The first known reference to clerks of assize was made in 1285 when a procedural rule was created stating that justices on assize should be accompanied by a clerk tasked with enrolling
pleas. The first few sets of assize clerks were the private clerks of the judges themselves, but by 1380 records show that the
Western Circuit had a permanent employed clerk, Simon of Lichfield, a barrister of the Old Temple. The clerks' income was initially the fees paid by parties to have a case come before the court, and as a result, their pay depended on the business of the court itself. By the 1650s there were over 100
nisi prius cases on each circuit, worth approximately 10s in fees, along with 50 criminal cases worth between 2s to 16s. Clerks were expected to pay for the expenses of the judge and the bailiff and Marshall's fees, but despite this still prospered: by the 1660s some were making more money than the assize judges themselves. The clerk positions eventually ceased to exist in 1971, when the
Courts Act 1971 eliminated the
assize courts. ==Duties and Restrictions==