Magistrates
So far I have found the experience very rewarding and the more experienced magistrates very helpful.
If you are considering applying I have included two links below you might find useful. Even if you apply and are unsuccessful you will find the interview process will teach you a lot about yourself you probably did not know. I will so no more as I don't want to spoil your fun !!
Becoming a Magistrate Magistrates Association
The History of Justices of the Peace (Magistrates)
Origin of the Office
The part played by magistrates in the judicial system of England and Wales can be traced to the year 1195. Richard I in that year commissioned certain knights to preserve the peace in unruly areas. They were responsible to the King for ensuring that the law was upheld. They preserved the "King's Peace", and were known as Keepers of the Peace.
The title Justices of the Peace derives from 1361, in the reign of Edward III. An Act of 1327 had referred to "good and lawful men" to be appointed in every county in the land to "guard the Peace". Justices of the Peace still retain (and occasionally use) the power conferred or re-conferred on them in 1361 to bind over unruly persons "to be of good behaviour". The bind over is not a punishment, but a preventive measure, intended to ensure that people thought likely to offend will not do so.
For the following 600 years, and continuing today, Justices of the Peace have undertaken the greater part of the judicial work carried out in England and Wales on behalf of the Sovereign. For most of that time - until the invention of our modern system of local government in the 19th Century - JPs also administered the country at a local level. They fixed wages, built and controlled roads and bridges, and undertook to provide and supervise locally those services thought by the Monarch and by Parliament to be necessary for the welfare of the country.
Commission of the Peace
The present work of Justice of the Peace is almost entirely judicial, but certain of their responsibilities e.g. for the licensing of the premises selling alcohol, are retained from the days when they were also regulators and administrators of the counties. On appointment a JP was (and still is) inscribed by name on the Commission of the Peace for the county concerned. It was as members of the Commission of the Peace that Justices became virtual rulers of England and Wales at local level, For centuries, those appointed to the Commission were either land owners or merchants of great substance, whose social position and economic power was so strong that their authority went undisputed. This is reflected in the fact that even today JP's hold no badge or certificate of appointment.
Quarter Sessions
An Act of 1361 provided that JPs should meet to conduct local business four times a year. This was the origin of Quarter Sessions, which continued until replaced by Crown Courts in January 1972. Although they retained their original name for more than 600 years, many of them were in continuous session in the closing years of their long record.
JPs are often referred to as 'the great unpaid'. In fact, under an Act of 1389 the early Justices received a 'subsistence allowance' of four shillings a day. This appears to have lapsed, presumably because for centuries most JPs were well-to-do landowners who would not bother about 'expense accounts'.
Tough on Poachers
As so many of these first JPs were landowners, it is not surprising that as early as 1389 the first Game Law was passed. The old JPs had the reputation of being tough on poachers who were usually well known to those before whom they appeared.
Power to fix wages and services
The administrative duties of JPs began to develop in the closing years of the 14th Century and continued until 1888. As early as 1389 they acquired powers to regulate wages and control the cost of living by fixing prices. The Act provided that victuallers 'shall have reasonable gains according to the discretion and limitations of the said Justices'. So long as the economy was predominantly rural, the pressure on both wages and prices came from such natural causes as inclement weather and poor harvests. Such factors as the cost of land and buildings hardly entered into the reckoning. The establishment of industries in the medieval 'wool' towns brought new problems with which the JPs were ill equipped to deal. Most of the new employers were in competition with the landowners for labour.
Legal Qualifications of JPs
Much has been said about JPs being untrained until recently but, in fact, many landowners were members of the Inns of Court. This, however, was not to assist them in administering the criminal law but to equip them for the prudent management of their estates. Usually their study of the law did not go very deep. Shakespeare's Master Shallow and Falstaff were typical. They were roistering fellows whose fondest memories are summed up in Falstaff's line 'we have heard the chimes at midnight, Master Shallow'. For all that, at least 50 editions of works for the guidance of Justices had been published by 1600, and so effective had their rule become, that Sir Edward Coke described it as "such a form of subordinate government for security and quiet of the realm as no part of the Christian world hath the like".
Parish Constables
In 1576, JPs were required to build 'houses of correction' in which rogues and vagabonds could be detained. These were apprehended by village constables - unpaid parishioners conscripted for service annually
Religious Influences
The Reformation, followed by alternating Catholic and Protestant ascendancy, affected the Justices as well as every other section of the community. JPs had their names removed from the Commission for non-attendance at their parish church. A screening operation carried out by the bishops in 1564 revealed that of 850 JPs examined, more than half were suspected of being recusants. A purge followed, and in 1579 every JP was required to swear fidelity to the established religion. Confidence was temporarily restored, and when the Spanish Armada threatened England, the Justices again proved fully capable of maintaining the Queen's peace.
The System under Pressure
In the third quarter of the 16th Century the rule of the JPs began to be questioned. It was alleged that many of them neglected their duties or were incapable of performing them. In the words of Elizabeth Is Lord Keeper: "Her Majesty may be driven, clean contrary to her most gracious nature and inclination, to appoint and assign private men for profit and gain sake to see her penal laws to be executed". At the same time it was acknowledged that many were conscientious. These, however, were said to be over-burdened and unable to meet the increasing demands of their office.
Duties expanded
In 1590 a new Commission was introduced redefining the duties of JPs. Seven years later they were given responsibility for the administration of the Poor Law. Meanwhile, their duties in operating the criminal law were increasing so rapidly that Labarde's work on the duties of Justices ran to more than 700 pages. The most controversial ordinance affecting JPs was the Act of 1652 empowering them to perform marriages and making all other forms of the ceremony illegal. When this exclusive right was repealed it became necessary to regularise the position of those already married by JPs by providing in the Act of Charles II that such marriages were to be held valid.
Social Fluctuations in Appointments
Under the Commonwealth, the social distribution of appointments widened. There were fewer noblemen and more esquires in the Commission. This trend, however, was reversed at the Restoration. The nobility returned to power and were the instruments of the Crown in enforcing measures against dissenters. They enforced uniformity in worship as their forerunners had done under Elizabeth I, but religious fluctuations again brought confusion. James II tried to pack the Commissions with his adherents.
Land Interest Weakened
The revolution of 1688 brought radical changes. In 1700, 74 Middlesex Justices were removed from the Commission. Property qualifications rather than political or religious allegiance carried weight. In 1732 the property qualification, which had remained unchanged since 1439, was raised. It was held 12 years later that it was "of the utmost consequence to provide against persons of mean estates" being appointed. The Lord Lieutenant appointed "Only men of substance" on the recommendation to the Crown.
Petty Sessions
As early as the 16th Century, JPs had divided themselves into local groups to deal with vagrancy, poor relief etc. In 1605, local sessions for the dispatch of urgent business not requiring jury were instituted by an order of the Privy Council. As the work increased these came to be known as Petty Sessions, but not until 1828 did they become established by statute. In that year the county Justices were authorised to divide their counties into Petty Sessional Districts. In each of these the JPs engaged a local attorney to act as clerk.
Effect of the Industrial Revolution
With the 19th Century the movement of population to the towns brought new problems. The 'county' families moved out of the newly urbanised districts into neighbouring countryside. The 'trading Justices' chiefly associated with Middlesex, but who were also prominent in Lancashire, came in. In the second half of the 18th Century a large number of clergymen had served as Justices. Some had, in fact, been chairmen of Quarter Sessions. The Reverend W.R. Hay, who held a valuable living at Rochdale worth £2,500 a year, was probably the first. Another clergyman, the Reverend Richard Burn, Vicar or Orton in Westmoreland, was a chairman of Quarter Session, and published in 1755 his great work "The Justice of the Peace and Parish Officer". The edition published in 1869 was in five volumes.
During the change from rural to urban conditions, many of these clerical Justices played a prominent part, particularly in improving conditions in county gaols. In 1832, of the 5,300 active JPs, one in every four was in holy orders.
JPs relieved of administrative duties
Between 1829 and 1888, JPs were relieved of some of their major administrative duties with the exception of liquor licensing, and it was thought widely that they would soon be relieved of their judicial duties also. The historian Maitland wrote, "The JP is cheap, he is pure, he is capable but he is doomed, he is to be sacrificed to a theory on the altar of the spirit of the age". Since he wrote those words, the judicial responsibilities of JPs have increased almost annually.
The effect of progressive urbanisation
Before 1835, Justices in towns were appointed in accordance with rights granted by charter. The Municipal Corporations Act 1835 provided for them to be nominated by the Lord Chancellor for the boroughs in consultation with local advisers, while, for the county benches, he continued to confirm the nomination of the Lord Lieutenants, who had their own methods for finding suitable candidates. The appointment of both was vested in the Crown acting on the Lord Chancellor's advice. The exception to the rule was Lancashire, where both county and borough magistrates were nominated by the Chancellor of the Duchy.
The system of appointment challenged
The Liberal Government in 1906 challenged this system of appointment, which led to a preponderance of Conservatives on the benches. The property qualification was abolished for county magistrates. Lord Loreburn, as Liberal Lord Chancellor, nominated 7,000 magistrates between January 1906, of whom 3,197 were liberals. The Royal Commission on the Appointment of Justices of the Peace 1910, recommended the institution of an Advisory Committee system, and by the end of 1911, Advisory Committees on which Liberals and Conservatives were usually equally represented had been set up in most counties to advise Lords Lieutenants on nominations. Ten or twelve years later, the boroughs also had formed Advisory Committees. Appointment to these Committees was for life until 1925, when Lord Cave introduced appointment for six years and ordered half the Committees to retire by rotation every three years.
The Magistrates 'Association
1920 is an important date in the recent history of Justices of the Peace for two events - the appointment of the first women JPs and the foundation of the Magistrates' Association. At its first AGM in 1921 Lord Haldane (the first President) said 'The primary purpose of the Association is to collect and bring together that common body of knowledge, and to diffuse it among magistrates everywhere'. Forty years later the 600th Anniversary of the Statute of Edward III creating the office of Justice of the Peace was marked by the grant, in November 1962, of a Royal Charter and a grant of arms bearing the motto Ratione et Consilio. The objects of the Association have remained constant throughout. They are summed up as 'to educate and instruct magistrates in the law, the administration of justice, the treatment of offenders and the best methods of preventing crime'. In 1922 the total membership was a mere 563. Today there are 28,000 and practically every new magistrate joins on appointment.
Training of Magistrates
The changes introduced by the Criminal Justice Act 1948 and the Justices of the Peace Act 1949 proved so far reaching that in 1953 a system of Magistrates' Courts Committees was established, with responsibilities for administering Magistrates' Courts, engaging staff and providing courses on instruction for Justices. Ten years later anxiety was widespread about their failure to fulfil their training function on an adequate scale by voluntary means and, after discussion with The Magistrates' Association, which by this time had gained considerable expertise in its training role, The Lord Chancellor introduced compulsory training for all newly appointed magistrates in 1966. Statutory responsibility for this remained with Magistrates' Courts Committees; but the Association found itself called upon to play a rapidly expanding role in promoting training conferences and organising courses of instruction. Nationally, the Magistrates' Association arranged a series of training activities, for the most part as residential conferences, focusing on issues of current concern. These are intensive, hard-working meetings whose object is to establish and maintain a good level of practice throughout the magistracy as a whole. Its 58 Branches also conduct training programmes on a local level.
The Justices of the Peace Act 1968
This Act provided for the gradual reduction of the age of retirement from the bench from 75 to 70, and confirmed the position of the Clerk as legal adviser to the Justices. The fact that 98% of all cases, which come before the criminal courts of England and Wales are disposed of by JPs with no required legal qualifications continues to surprise many people. The justification is based largely on the relationship which had developed over the years, and in 1968, received statutory authority, between JPs and their clerk - the JPs bearing sole responsibility for their findings on fact and on the credibility of witnesses, the clerk advising them on the law and the extent of their powers.
Crown Courts replace Assizes and Quarter Sessions
The Courts Act 1971 drastically altered the legal system which had continued for 600 years by providing for the abolition of courts of Assizes and Quarter Sessions and their replacement by a new Crown Court. In a presidential address to the Association, Lord Hailsham described this as 'by far the biggest measure of law reform in this particular field for at least a century and, in some respects, since the institution of the assize system in the reign of Henry II'. It was concerned mainly with the re-organisation of the higher courts, but it was important for JPs because it enlarged their powers by enabling them to exercise full jurisdiction in Crown Courts over the whole of England and Wales.
Her Majesty’s Courts Service
From 1 April 2005 Justices join with the professional Judiciary to work with Her Majesty’s Courts Service as it administers all the courts in England and Wales.
Reproduced by kind permission of Her Majesty's Courts Service and subject to Crown Copyright