The new
Sinn Féin party put arbitration courts into its program after its 1917
Ardfheis, and established them throughout the country. According to party leader
Arthur Griffith, "It was the duty of every Irishman" to obey the arbitration courts rather than seek justice from British courts. The courts were favoured by Sinn Féin because they adhered to the principle of
self-reliance in all matters, and arbitration between two parties in a dispute was legal and binding when the participants agreed to abide by a verdict. Unlike the agrarian-society courts, Sinn Féin's courts claimed jurisdiction over crime and enforced a written constitution. Adhering to the party's policy of
abstentionism, Sinn Féin MPs who were elected in the
1918 general election refused to take their seats in
Westminster and set up the
Dáil Éireann, a rival parliament. In August 1919, during the
Irish War of Independence, the Dáil announced the formation of a national court system for its nascent
Irish Republic. The system included local parish courts, district courts, and a court of appeal. Parish courts dealt with petty crime and civil cases under £10, providing inexpensive and convenient access to justice. Local judges were elected and all officials received a salary, which cost the state an estimated £113,000. The initial pretense of voluntary arbitration was dropped, and verdicts were enforced by the
Irish Republican Army (IRA). The resulting system had a high level of local initiative, with the Dáil exercising very little power. Because the maintenance of British rule had come to rely so heavily on the police and courts to enforce its power, the rest of the Republic's apparatus would have been a "pitiful charade" if the Dáil Courts had not become popular. Their operation was very similar to the British courts they replaced, and historian Mary Kotsonouris described them as "primarily concerned with the protection of property". The courts had a reputation for fairness, and even
unionists respected their role in maintaining order. Known for their "conservative, almost reactionary character", they are "widely considered to be one of the greatest successes of the
First Dáil". According to Irish unionist peer
Lord Dunraven, The Dáil Courts also brought all subversive agrarian courts and IRA courts-martial, which had been operating in some areas after the withdrawal of the
Royal Irish Constabulary, under the jurisdiction of the Dáil. The Dáil Courts refused to hear cases dealing with land issues, and in some cases the IRA was called in to remove squatters from private property. By 1921, those who used British courts were accused of "assisting the enemy in time of war". The IRA attacked everyone connected with the British judicial system, and declared that "every person in the pay of England (magistrates and jurors, etc.) will be deemed to have forfeited his life". Intimidation led many
JPs to resign, and some
RMs were assassinated. The RIC lost control of much of Ireland due to the Irish War of Independence, and rulings from British courts could not be enforced. Suppressed by the British government, the courts continued to operate underground. Their activity peaked during the July–December 1921 truce, when they were busy dealing with ratepayers who failed to pay taxes to the Republic. As a result of the 1921
Anglo-Irish Treaty, the British courts were turned over to the
Irish Free State.
Count Plunkett requested a petition of
habeas corpus for the detention without trial of his son,
George (an
anti-Treaty guerilla), in 1922 after the
split between Irish nationalists over the treaty. The judge, Diarmuid Crowley, ordered the younger Plunkett's release; however, Crowley was arrested by the Free State government. The Dáil court system was shut down and declared illegal after this incident, although a commission was appointed to iron out the loose ends in open cases. The courts were officially abolished by the Dáil Éireann Courts (Winding Up) Act 1923. ==References==