HC Deb 22 March 1886 vol 303 cc1487-8
CAPTAIN M'CALMONT (Antrim, E.)

asked the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, Whether his attention had been drawn to a recent case in the country Longford, wherein three orders for attachment had been issued against three persons for contempt of court; whether the contempt of court consisted in forcibly retaking possession of a farm from which they had been evicted; whether the sheriff had only been successful in arresting one of the parties, John Clarke, now in Sligo Gaol; whether, in alluding to the other two cases, Judge Boyd had said, as follows:— That it was a strange state of affairs to which the Country was reduced, when there was a warrant issued by one of Her Majestys' Courts, and the authorities refused to give the police authority to execute the warrant. The idea of a sheriff making a return that, in consequence of the refusal of the authorities to give police protection before 8 a.m., the two persons could not be arrested; and, whether the Irish Executive contemplated taking any steps to carry out the Law?

THE CHIEF SECRETARY (Mr. JOHN MORLEY) (Newcastle-on-Tyne)

said, he was not in a position to reply now, and asked that the Question should be repeated.