The Small Debts, Middlesex Act 1749 was a public act of the Parliament of Great Britain that reorganised the county court of the county of Middlesex.
The act allowed twelve freeholders summoned to the county court of Middlesex to decide small claims (debts or damages less than 40 shillings) by a majority and in a summary way.
The act was described by Blackstone:[1]
"This is a plan entirely agreeable to the constitution and genius of the nation: calculated to prevent a multitude of vexatious actions in the superior courts, and at the same time to give honest creditors an opportunity of recovering small sums; which now they are frequently deterred from by the expense of a suit at law: a plan which, in short, wants only to be generally known, in order to it's universal reception."
Sheriffs of the county counts of the county of Middlesex had authority to hear small claims (debts or damages less than 40 shillings), finding the process to be annoying, costly and slow.[2]
The act enacted that:[2]