DEFINITION : Court Leet

Manorial courts which dealt with petty law and order and the administration of communal agriculture.


What does the Alcester Court Leet do today?

* Maintains the traditions and ceremonies that have been particular to the area of Alcester over the last 700 years.

* Organises and participates in many events for the benefit of the community of Alcester.

* Raises funds for distribution to local organisations and charities.

Ceremoniously dressed officers can be seen participating in, or re-enacting their ancient roles at events throughout the year, bringing to people today glimpses of Alcester’s colourful past.

The Court Leet originated in England in the Court Baron, a Court authorised by the King and presided over by the Baron or landowner. It mainly dealt with matters relating to the duties and services owed by the peasants or villeins (not Freemen) to the Lord of the Manor or Baron.

The Court Baron's records, for example, would have details of how many day's service to the Baron each villein/serf owed, and how and when it was paid. It also would have dealt with personal actions within the Manor- one person against another - up to a claim amount of 40 shillings. (£2). Freeholders were not usually subject to its jurisdiction, but were liable under Common Law in other Manorial Courts. (See below)


The Court Leet or " The View of Frank Pledge" to give it the proper name (See below) had extra powers to that of the Court Baron. It was a Recording Court granted to a Hundred, Lordship, Manor, or Borough by the Kings Charter. The term Leet is noted in Domesday Book (in East Anglia) as a division of a Hundred which was self-governing. Other Records show, however, that it had been self governing and separate from any other place long before that. Court Leet judgements all those centuries ago are often responsible for the base content of what we call today "The Local Bye-laws"

Seen here on
Pancake Race Day

The Court Leet's duties were " to enquire regularly and periodically into the proper condition of watercourses, roads, paths, and ditches; to guard against all manner of encroachments upon the public rights, whether by unlawful enclosure or otherwise; to preserve landmarks, to keep watch and ward in the town , and overlook the common lands, adjust the rights over them, and restraining in any case their excessive exercise, as in the pasturage of cattle; to guard against the adulteration of food, to inspect weights and measures, to look in general to the morals of the people, and to find a remedy for each social ill and inconvenience. To take cognisance of grosser crimes of assault, arson, burglary, larceny, manslaughter, murder, treason, and every felony at common law" 


Seen here during the Alcester Mop

Any citizen, or the Jury itself, could indict another by a presentment to the Leet jury, and action would be taken accordingly, usually a fine. The Leet Jury in the main was made up of Burgesses and other Freemen. Freemen of the town were also enrolled at the Court Leet on Law Day. No person, you see, not born and bred in the town, and on reaching adulthood, who was not proposed and accepted by the Burgesses could legally carry on his or her trade without special permission; strangers had to be outside the town walls by nightfall; everyone had to be indoors ditto except with special dispensation or for watch duty; a strict laid down dress code was adhered to quite rigidly throughout England (eg only certain colours and fabrics were allowed to be worn by certain classes of people and woe betide the lower class woman who dared to wear a white hat instead of a cap); and householders and tenants had to keep their boundaries, businesses, rubbish pits; and so on to an acceptable standard. 
Who are the members of the Alcester Court Leet?


The current Lord of the Manor is the Most Honourable Henry Jocelyn Seymour Marquess of
Hertford.

Members of the Court Leet are all persons who have formally sworn the ancient Oath of
Frankpledge.

New members automatically become Jurymen of the Court.

Court Leet Officers are elected annually from and by the Jurymen at a ceremony held each October
in Alcester Town Hall.

Elected officers wear the traditional ceremonial robes of their office on all formal Court occasions.

Current Officers of the Alcester Court Leet?

Office held Name of Officer Email Address

Steward of the Manor
John S Hill
Chaplin to the Court
Reverend Canon
David C Capron
High Bailiff Lennox Cumberbatch highbailiff @alcestercourtleet.co.uk
Low Bailiff
Andy Mills
lowbailiff@alcestercourtleet.co.uk
Immediate Past Bailiff
Mick Quirke
immediatepastbailiff@alcestercourtleet.co.uk
Town Crier & Beadle  David Parkes
towncrier&beadle@alcestercourtleet.co.uk
Constable
Mike Clark constable@alcestercourtleet.co.uk
Marshall Vacant
marshall@alcestercourtleet.co.uk
Ale Taster Nick Dearling aletaster@alcestercourtleet.co.uk
Ale Taster
John Bate aletaster@alcestercourtleet.co.uk
Bread Weigher Peter Morrison
Bread Weigher Keith Greenaway
breadweigher@alcestercourtleet.co.uk
Fish & Flesh Taster Ben Egan
Fish & Flesh Taster  D. Dawson
Affearor Nigel Burchill
Affearor James Davies
Surveyor of the Highways S. Mumford
Brook Looker  Erick Wilson brooklooker@alcestercourtleet.co.uk
Hayward Jason Quirke
Searcher & Sealer of Leather Bob Allard
 


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