Royal Commission on the Inns of Court

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Royal Commission on the Inns of Court carried out an investigation into the Inns of Court and associated Inns of Chancery between 1854 and 1855.[1] The inns were medieval guild-like institutions that provided accommodation for lawyers and had developed gradually into centres for legal education. All barristers in the country had to be a member of one of the inns. It included many of the leading lawyers and jurists of the time. The commission found many of the inns, particularly the Inns of Chancery, were ineffective at educating students and recommended the creation of a single university of law. Steps were taken to accomplish this and a parliamentary bill was prepared but it was never achieved. The commission did, however, have an influence on legal education for decades and was a factor in the establishment of modern law schools at the universities of Cambridge, Oxford and London.

The Inns of Court were medieval institutions, similar to guilds, which served originally as accommodation and training to apprentices in law.[2][3] They remain the only institutions able to call barristers to the bar (allow them to practice law in the courts).[4] The system became more flexible in the 17th century with a relaxation of the residence requirements – students were only required to attend the inns for a certain number of dinners a year. Law began to be taught in the universities in the 18th-century but the inns retained a key role in assessing candidates for admission to the bar. There were (and remain) four Inns of Court.[2] At the time of the royal commission none of the inns were corporate bodies but were regarded as voluntary societies, funded by the subscriptions of their members. A House of Commons committee had looked into the inns during an 1846 report on the state of legal education.[4]

The Inns of Chancery were related institutions that were also established in the medieval era. They may have originally served as accommodation for the clerks of chancery who were responsible for writing legal writs but developed into preparatory inns for students who would go on to study law in the main four Inns of Court – each Inn of Chancery had an association with an Inn of Court.[5] The Inns of Chancery flourished in the 15th century with the ten inns having a minimum of a hundred students each.[6] In the 17th century the Inns of Chancery changed role and became associated largely with the training of solicitors as the legal profession began to separate into two distinct branches.[5] The Inns of Chancery had effectively ceased to be places of education by the 18th century.[6] The inns declined in the early 19th century as the result of the founding of alternative organisations for solicitors such as the Society of Gentleman Practisers in the Courts of Law and Equity and the Law Society of England and Wales. By the time of the royal commission there were just seven surviving Inns of Chancery.[5] They have been described as survivals of the past by means of inertia and tradition.[3]

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