Grand Jury (Ireland) Act, 1833

No action shall lie where compensation is obtained under this Act; but where not obtained, the party injured may seek for satisfaction in the mode directed by Irish Act, 23 & 24 Geo. 3. c. 20, &c.

74. No action or suit against any chief or other magistrate, or any inhabitant or inhabitants of any parish, shall be brought or prosecuted by the party so petitioning as aforesaid for the recovery of any satisfaction or damages sustained by reason of any offence for which compensation may have been obtained under the provisions herein-before contained: Provided always, that although such petition as aforesaid may have been preferred, it shall nevertheless be lawful, if the same shall be disallowed for such person or persons injured by such offence as aforesaid to seek for satisfaction and damages by all such ways and means as authorised or directed by an Act passed in the Parliament of Ireland in the twenty-third and twenty-fourth years of the reign of his Majesty King George the Third, intituled “An Act for the more effectually punishing such persons as shall by violence obstruct the freedom of corn markets and the corn trade, or who shall be guilty of other offences therein mentioned, and for making satisfaction to the parties injured,” or any other Act or Acts in force in Ireland, any thing herein contained to the contrary notwithstanding.

* * * * * *