Originally, the bailiff was both legislator and judge, but the position has become increasingly concentrated on the judicial functions. The bailiff presides in the main
trial court in his island – the
Royal Court of Jersey and the
Royal Court of Guernsey, where they sit with
Jurats, elected lay judges responsible for making finds of fact. The bailiff of each island is also a member of the court of appeal in his island, and that of the other. The bailiffs are the presidents (
presiding officers) of the legislatures—the
States of Jersey Assembly and the
States of Deliberation in Guernsey. Constitutional changes introduced in Jersey (2005) and Guernsey (2004) created posts of chief minister and in Jersey (but not in Guernsey) created a ministerial system of government. This has altered the executive functions of the bailiffs but they continue to have a residual executive role (for example, they see any correspondence between the chief minister of their island and the UK government and may be involved in any political decisions affecting the constitutional relationship between the islands and the United Kingdom). Each bailiff continues to be the 'first citizen' of the island, carrying out civil and ceremonial roles. The last lay (that is, not legally-qualified) Bailiff in either jurisdiction was Sir Edgar McCulloch, Bailiff of Guernsey, who served in the role from 1884 to 1895. By
constitutional convention he or she (though to date there have been no women holders of the office) and the deputy bailiff are now invariably selected from among those who have previously held the senior office within the Law Officers of the Crown–the
Procureur in Guernsey and the Attorney General in Jersey. Bailiffs and deputy bailiffs in modern times have also invariably been qualified as advocates in their respective islands. A deputy bailiff in each bailiwick may preside in the Royal Court and States chamber when the bailiff is not available. Senior
jurats may be appointed as lieutenant-bailiffs to perform some ceremonial duties in lieu of the bailiff on occasion as well as presiding over judicial proceedings generally of an administrative nature. In 1617 a
Privy Council decision clarified the division of civil and military responsibilities between the bailiffs and the lieutenant governors in
Guernsey and
Jersey. For the first time, the Crown laid down the bailiff's precedence over the governor in judicial affairs and in the States chamber. ==Bailiff of Guernsey==