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The General Indian Court of Mexico (''Juzgado General de Indios'')  was a judicial body established 1585-1607 by the Spanish crown in New Spain to adjudicate disputes between indigenous communities and individuals. Creating a court that allowed Indians swift, inexpensive, and effective justice came after the failure of crown efforts to provide
legal redress In jurisprudence, reparation is replenishment of a previously inflicted loss by the criminal to the victim. Monetary restitution is a common form of reparation. Background In the Basic Principles and Guidelines on the Right to a Remedy and Repara ...
through Spanish courts and legal procedures. A monograph by historian
Woodrow Borah Woodrow Wilson Borah (23 December 1912 in Utica, Mississippi – 10 December 1999 in Berkeley, California) was a U.S. historian of colonial Mexico, whose research contributions on demography, economics, and social structure made him a major Lati ...
examines the precedents for establishing the court, the procedures it adopted, and the financing legal aid to Indians through a tax of a half real. Previous to the court’s formal establishment, viceroys handled a good number of complaints by indigenous, a practice initiated by New Spain’s first viceroy, Don
Antonio de Mendoza Antonio de Mendoza y Pacheco (, ; 1495 – 21 July 1552) was a Spanish colonial administrator who was the first Viceroy of New Spain, serving from 14 November 1535 to 25 November 1550, and the third Viceroy of Peru, from 23 September 1551 ...
.


Background

The court was established after the almost complete destruction of the indigenous populations in the Caribbean and the precipitous fall in those populations in Central Mexico during the sixteenth century.  Similar processes were at work in Peru and Viceroy
Francisco de Toledo Francisco Álvarez de Toledo ( Oropesa, 10 July 1515 – Escalona, 21 April 1582), also known as ''The Viceroyal Solon'', was an aristocrat and soldier of the Kingdom of Spain and the fifth Viceroy of Peru. Often regarded as the "best of P ...
established the ''Juzgado General de Indios del Peru'', which set the precedent for the Indian court in Mexico. Spanish officials came to recognize that the access of indigenous individuals and communities to courts for summary judgments at low cost and without the possibility of extended litigation would benefit them.  The legal theory underpinning the establishment of the court was that the crown had the duty to protect ''miserables'', such as widows and orphans, and the classification was extended to the indigenous peoples.  The crown had already established a legal division between the Indians and the non-Indian populations broadly conceived (Spaniards, Africans, and mixed-race castas) with the ''República de Indios'' and the ''República de Españoles''.  Although with the establishment of the
Holy Office of the Inquisition The Inquisition was a group of institutions within the Catholic Church whose aim was to combat heresy, conducting trials of suspected heretics. Studies of the records have found that the overwhelming majority of sentences consisted of penances, ...
in 1571, indigenous were deemed perpetual neophytes and excluded from its jurisdiction, but the establishment of the General Indian Court under Viceroy Luis Velasco II, indigenous, particularly in Central Mexico, had standing in the legal system. With the help of legal aides funded by a half-real tax, indigenous could pursue legal redress through the courts. Vested Spanish interests opposed the establishment of the court, since their practices could be blocked by complaints by indigenous about exploitation.


References


Further reading

*Avalos, F., 1991. "The Legal Personality of the Colonial Period of Mexico." Law. Libr. J., 83, p.393. * Borah, Woodrow. ''Justice by Insurance: The General Indian Court of Colonial Mexico and the Legal Aides of the Half-Real''. Berkeley: University of California Press 1983. *Cunill, Caroline. "El indio miserable: nacimiento de la teoría legal en la América colonial del siglo XVI." ''Cuadernos Inter. cambio sobre Centroamérica y el Caribe'' 9 (2011). *Owensby, Brian Philip. ''Empire of law and Indian justice in colonial Mexico''. Stanford University Press, 2008. {{ISBN, 9780804776622 *Scardaville, Michael C. "Justice by Paperwork: A Day in the Life of a Court Scribe in Bourbon Mexico City." ''Journal of Social History'' 36, no. 4 (2003): 979-1007. *Traslosheros, Jorge E. "Orden judicial y herencia medieval en la Nueva España." ''Historia Mexicana'' (2006): 1105-1138. Indigenous people of the Americas History of Mexico Colonial Mexico Spanish Empire Legal history Legal history of Spain