The central theme of Bleak House is satirical exposure of the English
Chancery court system. Chancery or equity courts were one half of the
English civil justice system, existing side-by-side with law courts.
Chancery courts heard actions having to do with wills and estates, or
with the uses of private property and were notoriously slow and
inefficient. The novel has many characters and several sub-plots, and
the story is told partly by the novel's heroine, Esther Summerson, and
partly by an omniscient narrator. At the centre of Bleak House is a
long-running legal case, Jarndyce and Jarndyce, which came about because
someone wrote several conflicting wills. This novel helped support a
judicial reform movement, which culminated in the enactment of legal
reform in the 1870s.