posted on 2025-07-30, 15:34authored byChantal Stebbings
The compulsory establishment of large public lunatic asylums under Act of parliament in the nineteenth century to address the enormous increase in the number of the insane raised legal and practical challenges in relation to their status within the law of tax. As a result of their therapeutic and custodial objectives, these novel institutions required extensive landed property and very specific systems of governance, the fiscal consequences of which potentially undermined those very objectives. This article examines and analyses the nature and legal process of the application of the tax regime to these asylums, concluding that it constituted a rare and effective model of institutional taxation.
This is an Author's Original Manuscript of an article submitted for consideration in the Journal of Legal History [copyright Taylor & Francis]; Journal of Legal History is available online at http://www.tandfonline.com/ 10.1080/01440365.2011.559119
There is another ORE record for this item in ORE at 10036/3420
There is another ORE record for this item in ORE at http://hdl.handle.net/10036/3420