clear space clear space clear space white space
A
 r c h i v e s   o f   M a r y l a n d   O n l i n e

PLEASE NOTE: The searchable text below was computer generated and may contain typographical errors. Numerical typos are particularly troubling. Click “View pdf” to see the original document.

  Maryland State Archives | Index | Help | Search
search for:
clear space
white space
Proceedings of the Provincial Court, 1663-1666
Volume 49, Preface 6   View pdf image (33K)
 Jump to  
  << PREVIOUS  NEXT >>
clear space clear space clear space white space
             x		 Letter of Transmittal.

             Court” and the “County Court,” and this in a way to indicate that both terms
             were then in general use (Arch. Md. I, 147).
               The inclusion in the old Liber B B, from which this volume of the Archives
             is in large part taken, of a number of recorded papers for the years 1663-1666,
             relating principally to a land dispute in St. Mary's County (pages 571-91),
             brings up the debated questions as to just when a separate county court for
             St. Mary's first came into existence, and after its establishment, as to what
             were the respective jurisdictions in local affairs of it and of the Provincial
             Court. It is broadly stated by writers on the early judicial system of Maryland,
             that for the first decade or more following the settlement there was no purely
             local court in St. Mary's, other than the manorial courts with limited and
             local jurisdictions and powers, the Provincial Court having general jurisdiction
             there, and that even after the St. Mary's County Court was established, the Prov
             incial Court had full concurrent jurisdiction with it in minor matters, and
             exclusive jurisdiction in cases of greater moment. Whether a county court
             existed before 1644 may be problematical, but it is certain that one was in
             existence in that year, for on August 20, we find the Governor commissioning
             William Braithwaite as Commander of St. Mary's, to sit with Thomas Green
             and Cuthbert Fenwick as a court to try minor civil cases and criminal cases
             not involving loss of life or member (Arch. Md. III, 150-1). It is obvious from
             this that the Provincial Court had original jurisdiction in more important civil
             and criminal cases, but there is nothing to indicate whether or not the Provincial
             Court had concurrent jurisdiction with the county court in minor cases, or
             whether in these cases there was the right of appeal from the county court to
             the higher court. That there was an especially close connection between these
             two courts in St. Mary's down through the forties and into the fifties is certain,
             but owing to the loss of all the seventeenth century St. Mary's County Court
             records it is impossible to determine just how much independence the local court
             really had, as the only record of its acts are the entries to be found in the
             Provincial Court records of cases heard on appeal to it from the county court.
             That it was less independent of the Provincial Court than the other county
             courts of the period may have been in part due to the fact that it was more
             directly under the eye of the Governor and Council than were the other more
             distant county courts.
               As further evidence of a close connection between the two courts at this
             early period we find the same men from time to time on both courts, but owing
             to the lack of anything like a complete record of the membership of the county
             court, it cannot be determined whether any sat on both courts at the same time,
             or how much overlapping occurred. Significant of their association is the
             announcement made at an adjournment of the Provincial Court in 1649, “The
             Court rising the Governor appointed the next Court for the County of St.
             Maries to be held at St. Maries the seventh day of January," suggesting that
             some of the same justices were then sitting on both courts (Arch. Md. IV, 533).
             It may well be that this subservience of the local county court to the higher
             court existed only during the height of the struggle in Maryland between
             Proprietary and Parliamentary parties, and that the Commonwealth Commis
             


 
clear space
clear space
white space

Please view image to verify text. To report an error, please contact us.
Proceedings of the Provincial Court, 1663-1666
Volume 49, Preface 6   View pdf image (33K)
 Jump to  
  << PREVIOUS  NEXT >>


This web site is presented for reference purposes under the doctrine of fair use. When this material is used, in whole or in part, proper citation and credit must be attributed to the Maryland State Archives. PLEASE NOTE: The site may contain material from other sources which may be under copyright. Rights assessment, and full originating source citation, is the responsibility of the user.


Tell Us What You Think About the Maryland State Archives Website!



An Archives of Maryland electronic publication.
For information contact mdlegal@mdarchives.state.md.us.

©Copyright  October 06, 2023
Maryland State Archives