
PART I
1 
These Rules may be cited as the Coroners Rules 1984 and shall come into operation on 1st July 1984.
2 

(1) In these Rules, unless the context otherwise requires—
 “the Act of 1887” means the Coroners Act 1887;
 “the Act of 1926” means the Coroners
(Amendment) Act 1926;
 “appropriate
officer” has the same meaning as it has in section 3A
of the Act of 1887 ;
 “chief
officer of police” means the chief officer of police for the area
in which the coroner's jurisdiction is comprised;
 “coroner” includes a deputy
and assistant deputy coroner;
 “deceased” means the person
upon whose body a post-mortem examination is made
or touching whose death an inquest is held or the
person whose death is reported to the coroner, as
the case may be;
 “enforcing
authority” has the same meaning as it has in section
18(7) of the Health
and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974;
 “hospital” means any institution
for the reception and treatment of persons suffering
from illness or mental disorder, any maternity home,
and any institution for the reception and treatment
of persons during convalescence;
 “industrial
disease” means a disease prescribed under section
76 of the Social Security Act
1975;
 “inquest” means an inquest
for the purpose of inquiring into the death of a person;
 “legal
proceedings” includes proceedings for the purpose of obtaining
any benefit or other payments under the provisions
of the Social
Security Act 1975 relating
to industrial injuries or under section
5 of the Industrial Injuries
and Diseases (Old Cases) Act 1975;
 “pneumoconiosis
medical board” and “pneumoconiosis medical
panel” have the same meanings as they have in the Social
Security (Industrial Injuries) (Prescribed Diseases)
Regulations 1980;
 “post-mortem
examination” means a post-mortem examination which a legally
qualified medical practitioner is directed or requested
by a coroner to make under section 21
of the Act of 1887  or under section
21(1) or 22(1)
of the Act of 1926 ;
 “registrar” means a registrar
of births and deaths;
 “the
Registration Acts” has the same meaning as it has in the Act
of 1887;
 “special
examination” has the same meaning as it has in section 22(1)
of the Act of 1926.
(2) In these Rules any reference to a Rule or Schedule
shall be construed as a reference to a Rule contained
in these Rules, or, as the case may be, to a Schedule
thereto; and any reference in a Rule to a paragraph
shall be construed as a reference to a paragraph of
that Rule.
3 

(1) Subject to paragraph
(2), the Rules specified
in Schedule
1 are hereby revoked.
(2) These Rules shall not have effect in relation to any
inquest begun before 1st July 1984 or to any post-mortem
examination which, before that day, a coroner has
directed or requested a medical practitioner to make;
and, accordingly, the Rules revoked by paragraph (1)
shall continue to have effect in relation to any such
inquest or post-mortem examination.
PART II
4 
A coroner shall at all times hold himself
ready to undertake, either by himself or by his deputy
or assistant deputy, any duties in connection with
inquests and post-mortem examinations.
PART III
5 
Where a coroner directs or requests that
a post-mortem examination shall be made, it shall
be made as soon after the death of the deceased as
is reasonably practicable.
6 

(1) In considering what legally qualified medical
practitioner shall be directed or requested by the
coroner to make a post-mortem examination the coroner
shall have regard to the following considerations:—
(a) the post-mortem examination should be made,
whenever practicable, by a pathologist with suitable
qualifications and experience and having access to
laboratory facilities;
(b) if the coroner is informed by the chief
officer of police that a person may be charged with
the murder, manslaughter or infanticide of the deceased,
the coroner should consult the chief officer of police
regarding the legally qualified medical practitioner
who is to make the post-mortem examination;
(c) if the deceased died in a hospital, the
coroner should not direct or request a pathologist
on the staff of, or associated with, that hospital
to make a post-mortem examination if—
(i) that pathologist does not desire
to make the examination, or
(ii) the conduct of any member of the
hospital staff is likely to be called in question,
or
(iii) any relative of the deceased asks
the coroner that the examination be not made by such
a pathologist,unless the obtaining of another pathologist
with suitable qualifications and experience would
cause the examination to be unduly delayed;
(d) if the death of the deceased may have been
caused by any of the diseases or injuries within paragraph
(2), the coroner should
not direct or request a legally qualified medical
practitioner who is a member of a pneumoconiosis medical
panel to make the post-mortem examination.
(2) The diseases and injuries within this paragraph
are those in connection with which duties are from
time to time imposed upon pneumoconiosis medical boards
by Part III of the Social Security Act
1975 and any regulations
made under that Act.
7 

(1) Where a coroner directs or requests a legally
qualified medical practitioner to make a post-mortem
examination, the coroner shall notify the persons
and bodies set out in paragraph
(2) of the date, hour
and place at which the examination will be made, unless
it is impracticable to notify any such persons or
bodies or to do so would cause the examination to
be unduly delayed.
(2) The persons and bodies to be notified by
the coroner are as follows:—
(a) any relative of the deceased who has notified
the coroner of his desire to attend, or be represented
at, the post-mortem examination;
(b) the deceased's regular medical attendant;
(c) if the deceased died in a hospital, the
hospital;
(d) if the death of the deceased may have been
caused by any of the diseases or injuries within Rule 6(2) (other than occupational
asthma), the pneumoconiosis medical panel for the
area;
(e) if the death of the deceased may have been
caused by any accident or disease notice of which
is required by or under any enactment to be given—
(i) to an enforcing authority, the
appropriate inspector appointed by, or representative
of, that authority; or
(ii) to an inspector appointed by an
enforcing authority, that inspector;
(f) any government department which has notified
the coroner of its desire to be represented at the
examination;
(g) if the chief officer of police has notified
the coroner of his desire to be represented at the
examination, the chief officer of police.
(3) Any person or body mentioned in paragraph
(2) shall be entitled
to be represented at a post-mortem examination by
a legally qualified medical practitioner, or if any
such person is a legally qualified medical practitioner
he shall be entitled to attend the examination in
person; but the chief officer of police may be represented
by a member of the police force of which he is chief
officer.
(4) Nothing in the foregoing provisions of
this Rule shall be deemed to limit the discretion
of the coroner to notify any person of the date, hour
and place at which a post-mortem examination will
be made and to permit him to attend the examination.
8 
A person attending a post-mortem examination
by virtue of paragraph
(3) or (4) of Rule 7
shall not interfere with the performance of the examination.
9 
A person making a post-mortem examination
shall make provision, so far as possible, for the
preservation of material which in his opinion bears
upon the cause of death for such period as the coroner
thinks fit.
10 

(1) The person making a post-mortem examination
shall report to the coroner in the form set out in Schedule
2 or in a form to the
like effect.
(2) Unless authorised by the coroner, the person
making a post-mortem examination shall not supply
a copy of his report to any person other than the
coroner.
11 

(1) No post-mortem examination shall be made
in a dwelling house or in licensed premises.
(2) Every post-mortem examination shall be
made in premises which are adequately equipped for
the purpose of the examination.
(3) Where a person dies in a hospital possessing
premises so equipped, any post-mortem examination
of the body of that person shall, with the consent
of the hospital authority, be made in those premises
unless the coroner otherwise decides.
(4) For the purpose of this Rule no premises
shall be deemed to be adequately equipped for the
purpose of post-mortem examinations unless they are
supplied with running water, proper heating and lighting
facilities, and containers for the storing and preservation
of material.
PART IV
12 
A person making a special examination shall
make provision, so far as possible, for the preservation
of the material submitted to him for examination for
such period as the coroner thinks fit.
13 
Unless authorised by the coroner, the person
making a special examination shall not supply a copy
of his report to any person other than the coroner.
PART V
14 
An order of a coroner authorising the burial
of a body shall not be issued unless the coroner has
held, or has decided to hold, an inquest touching
the death.
15 
Where a coroner is satisfied that a certificate
for the disposal of a body has been issued by a registrar,
the coroner shall not issue an order authorising the
burial of that body unless the certificate has been
surrendered to him; and in such a case he shall on
issuing the order transmit the certificate to the
registrar and inform him of the issue of the order.
PART VI
16 
Every inquest shall be opened, adjourned
and closed in a formal manner.
17 
Every inquest shall be held in public:
Provided that the coroner may direct that the public
be excluded from an inquest or any part of an inquest
if he considers that it would be in the interest of
national security so to do.
18 
An inquest shall not be held on Christmas
Day, Good Friday, or a bank holiday unless the coroner
thinks it requisite on grounds of urgency that an
inquest should be held on such a day, and no inquest
shall be held on a Sunday.
19 
The coroner shall notify the date, hour
and place of an inquest to—
(a) the spouse or a near relative or personal
representative of the deceased whose name and address
are known to the coroner; and
(b) any other person who—
(i) in the opinion of the coroner is within Rule 20(2); and
(ii) has asked the coroner to notify him of
the aforesaid particulars of the inquest; and
(iii) has supplied the coroner with
a telephone number or address for the purpose of so
notifying him.
20 

(1) Without prejudice to any enactment with
regard to the examination of witnesses at an inquest,
any person who satisfies the coroner that he is within paragraph
(2) shall be entitled
to examine any witness at an inquest either in person
or by counsel or solicitor:Provided that—
(a) the chief officer of police,
unless interested otherwise than in that capacity,
shall only be entitled to examine a witness by counsel
or solicitor;
(b) the coroner shall disallow
any question which in his opinion is not relevant
or is otherwise not a proper question.
(2) Each of the following persons shall have
the rights conferred by paragraph
(1):—
(a) a parent, child, spouse and any personal
representative of the deceased;
(b) any beneficiary under a policy of insurance
issued on the life of the deceased;
(c) the insurer who issued such a policy of
insurance;
(d) any person whose act or omission or that
of his agent or servant may in the opinion of the
coroner have caused, or contributed to, the death
of the deceased;
(e) any person appointed by a trade union to
which the deceased at the time of his death belonged,
if the death of the deceased may have been caused
by an injury received in the course of his employment
or by an industrial disease;
(f) an inspector appointed by, or a representative
of, an enforcing authority, or any person appointed
by a government department to attend the inquest;
(g) the chief officer of police;
(h) any other person who, in the opinion of
the coroner, is a properly interested person.
21 
Unless the coroner otherwise determines,
a witness at an inquest shall be examined first by
the coroner and, if the witness is represented at
the inquest, lastly by his representative.
22 

(1) No witness at an inquest shall be obliged
to answer any question tending to incriminate himself.
(2) Where it appears to the coroner that a
witness has been asked such a question, the coroner
shall inform the witness that he may refuse to answer.
23 

(1) Where a coroner holds an inquest touching
the death of a person which may have been caused by
an accident or disease notice of which is required
to be given to an enforcing authority, the coroner
shall adjourn the request unless an inspector appointed
by, or a representative of, the enforcing authority
is present to watch the proceedings and shall, at
least four days before holding the adjourned inquest,
give to such inspector or representative notice of
the date, hour and place of holding the adjourned
inquest.
(2) Where a coroner holds an inquest touching
the death of a person which may have been caused by
an accident or disease notice of which is required
to be given to an inspector appointed by an enforcing
authority, the coroner shall adjourn the inquest unless
the inspector or a representative of the inspector
is present to watch the proceedings and shall, at
least four days before holding the adjourned inquest,
give to the inspector or representative notice of
the date, hour and place of holding the adjourned
inquest.
24 
Any person whose conduct is likely in the
opinion of the coroner to be called in question at
an inquest shall, if not duly summoned to give evidence
at the inquest, be given reasonable notice of the
date, hour and place at which the inquest will be
held.
25 
If the conduct of any person is called
in question at an inquest on grounds which the coroner
thinks substantial and which relate to any matter
referred to in Rule 36 and if that person
is not present at the inquest and has not been duly
summoned to attend or otherwise given notice of the
holding of the inquest, the inquest shall be adjourned
to enable him to be present, if he so desires.
26 

(1) If the chief officer of police requests
a coroner to adjourn an inquest on the ground that
a person may be charged with an offence within paragraph
(3), the coroner shall
adjourn the inquest for twenty-eight days or for such
longer period as he may think fit.
(2) At any time before the date fixed for the
holding of the adjourned inquest, the chief officer
of police may ask the coroner for a further adjournment
and the coroner may comply with his request.
(3) The offences within this paragraph are
murder, manslaughter or infanticide of the deceased,
an offence under section 1
of the Road Traffic Act 1972
committed by causing the death of the deceased and
an offence under section 2(1)
of the Suicide Act 1961
consisting of aiding, abetting, counselling or procuring
the suicide of the deceased.
27 

(1) If the Director of Public Prosecutions
requests a coroner to adjourn an inquest on the ground
that a person may be charged with an offence (whether
or not involving the death of a person other than
the deceased) committed in circumstances connected
with the death of the deceased, not being an offence
within Rule 26(3), the coroner shall
adjourn the inquest for twenty-eight days or for such
longer period as he may think fit.
(2) At any time before the date fixed for the
holding of the adjourned inquest, the Director of
Public Prosecutions may ask the coroner for a further
adjournment and the coroner may comply with his request.
28 

(1) If during the course of an inquest evidence
is given from which it appears to the coroner that
the death of the deceased is likely to be due to an
offence within Rule 26(3) and that a person
might be charged with such an offence, then the coroner,
unless he has previously been notified by the Director
of Public Prosecutions that adjournment is unnecessary,
shall adjourn the inquest for fourteen days or for
such longer period as he may think fit and send to
the Director particulars of that evidence.
(2) At any time before the date fixed for the
holding of the adjourned inquest, the Director of
Public Prosecutions may ask the coroner for a further
adjournment and the coroner may comply with his request.
29 
A certificate under the hand of a coroner
stating the particulars which under the Registration
Acts are required to be registered concerning a death
which he furnishes to a registrar of deaths under section
20(4) of the Act of 1926 shall be furnished
within five days from the date on which the inquest
is adjourned.
30 
When an inquest has been adjourned for
any reason and section
20(4) of the Act of
1926 does not apply, the coroner shall on application
supply to any person who, in the opinion of the coroner,
is a properly interested person an interim certificate
of the fact of death.
31 
A certificate under the hand of a coroner
stating the result of the relevant criminal proceedings
which he furnishes to a registrar of deaths under section
20(5) or section 20(7)
of the Act of 1926 shall be furnished within twenty-eight
days from the date on which he is notified of the
result of the proceedings under section 20(9)
or section 20(10)
of that Act or, if the person charged with an offence
before a magistrates' court as mentioned in section
20(8) of that Act is
not committed for trial to the Crown Court, within
twenty-eight days from the date on which he is notified
under the said section
20(8) of the result
of the proceedings in the magistrates' court.
32 
Subject to section
20 of the Act of 1926,
an inquest shall not be adjourned solely by reason
of the institution of criminal proceedings arising
out of the death of the deceased.
33 

(1) If an inquest which has been adjourned
in pursuance of section
20 of the Act of 1926
is not to be resumed, the coroner shall notify the
persons within paragraph
(4).
(2) If an inquest which has been adjourned
as aforesaid is to be resumed, the coroner shall give
reasonable notice of the date, hour and place at which
the inquest will be resumed to the persons within paragraph
(4).
(3) Where a coroner has fixed a date, hour
and place for the holding of an inquest adjourned
for any reason, he may, at any time before the date
so fixed, alter the date, hour or place fixed and
shall then give reasonable notice to the persons within paragraph
(4).
(4) The persons within this paragraph are the
members of the jury (if any), the witnesses, the chief
officer of police, any person notified under Rule 19 or 24
and any other person appearing in person or represented
at the inquest.
34 
Where any witness or juror who has been
bound over to attend at an adjourned inquest, whether
without further notice or conditionally on receiving
further notice, is notified by the coroner that his
attendance at the adjourned inquest is not required
or that the inquest will not be resumed, the recognizance
entered into by him shall be void.
35 
Where a person charged with an offence
within Rule 26(3) is committed for trial
to the Crown Court, the coroner who has adjourned
an inquest in pursuance of section 20
of the Act of 1926 shall inform the appropriate officer
of the Crown Court at the place where the person charged
is to be tried of such adjournment.
36 

(1) The proceedings and evidence at an inquest
shall be directed solely to ascertaining the following
matters, namely—
(a) who the deceased was;
(b) how, when and where the deceased came by
his death;
(c) the particulars for the time being required
by the Registration Acts to be registered concerning
the death.
(2) Neither the coroner nor the jury shall
express any opinion on any other matters.
37 

(1) Subject to the provisions of paragraphs
(2) to (4), the coroner
may admit at an inquest documentary evidence relevant
to the purposes of the inquest from any living person
which in his opinion is unlikely to be disputed, unless
a person who in the opinion of the coroner is within Rule 20(2) objects to the documentary
evidence being admitted.
(2) Documentary evidence so objected to may
be admitted if in the opinion of the coroner the maker
of the document is unable to give oral evidence within
a reasonable period.
(3) Subject to paragraph
(4), before admitting
such documentary evidence the coroner shall at the
beginning of the inquest announce publicly—
(a) that the documentary evidence may be admitted,
and
(b) 
(i) the full name of the maker of
the document to be admitted in evidence, and
(ii) a brief account of such document,
and
(c) that any person who in the opinion of the
coroner is within Rule 20(2) may object to the
admission of any such documentary evidence, and
(d) that any person who in the opinion of the
coroner is within Rule 20(2) is entitled to see
a copy of any such documentary evidence if he so wishes.
(4) If during the course of an inquest it appears
that there is available at the inquest documentary
evidence which in the opinion of the coroner is relevant
to the purposes of the inquest but the maker of the
document is not present and in the opinion of the
coroner the content of the documentary evidence is
unlikely to be disputed, the coroner shall at the
earliest opportunity during the course of the inquest
comply with the provisions of paragraph (3).
(5) A coroner may admit as evidence at an inquest
any document made by a deceased person if he is of
the opinion that the contents of the document are
relevant to the purposes of the inquest.
(6) Any documentary evidence admitted under
this Rule shall, unless the coroner otherwise directs,
be read aloud at the inquest.
38 
All exhibits produced in evidence at an
inquest shall be marked with consecutive numbers and
each number shall be preceded by the letter “C”.
39 
The coroner shall take notes of the evidence
at every inquest.
40 
No person shall be allowed to address the
coroner or the jury as to the facts.
41 
Where the coroner sits with a jury, he
shall sum up the evidence to the jury and direct them
as to the law before they consider their verdict and
shall draw their attention to Rules 36(2)
and 42.
42 
No verdict shall be framed in such a way
as to appear to determine any question of—
(a) criminal liability on the part of a named
person, or
(b) civil liability.
43 
A coroner who believes that action should
be taken to prevent the recurrence of fatalities similar
to that in respect of which the inquest is being held
may announce at the inquest that he is reporting the
matter in writing to the person or authority who may
have power to take such action and he may report the
matter accordingly.
PART VII
44 
Subject to the provisions of these Rules,
the person to whom the coroner's warrant is issued
under section
3 of the Act of 1887
for the summoning of persons to attend as jurors at
inquests shall have regard to the convenience of the
persons summoned and to their respective places of
residence, and in particular to the desirability of
selecting jurors within reasonable daily travelling
distance of the place where they are to attend.
45 
Subject to the provisions of these Rules,
jurors shall be summoned by notice in writing sent
by post or delivered by hand and a notice shall be
sent or delivered to a juror at his address as shown
in the electoral register.
46 
A written summons sent or delivered to
any person under Rule 45 shall be accompanied
by a notice informing him—
(a) of the effect of section 3A
of the Act of 1887 and Rules
51(1) and 52;
and
(b) that he may make representations to the
appropriate officer with a view to obtaining the withdrawal
of the summons, if for any reason he is not qualified
for jury service, or wishes or is entitled to be excused.
47 
If it appears to the appropriate officer,
at any time before the day on which any person summoned
under section
3 of the Act of 1887
is to attend, that his attendance is unnecessary,
or can be dispensed with, the appropriate officer
may withdraw or alter the summons by notice served
in the same way as a notice of summons.
48 
If it appears to the coroner that a jury
will be, or probably will be, incomplete, the coroner
may, if he thinks fit, require any persons who are
in, or in the vicinity of, the place of the inquest
to be summoned (without any written notice) for jury
service up to the number needed (after allowing for
any who may not be qualified under section 3A
of the Act of 1887 and for excusals) to make up such
number.
49 

(1) If a person summoned under section 3
of the Act of 1887 shows to the satisfaction of the
appropriate officer or of the coroner—
(a) that he has served on a jury, or duly attended
to serve on a jury, at inquests held in that coroner's
jurisdiction on three or more days in the period of
one year ending with the service of the summons on
him; or
(b) that he has served on a jury, or duly attended
to serve on a jury, in the Crown Court, the High Court
or any county court in the period of two years ending
with the service of the summons on him; or
(c) that any such court or a coroner has excused
him from jury service for a period which has not terminated,the appropriate officer or the coroner
shall excuse him from attending, or further attending,
in pursuance of the summons.
(2) In reckoning the days for the purpose of paragraph
(1)(a) no account shall
be taken of any day or days to which an inquest is
adjourned.
50 
A person duly attending to serve on a jury
in compliance with a summons under section 3
of the Act of 1887 shall be entitled on application
to the appropriate officer to a certificate recording
that he has so atterided.
51 

(1) A person summoned under section 3
of the Act of 1887 shall be entitled, if he so wishes,
to be excused from jury service if he is among the
persons for the time being listed in Part III
of Schedule 1 to the Juries
Act 1974 but, except
as provided by that Part of that Schedule in the case
of members of the forces, a person shall not by this
Rule be exempt from his obligation to attend if summoned
unless he is excused from attending under paragraph
(2).
(2) If any person so summoned shows to the
satisfaction of the appropriate officer or of the
coroner that there is good reason why he should be
excused from attending in pursuance of the summons,
the appropriate officer or the coroner may excuse
him from so attending and shall do so if the reason
shown is that the person is entitled under paragraph
(1) to excusal.
52 
Where it appears to the appropriate officer,
in the case of a person attending in pursuance of
a summons under section
3 of the Act of 1887,
that on account of physical disability or insufficient
understanding of English there is doubt as to his
capacity to act effectively as a juror, the person
may be brought before the coroner, who shall determine
whether or not he should act as a juror and, if not,
shall discharge the summons.
53 
Nothing in this Part of these Rules shall
have effect in relation to any inquest held by the
coroner of the Queen's household.
PART VIII
54 
A coroner shall keep an indexed register
of all deaths reported to him, or to his deputy or
assistant deputy, which shall contain the particulars
specified in Schedule
3.
55 
Every exhibit at an inquest shall, unless
a court otherwise directs, be retained by the coroner
until he is satisfied that the exhibit is not likely
to be, or will no longer be, required for the purposes
of any other legal proceedings, and shall then, if
a request for its delivery has been made by a person
appearing to the coroner to be entitled to the possession
thereof, be delivered to that person, or, if no such
request has been made, be destroyed or otherwise disposed
of as the coroner thinks fit.
56 
Any document (other than an exhibit at
an inquest) in the possession of a coroner in connection
with an inquest or post-mortem examination shall,
unless a court otherwise directs, be retained by the
coroner for at least fifteen years:
Provided that the coroner may deliver any such document
to any person who in the opinion of the coroner is
a proper person to have possession of it.
57 

(1) A coroner shall, on application and on
payment of the prescribed fee (if any), supply to
any person who, in the opinion of the coroner, is
a properly interested person a copy of any report
of a post-mortem examination (including one made under section
21 of the Act of 1926)
or special examination, or of any notes of evidence,
or of any document put in evidence at an inquest.
(2) A coroner may, on application and without
charge, permit any person who, in the opinion of the
coroner, is a properly interested person to inspect
such report, notes of evidence, or document.
58 
Where a deputy or assistant deputy coroner
acting for, or as, the coroner signs a document, he
shall sign it in his own name as deputy or assistant
deputy coroner, as the case may be.
59 
Where a coroner vacates his office by death
or otherwise, all documents, exhibits, registers and
other things in the custody of the coroner in connection
with inquests or post-mortem examinations shall be
transferred to the coroner next appointed to that
office.
60 
The forms set out in Schedule 4,
with such modifications as circumstances may require,
may be used for the purposes for which they are expressed
to be applicable.
Hailsham of St. Marylebone, C
5th April 1984I concur,
Leon Brittan
One of Her Majesty's Principal Secretaries of State
Home Office
9th April 1984
SCHEDULE 1
Rule 3


Rules revoked References
The Coroners Rules 1953 S.I. 1953/205
The Coroners Rules 1956 S.I. 1956/1691
The Coroners (Amendment) Rules 1974 S.I. 1974/2128
The Coroners (Amendment) Rules 1977 S.I. 1977/1881
The Coroners (Amendment) Rules 1980 S.I. 1980/557
The Coroners (Amendment) (Savings) Rules 1980 S.I. 1980/668
The Coroners (Amendment) Rules 1983 S.I. 1983/1539
SCHEDULE 2
Rule 10

SCHEDULE 3
Rule 54

Date on which death is reported to corner Particulars of deceased  State whether case disposed of by using Pink Form A or B or whether inquest was held
 Full name and address Age Sex Cause of death  Verdict at inquest (if any)

SCHEDULE 4
Rule 60

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