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JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - LONG TITLE An Act to amend and consolidate the Laws relating to Juries in Ireland.{1} [14th August 1871] Preamble rep. by SLR 1893 (No.2) Short title. JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 1 1. This Act may be cited for all purposes as "The Juries Act (Ireland), 1871." JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 2 Extent. 2. This Act shall extend to Ireland only. JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 3 Interpretation. 3. In the construction and for the purposes of this Act (if not inconsistent with the context or subject matter), the following words shall have the respective meanings herein-after assigned to them; (that is to say,) "County" shall include ["county borough"] and "the city and county of Londonderry": Definitions rep. by 1978 c.23 s.122(2) sch.7 Pt.I "Sheriff" shall include under sheriff: Definition rep. by 1919 c.71 s.4(2) sch. "Barony" shall include half barony or other division of a barony, and in counties of cities or counties of towns shall mean wards. JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 4 Repeal. 4. ... every ... Act or Acts and such parts of every ... Act or Acts as shall be inconsistent with this Act, shall be and they are hereby repealed, .... Ss.516 rep. by 1876 c.78 s.20; SLR 1893 (No.2); 1951 c.24 (NI) s.2 sch. Pt.I; 1953 c.19 (NI) s.11 sch.2; SLR (NI) 1954; 1967 c.18 (NI) s.15(2) sch.2 Pt.II; 1974 NI 6 art.9(2) sch.5 JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 17 Returning officers to have access to ""the Jurors List'' and all names to be returned from such books. 17. Where any precept for the return of jurors shall be issued to any coroner, elisor, or other officer, he shall have free access to "the [Jurors List]" ... for the current year, or for the preceding year, as he may require; and no sheriff or other officer shall in answer to any precept ... return the name of any person not contained in "the [Jurors List]" ... for the year current on the day named in such precept for such return: Provided always, that if there shall be no ["Jurors List"] ... in existence for such current year, it shall be lawful to return jurors from "the [Jurors List]" ... for the next preceding year, and if any person or persons whose names shall not be contained in such ["Jurors List"] ... shall be returned and sworn as a juror or jurors upon any trial without objection, such trial shall not be interrupted or deemed a mistrial, nor shall the verdict thereon be impeached or questioned on account of the return of such juror or jurors. JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 18 Sheriff shall apply for precepts. 18. It shall be the duty of every sheriff within whose bailiwick any court shall be appointed to be held before which the attendance of juries may be required, to apply for and procure to be issued in sufficient time before the time appointed for holding such court all such precepts as shall be necessary for commanding the return of jurors before such court, and immediately after the issue of any such precept the sheriff or other officer to whom the same shall be issued shall, according to the exigency of such precept, select a sufficient number of names from the ["Jurors List"] ... and prepare a panel thereof, and in all cases at the time of making such selection the said sheriff or other officer making the same shall inscribe the date thereof and the court for which such names are selected to be returned as jurors opposite each of the names so selected in the proper column of "the [Jurors List]", ... and shall initial in such ["Jurors List"] ... the names selected by him, and the jurors so selected shall be summoned as herein-after provided; and a written or printed panel containing the Christian names and surnames, arranged in the order in which they are ... selected from the ["Jurors List"], and the places of abode, and additions of the persons summoned, shall, seven days before the day named in such precept for the return of such panel, be made by such sheriff or other officer, and such panel shall contain a column in which, if any of the persons named in such panel has been previously summoned and returned as a ... juror, ..., ... during the same or the two preceding years, there shall be entered on the panel opposite such person's name the date when and the court before which such person shall have been so summoned and returned as a ... juror, ... and such panel shall be kept in the sheriff's office of the county, ..., for inspection, and a printed copy of such panel shall be delivered by the sheriff or his returning officer to any party requiring the same on payment of [such fee as may be prescribed by rules of court made under section 55 of the Judicature (Northern Ireland) Act 1978]. S.19 rep. by 1926 c.15 (NI) s.18(6) sch.6; 1953 c.19 (NI) s.11 sch.2; 1974 NI 6 art.9(2) sch.5 JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 20 Sheriff within one week after return of jurors to send certified copy of panel to chief clerk. 20. The sheriff or other officer to whom any precept shall have been issued for the return of jurors before any court shall, within one week after he has summoned or made his return of jurors in obedience to such precept, send and deliver to the [chief clerk] a true and complete copy, certified under the hand of such sheriff or officer, of the panel of jurors summoned or returned in obedience to such precept in every case in which the sheriff does not return the original panel to the [chief clerk], and the said [chief clerk] shall place and preserve the said copy panel along with any original panel among the records in his office. S.21 (summoning of jurors) rep. by 1876 c.78 s.6 JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 22 Jurors in the county of the city of Belfast may be summoned by post. 22. Provided, that in the county of the city of [Belfast] jurors may be summoned as aforesaid, or in the manner following; that is to say, the sheriff or other proper officer may make out a summons as herein-before prescribed, and such summons, having the words "jury summons" legibly written or printed on the same side as the address, may be sent open by the post, prepaid and directed to the person so required to serve as a juror, at his place of abode, as described in the "general jurors book," which said summons together with a duplicate indorsed with the name and address of the juror to whom the original summons is directed, shall be taken to the postmaster of any post office where money orders are received or paid within such hours as shall have been previously agreed upon at such post office, and [the postmaster, upon receipt of the fee (if any) exigible for so doing, shall] compare the address of the said summons with that of the duplicate, and, on being satisfied that they are alike, shall forward the summons to its address by the post, and shall return the duplicate to the party bringing the same, duly stamped with the stamp of the post office, and the production by the party who posted such summons of such stamped duplicate shall be evidence of the summons having been delivered at the dwelling-house of the person whose name and address are therein indorsed at the place mentioned in such indorsement on the day on which such summons would, in the ordinary course of post, have been delivered, provided it shall appear that the same was not returned by the post office as undelivered, and any summons sent by the post office as before mentioned, and not so returned as undelivered, shall be considered in all respects as duly served, and in the event of any person to whom any summons shall be addressed being ascertained to be dead or to have permanently left the place to which such summons is addressed, the postmaster or letter carrier of the place in which the summons shall then be shall indorse thereon the reason for the non-delivery thereof, and forward the same in the usual course of post to the returned letter office ..., in order that it may be returned to the sender: Provided always, that when any summons shall be served by post two additional days shall be allowed for the transmission of such summons by post over and above the number of days required by law for the service of a summons before the day on which the juror is required to attend, and any ... fees and postage paid by the said sheriff or other officer for the summoning of jurors by post, under the provisions of this Act, shall be defrayed in the same way as the expenses incurred ... in the execution of this Act. JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 23 If name shall be on Jurors List no challenge for want of qualification or want of a knight or jury duly summoned. 23. If any person shall be returned as a juror in any court whose name shall be on the ["Jurors List"], want of qualification shall not be a cause of challenge, nor shall any challenge be taken to any panel of jurors for want of a knight being returned on such panel, or on the ground that the jurors, or any of them, were not duly summoned, and the fact that the name of any person returned as a ... juror is not on the ["Jurors List"] ..., or that such person was returned to serve as a juror contrary to the provision for the returning of jurors [in Article 5 of the Juries (Northern Ireland) Order 1974], shall be a good cause of challenge to any person so returned before any court, and any such person shall be discharged upon such challenge if the court shall be satisfied of the fact upon the production of the ["Jurors List"] ... or by such other evidence as the said court shall deem sufficient, but it shall lie on the person challenging to prove the fact, and the production of the ["Jurors List"] ... shall be conclusive evidence as against all parties to any issue or issues, whether civil or criminal, triable in any of the Queen's courts, and to be tried by any jurors whose names shall have been returned out of any such ["Jurors List"] ... that [the Jurors List has] been duly prepared and made out ..., and except as aforesaid, nothing in this Act contained shall alter or affect any existing right of challenge belonging to the Crown or to the subject, in any cause, whether civil or criminal, and whether conferred by statute or otherwise. Ss.2428 rep. by 1872 c.25 s.1; 1876 c.78 s.16; SLR 1893 (No.2); 1953 c.19 (NI) s.11 sch.2; 1959 c.25 (NI) s.154(3) sch.5; 1974 NI 6 art.9(2) sch.5 S.29 rep. by 1974 NI 6 art.9(2) sch.5 JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 30 General precept for the return of jurors. 30. No jury process shall henceforth be necessary in any case whatsoever, but it shall be lawful and sufficient for the judge, or any one of the judges of Her Majesty's courts, before which the attendance of jurors shall be required, fifteen days at the least before the first day upon which such attendance shall be required, to issue a precept for the return of jurors under the hand of such judge to the sheriff or other officer to whom the return of jurors shall belong, and from whose bailiwick or jurisdiction the attendance of jurors shall be required; and such precept shall command the sheriff or other officer to whom the same shall be issued to summon and return, on a day to be named therein for the trial of all issues, whether civil or criminal, which may come on for trial before the said court, a sufficient number of good and lawful men ..., qualified according to law, and shall not require the same to be returned from any particular venue ... and every such sheriff or other officer shall, pursuant to such precept, and without any other authority, summon and return all such men as he shall be so required to summon, in manner herein-before provided; and the jurors whose names are contained on any such panel as aforesaid shall, subject to all just challenges and objections, be the jurors to try the causes for which they shall be summoned respectively, and all such proceedings may be heard and taken before such juries in like manner and with the like consequences in all respects as before the passing of this Act; .... S.32 rep. by 1974 NI 6 art.9(2) sch.5; 1978 c.23 s.122(2) sch.7 Pt.I. Ss.3337 rep. by 1953 c.19 (NI) s.11 sch.2 JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 38 View jury to be by rule. 38. A writ or clause of view shall not be necessary or used, but ... it shall be sufficient to obtain a rule of the court or a judge's order directing a view to be had, and directing the sheriff to have six or more of the jurors named in the panel chosen by consent, or, if the parties cannot agree, nominated by the proper officer of the court at the place in question some convenient time before the trial; and the viewers shall have the place shown to them by two persons to be named in the order, and to be appointed by the court or a judge; and the sheriff, upon request, shall deliver to either party the names of the viewers, and shall also return their names to the registrar, for the purpose of their being called as jurymen upon the trial. S.39 rep. by 1953 c.19 (NI) s.11 sch.2 JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 40 Penalty on defaulting jurors. 40. If any man having been duly summoned to attend on a jury shall not attend in pursuance of such summons ..., or if any such man, or any talesman, after having been called, shall be present but not appear, or after his appearance shall wilfully withdraw himself from the presence of the court, the court shall set such fine as the court shall think meet upon every such man or talesman making default, unless some reasonable excuse shall be proved by oath or affidavit, as the court shall think meet: Provided that where any viewer, having been duly summoned to attend on any jury, shall make default as aforesaid, the court is hereby authorized and required to set upon such viewer (unless some reasonable excuse shall be proved as aforesaid) a fine to the amount of ten pounds at the least, and as much more as the court under the circumstances of the particular case shall think proper. JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 41 Names of jurors to be balloted for. 41. The name of each man who shall be summoned and empannelled ... as a ... juror [in the High Court or the Crown Court], with the place of his abode and addition, shall be written on a distinct piece of parchment or card, being all as nearly as may be of an equal size, which shall be delivered unto the clerk or registrar of the judge who is to try the cause by the sheriff or other officer returning the process, and shall, by direction and care of such clerk or registrar, be put together in a box to be provided for that purpose; and when any issue shall be brought on to be tried, such clerk or registrar shall in open court draw out twelve of the said parchments or cards, one after another, after having shaken them together, or, in cases where any view shall have been directed and had as aforesaid, so many as, together with the viewers who shall appear and shall be sworn, shall be sufficient to make up the number of twelve; and if any of the men whose names shall be so drawn shall not appear, or shall be challenged and set aside, then such further number, until twelve men, or such other number as, together with such viewers so appearing and sworn as aforesaid, shall make up the number of twelve, be drawn, who shall appear, and who, after all just causes of challenge allowed, shall remain as fair and indifferent; and the said twelve men, and their names being marked in the panel, and they being sworn, shall be the jury to try the issue; and the names of the men so drawn and sworn shall be kept apart by themselves until such jury shall have given in their verdict and the same shall be recorded, or until such jury shall by consent of the parties or by leave of the court, be discharged, and then the same names shall be returned to the box, there to be kept with the other names remaining at the time undrawn, and so toties quoties as long as any issue remains to be tried: Provided always, if any issue shall be brought on to be tried in any of the said courts before the jury in any other issue shall have brought in their verdict or been discharged, it shall be lawful for the court to order twelve of the residue of the said parchments or cards not containing the names of any of the jurors who shall not have so brought in their verdict or been discharged, to be drawn in such manner as aforesaid for the trial of the issue which shall be so brought on to be tried: Provided also, that when both parties shall consent thereto, the court may try any issue with the same jury that shall have previously tried or been drawn to try any other issue, without their names being returned to the box and withdrawn, or order the name or names of any man or men on such jury, whom both parties may consent to withdraw, or who may justly be challenged or excused by the court, to be set aside, and another name or other names to be drawn on the box and try the issue with the residue of such original jury and with such man or men whose name or names shall be so drawn, and who shall appear and be approved as indifferent, and so toties quoties as long as any issue remains to be tried. JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 42 Tales de circumstantibus. 42. Where a full jury shall not appear before [the High Court or the Crown Court], or where, after appearance of a full jury, by challenge of any of the parties the issue is likely to remain untaken for default of jurors, every such court, upon request made for the Queen by any one thereto authorized, or assigned by the court, in cases of such criminal prosecutions as aforesaid, or on request made by the parties, plaintiff or defendant, or their respective attorneys, in any action or suit, shall command the sheriff or other officer to whom the making of the return shall belong to name and appoint, as often as need shall require, twelve other able men ... then present; and the sheriff or other officer to whom the making of the return shall belong aforesaid, shall at such command of the court return twelve such men duly qualified who shall be present or can be found to serve on such jury, and shall add and annex their names to the former panel: ... and the names of the persons so to be named with their additions and places of abode, shall be written on several distinct pieces of parchment or card being all as near as may be of equal size, and shall be delivered to the clerk or registrar of the judge before whom such issue is to be tried, by the sheriff or other officer to whom the returning of such jury shall belong, and shall by the direction and care of such clerk or registrar, be rolled up as near as may be in the same manner, and put together in a box or drawer, and shaken together, and the said clerk or registrar or other indifferent person, by direction of the court, in open court, shall draw out such pieces of parchment or card, one after another, until a number shall appear which shall be sufficient, with those of the original panel who appear to make up the number of twelve, who shall be the jury to try the said issue; and the Queen, by any one so authorized or assigned as aforesaid, and all and every the parties aforesaid, shall and may, in each of the cases aforesaid respectively, have their respective challenges to the jurors so added and annexed; and the court shall proceed to the trial of every such issue with those jurors who were before empannelled, together with the talesmen so newly added and annexed, as if all the said jurors had been returned upon the precept awarded to try the issue. JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 43 Sheriff indemnified for returning names contained in Jurors List. 43. Every sheriff and other officer to whom the return of juries shall belong shall be and is hereby indemnified for empannelling and returning any man named in the ["Jurors List"] ... although he may not be qualified or liable to serve on juries; and if any sheriff or other such officer shall empannel and return any man to serve on any such jury before any court ..., such man's name not being inserted in the ["Jurors List"] ... for the current year, or if said ["Jurors List"] ... has not been [prepared] then in the ["Jurors List"] ... last [prepared], or if any officer of any court shall wilfully record the appearance of any person so summoned and returned who did not really appear, in every such case the court shall, upon examination in a summary way, set such fine upon such officer so offending as the court shall think meet. JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 44 No money to be taken by any officer to excuse persons from serving. 44. No sheriff, coroner, elisor, bailiff, or other officer or person whatsoever shall, directly or indirectly, take or receive any money or other reward, or promise of money or reward, or any consideration whatsoever, or the promise of any consideration, to excuse any man from serving or from being summoned to serve on juries, or under any such colour or pretence; and no bailiff or other officer appointed by any sheriff, coroner, or elisor to summon juries, shall summon any man to serve thereon, other than those whose names are specified in a warrant or mandate signed by such sheriff, coroner, or elisor, and directed to such bailiff or other officer; and if any sheriff, coroner, elisor, bailiff, or other officer shall wilfully transgress in any of the cases aforesaid, or shall neglect to summon any juror any number of days less than the number herein-before appointed for that purpose, the court within whose jurisdiction such offence shall have been committed may and is hereby required, on examination and proof of such offence in a summary way, to set such a fine upon every person so offending as the court shall think meet, according to the nature of the offence. Ss.4549 rep by, SLR 1893 (No.2); 1953 c.19 (NI) s.11 sch.2; 1954 c.11 (NI) ss.1, 3 sch.; SLR (NI) 1954; 1959 c.15 (NI) s.38 sch.; 1967 c.18 (NI) s.15(2) sch.2 Pt.I; 1974 NI 6 art.9(2) sch.5; 1978 c.23 s.122(2) sch.7 Pt.I JURIES ACT (IRELAND) 1871 - SECT 50 Fines to be levied as provided by 1851 c.90. 50. All fines and penalties incurred or imposed under this Act by any court or judge shall be levied and recovered and applied as by the Fines Act (Ireland), 1851, is provided. S.51 rep. by 1978 c.23 s.122(2) sch.7 Pt.I. S.52 rep. by 1872 c.25 s.1 First and Second Schedules rep. by SLR (NI) 1954. Third Schedule rep. by 1953 c.19 (NI) s.11 sch.2; SLR (NI) 1954; 1974 NI6 art.9(2) sch.5. Fourth and Fifth Schedules rep. by SLR (NI) 1954
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