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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 August 2021
Personally, I am feeling both buoyed up, and also a bit deflated, as a result of Norman's lecture (and the accompanying Ecclesiastical Law Journal article, to which the lecture is just an hors d'oeuvre). Buoyed up that, according to Oughton's treatise of 1728, in the seat of justice the dean should be addressed as Domine Judex or more frequently Domine Decane. Either will do excellently for the future! Deflated because, while Dean Phillimore's letters patent as Dean of the Arches recognised his ‘sound doctrine, good morals, purity of conscience’, my own were, probably rightly, considerably less effusive.
This comment is based on the response and vote of thanks delivered by the author after Professor Norman Doe's lecture, ‘The Court of Arches: its jurisdiction and jurisprudence – entirely settled?’, given at St Mary-le-Bow Church on 20 November 2019, a version of which is printed above, pp 322–341.
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3 Logan, F and Eckhardt, C, ‘Fragments from a lost Court of Arches act book, 1445–1446’, (2015) 77 Medieval Studies 183–201Google Scholar, available at <https://pims.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/ms77-183.pdf>, accessed 26 May 2021.
4 [2019] Fam 343.
5 G H Newsom and G L Newsom, Faculty Jurisdiction of the Church of England (second edition, London 1993), p 7.
6 [2012] 1 AC 663.
7 Young v Bristol Aeroplane Company Limited [1944] 1 KB 718.
8 In re St Alkmund, Duffield [2013] Fam 158, at para 85, citing In re Lapford (Devon) Parish Church [1955] P 205.
9 In re Lapford, citing a Privy Council decision of 1892, Read v Bishop of Lincoln [1892] AC 644 PC.
10 Read v Bishop of Lincoln at para 655.
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12 Re Sam Tai Chan (sub nom re St Chad's, Bensham) [2017] Fam 68.