As the
Crown of Castile found its territories rapidly expanding half a world away during the
Spanish colonization of the Americas and the
Spanish Philippines, it found it necessary to grant its overseas
oidores functions and powers which in the mother country normally fell to other officials. Thus, the
oidores of the overseas
audiencias functioned as judges of the
audiencia, and as magistrates overseeing the sale of the Holy Crusade
indulgences (
juez de la Santa Cruzada),
mortgages and
ground rents (
juez de censos),
probate issues (
juez de bienes de difuntos), and
legal separation (
oidor juez de casados). Oidores often had kinship ties to mercantile elites in the Philippines, and channeled policy recommendations desired by merchants to King via the Consejo de Indias in Madrid. In the
audiencias in which the criminal judges (
alcaldes del crimen) met as a separate chamber, such as those of
Mexico City and
Lima, it was not uncommon for one person to serve as both
oidor (civil judge) and an
alcalde del crimen. Upon the death or incapacity of a
governor or
viceroy, either the senior
oidor (
oidor decano) or the
audiencia as a whole would serve as the interim governor or viceroy, depending on the specific
law of the territory. ==Marriage disputes==