduced for barristers and judges it caused some difficulty for Serjeants, who were not allowed to cover the coif. Wigmakers got around this by adding a small white cloth to the top of the wig, representing the coif.[47]

King's or Queen's Serjeants

A King's or Queen's Serjeant was a Serjeant-at-Law appointed to serve the Crown as a legal adviser to the monarch and their government in the same way as the Attorney-General for England and Wales. The King's Serjeant (who had the postnominal KS, or QS during the reign of a female monarch) would represent the Crown in court, acting as prosecutor in criminal cases and representative in civil ones, and would have higher powers and ranking in the lower courts than the Attorney- or Solicitor General.[48] King's Serjeants also worked as legal advisers in the House of Lords, and were not allowed to act in cases against the Crown or do anything that would harm it; in 1540 Serjeant Browne was heavily punished for creating a tax avoidance scheme.[49] The King's Serjeants would wear a black Coif with a narrow strip of white, unlike the all-white Coif of a normal Serjeant.[50] The King's Serjeants were required to swear a second oath to serve "The King and his people", rather than "The King's people" as a Serjeant-at-Law would swear.[51] The King's favoured Serjeant would become the King's Premier Serjeant, while the oldest one was known as the King's Ancient Serjeant.[52]

Precedence, status and rights of audience

For almost all of their history, Serjeants at Law and King's Serjeants were the only advocates given rights of audience in the Court of Common Pleas.[53] Until the 17th century they were also first in the order of precedence in the Court of King's Bench and Court of Chancery,[54] which gave them priority in motions before the court. Serjeants also had the privilege of being immune from most normal forms of lawsuit – they could only be sued by a writ from the Court of Chancery.[55] It was held as an extension of this that servants of Serjeants could only be sued in the Common Pleas. As part of the Court of Common Pleas the Serjeants also performed some judicial duties, such as levying fines.[56] In exchange for these privileges, Serjeants were expected to fulfil certain duties; firstly, that they represent anybody who asked regardless of their ability to pay, and secondly that, due to the small number of judges, they serve as deputy judges to hear cases when there was no judge available.[57]

Only Serjeants-at-Law could become judges of the common law courts; this rule came into being in the 14th century for the Courts of Common Pleas and King's Bench, and was extended to the Exchequer of Pleas in the 16th century; it did not apply to the Court of Chancery, a court of equity, or the Ecclesiastical Courts.[58] The Serjeants-at-Law also had social privileges; they ranked above Knights Bachelor and Companions of the Bath, and their wives had the right to be addressed as "Lady —", in the same way as the wives of knights or baronets. A Serjeant made a King's Counsel or judge would still retain these social privileges.[59] As the cream of the legal profession, Serjeants earned higher fees than normal barristers.[60]

In the order of precedence King's Serjeants came before all other barristers, even the Attorney-General, until the introduction of King's Counsel.[61] This state of affairs came to an end as a result of two changes – firstly, during the reign of James I, when a royal patent gave the Attorney General precedence over all King's Serjeants "except the two ancientiest",[62] and secondly in 1814 when the Attorney General of the time was a barrister and the Solicitor General (politically junior to the Attorney General) a King's Serjeant. To reflect the political reality, the Attorney General was made superior to any King's Serjeant, and this remained until the order of Serjeants-at-Law finally died out.[62]

In literature

The main character in C. J. Sansom's Shardlake novels, hunchback lawyer Matthew Shardlake, is a Serjeant-at-Law during the reign of King Henry VIII of England.

References

  1. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 2
  2. ^ Warren (1945) p. 918
  3. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 3
  4. ^ Warren (1945) p. 919
  5. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 42
  6. ^ Kynell (2000) p. 93
  7. ^ Baker (1984) p. 10
  8. ^ Baker (1984) p. 11
  9. ^ Baker (1984) p. 12
  10. ^ Baker (2003) p. 421
  11. ^ Kynell (2000) p. 92
  12. ^ Baker (2003) p. 422
  13. ^ Baker (2003) p. 423
  14. ^ Baker (2003) p. 425
  15. ^ Megarry (1972) p. 19
  16. ^ Megarry (1972) p. 20
  17. ^ Megarry (1972) p. 21
  18. ^ Haydn (1851) p. 246
  19. ^ Megarry (1972) p. 22
  20. ^ Megarry (1972) p. 23
  21. ^ Bellot (1902) p. 168
  22. ^ Warren (1945) p. 934
  23. ^ Robinson (1894) p. 310
  24. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 123
  25. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 124
  26. ^ Megarry (1972) p. 24
  27. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 126
  28. ^ Megarry (1972) p. 25
  29. ^ Robinson (1894) p. 304
  30. ^ Robinson (1894) p. 308
  31. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 125
  32. ^ Megarry (1972) p. 26
  33. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 227
  34. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 228
  35. ^ Warren (1945) p. 925
  36. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 245
  37. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 235
  38. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 236
  39. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 240
  40. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 214
  41. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 215
  42. ^ a b Pulling (1884) p.218
  43. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 226
  44. ^ Robinson: "Bench and Bar" (1889, Hurst & Blacket, London) at p.295
  45. ^ a b Pulling (1884) p. 220
  46. ^ a b c Pulling (1884) p. 221
  47. ^ Megarry (1972) p. 18
  48. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 40
  49. ^ Baker (2003) p. 424
  50. ^ Warren (1945) p. 920
  51. ^ Warren (1945) p. 926
  52. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 41
  53. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 179
  54. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 180
  55. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 232
  56. ^ Warren (1945) p. 924
  57. ^ Warren (1945) p. 923
  58. ^ Megarry (1972) p. 16
  59. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 37
  60. ^ Kynell (2000) p. 91
  61. ^ Pulling (1884) p. 182
  62. ^ a b Pulling (1884) p. 183

Bibliography

  • Baker, John (2003). The Oxford history of the laws of England. Vol. 7. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-825817-8.
  • Baker, John (1984). 5th Selden Society Supplement. Selden Society.
  • Bellot, Hugh (1902). The Inner and Middle Temple, legal, literary, and historic associations. London: Methuen & Co. OCLC 585828.
  • Haydn, Joseph (1851). The book of dignities: containing rolls of the official personages of the British Empire from the earliest periods to the present time together with the sovereigns of Europe, from the foundation of their respective states; the peerage of England and Great Britain. Longmans. OCLC 5281608.
  • Megarry, Robert (1972). Inns Ancient and Modern. Selden Society. ISBN 0-85490-006-3.
  • Pollock, Jonathan Frederick (1829). Copy of the first report made to His Majesty by the commissioners appointed to inquire into the practice and proceedings of the superior courts of common law. House of Commons.
  • Pulling, Alexander (1884). The Order of the Coif. William Clows & Sons Ltd. OCLC 2049459.
  • Robinson, Benjamin Coulson (1894). Bench and Bar: Reminiscences of One of the Last of an Ancient Race. London: Hurst and Blackett. OCLC 60719596.
  • von Kynell, Kurt (2000). Saxon and medieval antecedents of the English common law. Edwin Mellen Press. ISBN 0-7734-7873-6.
  • Warren, Edward (1942). "Serjeants-at-Law; The Order of the Coif". Virginia Law Review. University of Virginia School of Law. 28 (7). doi:10.2307/1068630. ISSN 0042-6601. JSTOR 1068630.

External links

serjeant, this, article, about, english, legal, office, irish, legal, office, ireland, serjeant, commonly, known, simply, serjeant, member, order, barristers, english, irish, position, serjeant, servientes, legem, sergeant, counter, centuries, there, writs, da. This article is about the English legal office For the Irish legal office see Serjeant at law Ireland A Serjeant at Law SL commonly known simply as a Serjeant was a member of an order of barristers at the English and Irish Bar The position of Serjeant at Law servientes ad legem or Sergeant Counter was centuries old there are writs dating to 1300 which identify them as descended from figures in France before the Norman Conquest thus the Serjeants are said to be the oldest formally created order in England The order rose during the 16th century as a small elite group of lawyers who took much of the work in the central common law courts Lord Lindley the last English Serjeant at Law With the creation of Queen s Counsel or Queen s Counsel Extraordinary during the reign of Elizabeth I the order gradually began to decline with each monarch opting to create more King s or Queen s Counsel The Serjeants exclusive jurisdictions were ended during the 19th century and with the Judicature Act 1873 coming into force in 1875 it was felt that there was no need to have such figures and no more were created The last appointed was Nathaniel Lindley later a Law Lord who retired in 1905 and died in 1921 The number of Irish Serjeants at law was limited to three originally one later two The last appointment was A M Sullivan in 1912 after his 1921 relocation to the English bar he remained Serjeant Sullivan as a courtesy title The Serjeants had for many centuries exclusive jurisdiction over the Court of Common Pleas being the only lawyers allowed to argue a case there At the same time they had rights of audience in the other central common law courts the Court of King s Bench and Exchequer of Pleas and precedence over all other lawyers Only Serjeants at Law could become judges of these courts until the 19th century and socially the Serjeants ranked above Knights Bachelor and Companions of the Bath Within the Serjeants at Law were distinct orders the King s Serjeants particularly favoured Serjeants at Law and within that the King s Premier Serjeant the Monarch s most favoured Serjeant and the King s Ancient Serjeant the oldest Serjeants except King s Serjeants were created by Writ of Summons under the Great Seal of the Realm and wore a distinctive dress the chief feature of which was the coif a white lawn or silk skullcap afterwards represented by a round piece of white lace at the top of the wig Although the Serjeants are extinct as a class of advocates the title The Serjeant at Law in the Common Hall is still given to the judge generally known as the Common Serjeant of London Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Rise 1 3 Decline and abolition 2 Organisation 2 1 Serjeant s Inn 2 2 Call to the Coif 2 3 Robes 2 4 King s or Queen s Serjeants 2 5 Precedence status and rights of audience 3 In literature 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksHistory EditEarly history Edit The history of Serjeants at Law goes back to within a century of the Norman Conquest Alexander Pulling argues that Serjeants at Law existed before any large portion of our law was formed and Edward Warren agrees that they existed in Normandy supporting him with a Norman writ from approximately 1300 which identifies Serjeants at Law as directly descending from Norman conteurs indeed they were sometimes known as Serjeant Conteurs 1 2 The members of the Order initially used St Paul s Cathedral as their meeting place standing near the parvis where they would give counsel to those who sought advice Geoffrey Chaucer makes reference to the Serjeants in the Canterbury Tales General Prologue writing A serjeant of the law ware and wise That often hadde ben at the parvis Ther was also full rich of excellence Discreet he was and of great reverence He sened swiche his wordes were so wise Justice he was ful often in assise By patent and by pleine commissiun For his science and for his high renoun Of fees and robes had he many on 3 Firm evidence for existence of legal serjeants in England dates from the reign of Henry III As such it is the oldest royally created order the next is the Order of the Garter created in 1330 4 Serjeants at Law existed in Ireland from at least 1302 and were appointed by letters patent 5 Henry de Bracton claimed that for the trial of Hubert de Burgh in 1239 the king was assisted by all the serjeants of the bench although it is not known who they were 6 By the 1270s there were approximately 20 recorded Serjeants by 1290 36 7 This period also saw the first regulation of Serjeants with a statutory power from 1275 to suspend from practise any Serjeant who misbehaved enacted as chapter 29 of the Statute of Westminster 1275 8 The exclusive jurisdiction Serjeants at Law held over the Court of Common Pleas slowly came about during the 1320s squeezing the size of the bar until only a consistent group reappeared From this period Serjeants also began to be called in regular groups rather than individually on whatever date was felt appropriate 9 Rise Edit During the 16th century the Serjeants at Law were a small though highly respected and powerful elite There were never more than ten alive and on several occasions the number dwindled to one William Blendlowes bragged that he had been the only Serjeant at Law in England in 1559 10 Over these 100 years only 89 Serjeants were created At the time they were the only clearly distinguishable branch of the legal profession and it is thought that their work may have actually created barristers as a separate group although Serjeants were the only lawyers who normally argued in court they occasionally allowed other lawyers to help them in special cases These lawyers became known as outer or utter barristers because they were confined to the outer bar of the court if they were allowed to act they had passed the bar towards becoming a Serjeant at Law 11 Despite holding a monopoly on cases in the Court of Common Pleas Serjeants also took most of the business in the Court of King s Bench Although required to make the Common Pleas their principal place of work there is evidence of Serjeants who did not one Robert Mennell worked entirely in the North of England after his creation in 1547 and was not known in Westminster where the Common Pleas was located 12 This was also a time of great judicial success for the Serjeants since only Serjeants could be appointed to the common law courts many also sat in the Exchequer of Pleas a court of equity 13 This period was not a time of success for the profession overall however despite the brisk business being done The rise of central courts other than the Common Pleas allowed other lawyers to gain advocacy experience and work drawing it away from the Serjeants and at the same time the few Serjeants could not handle all the business in the Common Pleas allowing the rise of barristers as dedicated advocates 14 Decline and abolition Edit The decline of the Serjeants at Law started in 1596 when Francis Bacon persuaded Elizabeth I to appoint him Queen s Counsel Extraordinary QC a new creation which gave him precedence over the Serjeants This was not a formal creation in that he was not granted a patent of appointment but in 1604 James I saw fit to finally award this The creation of Queen s or King s Counsel was initially small James I created at least one other and Charles I four Following the English Restoration this increased with a few appointed each year The largest change came about with William IV who appointed an average of nine a year and following him approximately 12 were created a year with an average of 245 at any one time 15 Every new Queen s Counsel created reduced the Serjeants in importance since even the most junior QC took precedence over the most senior Serjeant Although appointments were still made to the Serjeants at Law the King s Serjeant and the King s Ancient Serjeant and several Serjeants were granted patents of precedence which gave them superiority over QCs the Victorian era saw a decline in appointments The rule that all common law judges must be Serjeants was circumvented anyone chosen to be a judge would be appointed a Serjeant and immediately thereafter a judge 16 In 1834 Lord Brougham issued a mandate which opened up pleading in the Court of Common Pleas to every barrister Serjeant or not and this was followed for six years until the Serjeants successfully petitioned the Queen to overturn it as invalid 17 The Serjeants only enjoyed their returned status for another six years however before Parliament intervened The Practitioners in Common Pleas Act 1846 from 18 August 1846 allowed all barristers to practise in the Court of Common Pleas 18 The next and final blow was the Judicature Act 1873 which came into force on 1 November 1875 Section 8 provided that common law judges need no longer be appointed from the Serjeants at Law removing the need to appoint judicial Serjeants With this Act and the rise of the Queen s Counsel there was no longer any need to appoint Serjeants and the practice ended 19 The equivalent Irish rank of Serjeant at law survived until 1919 Alexander Sullivan the last Irish serjeant spent the second half of his career at the English Bar and as a matter of courtesy was always addressed as Serjeant Organisation EditSerjeant s Inn Edit Main article Serjeant s Inn A plaque marks the site of Old Serjeant s Inn in Chancery Lane Serjeant s Inn was a legal inn restricted to Serjeants at Law It operated from three locations one in Holborn known as Scroope s Inn which was abandoned by 1498 for the one in Fleet Street 20 which was pulled down during the 18th century 21 and one on Chancery Lane pulled down in 1877 22 The Inn was a voluntary association and although most Serjeants joined upon being appointed they were not required to 23 There were rarely more than 40 Serjeants even including members of the judiciary and the Inns were noticeably smaller than the Inns of Court 24 Unlike the Inns of Court Serjeant s Inn was a private establishment similar to a gentlemen s club 25 The Inn on Fleet Street existed from at least 1443 when it was rented from the Dean of York By the 16th century it had become the main Inn before being burnt down during the Great Fire of London 26 It was rebuilt by 1670 but the end finally came in 1733 The Fleet Street Inn had fallen into a ruinous state and the Serjeants had been unable to obtain a renewal of their lease They abandoned the property and it returned to the Dean 27 The property on Chancery Lane consisted of a Hall dining room a library kitchens and offices for the Serjeants at Law This Inn was originally known as Skarle s Inn from about 1390 named after John Scarle who became Master of the Rolls in 1394 By 1404 it was known as Farringdon s Inn but although the Serjeants were in full possession by 1416 it was not until 1484 that the property became known as Serjeant s Inn 28 Newly promoted Serjeants had to pay 350 in the 19th century while those promoted solely to take up judicial office had to pay 500 29 The Hall was a large room hung with portraits of various famous judges and Serjeants at Law with three windows on one side each containing the coat of arms of a distinguished judge Around the room were the coats of arms of various Serjeants which were given to their descendants when the Inn was finally sold 30 When the Fleet Street Inn was abandoned this location became the sole residence of the Serjeants 31 With the demise of the order after the Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873 there was no way to support the Inn and it was sold in 1877 for 57 100 The remaining Serjeants were accepted into their former Inns of Court where judicial Serjeants were made Benchers and normal Serjeants barristers 32 Call to the Coif Edit The process of being called to the order of Serjeants at Law stayed fairly constant The traditional method was that the Serjeants would discuss among themselves prospective candidates and then make recommendations to the Chief Justice of the Common Pleas He would pass these names on to the Lord Chancellor who would appoint the new Serjeants This was intended to provide a way to select possible judges in a period where political favouritism was rampant since only Serjeants could become judges making sure that Serjeants were not political appointees was seen to provide for a neutral judiciary 33 Serjeants were traditionally appointed by a writ directly from the King The writ was issued under the Great Seal of the Realm and required the elected and qualified apprentices of the law to take the state and degree of a Serjeant at Law 34 The newly created Serjeants would then assemble in one of the Inns of Court where they would hear a speech from the Lord Chancellor or Lord Chief Justice and be given a purse of gold The Coif was then placed on the Serjeant s head The Serjeants were required to swear an oath which was that they would serve the King s people as one of the Serjeants at law and you shall truly counsel them that you be retained with after your cunning and you shall not defer or delay their causes willingly for covetness of money or other thing that may turn you to profit and you shall give due attendance accordingly So help you God 35 The new Serjeants would give a feast to celebrate and gave out rings to their close friends and family to mark the occasion The King the Lord Chancellor and other figures also received rings 36 The major courts would be suspended for the day and the other Serjeants judges leaders of the Inns of Court and occasionally the King would attend 37 Serjeant s Inn and the Inns of Court were not big enough for such an occasion and Ely Place or Lambeth Palace would instead be used 38 The feasts gradually declined in importance and by the 17th century they were small enough to be held in the Inns The last recorded feast was in 1736 in Middle Temple when fourteen new Serjeants were raised to the Coif 39 Robes Edit An example of a coif The traditional clothing of a Serjeant at Law consisted of a coif a robe and a furred cloak 40 The robe and cloak were later adapted into the robe worn by judges 41 The cut and colour of this robe varied records from the King s Privy Wardrobe show judges being instructed to wear robes of scarlet green purple and miniver and Serjeants being ordered to wear the same 42 In 1555 new Serjeants were required to have robes of scarlet brown blue mustard and murrey 42 By the time the order came to an end the formal robes were red 43 but Mr Serjeant Robinson recalled that towards the end days of the order black silk gowns were the everyday court garb and the red gown was worn only on certain formal occasions 44 The cape was originally a cloak worn separately from the robe but gradually made its way into the uniform as a whole John Fortescue described the cape as the main ornament of the order 45 distinguished only from the cape worn by judges because it was furred with lambskin rather than miniver 45 The capes were not worn into court by the advocates only by the serjeants 46 The coif was the main symbol of the Order of Serjeants at Law and is where their most recognisable name the Order of the Coif comes from 46 The coif was white and made of either silk or lawn A Serjeant was never obliged to take off or cover his coif not even in the presence of the King except as a judge when passing a death sentence In that situation he would wear a black cap intended to cover the Coif although it is often confused with the coif itself 46 When wigs were first introduced for barristers and judges it caused some difficulty for Serjeants who were not allowed to cover the coif Wigmakers got around this by adding a small white cloth to the top of the wig representing the coif 47 King s or Queen s Serjeants Edit A King s or Queen s Serjeant was a Serjeant at Law appointed to serve the Crown as a legal adviser to the monarch and their government in the same way as the Attorney General for England and Wales The King s Serjeant who had the postnominal KS or QS during the reign of a female monarch would represent the Crown in court acting as prosecutor in criminal cases and representative in civil ones and would have higher powers and ranking in the lower courts than the Attorney or Solicitor General 48 King s Serjeants also worked as legal advisers in the House of Lords and were not allowed to act in cases against the Crown or do anything that would harm it in 1540 Serjeant Browne was heavily punished for creating a tax avoidance scheme 49 The King s Serjeants would wear a black Coif with a narrow strip of white unlike the all white Coif of a normal Serjeant 50 The King s Serjeants were required to swear a second oath to serve The King and his people rather than The King s people as a Serjeant at Law would swear 51 The King s favoured Serjeant would become the King s Premier Serjeant while the oldest one was known as the King s Ancient Serjeant 52 Precedence status and rights of audience Edit For almost all of their history Serjeants at Law and King s Serjeants were the only advocates given rights of audience in the Court of Common Pleas 53 Until the 17th century they were also first in the order of precedence in the Court of King s Bench and Court of Chancery 54 which gave them priority in motions before the court Serjeants also had the privilege of being immune from most normal forms of lawsuit they could only be sued by a writ from the Court of Chancery 55 It was held as an extension of this that servants of Serjeants could only be sued in the Common Pleas As part of the Court of Common Pleas the Serjeants also performed some judicial duties such as levying fines 56 In exchange for these privileges Serjeants were expected to fulfil certain duties firstly that they represent anybody who asked regardless of their ability to pay and secondly that due to the small number of judges they serve as deputy judges to hear cases when there was no judge available 57 Only Serjeants at Law could become judges of the common law courts this rule came into being in the 14th century for the Courts of Common Pleas and King s Bench and was extended to the Exchequer of Pleas in the 16th century it did not apply to the Court of Chancery a court of equity or the Ecclesiastical Courts 58 The Serjeants at Law also had social privileges they ranked above Knights Bachelor and Companions of the Bath and their wives had the right to be addressed as Lady in the same way as the wives of knights or baronets A Serjeant made a King s Counsel or judge would still retain these social privileges 59 As the cream of the legal profession Serjeants earned higher fees than normal barristers 60 In the order of precedence King s Serjeants came before all other barristers even the Attorney General until the introduction of King s Counsel 61 This state of affairs came to an end as a result of two changes firstly during the reign of James I when a royal patent gave the Attorney General precedence over all King s Serjeants except the two ancientiest 62 and secondly in 1814 when the Attorney General of the time was a barrister and the Solicitor General politically junior to the Attorney General a King s Serjeant To reflect the political reality the Attorney General was made superior to any King s Serjeant and this remained until the order of Serjeants at Law finally died out 62 In literature EditThe main character in C J Sansom s Shardlake novels hunchback lawyer Matthew Shardlake is a Serjeant at Law during the reign of King Henry VIII of England References Edit Pulling 1884 p 2 Warren 1945 p 918 Pulling 1884 p 3 Warren 1945 p 919 Pulling 1884 p 42 Kynell 2000 p 93 Baker 1984 p 10 Baker 1984 p 11 Baker 1984 p 12 Baker 2003 p 421 Kynell 2000 p 92 Baker 2003 p 422 Baker 2003 p 423 Baker 2003 p 425 Megarry 1972 p 19 Megarry 1972 p 20 Megarry 1972 p 21 Haydn 1851 p 246 Megarry 1972 p 22 Megarry 1972 p 23 Bellot 1902 p 168 Warren 1945 p 934 Robinson 1894 p 310 Pulling 1884 p 123 Pulling 1884 p 124 Megarry 1972 p 24 Pulling 1884 p 126 Megarry 1972 p 25 Robinson 1894 p 304 Robinson 1894 p 308 Pulling 1884 p 125 Megarry 1972 p 26 Pulling 1884 p 227 Pulling 1884 p 228 Warren 1945 p 925 Pulling 1884 p 245 Pulling 1884 p 235 Pulling 1884 p 236 Pulling 1884 p 240 Pulling 1884 p 214 Pulling 1884 p 215 a b Pulling 1884 p 218 Pulling 1884 p 226 Robinson Bench and Bar 1889 Hurst amp Blacket London at p 295 a b Pulling 1884 p 220 a b c Pulling 1884 p 221 Megarry 1972 p 18 Pulling 1884 p 40 Baker 2003 p 424 Warren 1945 p 920 Warren 1945 p 926 Pulling 1884 p 41 Pulling 1884 p 179 Pulling 1884 p 180 Pulling 1884 p 232 Warren 1945 p 924 Warren 1945 p 923 Megarry 1972 p 16 Pulling 1884 p 37 Kynell 2000 p 91 Pulling 1884 p 182 a b Pulling 1884 p 183Bibliography EditBaker John 2003 The Oxford history of the laws of England Vol 7 Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 825817 8 Baker John 1984 5th Selden Society Supplement Selden Society Bellot Hugh 1902 The Inner and Middle Temple legal literary and historic associations London Methuen amp Co OCLC 585828 Haydn Joseph 1851 The book of dignities containing rolls of the official personages of the British Empire from the earliest periods to the present time together with the sovereigns of Europe from the foundation of their respective states the peerage of England and Great Britain Longmans OCLC 5281608 Megarry Robert 1972 Inns Ancient and Modern Selden Society ISBN 0 85490 006 3 Pollock Jonathan Frederick 1829 Copy of the first report made to His Majesty by the commissioners appointed to inquire into the practice and proceedings of the superior courts of common law House of Commons Pulling Alexander 1884 The Order of the Coif William Clows amp Sons Ltd OCLC 2049459 Robinson Benjamin Coulson 1894 Bench and Bar Reminiscences of One of the Last of an Ancient Race London Hurst and Blackett OCLC 60719596 von Kynell Kurt 2000 Saxon and medieval antecedents of the English common law Edwin Mellen Press ISBN 0 7734 7873 6 Warren Edward 1942 Serjeants at Law The Order of the Coif Virginia Law Review University of Virginia School of Law 28 7 doi 10 2307 1068630 ISSN 0042 6601 JSTOR 1068630 External links Edit Serjeant at Law Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Serjeant at law amp oldid 1117037026, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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