Court of Appeal in Chancery

The Court of Appeal in Chancery was created in 1851 to hear appeals of decisions and decrees made in the Chancery Court.

The court was created in 1851 to hear appeals of decisions made by the Vice Chancellors and the Master of the Rolls in Chancery Court.

The appeals in the court were heard by the Lord Chancellor alone as under the previous mechanism,[1][2] or as a tripartite panel (supplemented by two Lords Justices of Appeal).

The Court of Appeal in Chancery became incorporated into and superseded by Court of Appeal of England and Wales, uniting the other common branches of the civil law and all of the criminal law, which was established later in 1875.

Sitting with the Lord Chancellor of Ireland was a single Lord Justice of Appeal in Chancery in Ireland, Francis Blackburne until 1866, Abraham Brewster from 1866 until 1867[4] and Jonathan Christian from 1867.