Abstract

ABSTRACT By the early seventeenth century, about 180 cities, towns and townships in England and Wales were administered as self-governing boroughs. In 1615, in Bagg's Case, Coke CJ announced that the King's Bench possessed a jurisdiction to judicially review misgovernment in the boroughs. Coke CJ's claim to remedy ‘any manner of misgovernment’ was denounced by Lord Chancellor Ellesmere, and the King's Bench was encouraged to disregard the idea. The King's Bench quietly ignored this advice and, through what would evolve into the writ of mandamus, implemented Coke's vision of a process of judicial review of misgovernment in the boroughs. This article reviews the uses to which Coke's remedy was put within the political life of the seventeenth- and eighteenth-century chartered corporation.

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