Consular court

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Consular Courts were law courts established by foreign powers in countries where they had extraterritorial rights. They were presided over by consular officers.

Extraterritoriality

Western powers when establishing diplomatic relations with countries they considered to have underdeveloped legal systems would demand extraterritorial rights. Treaty provisions provided that the laws of the local country did not apply to citizens of the treaty powers and that local courts did not have jurisdiction over them. Consular courts were established to handle civil and criminal cases against citizens and subjects of the subjects of the country.[1] The British had the widest system of consular courts run by the Foreign Office. British consular courts could be found in Africa, the Ottoman Empire, Egypt, China, Japan and Siam.[2]

China and Japan

In China and Japan under the unequal treaties signed in the mid 19th Century many countries established consular courts in cities open to foreign trade (called treaty ports).

Britain established a fully fledged court system in China and Japan. In 1865, the British Supreme Court for China and Japan was established in Shanghai, China as a first instance consular court for cases in the Shanghai region as well as an appellate court for cases heard by consular courts in the rest of China, Japan and, from the 1880s Korea. In 1879, a British Court for Japan was established in Yokohama to replace the Kanagawa Consular Court to hear first instance cases for Yokohama region as well as to act as an appellate court for cases from consular courts in other Japanese cities.

In Japan extraterritoriality came to an end on 4 August 1899 and the British Court for Japan and other consular courts closed soon after that after finalising pending cases.

In 1906, the United States established the United States Court for China modelled on the British Supreme Court for China and Japan.

In China, consular courts operated up until the 1940s when extraterritoriality for most nations came to an end then.

References

  1. C Lobingier, Extraterritorial Cases, Vol I, p1-5
  2. Turan Kayaoğlu, Legal Imperialism, Sovereignty and Extraterritoriality in Japan, the Ottoman Empire, and China