Ordines cancellariæ, being orders of the High Court of Chancery, from the first year of King Charles I, to this present Hillary term, 1697 ... to which is added the Rules and orders of the Court of Exchequer.

About this Item

Title
Ordines cancellariæ, being orders of the High Court of Chancery, from the first year of King Charles I, to this present Hillary term, 1697 ... to which is added the Rules and orders of the Court of Exchequer.
Author
England and Wales. Court of Chancery.
Publication
London :: Printed by the assigns of Rich. and Edw. Atkins, Esquires, for J. Walthoe, and are to be sold at his shop ...,
1698.
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Subject terms
Equity pleading and procedure -- England.
Court rules -- England.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A53418.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Ordines cancellariæ, being orders of the High Court of Chancery, from the first year of King Charles I, to this present Hillary term, 1697 ... to which is added the Rules and orders of the Court of Exchequer." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A53418.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 10, 2024.

Pages

Veneris 25 die Novembris Anno Regni Caroli Regis Duodecimo 1636.

Concerning Hearing of Causes.

Ordo Curiae.

WHereas by reason of the late In∣fection, the Causes appointed and set down for Michaelmas Term could not then be heard, his Lordship taking the same into consideration, and desiring to give as much Expedition to those Causes as the season will permit, and his Lordship shall be able; hath thought fit, and doth hereby order, that the Causes formerly set down in Mi∣chaelmas Term shall now according to their then Order,* 1.1 and in their due pla∣ces continue ranked for Hillary Term. And whereas there were only four Cau∣ses

Page 31

appointed for every day, his Lord∣ship doth propose (God willing) though it may prove the more labour and trou∣ble unto his Lordship, to hear Six Cau∣ses; to which purpose his Lordship doth also order that six Causes of those al∣ready set down be set down for every day, and that the Register enter this Order, and make a Book of Causes ac∣cordingly, and give notice to the Six Clerks, and their Clerks, that they or their Clients if they intend to have their Causes heard, do sue out and serve Pro∣cess ad Audiendum Judicium, as is accu∣stomed in the like case against the days now appointed. And for such Causes as shall remain unset down, his Lordship doth propose, God willing, to set down those in the first place for Easter Term next.

Notes

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