| Volume 49, Preface 9 View pdf image (33K) |
Letter of Transmittal. XIII
Deeds continued to be filed for record in the Provincial Court and in its successor
the General Court, until the latter was abolished in 1805. As a matter of
preference purchasers of land who were non-residents of the county in which
it was located usually recorded their deeds in the more centrally located Prov
incial Court office.
Without entering into a detailed discussion of the evolution in Maryland of
its court of the highest appellate jurisdiction, which during the entire colonial
period was composed of the same men, who acting in various other official
capacities, formed the Upper House of the Assembly and the Council, it may
be said that a definitely organized body under the name of the Court of Appeals,
first came into existence in 1694. Until 1694 the highest appellate court of the
Province was the Upper House, sitting as such in a judicial capacity. Appeals
from decisions of the Provincial Court down to this time, therefore resulted
in the anomalous situation, in which the same men heard the appeal sitting as
the Upper House who had previously decided the case below in the Provincial
Court; and it is of interest to note that they not infrequently reversed their own
decisions rendered in the Provincial Court, as is shown by the cases cited later.
In 1694, however, the new court known as the Court of Appeals, was organized,
and became the highest appellate body in the Province. While the newly created
Court of Appeals was composed of the same men who formed the Upper House
sitting as a court, an important change now took place in the composition of the
Provincial Court, which thereafter drew its members in great part from out
side this little group, although always a few members of the higher court were
found sitting on it.
The story of the development and history of the Court of Appeals has recently
been ably written by the Honorable Carroll T. Bond, the present chief judge of
this same court. The discovery a few years ago by Judge Bond of an old manu
script volume containing the proceedings of this court from 1695 to 1729, with
some breaks, has been a matter of lively interest to all students of the history
of American law. It is the earliest and most complete record that has been
preserved in any colony of proceedings by the court of the highest appellate
jurisdiction. it is now being prepared for publication by the American Histori
cal Association under the editorship of Judge Bond. It was selected by a distin
guished group of those interested in American legal history as the first volume
of a series which it is proposed to publish under the auspices of the Association,
covering the historical development of the law in the American colonies. With
its appearance the attention of all students of early American jurisprudence will
be focussed upon the judicial system of colonial Maryland. It is therefore
not amiss to note here some of the records of other Maryland courts that are
available for students.
Down to the year 1 661 equity cases seem to have been heard by the Governor
and Council sitting in the Provincial Court, as cases of this kind are scattered
through the records of this court, and no mention of a separate chancery court
as such has been found. Prior to this date among the numerous offices con
ferred upon the several governors when they were commissioned, was that of
chancellor, yet no instance of a governor considering an equity case alone as
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| Volume 49, Preface 9 View pdf image (33K) |
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