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The Winding Up of the Dail Courts, 1922-1925

Part of the Irish legal history society series series
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In 1923 the Irish Free State government established a judicial commission with extraordinary powers to revive the jurisdiction of the court system which had flouri shed under the authority of the First Dail, so that the 5000 civil cases current when the Dail courts were abruptly closed down at the outbreak of the Civil War, could be brought to a conclusion.

Its registry and principal court were at Dublin Castle, but the commissioners also went out on circuit.

After two years, their jurisdiction was transferred to the High Court where it remains.

All its records are in the National Archives. This book describes not only the origins and progress of the commission and its importance in the early years of the Irish Free State, but its role at the centre of a power struggle between the shrewd mandarins then at the helms of the nascent departments of justice and finance.

Figures such as Kevin O'Higgins, Hugh Kennedy, O'Friel, Meredith and Mathieson are prominent in the story.

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Product Details
Four Courts Press Ltd
1851827676 / 9781851827671
Hardback
31/01/2004
Ireland
English
204 p.
24 cm
general /postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More