Coroner of the Queen's Household
1 c. 3) within the Articuli super Cartas (Articles upon the Charters), which said Second, in 1311 there were Les noveles Ordenances (5 Edw."[11] This seems to imply that the joint responsibility applied only when the court moved between the time of the death and the inquest.I should apprehend, therefore, that all inquests as they are now, I believe, taken by the coroner of the county singly, when the question should be discussed, will be held to be bad."[12] The Coroners Act 1887, section 29, therefore removed this requirement—in fact doing away with the idea of the verge altogether—and leaving only those parts of the Henry VIII legislation mentioned above.This led to some controversy concerning the independence of the jury in the 2006 second inquest into the death of Diana, Princess of Wales.