"Malitiosis litium protractionibus". An ethical standard for advocates and proctors

The Second Council of Lyons (1274) promulgated the constitution Properandum which established, that advocates and procurators had to swear an oath before being admitted to act in ecclesiastical tribunals. The central point of the oath was that they should only accept cases that were just and if they...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ferme, Brian Edwin 1955- (Author)
Format: Print Article
Language:Undetermined language
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Fernleihe:Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste
Published: Libreria Ed. Vaticana 2010
In: "Iustitia et iudicium" ; 3
Year: 2010, Pages: 1709-1724
IxTheo Classification:SB Catholic Church law
Further subjects:B Jurisdiction
B Ethics
B Procedural law
B Law
B England
B Ordentliches Streitverfahren
B Process
B Lawyer
B History
B Course of
B Legal representation
B Court
Description
Summary:The Second Council of Lyons (1274) promulgated the constitution Properandum which established, that advocates and procurators had to swear an oath before being admitted to act in ecclesiastical tribunals. The central point of the oath was that they should only accept cases that were just and if they discovered, even during the course of litigation, that the cause was not just they were bount to abandon it. The constitution Properandum established serious ethical standards for lawyers with were generally followed, as the records of the medieval ecclesiastical courts in England demonstrate. The English canonist William Lynswood, in his important commentary, the Provinciale, dealt with a number of the issues considered by Properandum and there are considered in the light of the constitution
ISBN:8820983524
Contains:Enthalten in: "Iustitia et iudicium" ; 3