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Wszystkie przewodniki
Coroners & Inquests
5 kroków
Zaktualizowano March 2026

Co dzieje się na rozprawie koronerskiej

Przewodnik po procesie rozprawy koronerskiej.

Przegląd

An inquest is a public, fact-finding inquiry conducted by a coroner (sometimes with a jury) to investigate a death. Inquests are not trials — they do not determine guilt or blame. The purpose is to establish who died, when, where, and how (and in what circumstances, for Article 2 inquests). If you are a bereaved family member or another 'interested person', you have the right to participate.

Proces krok po kroku

1

Referral and Investigation

A death is referred to the coroner by a doctor, registrar, or police officer. The coroner decides whether an investigation (and inquest) is needed. This is required where the death was violent, unnatural, of unknown cause, or occurred in custody or state detention. The coroner orders a post-mortem examination.

Ramy czasowe: Days to weeks after death
Praktyczne wskazówki
  • The coroner's office will contact the family
  • A post-mortem may delay funeral arrangements
2

Pre-Inquest Review (PIR)

In complex cases, the coroner holds a pre-inquest review hearing. This determines the scope of the inquest, identifies interested persons, lists witnesses, and sets directions for disclosure. In Article 2 cases, legal aid may be available for the family.

Ramy czasowe: Weeks to months before the inquest
Praktyczne wskazówki
  • Attend the PIR if possible — it shapes the entire inquest
  • Apply for Exceptional Case Funding (legal aid) early if an Article 2 inquest
3

The Inquest Hearing

The inquest is held in public. The coroner (or jury, if summoned) hears evidence from witnesses including doctors, police officers, and expert witnesses. Interested persons (family, employers, state bodies) may ask questions through their representatives or in person. The coroner controls the proceedings.

Ramy czasowe: Varies — scheduled by the coroner
Praktyczne wskazówki
  • You can ask questions of witnesses
  • The hearing may last from a few hours to several weeks depending on complexity
4

Conclusion (Verdict)

The coroner or jury records a conclusion: natural causes, accident/misadventure, suicide, unlawful killing, lawful killing, open, industrial disease, drug/alcohol related, or a narrative conclusion setting out the circumstances. The conclusion must not appear to determine criminal liability of a named person.

Ramy czasowe: At the end of the hearing
Praktyczne wskazówki
  • A narrative conclusion allows the coroner to set out the full circumstances
  • The family can submit proposed questions and request particular conclusions
5

After the Inquest

The coroner may issue a Prevention of Future Deaths (PFD) report if the evidence reveals a risk of further deaths. The recipient must respond within 56 days. The inquest finding may be relevant to civil or criminal proceedings but is not determinative. A new inquest may be ordered by the High Court if fresh evidence emerges.

Ramy czasowe: Following the conclusion
Praktyczne wskazówki
  • PFD reports and responses are published on the Chief Coroner's website
  • The inquest does not prevent a separate civil claim for damages

Ważne ostrzeżenia

An inquest is not a trial — it does not determine guilt or civil liability.

Legal aid is generally not available for inquests, except in some Article 2 cases through Exceptional Case Funding.

The coroner decides the scope of the inquest — interested persons can request a wider scope but the coroner's decision is final (subject to judicial review).