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[lower-alpha 1] 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

Notes

  1. A peculiar parish is a parish outside the jurisdiction of the diocese in which it is located, see royal peculiar.[1]

References

  1. 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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