| ANDTERMINER | In English law before 1972, a commission issued to judges to try a case in a court of assize (3,8) |
| OYER | And 19 Down In English law before 1972, a commission issued to judges to try a case in a court of assize (4) |
| ENDEAVOURED | Being tried English knight scoffed outside front of assizes |
| PLATE | ___ up - get MasterChef food ready for judges to try (5) |
| REHEAR | Try a case again |
| SENATOR | Ranger, before 1972 |
| ADVOCATE | One who pleads a case in a court of law (8) |
| OPEN | Like a case in a police procedural |
| THEFUGITIVE | Blamed for killing his wife, Dr Richard Kimble (David Janssen) evaded the law before finally catching up with the one-armed killer in this thrilling TV series (3,8) |
| EVOCATIVELY | See about case in a way that invites strong feelings (11) |
| LEGISLATIVE | Member is dynamic over English law-making |
| DAMAGE | - feasant; in English law, harm done to a person's land or property by a trespassing animal (6) |
| CULPABLE | ___ homicide, an offence under Scottish common law roughly equivalent to the offence of manslaughter in English law |
| LARCENY | In English law, the former crime of taking goods of another person without permission with the intention of keeping them (7) |
| DEFINITE | Fought one's case in a court of law? (8) |
| USURY | The charging of an exorbitant rate of interest; in old English law it applied to the charging of any interest at all (5) |
| LIBEL | In English law, defamation made in writing or by broadcast, as opposed to slander, which is spoken ( |
| PROCTOR | An agent, engaged to conduct another's case in a court. (7) |
| JUDGE | Official who hears cases in a court of law (5) |
| OMNIBUS | Clapham __ a where, in English law, a reasonable person may be found? (7) |