SOUTH WOOTTON, LATER WOODSTOCK PETTY SESSION DIVISION

Scope and Content

Records of the court held at Woodstock. The area was originally known as South Wootton Petty Sessions Division, but was renamed Woodstock Petty Sessions Division in April 1954. In 1989 the court merged with North Oxfordshire Petty Session (please see PS10 for records of this court) to form North Oxfordshire and Chipping Norton Petty Sessions (please see PS19 for records of this court).

The records mainly comprise of Minute Books and Registers of the Court of Summary Jurisdiction, which became Registers of the Magistrates Court in the 1950s. Among the other documents are Registers of the Juvenile Court (which contain similar information to the main court registers), Registers of Licences (giving name of licensee and owner, address of premises and type of licence) and Clubs, and Registers of Non-Contentious Business.

Quarter Sessions were held four times a year, Petty Sessions much more frequently. The latter had civil jurisdiction, such as the licensing of premises for the sale of alcohol. Most, of their time spent on criminal cases involved trials of the vast amount of minor non-indictable crimes. However, under the Magistrates Courts Act of 1952 the magistrates could also try some indictable offences, especially those involving persons under the age of eighteen. Under Childrens and Young Persons Acts 1933-63 a bench of magistrates trying a child or young person was termed a Juvenile Court.

Petty Sessions was used as a Court of Summary Jurisdiction, held before two or more magistrates in a sessional court-house. However, a defendant could choose to go before a jury at Quarter Sessions or Assizes, if he felt he had a better chance of acquittal.

Quarter Sessions acted as a Court of Appeal from Petty Sessions, as well as a court of original jurisdiction in its own right for many indictable crimes. More serious cases, such as murder, were removed to Assize hearings. These courts were abolished on 1 January 1972: Petty Sessional Courts are now known as Magistrates Courts. Separate Borough Courts remained in existence until the Local Government Act of 1972.

Further records were deposited as Acc 3431 in January 1992 and as part of Acc 6568 in April 2017. Catalogued by Alison Smith in September 2021.

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