The Court of Peculiars is one of the ecclesiastical courts of the Church of England. The court sits with a Dean, who is also the Dean of the Arches. The Registrars are the Joint Provincial Registrars. The Court of Peculiars deals with all legal matters from peculiar parishes in the province. Until 1545, ecclesiastical judges were required to have a degree in canon law; thereafter, they only needed a doctorate in civil law. Binding precedent was only introduced into the ecclesiastical courts in the nineteenth century.
List of deans of the court
- Sir Philip Wilbraham-Baker, c. 1938–1955
- Sir Henry Willink, 1955–1970
- Walter Wigglesworth, 1971–1972
- Sir Harold Kent, 1972–1976
- Kenneth Elphinstone, 1977–1980
- Sir John Owen, 1980–2000
- Sheila Cameron, 2000–2009
- Charles George, 2009–
Notes
- A peculiar parish is a parish outside the jurisdiction of the diocese in which it is located, see royal peculiar.
References
- Barber, Paul (Winter 1995). "What Is a Peculiar?". Ecclesiastical Law Journal. 3 (16): 299–312. doi:10.1017/S0956618X00002210. ISSN 1751-8539.
- Cox, Noel (2001). "Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in the Church of the Province of Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia". Deakin Law Review. 6 (2): 266–284.
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