Committiturs and orders for exoneration of bail, 1797-1829.

ArchivalResource

Committiturs and orders for exoneration of bail, 1797-1829.

Records concerning surrender of a defendant and exoneration of his bail from liability include the committitur, copy of justice's show cause order to plaintiff, justice's order that the exoneretur be subscribed on the bail piece, and some original bail pieces.

2.2 cu. ft. (5 boxes)

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 8311645

Related Entities

There are 3 Entities related to this resource.

New York (State). Supreme Court of Judicature (Albany)

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6hf8mk2 (corporateBody)

New York (State). Court of Appeals

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61k37sb (corporateBody)

CURRENT FUNCTIONS. The court of appeals is New York State's highest court and court of last resort with appellate jurisdiction only. It hears cases on appeal from other appellate courts and sometimes from trial courts. Its review is generally limited to questions of law; in capital cases it may rule on both law and fact. The court of appeals also reviews determinations of the Commission on Judicial Conduct. ORGANIZATIONAL HISTORY. Under British colonial rule, appeals fro...

New York (State). Supreme Court of Judicature

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Between 1786 and 1829 the Supreme Court and the county courts of common pleas shared with the Surrogate's Courts the power to prove and record wills devising real property, and also wills whose witnesses were unable to appear in court. In addition, between 1801 and 1829 the Supreme Court had the exclusive power to prove and record wills devising real property located in several counties. (Wills proved in the courts of common pleas were recorded by the county clerks). After a will was proved and ...