10309 lines
577 KiB
Plaintext
10309 lines
577 KiB
Plaintext
Project Gutenberg's An Essay on the Trial by Jury, by Lysander Spooner
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This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
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re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
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with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
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Title: An Essay on the Trial by Jury
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Author: Lysander Spooner
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Release Date: June 27, 2010 [EBook #32984]
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Language: English
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*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN ESSAY ON THE TRIAL BY JURY ***
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Produced by Susan Goble, Curtis Weyant, Graeme Mackreth
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and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
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https://www.pgdp.net
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AN ESSAY
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ON THE
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TRIAL BY JURY.
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BY LYSANDER SPOONER.
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BOSTON:
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JOHN P. JEWETT AND COMPANY.
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CLEVELAND, OHIO:
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JEWETT, PROCTOR & WORTHINGTON.
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1852.
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Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1852, by
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LYSANDER SPOONER,
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In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of Massachusetts.
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NOTICE TO ENGLISH PUBLISHERS.
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The author claims the copyright of this book in England, on Common Law
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principles, without regard to acts of parliament; and if the main
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principle of the book itself be true, viz., that no legislation, in
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conflict with the Common Law, is of any validity, his claim is a legal
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one. He forbids any one to reprint the book without his consent.
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Stereotyped by
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HOBART & ROBBINS;
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New England Type and Stereotype Foundery,
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BOSTON.
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NOTE.
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This volume, it is presumed by the author, gives what will generally be
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considered satisfactory evidence,--though not all the evidence,--of what
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the Common Law trial by jury really is. In a future volume, if it should
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be called for, it is designed to corroborate the grounds taken in this;
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give a concise view of the English constitution; show the
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unconstitutional character of the existing government in England, and
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the unconstitutional means by which the trial by jury has been broken
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down in practice; prove that, neither in England nor the United States,
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have legislatures ever been invested by the people with any authority to
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impair the powers, change the oaths, or (with few exceptions) abridge
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the jurisdiction, of juries, or select jurors on any other than Common
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Law principles; and, consequently, that, in both countries, legislation
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is still constitutionally subordinate to the discretion and consciences
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of Common Law juries, in all cases, both civil and criminal, in which
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juries sit. The same volume will probably also discuss several political
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and legal questions, which will naturally assume importance if the trial
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by jury should be reëstablished.
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CONTENTS.
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PAGE
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CHAPTER I. THE RIGHT OF JURIES TO JUDGE OF THE JUSTICE OF LAWS, 5
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SECTION 1, 5
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SECTION 2, 11
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CHAPTER II. THE TRIAL BY JURY, AS DEFINED BY MAGNA CARTA, 20
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SECTION 1. _The History of Magna Carta_, 20
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SECTION 2. _The Language of Magna Carta_, 25
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CHAPTER III. ADDITIONAL PROOFS OF THE RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF JURORS, 51
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SECTION 1. _Weakness of the Regal Authority_, 51
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SECTION 2. _The Ancient Common Law Juries were mere
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Courts of Conscience_, 63
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SECTION 3. _The Oaths of Jurors_, 85
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SECTION 4. _The Right of Jurors to fix the Sentence_, 91
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SECTION 5. _The Oaths of Judges_, 98
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SECTION 6. _The Coronation Oath_, 102
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CHAPTER IV. THE RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF JURIES IN CIVIL SUITS, 110
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CHAPTER V. OBJECTIONS ANSWERED, 128
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CHAPTER VI. JURIES OF THE PRESENT DAY ILLEGAL, 142
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CHAPTER VII. ILLEGAL JUDGES, 157
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CHAPTER VIII. THE FREE ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE, 172
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CHAPTER IX. THE CRIMINAL INTENT, 178
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CHAPTER X. MORAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR JURORS, 189
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CHAPTER XI. AUTHORITY OF MAGNA CARTA, 192
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CHAPTER XII. LIMITATIONS IMPOSED UPON THE MAJORITY BY
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THE TRIAL BY JURY, 206
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APPENDIX--TAXATION, 222
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TRIAL BY JURY.
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CHAPTER I.
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THE RIGHT OF JURIES TO JUDGE OF THE JUSTICE OF LAWS.
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SECTION I.
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For more than six hundred years--that is, since Magna Carta, in
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1215--there has been no clearer principle of English or American
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constitutional law, than that, in criminal cases, it is not only the
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right and duty of juries to judge what are the facts, what is the law,
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and what was the moral intent of the accused; _but that it is also their
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right, and their primary and paramount duty, to judge of the justice of
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the law, and to hold all laws invalid, that are, in their opinion,
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unjust or oppressive, and all persons guiltless in violating, or
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resisting the execution of, such laws_.
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Unless such be the right and duty of jurors, it is plain that, instead
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of juries being a "palladium of liberty"--a barrier against the tyranny
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and oppression of the government--they are really mere tools in its
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hands, for carrying into execution any injustice and oppression it may
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desire to have executed.
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But for their right to judge of the law, _and the justice of the law_,
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juries would be no protection to an accused person, _even as to matters
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of fact_; for, if the government can dictate to a jury any law whatever,
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in a criminal case, it can certainly dictate to them the laws of
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evidence. That is, it can dictate what evidence is admissible, and what
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inadmissible, _and also what force or weight is to be given to the
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evidence admitted_. And if the government can thus dictate to a jury the
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laws of evidence, it can not only make it necessary for them to convict
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on a partial exhibition of the evidence rightfully pertaining to the
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case, but it can even require them to convict on any evidence whatever
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that it pleases to offer them.
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That the rights and duties of jurors must necessarily be such as are
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here claimed for them, will be evident when it is considered what the
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trial by jury is, and what is its object.
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_"The trial by jury," then, is a "trial by the country"--that is, by the
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people--as distinguished from a trial by the government._
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It was anciently called "trial _per pais_"--that is, "trial by the
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country." And now, in every criminal trial, the jury are told that the
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accused "has, for trial, put himself upon the _country_; which _country_
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you (the jury) are."
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_The object of this trial "by the country" or by the people, in
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preference to a trial by the government, is to guard against every
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species of oppression by the government. In order to effect this end, it
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is indispensable that the people, or "the country," judge of and
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determine their own liberties against the government; instead of the
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government's judging of and determining its own powers over the people.
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How is it possible that juries can do anything to protect the liberties
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of the people against the government, if they are not allowed to
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determine what those liberties are?_
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Any government, that is its own judge of, and determines authoritatively
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for the people, what are its own powers over the people, is an absolute
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government of course. It has all the powers that it chooses to exercise.
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There is no other--or at least no more accurate--definition of a
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despotism than this.
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On the other hand, any people, that judge of, and determine
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authoritatively for the government, what are their own liberties against
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the government, of course retain all the liberties they wish to enjoy.
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_And this is freedom._ At least, it is freedom _to them_; because,
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although it may be theoretically imperfect, it, nevertheless,
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corresponds to _their_ highest notions of freedom.
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To secure this right of the people to judge of their own liberties
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against the government, the jurors are taken, (or must be, to make them
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lawful jurors,) from the body of the people, _by lot_, or by some
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process that precludes any previous knowledge, choice, or selection of
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them, on the part of the government. This is done to prevent the
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government's constituting a jury of its own partisans or friends; in
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other words, to prevent the government's _packing_ a jury, with a view
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to maintain its own laws, and accomplish its own purposes.
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It is supposed that, if twelve men be taken, _by lot_, from the mass of
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the people, without the possibility of any previous knowledge, choice,
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or selection of them, on the part of the government, the jury will be a
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fair epitome of "the country" at large, and not merely of the party or
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faction that sustain the measures of the government; that substantially
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all classes of opinions, prevailing among the people, will be
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represented in the jury; and especially that the opponents of the
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government, (if the government have any opponents,) will be represented
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there, as well as its friends; that the classes, who are oppressed by
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the laws of the government, (if any are thus oppressed,) will have their
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representatives in the jury, as well as those classes, who take sides
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with the oppressor--that is, with the government.
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It is fairly presumable that such a tribunal will agree to no conviction
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except such as _substantially the whole country_ would agree to, if they
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were present, taking part in the trial. A trial by such a tribunal is,
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therefore, in effect, "a trial by the country." In its results it
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probably comes as near to a trial by the _whole_ country, as any trial
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that it is practicable to have, without too great inconvenience and
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expense. And as unanimity is required for a conviction, it follows that
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no one can be convicted, except for the violation of such laws as
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substantially the whole country wish to have maintained. The government
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can enforce none of its laws, (by punishing offenders, through the
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verdicts of juries,) except such as substantially the whole people wish
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to have enforced. The government, therefore, consistently with the trial
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by jury, can exercise no powers over the people, (or, what is the same
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thing, over the accused person, who represents the rights of the
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people,) except such as substantially the whole people of the country
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consent that it may exercise. In such a trial, therefore, "the country,"
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or the people, judge of and determine their own liberties against the
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government, instead of the government's judging of and determining its
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own powers over the people.
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But all this "trial by the country" would be no trial at all "by the
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country," but only a trial by the government, if the government could
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either declare who may, and who may not, be jurors, or could dictate to
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the jury anything whatever, either of law or evidence, that is of the
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essence of the trial.
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If the government may decide who may, and who may not, be jurors, it
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will of course select only its partisans, and those friendly to its
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measures. It may not only prescribe who may, and who may not, be
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eligible to be drawn as jurors; but it may also question each person
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drawn as a juror, as to his sentiments in regard to the particular law
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involved in each trial, before suffering him to be sworn on the panel;
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and exclude him if he be found unfavorable to the maintenance of such a
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law.[1]
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So, also, if the government may dictate to the jury _what laws they are
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to enforce_, it is no longer a "trial by the country," but a trial by
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the government; because the jury then try the accused, not by any
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standard of their own--not by their own judgments of their rightful
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liberties--but by a standard dictated to them by the government. And the
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standard, thus dictated by the government, becomes the measure of the
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people's liberties. If the government dictate the standard of trial, it
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of course dictates the results of the trial. And such a trial is no
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trial by the country, but only a trial by the government; and in it the
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government determines what are its own powers over the people, instead
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of the people's determining what are their own liberties against the
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government. In short, if the jury have no right to judge of the justice
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of a law of the government, they plainly can do nothing to protect the
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people against the oppressions of the government; for there are no
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oppressions which the government may not authorize by law.
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The jury are also to judge whether the laws are rightly expounded to
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them by the court. Unless they judge on this point, they do nothing to
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protect their liberties against the oppressions that are capable of
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being practised under cover of a corrupt exposition of the laws. If the
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judiciary can authoritatively dictate to a jury any exposition of the
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law, they can dictate to them the law itself, and such laws as they
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please; because laws are, in practice, one thing or another, according
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as they are expounded.
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The jury must also judge whether there really be any such law, (be it
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good or bad,) as the accused is charged with having transgressed. Unless
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they judge on this point, the people are liable to have their liberties
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taken from them by brute force, without any law at all.
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The jury must also judge of the laws of evidence. If the government can
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dictate to a jury the laws of evidence, it can not only shut out any
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evidence it pleases, tending to vindicate the accused, but it can
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require that any evidence whatever, that it pleases to offer, be held as
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conclusive proof of any offence whatever which the government chooses to
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allege.
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It is manifest, therefore, that the jury must judge of and try the whole
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case, and every part and parcel of the case, free of any dictation or
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authority on the part of the government. They must judge of the
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existence of the law; of the true exposition of the law; _of the justice
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of the law_; and of the admissibility and weight of all the evidence
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offered; otherwise the government will have everything its own way; the
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jury will be mere puppets in the hands of the government; and the trial
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will be, in reality, a trial by the government, and not a "trial by the
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country." By such trials the government will determine its own powers
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over the people, instead of the people's determining their own liberties
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against the government; and it will be an entire delusion to talk, as
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for centuries we have done, of the trial by jury, as a "palladium of
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liberty," or as any protection to the people against the oppression and
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tyranny of the government.
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The question, then, between trial by jury, as thus described, and trial
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by the government, is simply a question between liberty and despotism.
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The authority to judge what are the powers of the government, and what
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the liberties of the people, must necessarily be vested in one or the
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other of the parties themselves--the government, or the people; because
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there is no third party to whom it can be entrusted. If the authority be
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vested in the government, the government is absolute, and the people
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have no liberties except such as the government sees fit to indulge them
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with. If, on the other hand, that authority be vested in the people,
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then the people have all liberties, (as against the government,) except
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such as substantially the whole people (through a jury) choose to
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disclaim; and the government can exercise no power except such as
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substantially the whole people (through a jury) consent that it may
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exercise.
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SECTION II.
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The force and justice of the preceding argument cannot be evaded by
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saying that the government is chosen by the people; that, in theory, it
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represents the people; that it is designed to do the will of the people;
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that its members are all sworn to observe the fundamental or
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constitutional law instituted by the people; that its acts are therefore
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entitled to be considered the acts of the people; and that to allow a
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jury, representing the people, to invalidate the acts of the government,
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would therefore be arraying the people against themselves.
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There are two answers to such an argument.
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One answer is, that, in a representative government, there is no
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absurdity or contradiction, nor any arraying of the people against
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themselves, in requiring that the statutes or enactments of the
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government shall pass the ordeal of any number of separate tribunals,
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before it shall be determined that they are to have the force of laws.
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Our American constitutions have provided five of these separate
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tribunals, to wit, representatives, senate, executive,[2] jury, and
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judges; and have made it necessary that each enactment shall pass the
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ordeal of all these separate tribunals, before its authority can be
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established by the punishment of those who choose to transgress it. And
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there is no more absurdity or inconsistency in making a jury one of
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these several tribunals, than there is in making the representatives, or
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the senate, or the executive, or the judges, one of them. There is no
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more absurdity in giving a jury a veto upon the laws, than there is in
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giving a veto to each of these other tribunals. The people are no more
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arrayed against themselves, when a jury puts its veto upon a statute,
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which the other tribunals have sanctioned, than they are when the same
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veto is exercised by the representatives, the senate, the executive, or
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the judges.
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But another answer to the argument that the people are arrayed against
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themselves, when a jury hold an enactment of the government invalid, is,
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that the government, and all the departments of the government, _are
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merely the servants and agents of the people_; not invested with
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arbitrary or absolute authority to bind the people, but required to
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submit all their enactments to the judgment of a tribunal more fairly
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representing the whole people, before they carry them into execution, by
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punishing any individual for transgressing them. If the government were
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not thus required to submit their enactments to the judgment of "the
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country," before executing them upon individuals--if, in other words,
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the people had reserved to themselves no veto upon the acts of the
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government, the government, instead of being a mere servant and agent of
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the people, would be an absolute despot over the people. It would have
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all power in its own hands; because the power to _punish_ carries all
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other powers with it. A power that can, of itself, and by its own
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authority, punish disobedience, can compel obedience and submission, and
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is above all responsibility for the character of its laws. In short, it
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is a despotism.
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And it is of no consequence to inquire how a government came by this
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power to punish, whether by prescription, by inheritance, by usurpation,
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or by delegation from the people? _If it have now but got it_, the
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government is absolute.
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It is plain, therefore, that if the people have invested the government
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with power to make laws that absolutely bind the people, and to punish
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the people for transgressing those laws, the people have surrendered
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their liberties unreservedly into the hands of the government.
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It is of no avail to say, in answer to this view of the case, that in
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surrendering their liberties into the hands of the government, the
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people took an oath from the government, that it would exercise its
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power within certain constitutional limits; for when did oaths ever
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restrain a government that was otherwise unrestrained? Or when did a
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government fail to determine that all its acts were within the
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constitutional and authorized limits of its power, if it were permitted
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to determine that question for itself?
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Neither is it of any avail to say, that, if the government abuse its
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power, and enact unjust and oppressive laws, the government may be
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changed by the influence of discussion, and the exercise of the right of
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suffrage. Discussion can do nothing to prevent the enactment, or procure
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the repeal, of unjust laws, unless it be understood that the discussion
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is to be followed by resistance. Tyrants care nothing for discussions
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that are to end only in discussion. Discussions, which do not interfere
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with the enforcement of their laws, are but idle wind to them. Suffrage
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is equally powerless and unreliable. It can be exercised only
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periodically; and the tyranny must at least be borne until the time for
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suffrage comes. Besides, when the suffrage is exercised, it gives no
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guaranty for the repeal of existing laws that are oppressive, and no
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security against the enactment of new ones that are equally so. The
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second body of legislators are liable and likely to be just as
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tyrannical as the first. If it be said that the second body may be
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chosen for their integrity, the answer is, that the first were chosen
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for that very reason, and yet proved tyrants. The second will be exposed
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to the same temptations as the first, and will be just as likely to
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prove tyrannical. Who ever heard that succeeding legislatures were, on
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the whole, more honest than those that preceded them? What is there in
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the nature of men or things to make them so? If it be said that the first
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body were chosen from motives of injustice, that fact proves that there is
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a portion of society who desire to establish injustice; and if they were
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powerful or artful enough to procure the election of their instruments to
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compose the first legislature, they will be likely to be powerful or
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artful enough to procure the election of the same or similar instruments
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to compose the second. The right of suffrage, therefore, and even a change
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of legislators, guarantees no change of legislation--certainly no change
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for the better. Even if a change for the better actually comes, it comes
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too late, because it comes only after more or less injustice has been
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irreparably done.
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But, at best, the right of suffrage can be exercised only periodically;
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and between the periods the legislators are wholly irresponsible. No
|
|
despot was ever more entirely irresponsible than are republican
|
|
legislators during the period for which they are chosen. They can
|
|
neither be removed from their office, nor called to account while in
|
|
their office, nor punished after they leave their office, be their
|
|
tyranny what it may. Moreover, the judicial and executive departments of
|
|
the government are equally irresponsible _to the people_, and are only
|
|
responsible, (by impeachment, and dependence for their salaries), to
|
|
these irresponsible legislators. This dependence of the judiciary and
|
|
executive upon the legislature is a guaranty that they will always
|
|
sanction and execute its laws, whether just or unjust. Thus the
|
|
legislators hold the whole power of the government in their hands, and
|
|
are at the same time utterly irresponsible for the manner in which they
|
|
use it.
|
|
|
|
If, now, this government, (the three branches thus really united in
|
|
one), can determine the validity of, and enforce, its own laws, it is,
|
|
for the time being, entirely absolute, and wholly irresponsible to the
|
|
people.
|
|
|
|
But this is not all. These legislators, and this government, so
|
|
irresponsible while in power, can perpetuate their power at pleasure, if
|
|
they can determine what legislation is authoritative upon the people,
|
|
and can enforce obedience to it; for they can not only declare their
|
|
power perpetual, but they can enforce submission to all legislation that
|
|
is necessary to secure its perpetuity. They can, for example, prohibit
|
|
all discussion of the rightfulness of their authority; forbid the use of
|
|
the suffrage; prevent the election of any successors; disarm, plunder,
|
|
imprison, and even kill all who refuse submission. If, therefore, the
|
|
government (all departments united) be absolute for a day--that is, if
|
|
it can, for a day, enforce obedience to its own laws--it can, in that
|
|
day, secure its power for all time--like the queen, who wished to reign
|
|
but for a day, but in that day caused the king, her husband, to be
|
|
slain, and usurped his throne.
|
|
|
|
Nor will it avail to say that such acts would be unconstitutional, and
|
|
that unconstitutional acts may be lawfully resisted; for everything a
|
|
government pleases to do will, of course, be determined to be
|
|
constitutional, if the government itself be permitted to determine the
|
|
question of the constitutionality of its own acts. Those who are capable
|
|
of tyranny, are capable of perjury to sustain it.
|
|
|
|
The conclusion, therefore, is, that any government, that can, _for a
|
|
day_, enforce its own laws, without appealing to the people, (or to a
|
|
tribunal fairly representing the people,) for their consent, is, in
|
|
theory, an absolute government, irresponsible to the people, and can
|
|
perpetuate its power at pleasure.
|
|
|
|
The trial by jury is based upon a recognition of this principle, and
|
|
therefore forbids the government to execute any of its laws, by
|
|
punishing violators, in any case whatever, without first getting the
|
|
consent of "the country," or the people, through a jury. In this way,
|
|
the people, at all times, hold their liberties in their own hands, and
|
|
never surrender them, even for a moment, into the hands of the
|
|
government.
|
|
|
|
The trial by jury, then, gives to any and every individual the liberty,
|
|
at any time, to disregard or resist any law whatever of the government,
|
|
if he be willing to submit to the decision of a jury, the questions,
|
|
whether the law be intrinsically just and obligatory? and whether his
|
|
conduct, in disregarding or resisting it, were right in itself? And any
|
|
law, which does not, in such trial, obtain the unanimous sanction of
|
|
twelve men, taken at random from the people, and judging according to
|
|
the standard of justice in their own minds, free from all dictation and
|
|
authority of the government, may be transgressed and resisted with
|
|
impunity, by whomsoever pleases to transgress or resist it.[3]
|
|
|
|
The trial by jury authorizes all this, or it is a sham and a hoax,
|
|
utterly worthless for protecting the people against oppression. If it do
|
|
not authorize an individual to resist the first and least act of
|
|
injustice or tyranny, on the part of the government, it does not
|
|
authorize him to resist the last and the greatest. If it do not
|
|
authorize individuals to nip tyranny in the bud, it does not authorize
|
|
them to cut it down when its branches are filled with the ripe fruits of
|
|
plunder and oppression.
|
|
|
|
Those who deny the right of a jury to protect an individual in resisting
|
|
an unjust law of the government, deny him all _legal_ defence
|
|
whatsoever against oppression. The right of revolution, which tyrants,
|
|
in mockery, accord to mankind, is no _legal_ right _under_ a government;
|
|
it is only a _natural_ right to overturn a government. The government
|
|
itself never acknowledges this right. And the right is practically
|
|
established only when and because the government no longer exists to
|
|
call it in question. The right, therefore, can be exercised with
|
|
impunity, only when it is exercised victoriously. All _unsuccessful_
|
|
attempts at revolution, however justifiable in themselves, are punished
|
|
as treason, if the government be permitted to judge of the treason. The
|
|
government itself never admits the injustice of its laws, as a legal
|
|
defence for those who have attempted a revolution, and failed. The right
|
|
of revolution, therefore, is a right of no practical value, except for
|
|
those who are stronger than the government. So long, therefore, as the
|
|
oppressions of a government are kept within such limits as simply not to
|
|
exasperate against it a power greater than its own, the right of
|
|
revolution cannot be appealed to, and is therefore inapplicable to the
|
|
case. This affords a wide field for tyranny; and if a jury cannot _here_
|
|
intervene, the oppressed are utterly defenceless.
|
|
|
|
It is manifest that the only security against the tyranny of the
|
|
government lies in forcible resistance to the execution of the
|
|
injustice; because the injustice will certainly be executed, _unless it
|
|
be forcibly resisted_. And if it be but suffered to be executed, it must
|
|
then be borne; for the government never makes compensation for its own
|
|
wrongs.
|
|
|
|
Since, then, this forcible resistance to the injustice of the government
|
|
is the only possible means of preserving liberty, it is indispensable to
|
|
all _legal_ liberty that this _resistance_ should be _legalized_. It is
|
|
perfectly self-evident that where there is no _legal_ right to resist
|
|
the oppression of the government, there can be no _legal_ liberty. And
|
|
here it is all-important to notice, that, _practically speaking_, there
|
|
can be no _legal_ right to resist the oppressions of the government,
|
|
unless there be some _legal_ tribunal, other than the government, and
|
|
wholly independent of, and _above_, the government, to judge between the
|
|
government and those who resist its oppressions; in other words, to
|
|
judge what laws of the government are to be obeyed, and what may be
|
|
resisted and held for nought. The only tribunal known to our laws, for
|
|
this purpose, is a jury. If a jury have not the right to judge between
|
|
the government and those who disobey its laws, and resist its
|
|
oppressions, the government is absolute, and the people, _legally
|
|
speaking_, are slaves. Like many other slaves they may have sufficient
|
|
courage and strength to keep their masters somewhat in check; but they
|
|
are nevertheless _known to the law_ only as slaves.
|
|
|
|
That this right of resistance was recognized as a common law right, when
|
|
the ancient and genuine trial by jury was in force, is not only proved
|
|
by the nature of the trial itself, but is acknowledged by history.[4]
|
|
|
|
This right of resistance is recognized by the constitution of the United
|
|
States, as a strictly legal and constitutional right. It is so
|
|
recognized, first by the provision that "the trial of all crimes, except
|
|
in cases of impeachment, shall be by jury"--that is, by the country--and
|
|
not by the government; secondly, by the provision that "the right of the
|
|
people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." This
|
|
constitutional security for "the right to keep and bear arms," implies
|
|
the right to use them--as much as a constitutional security for the
|
|
right to buy and keep food would have implied the right to eat it. The
|
|
constitution, therefore, takes it for granted that the people will
|
|
judge of the conduct of the government, and that, as they have the
|
|
right, they will also have the sense, to use arms, whenever the
|
|
necessity of the case justifies it. And it is a sufficient and _legal_
|
|
defence for a person accused of using arms against the government, if he
|
|
can show, to the satisfaction of a jury, _or even any one of a jury_,
|
|
that the law he resisted was an unjust one.
|
|
|
|
In the American _State_ constitutions also, this right of resistance to
|
|
the oppressions of the government is recognized, in various ways, as a
|
|
natural, legal, and constitutional right. In the first place, it is so
|
|
recognized by provisions establishing the trial by jury; thus requiring
|
|
that accused persons shall be tried by "the country," instead of the
|
|
government. In the second place, it is recognized by many of them, as,
|
|
for example, those of Massachusetts, Maine, Vermont, Connecticut,
|
|
Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas,
|
|
Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida, by provisions expressly declaring
|
|
that the people shall have the right to bear arms. In many of them also,
|
|
as, for example, those of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts,
|
|
New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Florida,
|
|
Iowa, and Arkansas, by provisions, in their bills of rights, declaring
|
|
that men have a natural, inherent, and inalienable right of "_defending_
|
|
their lives and liberties." This, of course, means that they have a
|
|
right to defend them against any injustice _on the part of the
|
|
government_, and not merely on the part of private individuals; because
|
|
the object of all bills of rights is to assert the rights of individuals
|
|
and the people, _as against the government_, and not as against private
|
|
persons. It would be a matter of ridiculous supererogation to assert, in
|
|
a constitution of government, the natural right of men to defend their
|
|
lives and liberties against private trespassers.
|
|
|
|
Many of these bills of rights also assert the natural right of all men
|
|
to protect their property--that is, to protect it _against the
|
|
government_. It would be unnecessary and silly indeed to assert, in a
|
|
constitution of government, the natural right of individuals to protect
|
|
their property against thieves and robbers.
|
|
|
|
The constitutions of New Hampshire and Tennessee also declare that "The
|
|
doctrine of non-resistance against arbitrary power and oppression is
|
|
absurd, slavish, and destructive of the good and happiness of mankind."
|
|
|
|
The legal effect of these constitutional recognitions of the right of
|
|
individuals to defend their property, liberties, and lives, against the
|
|
government, is to legalize resistance to all injustice and oppression,
|
|
of every name and nature whatsoever, on the part of the government.
|
|
|
|
But for this right of resistance, on the part of the people, all
|
|
governments would become tyrannical to a degree of which few people are
|
|
aware. Constitutions are utterly worthless to restrain the tyranny of
|
|
governments, unless it be understood that the people will, by force,
|
|
compel the government to keep within the constitutional limits.
|
|
Practically speaking, no government knows any limits to its power,
|
|
except the endurance of the people. But that the people are stronger
|
|
than the government, and will resist in extreme cases, our governments
|
|
would be little or nothing else than organized systems of plunder and
|
|
oppression. All, or nearly all, the advantage there is in fixing any
|
|
constitutional limits to the power of a government, is simply to give
|
|
notice to the government of the point at which it will meet with
|
|
resistance. If the people are then as good as their word, they may keep
|
|
the government within the bounds they have set for it; otherwise it will
|
|
disregard them--as is proved by the example of all our American
|
|
governments, in which the constitutions have all become obsolete, at the
|
|
moment of their adoption, for nearly or quite all purposes except the
|
|
appointment of officers, who at once become practically absolute, except
|
|
so far as they are restrained by the fear of popular resistance.
|
|
|
|
The bounds set to the power of the government, by the trial by jury, as
|
|
will hereafter be shown, are these--that the government shall never
|
|
touch the property, person, or natural or civil rights of an individual,
|
|
against his consent, (except for the purpose of bringing them before a
|
|
jury for trial,) unless in pursuance and _execution_ of a judgment, or
|
|
decree, rendered by a jury in each individual case, upon such evidence,
|
|
and such law, as are satisfactory to their own understandings and
|
|
consciences, irrespective of all legislation of the government.
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 1: To show that this supposition is not an extravagant one, it
|
|
may be mentioned that courts have repeatedly questioned jurors to
|
|
ascertain whether they were prejudiced _against the government_--that
|
|
is, whether they were in favor of, or opposed to, such laws of the
|
|
government as were to be put in issue in the then pending trial. This
|
|
was done (in 1851) in the United States District Court for the District
|
|
of Massachusetts, by Peleg Sprague, the United States district judge, in
|
|
empanelling three several juries for the trials of Scott, Hayden, and
|
|
Morris, charged with having aided in the rescue of a fugitive slave from
|
|
the custody of the United States deputy marshal. This judge caused the
|
|
following question to be propounded to all the jurors separately; and
|
|
those who answered unfavorably for the purposes of the government, were
|
|
excluded from the panel.
|
|
|
|
"Do you hold any opinions upon the subject of the Fugitive Slave Law,
|
|
so called, which will induce you to refuse to convict a person
|
|
indicted under it, if the facts set forth in the indictment, _and
|
|
constituting the offence_, are proved against him, and the court
|
|
direct you that the law is constitutional?"
|
|
|
|
The reason of this question was, that "the Fugitive Slave Law, so
|
|
called," was so obnoxious to a large portion of the people, as to render
|
|
a conviction under it hopeless, if the jurors were taken
|
|
indiscriminately from among the people.
|
|
|
|
A similar question was soon afterwards propounded to the persons drawn
|
|
as jurors in the United States _Circuit_ Court for the District of
|
|
Massachusetts, by Benjamin R. Curtis one of the Justices of the Supreme
|
|
Court of the United States, in empanelling a jury for the trial of the
|
|
aforesaid Morris on the charge before mentioned; and those who did not
|
|
answer the question favorably for the government were again excluded
|
|
from the panel.
|
|
|
|
It has also been an habitual practice with the Supreme Court of
|
|
Massachusetts, in empanelling juries for the trial of _capital_
|
|
offences, to inquire of the persons drawn as jurors whether they had any
|
|
conscientious scruples against finding verdicts of guilty in such cases;
|
|
that is, whether they had any conscientious scruples against sustaining
|
|
the law prescribing death as the punishment of the crime to be tried;
|
|
and to exclude from the panel all who answered in the affirmative.
|
|
|
|
The only principle upon which these questions are asked, is this--that
|
|
no man shall be allowed to serve as juror, unless he be ready to enforce
|
|
any enactment of the government, however cruel or tyrannical it may be.
|
|
|
|
What is such a jury good for, as a protection against the tyranny of the
|
|
government? A jury like that is palpably nothing but a mere tool of
|
|
oppression in the hands of the government. A trial by such a jury is
|
|
really a trial by the government itself--and not a trial by the
|
|
country--because it is a trial only by men specially selected by the
|
|
government for their readiness to enforce its own tyrannical measures.
|
|
|
|
If that be the true principle of the trial by jury, the trial is utterly
|
|
worthless as a security to liberty. The Czar might, with perfect safety
|
|
to his authority, introduce the trial by jury into Russia, if he could
|
|
but be permitted to select his jurors from those who were ready to
|
|
maintain his laws, without regard to their injustice.
|
|
|
|
This example is sufficient to show that the very pith of the trial by
|
|
jury, as a safeguard to liberty, consists in the jurors being taken
|
|
indiscriminately from the whole people, and in their right to hold
|
|
invalid all laws which they think unjust.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 2: The executive has a qualified veto upon the passage of
|
|
laws, in most of our governments, and an absolute veto, in all of them,
|
|
upon the execution of any laws which he deems unconstitutional; because
|
|
his oath to support the constitution (as he understands it) forbids him
|
|
to execute any law that he deems unconstitutional.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 3: And if there be so much as a reasonable _doubt_ of the
|
|
justice of the laws, the benefit of that doubt must be given to the
|
|
defendant, and not to the government. So that the government must keep
|
|
its laws _clearly_ within the limits of justice, if it would ask a jury
|
|
to enforce them.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 4: _Hallam_ says, "The relation established between a lord and
|
|
his vassal by the feudal tenure, far from containing principles of any
|
|
servile and implicit obedience, permitted the compact to be dissolved in
|
|
case of its violation by either party. This extended as much to the
|
|
sovereign as to inferior lords. * * If a vassal was aggrieved, and if
|
|
justice was denied him, he sent a defiance, that is, a renunciation of
|
|
fealty to the king, and was entitled to enforce redress at the point of
|
|
his sword. It then became a contest of strength as between two
|
|
independent potentates, and was terminated by treaty, advantageous or
|
|
otherwise, according to the fortune of war. * * There remained the
|
|
original principle, that allegiance depended conditionally upon good
|
|
treatment, and that an appeal might be _lawfully_ made to arms against
|
|
an oppressive government. Nor was this, we may be sure, left for extreme
|
|
necessity, or thought to require a long-enduring forbearance. In modern
|
|
times, a king, compelled by his subjects' swords to abandon any
|
|
pretension, would be supposed to have ceased to reign; and the express
|
|
recognition of such a right as that of insurrection has been justly
|
|
deemed inconsistent with the majesty of law. But ruder ages had ruder
|
|
sentiments. Force was necessary to repel force; and men accustomed to
|
|
see the king's authority defied by a private riot, were not much shocked
|
|
when it was resisted in defence of public freedom."--_3 Middle Ages_,
|
|
240-2.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER II.
|
|
|
|
THE TRIAL BY JURY, AS DEFINED BY MAGNA CARTA.
|
|
|
|
|
|
That the trial by jury is all that has been claimed for it in the
|
|
preceding chapter, is proved both by the history and the language of the
|
|
Great Charter of English Liberties, to which we are to look for a true
|
|
definition of the trial by jury, and of which the guaranty for that
|
|
trial is the vital, and most memorable, part.
|
|
|
|
|
|
SECTION I.
|
|
|
|
_The History of Magna Carta._
|
|
|
|
In order to judge of the object and meaning of that chapter of Magna
|
|
Carta which secures the trial by jury, it is to be borne in mind that,
|
|
at the time of Magna Carta, the king (with exceptions immaterial to this
|
|
discussion, but which will appear hereafter) was, constitutionally, the
|
|
entire government; the sole _legislative_, _judicial_, and executive
|
|
power of the nation. The executive and judicial officers were merely his
|
|
servants, appointed by him, and removable at his pleasure. In addition
|
|
to this, "the king himself often sat in his court, which always attended
|
|
his person. He there heard causes, and pronounced judgment; and though
|
|
he was assisted by the advice of other members, it is not to be imagined
|
|
that a decision could be obtained contrary to his inclination or
|
|
opinion."[5] Judges were in those days, and afterwards, such abject
|
|
servants of the king, that "we find that King Edward I. (1272 to 1307)
|
|
fined and imprisoned his judges, in the same manner as Alfred the Great,
|
|
among the Saxons, had done before him, by the sole exercise of his
|
|
authority."[6]
|
|
|
|
Parliament, so far as there was a parliament, was a mere _council_ of
|
|
the king.[7] It assembled only at the pleasure of the king; sat only
|
|
during his pleasure; and when sitting had no power, so far as _general_
|
|
legislation was concerned, beyond that of simply _advising_ the king.
|
|
The only legislation to which their assent was constitutionally
|
|
necessary, was demands for money and military services for
|
|
_extraordinary_ occasions. Even Magna Carta itself makes no provisions
|
|
whatever for any parliaments, except when the king should want means to
|
|
carry on war, or to meet some other _extraordinary_ necessity.[8] He had
|
|
no need of parliaments to raise taxes for the _ordinary_ purposes of
|
|
government; for his revenues from the rents of the crown lands and other
|
|
sources, were ample for all except extraordinary occasions. Parliaments,
|
|
too, when assembled, consisted only of bishops, barons, and other great
|
|
men of the kingdom, unless the king chose to invite others.[9] There was
|
|
no House of Commons at that time, and the people had no right to be
|
|
heard, unless as petitioners.[10]
|
|
|
|
Even when laws were made at the time of a parliament, they were made in
|
|
the name of the king alone. Sometimes it was inserted in the laws, that
|
|
they were made with the _consent_ or _advice_ of the bishops, barons,
|
|
and others assembled; but often this was omitted. Their consent or
|
|
advice was evidently a matter of no legal importance to the enactment or
|
|
validity of the laws, but only inserted, when inserted at all, with a
|
|
view of obtaining a more willing submission to them on the part of the
|
|
people. The style of enactment generally was, either "_The King wills
|
|
and commands_," or some other form significant of the sole legislative
|
|
authority of the king. The king could pass laws at any time when it
|
|
pleased him. The presence of a parliament was wholly unnecessary. Hume
|
|
says, "It is asserted by Sir Harry Spelman, as an undoubted fact, that,
|
|
during the reigns of the Norman princes, every order of the king, issued
|
|
with the consent of his privy council, had the full force of law."[11]
|
|
And other authorities abundantly corroborate this assertion.[12]
|
|
|
|
The king was, therefore, constitutionally the government; and the only
|
|
legal limitation upon his power seems to have been simply the _Common
|
|
Law_, usually called "_the law of the land_," which he was bound by oath
|
|
to maintain; (which oath had about the same practical value as similar
|
|
oaths have always had.) This "law of the land" seems not to have been
|
|
regarded at all by many of the kings, except so far as they found it
|
|
convenient to do so, or were constrained to observe it by the fear of
|
|
arousing resistance. But as all people are slow in making resistance,
|
|
oppression and usurpation often reached a great height; and, in the case
|
|
of John, they had become so intolerable as to enlist the nation almost
|
|
universally against him; and he was reduced to the necessity of
|
|
complying with any terms the barons saw fit to dictate to him.
|
|
|
|
It was under these circumstances, that the Great Charter of English
|
|
Liberties was granted. The barons of England, sustained by the common
|
|
people, having their king in their power, compelled him, as the price of
|
|
his throne, to pledge himself that he would punish no freeman for a
|
|
violation of any of his laws, unless with the consent of the peers--that
|
|
is, the equals--of the accused.
|
|
|
|
The question here arises, Whether the barons and people intended that
|
|
those peers (the jury) should be mere puppets in the hands of the king,
|
|
exercising no opinion of their own as to the intrinsic merits of the
|
|
accusations they should try, or the _justice_ of the laws they should be
|
|
called on to enforce? Whether those haughty and victorious barons, when
|
|
they had their tyrant king at their feet, gave back to him his throne,
|
|
with full power to enact any tyrannical laws he might please, reserving
|
|
only to a jury ("the country") the contemptible and servile privilege of
|
|
ascertaining, (under the dictation of the king, or his judges, as to the
|
|
laws of evidence), the simple _fact_ whether those laws had been
|
|
transgressed? Was this the only restraint, which, when they had all
|
|
power in their hands, they placed upon the tyranny of a king, whose
|
|
oppressions they had risen in arms to resist? Was it to obtain such a
|
|
charter as that, that the whole nation had united, as it were, like one
|
|
man, against their king? Was it on such a charter that they intended to
|
|
rely, for all future time, for the security of their liberties? No. They
|
|
were engaged in no such senseless work as that. On the contrary, when
|
|
they required him to renounce forever the power to punish any freeman,
|
|
unless by the consent of his peers, they intended those peers should
|
|
judge of, and try, the whole case on its merits, independently of all
|
|
arbitrary legislation, or judicial authority, on the part of the king.
|
|
In this way they took the liberties of each individual--and thus the
|
|
liberties of the whole people--entirely out of the hands of the king,
|
|
and out of the power of his laws, and placed them in the keeping of the
|
|
people themselves. And this it was that made the trial by jury the
|
|
palladium of their liberties.
|
|
|
|
The trial by jury, be it observed, was the only real barrier interposed
|
|
by them against absolute despotism. Could this trial, then, have been
|
|
such an entire farce as it necessarily must have been, if the jury had
|
|
had no power to judge of the justice of the laws the people were
|
|
required to obey? Did it not rather imply that the jury were to judge
|
|
independently and fearlessly as to everything involved in the charge,
|
|
and especially as to its intrinsic justice, and thereon give their
|
|
decision, (unbiased by any legislation of the king,) whether the accused
|
|
might be punished? The reason of the thing, no less than the historical
|
|
celebrity of the events, as securing the liberties of the people, and
|
|
the veneration with which the trial by jury has continued to be
|
|
regarded, notwithstanding its essence and vitality have been almost
|
|
entirely extracted from it in practice, would settle the question, if
|
|
other evidences had left the matter in doubt.
|
|
|
|
Besides, if his laws were to be authoritative with the jury, why should
|
|
John indignantly refuse, as at first he did, to grant the charter, (and
|
|
finally grant it only when brought to the last extremity,) on the ground
|
|
that it deprived him of all power, and left him only the name of a king?
|
|
_He_ evidently understood that the juries were to veto his laws, and
|
|
paralyze his power, at discretion, by forming their own opinions as to
|
|
the true character of the offences they were to try, and the laws they
|
|
were to be called on to enforce; and that "_the king wills and
|
|
commands_" was to have no weight with them contrary to their own
|
|
judgments of what was intrinsically right.[13]
|
|
|
|
The barons and people having obtained by the charter all the liberties
|
|
they had demanded of the king, it was further provided by the charter
|
|
itself that twenty-five barons should be appointed by the barons, out of
|
|
their number, to keep special vigilance in the kingdom to see that the
|
|
charter was observed, with authority to make war upon the king in case
|
|
of its violation. The king also, by the charter, so far absolved all the
|
|
people of the kingdom from their allegiance to him, as to authorize and
|
|
require them to swear to obey the twenty-five barons, in case they
|
|
should make war upon the king for infringement of the charter. It was
|
|
then thought by the barons and people, that something substantial had
|
|
been done for the security of their liberties.
|
|
|
|
This charter, in its most essential features, and without any abatement
|
|
as to the trial by jury, has since been confirmed more than thirty
|
|
times; and the people of England have always had a traditionary idea
|
|
that it was of some value as a guaranty against oppression. Yet that
|
|
idea has been an entire delusion, unless the jury have had the right to
|
|
judge of the justice of the laws they were called on to enforce.
|
|
|
|
|
|
SECTION II.
|
|
|
|
_The Language of Magna Carta._
|
|
|
|
The language of the Great Charter establishes the same point that is
|
|
established by its history, viz., that it is the right and duty of the
|
|
jury to judge of the justice of the laws.
|
|
|
|
The chapter guaranteeing the trial by jury is in these words:
|
|
|
|
"Nullus liber homo capiatur, vel imprisonetur, aut disseisetur, aut
|
|
utlagetur, aut exuletur, aut aliquo modo destruatur; nec super eum
|
|
ibimus, nec super eum mittemus, nisi per legale judicium parium
|
|
suorum, vel per legem terræ."[14]
|
|
|
|
The corresponding chapter in the Great Charter, granted by Henry III.,
|
|
(1225,) and confirmed by Edward I., (1297,) (which charter is now
|
|
considered the basis of the English laws and constitution,) is in nearly
|
|
the same words, as follows:
|
|
|
|
"Nullus liber homo capiatur, vel imprisonetur, aut disseisetur de
|
|
libero tenemento, vel libertatibus, vel liberis consuetudinibus suis,
|
|
aut utlagetur, aut exuletur, aut aliquo modo destruatur, nec super
|
|
eum ibimus, nec super eum mittemus, nisi per legale judicium parium
|
|
suorum, vel per legem terræ."
|
|
|
|
The most common translation of these words, at the present day, is as
|
|
follows:
|
|
|
|
"No freeman shall be arrested, or imprisoned, or deprived of his
|
|
freehold, or his liberties, or free customs, or outlawed, or exiled,
|
|
or in any manner destroyed, _nor will we (the king) pass upon him,
|
|
nor condemn him_, unless by the judgment of his peers, or the law of
|
|
the land."
|
|
|
|
"_Nec super eum ibimus, nec super eum mittemus._"
|
|
|
|
There has been much confusion and doubt as to the true meaning of the
|
|
words, "_nec super eum ibimus, nec super eum mittemus_." The more common
|
|
rendering has been, "_nor will we pass upon him, nor condemn him_." But
|
|
some have translated them to mean, "_nor will we pass upon him, nor
|
|
commit him to prison_." Coke gives still a different rendering, to the
|
|
effect that "No man shall be condemned at the king's suit, either before
|
|
the king in his bench, nor before any other commissioner or judge
|
|
whatsoever."[15]
|
|
|
|
But all these translations are clearly erroneous. In the first place,
|
|
"_nor will we pass upon him_,"--meaning thereby to decide upon his guilt
|
|
or innocence _judicially_--is not a correct rendering of the words,
|
|
"_nec super eum ibimus_." There is nothing whatever, in these latter
|
|
words, that indicates _judicial_ action or opinion at all. The words, in
|
|
their common signification, describe _physical_ action alone. And the
|
|
true translation of them, as will hereafter be seen, is, _"nor will we
|
|
proceed against him," executively_.
|
|
|
|
In the second place, the rendering, "_nor will we condemn him_," bears
|
|
little or no analogy to any common, or even uncommon, signification of
|
|
the words "_nec super eum mittemus_." There is nothing in these latter
|
|
words that indicates _judicial_ action or decision. Their common
|
|
signification, like that of the words _nec super eum ibimus_, describes
|
|
_physical_ action alone. "_Nor will we send upon (or against) him_,"
|
|
would be the most obvious translation, and, as we shall hereafter see,
|
|
such is the true translation.
|
|
|
|
But although these words describe _physical_ action, on the part of the
|
|
king, as distinguished from judicial, they nevertheless do not mean, as
|
|
one of the translations has it, "_nor will we commit him to prison_;"
|
|
for that would be a mere repetition of what had been already declared by
|
|
the words "_nec imprisonetur_." Besides, there is nothing about prisons
|
|
in the words "_nec super eum mittemus_;" nothing about sending _him_
|
|
anywhere; but only about sending (something or somebody) _upon_ him, or
|
|
_against_ him--that is, _executively_.
|
|
|
|
Coke's rendering is, if possible, the most absurd and gratuitous of all.
|
|
What is there in the words, "_nec super eum mittemus_" that can be made
|
|
to mean "_nor shall he be condemned before any other commissioner or
|
|
judge whatsoever_?" Clearly there is nothing. The whole rendering is a
|
|
sheer fabrication. And the whole object of it is to give color for the
|
|
exercise of a _judicial_ power, by the king, or his judges, which is
|
|
nowhere given them.
|
|
|
|
Neither the words, "_nec super eum ibimus, nec super eum mittemus_," nor
|
|
any other words in the whole chapter, authorize, provide for, describe,
|
|
or suggest, any _judicial_ action whatever, on the part either of the
|
|
king, or of his judges, or of anybody, _except the peers, or jury_.
|
|
There is nothing about the king's _judges_ at all. And there is nothing
|
|
whatever, in the whole chapter, _so far as relates to the action of the
|
|
king_, that describes or suggests anything but _executive_ action.[16]
|
|
|
|
But that all these translations are certainly erroneous, is proved by a
|
|
temporary charter, granted by John a short time previous to the Great
|
|
Charter, for the purpose of giving an opportunity for conference,
|
|
arbitration, and reconciliation between him and his barons. It was to
|
|
have force until the matters in controversy between them could be
|
|
submitted to the Pope, and to other persons to be chosen, some by the
|
|
king, and some by the barons. The words of the charter are as follows:
|
|
|
|
"Sciatis nos concessisse baronibus nostris qui contra nos sunt quod nec
|
|
eos nec homines suos capiemus, nec disseisiemus _nec super eos per vim
|
|
vel per arma ibimus_ nisi per legem regni nostri vel per judicium parium
|
|
suorum in curia nostra donec consideratio facta fuerit," &c., &c.
|
|
|
|
That is, "Know that we have granted to our barons who are opposed to us,
|
|
that we will neither arrest them nor their men, nor disseize them, _nor
|
|
will we proceed against them by force or by arms_, unless by the law of
|
|
our kingdom, or by the judgment of their peers in our court, until
|
|
consideration shall be had," &c., &c.
|
|
|
|
A copy of this charter is given in a note in Blackstone's Introduction
|
|
to the Charters.[17]
|
|
|
|
Mr. Christian speaks of this charter as settling the true meaning of the
|
|
corresponding clause of Magna Carta, on the principle that laws and
|
|
charters on the same subject are to be construed with reference to each
|
|
other. See _3 Christian's Blackstone_, 41, _note_.
|
|
|
|
The true meaning of the words, _nec super eum ibimus, nec super eum
|
|
mittemus_, is also proved by the "_Articles of the Great Charter of
|
|
Liberties_," demanded of the king by the barons, and agreed to by the
|
|
king, under seal, a few days before the date of the Charter, and from
|
|
which the Charter was framed.[18] Here the words used are these:
|
|
|
|
"Ne corpus liberi hominis capiatur nec imprisonetur nec disseisetur
|
|
nec utlagetur nec exuletur nec aliquo modo destruatur _nec rex eat
|
|
vel mittat super eum vi_ nisi per judicium parium suorum vel per
|
|
legem terræ."
|
|
|
|
That is, "The body of a freeman shall not be arrested, nor
|
|
imprisoned, nor disseized, nor outlawed, nor exiled, nor in any
|
|
manner destroyed, _nor shall the king proceed or send (any one)
|
|
against him_ WITH FORCE, unless by the judgment of his peers, or the
|
|
law of the land."
|
|
|
|
The true translation of the words _nec super eum ibimus, nec super eum
|
|
mittemus_, in Magna Carta, is thus made certain, as follows, "_nor will
|
|
we (the king) proceed against him, nor send (any one) against him_ WITH
|
|
FORCE OR ARMS."[19]
|
|
|
|
It is evident that the difference between the true and false
|
|
translations of the words, _nec super eum ibimus, nec super eum
|
|
mittemus_, is of the highest legal importance, inasmuch as the true
|
|
translation, _nor will we (the king) proceed against him, nor send (any
|
|
one) against him by force or arms_, represents the king only in an
|
|
_executive_ character, _carrying the judgment of the peers and "the law
|
|
of the land" into execution_; whereas the false translation, _nor will
|
|
we pass upon him, nor condemn him_, gives color for the exercise of a
|
|
_judicial_ power, on the part of the king, to which the king had no
|
|
right, but which, according to the true translation, belongs wholly to
|
|
the jury.
|
|
|
|
"_Per legale judicium parium suorum._"
|
|
|
|
The foregoing interpretation is corroborated, (if it were not already
|
|
too plain to be susceptible of corroboration,) by the true
|
|
interpretation of the phrase "_per legale judicium parium suorum_."
|
|
|
|
In giving this interpretation, I leave out, for the present, the word
|
|
_legale_, which will be defined afterwards.
|
|
|
|
The true meaning of the phrase, _per judicium parium suorum_, is,
|
|
_according to the sentence of his peers_. The word _judicium, judgment_,
|
|
has a technical meaning in the law, signifying the decree rendered in
|
|
the decision of a cause. In civil suits this decision is called a
|
|
_judgment_; in chancery proceedings it is called a _decree_; in criminal
|
|
actions it is called a _sentence_, or _judgment_, indifferently. Thus,
|
|
in a criminal suit, "a motion in arrest of _judgment_" means a motion in
|
|
arrest of _sentence_.[20]
|
|
|
|
In cases of sentence, therefore, in criminal suits, the words _sentence_
|
|
and _judgment_ are synonymous terms. They are, to this day, commonly
|
|
used in law books as synonymous terms. And the phrase _per judicium
|
|
parium suorum_, therefore, implies that the jury are to fix the
|
|
sentence.
|
|
|
|
The word _per_ means _according to_. Otherwise there is no sense in the
|
|
phrase _per judicium parium suorum_. There would be no sense in saying
|
|
that a king might imprison, disseize, outlaw, exile, or otherwise punish
|
|
a man, or proceed against him, or send any one against him, _by force or
|
|
arms, by_ a judgment of his peers; but there is sense in saying that the
|
|
king may imprison, disseize, and punish a man, or proceed against him,
|
|
or send any one against him, by force or arms, _according to_ a
|
|
judgment, or _sentence_, of his peers; because in that case the king
|
|
would be merely carrying the sentence or judgment of the peers into
|
|
execution.
|
|
|
|
The word _per_, in the phrase "_per_ judicium parium suorum," of course
|
|
means precisely what it does in the next phrase, "_per_ legem terræ;"
|
|
where it obviously means _according to_, and not _by_, as it is usually
|
|
translated. There would be no sense in saying that the king might
|
|
proceed against a man by force or arms, _by_ the law of the land; but
|
|
there is sense in saying that he may proceed against him, by force or
|
|
arms, _according to_ the law of the land; because the king would then be
|
|
acting only as an executive officer, carrying the law of the land into
|
|
execution. Indeed, the true meaning of the word _by_, as used in similar
|
|
cases now, always is _according to_; as, for example, when we say a
|
|
thing was done by the government, or by the executive, _by law_, we mean
|
|
only that it was done by them _according to law_; that is, that they
|
|
merely executed the law.
|
|
|
|
Or, if we say that the word _by_ signifies _by authority of_, the result
|
|
will still be the same; for nothing can be done _by authority of_ law,
|
|
except what the law itself authorizes or directs to be done; that is,
|
|
nothing can be done by authority of law, except simply to carry the law
|
|
itself into execution. So nothing could be done _by authority of_ the
|
|
sentence of the peers, or _by authority of_ "the law of the land,"
|
|
except what the sentence of the peers, or the law of the land,
|
|
themselves authorized or directed to be done; nothing, in short, but to
|
|
carry the sentence of the peers, or the law of the land, themselves into
|
|
execution.
|
|
|
|
Doing a thing _by_ law, or _according to_ law, is only carrying the law
|
|
into execution. And punishing a man _by_, or _according to_, the
|
|
sentence or judgment of his peers, is only carrying that sentence or
|
|
judgment into execution.
|
|
|
|
If these reasons could leave any doubt that the word _per_ is to be
|
|
translated _according to_, that doubt would be removed by the terms of
|
|
an antecedent guaranty for the trial by jury, granted by the Emperor
|
|
Conrad, of Germany,[21] two hundred years before Magna Carta. Blackstone
|
|
cites it as follows:--(_3 Blackstone_, 350.)
|
|
|
|
"Nemo beneficium suum perdat, nisi _secundum_ consuetudinem antecessorum
|
|
nostrorum, et judicium parium suorum." That is, No one shall lose his
|
|
estate,[22] unless _according to_ ("_secundum_") the custom (or law) of
|
|
our ancestors, and (_according to_) the sentence (or judgment) of his
|
|
peers.
|
|
|
|
The evidence is therefore conclusive that the phrase _per judicium
|
|
parium suorum_ means _according to the sentence of his peers_; thus
|
|
implying that the jury, and not the government, are to fix the sentence.
|
|
|
|
If any additional proof were wanted that juries were to fix the
|
|
sentence, it would be found in the following provisions of Magna Carta,
|
|
viz.:
|
|
|
|
"A freeman shall not be amerced for a small crime, (_delicto_,) but
|
|
according to the degree of the crime; and for a great crime in
|
|
proportion to the magnitude of it, saving to him his
|
|
_contenement_;[23] and after the same manner a merchant, saving to
|
|
him his merchandise. And a villein shall be amerced after the same
|
|
manner, saving to him his waynage,[24] if he fall under our mercy;
|
|
_and none of the aforesaid amercements shall be imposed, (or
|
|
assessed, ponatur,) but by the oath of honest men of the
|
|
neighborhood. Earls and Barons shall not be amerced but by their
|
|
peers_, and according to the degree of their crime."[25]
|
|
|
|
Pecuniary punishments were the most common punishments at that day, and
|
|
the foregoing provisions of Magna Carta show that the amount of those
|
|
punishments was to be fixed by the jury.
|
|
|
|
Fines went to the king, and were a source of revenue; and if the amounts
|
|
of the fines had been left to be fixed by the king, he would have had a
|
|
pecuniary temptation to impose unreasonable and oppressive ones. So,
|
|
also, in regard to other punishments than fines. If it were left to the
|
|
king to fix the punishment, he might often have motives to inflict cruel
|
|
and oppressive ones. As it was the object of the trial by jury to
|
|
protect the people against all possible oppression from the king, it was
|
|
necessary that the jury, and not the king, should fix the
|
|
punishments.[26]
|
|
|
|
"_Legale._"
|
|
|
|
The word "_legale_," in the phrase "_per legale judicium parium
|
|
suorum_," doubtless means two things. 1. That the sentence must be given
|
|
in a legal manner; that is, by the legal number of jurors, legally
|
|
empanelled and sworn to try the cause; and that they give their judgment
|
|
or sentence after a legal trial, both in form and substance, has been
|
|
had. 2. That the sentence shall be for a legal cause or offence. If,
|
|
therefore, a jury should convict and sentence a man, either without
|
|
giving him a legal trial, or for an act that was not really and legally
|
|
criminal, the sentence itself would not be legal; and consequently this
|
|
clause forbids the king to carry such a sentence into execution; for the
|
|
clause guarantees that he will execute no judgment or sentence, except
|
|
it be _legale judicium_, a legal sentence. Whether a sentence be a legal
|
|
one, would have to be ascertained by the king or his judges, on appeal,
|
|
or might be judged of informally by the king himself.
|
|
|
|
The word "_legale_" clearly did not mean that the _judicium parium
|
|
suorum_ (judgment of his peers) should be a sentence which any law (of
|
|
the king) should _require_ the peers to pronounce; for in that case the
|
|
sentence would not be the sentence of the peers, but only the sentence
|
|
of the law, (that is, of the king); and the peers would be only a
|
|
mouthpiece of the law, (that is, of the king,) in uttering it.
|
|
|
|
"_Per legem terræ._"
|
|
|
|
One other phrase remains to be explained, viz., "_per legem terræ_,"
|
|
"_by the law of the land_."
|
|
|
|
All writers agree that this means the _common law_. Thus, Sir Matthew
|
|
Hale says:
|
|
|
|
"The common law is sometimes called, by way of eminence, _lex terræ_,
|
|
as in the statute of _Magna Carta_, chap. 29, where certainly the
|
|
common law is principally intended by those words, _aut per legem
|
|
terræ_; as appears by the exposition thereof in several subsequent
|
|
statutes; and particularly in the statute of 28 Edward III., chap. 3,
|
|
which is but an exposition and explanation of that statute. Sometimes
|
|
it is called _lex Angliæ_, as in the statute of Merton, cap. 9,
|
|
"_Nolumus leges Angliæ mutari_," &c., (We will that the laws of
|
|
England be not changed). Sometimes it is called _lex et consuetudo
|
|
regni_ (the law and custom of the kingdom); as in all commissions of
|
|
oyer and terminer; and in the statutes of 18 Edward I., cap.--, and
|
|
_de quo warranto_, and divers others. But most commonly it is called
|
|
the Common Law, or the Common Law of England; as in the statute
|
|
_Articuli super Chartas_, cap. 15, in the statute 25 Edward III.,
|
|
cap. 5, (4,) and infinite more records and statutes."--1 _Hale's
|
|
History of the Common Law_, 128.
|
|
|
|
This common law, or "law of the land," _the king was sworn to maintain_.
|
|
This fact is recognized by a statute made at Westminster, in 1346, by
|
|
Edward III., which commences in this manner:
|
|
|
|
"Edward, by the Grace of God, &c., &c., to the Sheriff of Stafford,
|
|
Greeting: Because that by divers complaints made to us, we have
|
|
perceived that _the law of the land, which we by oath are bound to
|
|
maintain_," &c.--_St. 20 Edward III._
|
|
|
|
The foregoing authorities are cited to show to the unprofessional
|
|
reader, what is well known to the profession, that _legem terræ, the law
|
|
of the land_, mentioned in Magna Carta, was the common, ancient,
|
|
fundamental law of the land, which the kings were bound by oath to
|
|
observe; _and that it did not include any statutes or laws enacted by
|
|
the king himself, the legislative power of the nation_.
|
|
|
|
If the term _legem terræ_ had included laws enacted by the king himself,
|
|
the whole chapter of Magna Carta, now under discussion, would have
|
|
amounted to nothing as a protection to liberty; because it would have
|
|
imposed no restraint whatever upon the power of the king. The king could
|
|
make laws at any time, and such ones as he pleased. He could, therefore,
|
|
have done anything he pleased, _by the law of the land_, as well as in
|
|
any other way, if his own laws had been "_the law of the land_." If his
|
|
own laws had been "the law of the land," within the meaning of that term
|
|
as used in Magna Carta, this chapter of Magna Carta would have been
|
|
sheer nonsense, inasmuch as the whole purport of it would have been
|
|
simply that "no man shall be arrested, imprisoned, or deprived of his
|
|
freehold, or his liberties, or free customs, or outlawed, or exiled, or
|
|
in any manner destroyed (by the king); nor shall the king proceed
|
|
against him, nor send any one against him with force and arms, unless by
|
|
the judgment of his peers, _or unless the king shall please to do so_."
|
|
|
|
This chapter of Magna Carta would, therefore, have imposed not the
|
|
slightest restraint upon the power of the king, or afforded the
|
|
slightest protection to the liberties of the people, if the laws of the
|
|
king had been embraced in the term _legem terræ_. But if _legem terræ_
|
|
was the common law, which the king was sworn to maintain, then a real
|
|
restriction was laid upon his power, and a real guaranty given to the
|
|
people for their liberties.
|
|
|
|
Such, then, being the meaning of _legem terræ_, the fact is established
|
|
that Magna Carta took an accused person entirely out of the hands of the
|
|
legislative power, that is, of the king; and placed him in the power and
|
|
under the protection of his peers, and the common law alone; that, in
|
|
short, Magna Carta suffered no man to be punished for violating any
|
|
enactment of the legislative power, unless the peers or equals of the
|
|
accused freely consented to it, or the common law authorized it; that
|
|
the legislative power, _of itself_, was wholly incompetent to _require_
|
|
the conviction or punishment of a man for any offence whatever.
|
|
|
|
_Whether Magna Carta allowed of any other trial than by jury._
|
|
|
|
The question here arises, whether "_legem terræ_" did not allow of some
|
|
other mode of trial than that by jury.
|
|
|
|
The answer is, that, at the time of Magna Carta, it is not probable,
|
|
(for the reasons given in the note,) that _legem terræ_ authorized, in
|
|
criminal cases, any other trial than the trial by jury; but, if it did,
|
|
it certainly authorized none but the trial by battle, the trial by
|
|
ordeal, and the trial by compurgators. These were the only modes of
|
|
trial, except by jury, that had been known in England, in criminal
|
|
cases, for some centuries previous to Magna Carta. All of them had
|
|
become nearly extinct at the time of Magna Carta, and it is not probable
|
|
that they were included in "_legem terræ_" as that term is used in that
|
|
instrument. But if they were included in it, they have now been long
|
|
obsolete, and were such as neither this nor any future age will ever
|
|
return to.[27] For all practical purposes of the present day,
|
|
therefore, it may be asserted that Magna Carta allows no trial whatever
|
|
but trial by jury.
|
|
|
|
_Whether Magna Carta allowed sentence to be fixed otherwise than by the
|
|
jury._
|
|
|
|
Still another question arises on the words _legem terræ_, viz., whether,
|
|
in cases where the question of guilt was determined by the jury, the
|
|
amount of _punishment_ may not have been fixed by _legem terræ_, the
|
|
Common Law, instead of its being fixed by the jury.
|
|
|
|
I think we have no evidence whatever that, at the time of Magna Carta,
|
|
or indeed at any other time, _lex terræ_, the common law, fixed the
|
|
punishment in cases where the question of guilt was tried by a jury; or,
|
|
indeed, that it did in any other case. Doubtless certain punishments
|
|
were common and usual for certain offences; but I do not think it can be
|
|
shown that the _common law_, the _lex terræ_, which the king was sworn
|
|
to maintain, required any one specific punishment, or any precise amount
|
|
of punishment, for any one specific offence. If such a thing be claimed,
|
|
it must be shown, for it cannot be presumed. In fact, the contrary must
|
|
be presumed, because, in the nature of things, the amount of punishment
|
|
proper to be inflicted in any particular case, is a matter requiring the
|
|
exercise of discretion at the time, in order to adapt it to the moral
|
|
quality of the offence, which is different in each case, varying with
|
|
the mental and moral constitutions of the offenders, and the
|
|
circumstances of temptation or provocation. And Magna Carta recognizes
|
|
this principle distinctly, as has before been shown, in providing that
|
|
freemen, merchants, and villeins, "shall not be amerced for a small
|
|
crime, but according to the degree of the crime; and for a great crime
|
|
in proportion to the magnitude of it;" and that "none of the aforesaid
|
|
amercements shall be imposed (or assessed) but by the oaths of honest
|
|
men of the neighborhood;" and that "earls and barons shall not be
|
|
amerced but by their peers, and according to the quality of the
|
|
offence."
|
|
|
|
All this implies that the moral quality of the offence was to be judged
|
|
of at the trial, and that the punishment was to be fixed by the
|
|
discretion of the peers, or jury, and not by any such unvarying rule as
|
|
a common law rule would be.
|
|
|
|
I think, therefore, it must be conceded that, in all cases, tried by a
|
|
jury, Magna Carta intended that the punishment should be fixed by the
|
|
jury, and not by the common law, for these several reasons.
|
|
|
|
1. It is uncertain whether the _common law_ fixed the punishment of any
|
|
offence whatever.
|
|
|
|
2. The words "_per judicium parium suorum_," _according to the sentence
|
|
of his peers_, imply that the jury fixed the sentence in _some_ cases
|
|
tried by them; and if they fixed the sentence in some cases, it must be
|
|
presumed they did in all, unless the contrary be clearly shown.
|
|
|
|
3. The express provisions of Magna Carta, before adverted to, that no
|
|
amercements, or fines, should be imposed upon freemen, merchants, or
|
|
villeins, "but by the oath of honest men of the neighborhood," and
|
|
"according to the degree of the crime," and that "earls and barons
|
|
should not be amerced but by their peers, and according to the quality
|
|
of the offence," _proves_ that, at least, there was no common law fixing
|
|
the amount of _fines_, or, if there were, that it was to be no longer in
|
|
force. And if there was no common law fixing the amount of _fines_, or
|
|
if it was to be no longer in force, it is reasonable to infer, (in the
|
|
absence of all evidence to the contrary,) either that the common law did
|
|
not fix the amount of any other punishment, or that it was to be no
|
|
longer in force for that purpose.[28]
|
|
|
|
Under the Saxon laws, fines, payable to the injured party, seem to have
|
|
been the common punishments for all offences. Even murder was punishable
|
|
by a fine payable to the relatives of the deceased. The murder of the
|
|
king even was punishable by fine. When a criminal was unable to pay his
|
|
fine, his relatives often paid it for him. But if it were not paid, he
|
|
was put out of the protection of the law, and the injured parties, (or,
|
|
in the case of murder, the kindred of the deceased,) were allowed to
|
|
inflict such punishment as they pleased. And if the relatives of the
|
|
criminal protected him, it was lawful to take vengeance on them also.
|
|
Afterwards the custom grew up of exacting fines also to the king as a
|
|
punishment for offences.[29] And this latter was, doubtless, the usual
|
|
punishment at the time of Magna Carta, as is evidenced by the fact that
|
|
for many years immediately following Magna Carta, nearly or quite all
|
|
statutes that prescribed any punishment at all, prescribed that the
|
|
offender should "be grievously amerced," or "pay a great fine to the
|
|
king," or a "grievous ransom,"--with the alternative in some cases
|
|
(perhaps _understood_ in all) of imprisonment, banishment, or outlawry,
|
|
in case of non-payment.[30]
|
|
|
|
Judging, therefore, from the special provisions in Magna Carta,
|
|
requiring _fines_, or amercements, to be imposed only by juries,
|
|
(without mentioning any other punishments;) judging, also, from the
|
|
statutes which immediately followed Magna Carta, it is probable that the
|
|
Saxon custom of punishing all, or nearly all, offences by _fines_, (with
|
|
the alternative to the criminal of being imprisoned, banished, or
|
|
outlawed, and exposed to private vengeance, in case of non-payment,)
|
|
continued until the time of Magna Carta; and that in providing expressly
|
|
that _fines_ should be fixed by the juries, Magna Carta provided for
|
|
nearly or quite all the punishments that were expected to be inflicted;
|
|
that if there were to be any others, they were to be fixed by the
|
|
juries; and consequently that nothing was left to be fixed by "_legem
|
|
terræ_."
|
|
|
|
But whether the common law fixed the punishment of any offences, or not,
|
|
is a matter of little or no practical importance at this day; because we
|
|
have no idea of going back to any common law punishments of six hundred
|
|
years ago, if, indeed, there were any such at that time. It is enough
|
|
for us to know--_and this is what it is material for us to know_--that
|
|
the jury fixed the punishments, in all cases, unless they were fixed by
|
|
the _common law_; that Magna Carta allowed no punishments to be
|
|
prescribed by statute--that is, by the legislative power--nor in any
|
|
other manner by the king, or his judges, in any case whatever; and,
|
|
consequently, that all statutes prescribing particular punishments for
|
|
particular offences, or giving the king's judges any authority to fix
|
|
punishments, were void.
|
|
|
|
If the power to fix punishments had been left in the hands of the king,
|
|
it would have given him a power of oppression, which was liable to be
|
|
greatly abused; which there was no occasion to leave with him; and which
|
|
would have been incongruous with the whole object of this chapter of
|
|
Magna Carta; which object was to take all discretionary or arbitrary
|
|
power over individuals entirely out of the hands of the king, and his
|
|
laws, and entrust it only to the common law, and the peers, or
|
|
jury--that is, the people.
|
|
|
|
_What lex terræ did authorize._
|
|
|
|
But here the question arises, What then did "_legem terræ_" authorize
|
|
the king, (that is, the government,) to do in the case of an accused
|
|
person, if it neither authorized any other trial than that by jury, nor
|
|
any other punishments than those fixed by juries?
|
|
|
|
The answer is, that, owing to the darkness of history on the point, it
|
|
is probably wholly impossible, at this day, to state, _with any
|
|
certainty or precision_, anything whatever that the _legem terræ_ of
|
|
Magna Carta did authorize the king, (that is, the government,) to do,
|
|
(if, indeed, it authorized him to do anything,) in the case of
|
|
criminals, _other than to have them tried and sentenced by their peers,
|
|
for common law crimes_; and to carry that sentence into execution.
|
|
|
|
The trial by jury was a part of _legem terræ_, and we have the means of
|
|
knowing what the trial by jury was. The fact that the jury were to fix
|
|
the sentence, implies that they were to _try_ the accused; otherwise
|
|
they could not know what sentence, or whether any sentence, ought to be
|
|
inflicted upon him. Hence it follows that the jury were to judge of
|
|
everything involved in the trial; that is, they were to judge of the
|
|
nature of the offence, of the admissibility and weight of testimony, and
|
|
of everything else whatsoever that was of the essence of the trial. If
|
|
anything whatever could be dictated to them, either of law or evidence,
|
|
the sentence would not be theirs, but would be dictated to them by the
|
|
power that dictated to them the law or evidence. The trial and sentence,
|
|
then, were wholly in the hands of the jury.
|
|
|
|
We also have sufficient evidence of the nature of the oath administered
|
|
to jurors in criminal cases. It was simply, that _they would neither
|
|
convict the innocent, nor acquit the guilty_. This was the oath in the
|
|
Saxon times, and probably continued to be until Magna Carta.
|
|
|
|
We also know that, in case of _conviction_, the sentence of the jury was
|
|
not necessarily final; that the accused had the right of appeal to the
|
|
king and his judges, and to demand either a new trial, or an acquittal,
|
|
if the trial or conviction had been against law.
|
|
|
|
So much, therefore, of the _legem terræ_ of Magna Carta, we know with
|
|
reasonable certainty.
|
|
|
|
We also know that Magna Carta provides that "No bailiff (_balivus_)
|
|
shall hereafter put any man to his law, (put him on trial,) on his
|
|
single testimony, without credible witnesses brought to support it."
|
|
Coke thinks "that under this word _balivus_, in this act, is
|
|
comprehended every justice, minister of the king, steward of the king,
|
|
steward and bailiff." (2 Inst. 44.) And in support of this idea he
|
|
quotes from a very ancient law book, called the Mirror of Justices,
|
|
written in the time of Edward I., within a century after Magna Carta.
|
|
But whether this were really a common law principle, or whether the
|
|
provision grew out of that jealousy of the government which, at the time
|
|
of Magna Carta, had reached its height, cannot perhaps now be
|
|
determined.
|
|
|
|
We also know that, by Magna Carta, amercements, or fines, could not be
|
|
imposed to the ruin of the criminal; that, in the case of a freeman, his
|
|
_contenement_, or means of subsisting in the condition of a freeman,
|
|
must be saved to him; that, in the case of a merchant, his merchandise
|
|
must be spared; and in the case of a villein, his _waynage_, or
|
|
plough-tackle and carts. This also is likely to have been a principle of
|
|
the common law, inasmuch as, in that rude age, when the means of getting
|
|
employment as laborers were not what they are now, the man and his
|
|
family would probably have been liable to starvation, if these means of
|
|
subsistence had been taken from him.
|
|
|
|
We also know, _generally_, that, at the time of Magna Carta, _all acts
|
|
intrinsically criminal_, all trespasses against persons and property,
|
|
were crimes, according to _lex terræ_, or the common law.
|
|
|
|
Beyond the points now given, we hardly know anything, probably nothing
|
|
_with certainty_, as to what the "_legem terræ_" of _Magna Carta_ did
|
|
authorize, in regard to crimes. There is hardly anything extant that can
|
|
give us any real light on the subject.
|
|
|
|
It would seem, however, that there were, even at that day, some common
|
|
law principles governing arrests; and some common law forms and rules as
|
|
to holding a man for trial, (by bail or imprisonment;) putting him on
|
|
trial, such as by indictment or complaint; summoning and empanelling
|
|
jurors, &c., &c. Whatever these common law principles were, Magna Carta
|
|
requires them to be observed; for Magna Carta provides for the whole
|
|
proceedings, commencing with the arrest, ("no freeman shall be
|
|
_arrested_," &c.,) and ending with the execution of the sentence. And it
|
|
provides that nothing shall be done, by the government, from beginning
|
|
to end, unless according to the sentence of the peers, or "_legem
|
|
terræ_," the common law. The trial by peers was a part of _legem terræ_,
|
|
and we have seen that the peers must necessarily have governed the whole
|
|
proceedings at the trial. But all the proceedings for arresting the man,
|
|
and bringing him to trial, must have been had before the case could come
|
|
under the cognizance of the peers, and they must, therefore, have been
|
|
governed by other rules than the discretion of the peers. We may
|
|
_conjecture_, although we cannot perhaps know with much certainty, that
|
|
the _lex terræ_, or common law, governing these other proceedings, was
|
|
somewhat similar to the common law principles, on the same points, at
|
|
the present day. Such seem to be the opinions of Coke, who says that the
|
|
phrase _nisi per legem terræ_ means _unless by due process of law_.
|
|
|
|
Thus, he says:
|
|
|
|
"_Nisi per legem terræ. But by the law of the land._ For the true sense
|
|
and exposition of these words, see the statute of 37 Edw. III., cap. 8,
|
|
where the words, _by the law of the land_, are rendered _without due
|
|
process of law_; for there it is said, though it be contained in the
|
|
Great Charter, that no man be taken, imprisoned, or put out of his
|
|
freehold, _without process of the law; that is, by indictment or
|
|
presentment of good and lawful men, where such deeds be done in due
|
|
manner, or by writ original of the common law_.
|
|
|
|
"Without being brought in to answer but by due process of the common
|
|
law.
|
|
|
|
"No man be put to answer without presentment before justices, or thing
|
|
of record, or by due process, or by writ original, _according to the old
|
|
law of the land_."--_2 Inst._ 50.
|
|
|
|
The foregoing interpretations of the words _nisi per legem terræ_ are
|
|
corroborated by the following statutes, enacted in the next century
|
|
after Magna Carta.
|
|
|
|
"That no man, from henceforth, shall be attached by any accusation, nor
|
|
forejudged of life or limb, nor his land, tenements, goods, nor
|
|
chattels, seized into the king's hands, against the form of the Great
|
|
Charter, _and the law of the land_."--_St. 5 Edward III., Ch._ 9.
|
|
(1331.)
|
|
|
|
"Whereas it is contained in the Great Charter of the franchises of
|
|
England, that none shall be imprisoned, nor put out of his freehold, nor
|
|
of his franchises, nor free customs, _unless it be by the law of the
|
|
land_; it is accorded, assented, and established, that from henceforth
|
|
none shall be taken by petition, or suggestion made to our lord the
|
|
king, or to his council, _unless it be by indictment or presentment of
|
|
good and lawful people of the same neighborhood where such deeds be done
|
|
in due manner, or by process made by writ original at the common law_;
|
|
nor that none be put out of his franchises, nor of his freehold, _unless
|
|
he be duly brought into answer, and forejudged of the same by the course
|
|
of the law_; and if anything be done against the same, it shall be
|
|
redressed and holden for none."--_St. 25 Edward III., Ch._ 4. (1350.)
|
|
|
|
"That no man, of what estate or condition that he be, shall be put out
|
|
of land or tenement, nor taken, nor imprisoned, nor disinherited, nor
|
|
put to death, without being brought in answer _by due process of
|
|
law_."--_St. 28 Edward III., Ch._ 3. (1354.)
|
|
|
|
"That no man be put to answer without presentment before justices, or
|
|
matter of record, or by due process and writ original, according to the
|
|
_old law of the land_. And if anything from henceforth be done to the
|
|
contrary, it shall be void in law, and holden for error."--_St. 42
|
|
Edward III., Ch._ 3. (1368.)
|
|
|
|
The foregoing interpretation of the words _nisi per legem terræ_--that
|
|
is, _by due process of law_--including indictment, &c., has been adopted
|
|
as the true one by modern writers and courts; as, for example, by Kent,
|
|
(2 _Comm._ 13,) Story, (3 _Comm._ 661,) and the Supreme Court of New
|
|
York, (19 _Wendell_, 676; 4 _Hill_, 146.)
|
|
|
|
The fifth amendment to the constitution of the United States seems to
|
|
have been framed on the same idea, inasmuch as it provides that "no
|
|
person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, _without due
|
|
process of law_."[31]
|
|
|
|
_Whether the word_ VEL _should be rendered by_ OR, _or by_ AND.
|
|
|
|
Having thus given the meanings, or rather the applications, which the
|
|
words _vel per legem terræ_ will reasonably, and perhaps must
|
|
necessarily, bear, it is proper to suggest, that it has been supposed by
|
|
some that the word _vel_, instead of being rendered by _or_, as it
|
|
usually is, ought to be rendered by _and_, inasmuch as the word _vel_ is
|
|
often used for _et_, and the whole phrase _nisi per judicium parium
|
|
suorum, vel per legem terræ_, (which would then read, unless by the
|
|
sentence of his peers, _and_ the law of the land,) would convey a more
|
|
intelligible and harmonious meaning than it otherwise does.
|
|
|
|
Blackstone suggests that this may be the true reading. (_Charters_, p.
|
|
41.) Also Mr. Hallam, who says:
|
|
|
|
"Nisi per legale judicium parium suorum, _vel_ per legem terræ.
|
|
Several explanations have been offered of the alternative clause;
|
|
which some have referred to judgment by default, or demurrer; others
|
|
to the process of attachment for contempt. Certainly there are many
|
|
legal procedures besides trial by jury, through which a party's goods
|
|
or person may be taken. But one may doubt whether these were in
|
|
contemplation of the framers of Magna Carta. In an entry of the
|
|
Charter of 1217 by a contemporary hand, preserved in the Town-clerk's
|
|
office in London, called Liber Custumarum et Regum antiquarum, a
|
|
various reading, _et_ per legem terræ, occurs. _Blackstone's
|
|
Charters_, p. 42 (41.) And the word _vel_ is so frequently used for
|
|
_et_, that I am not wholly free from a suspicion that it was so
|
|
intended in this place. The meaning will be, that no person shall be
|
|
disseized, &c., except upon a lawful cause of action, found by the
|
|
verdict of a jury. This really seems as good as any of the
|
|
disjunctive interpretations; but I do not offer it with much
|
|
confidence."--2 _Hallam's Middle Ages, Ch._ 8, _Part_ 2, p. 449,
|
|
_note_.[32]
|
|
|
|
The idea that the word _vel_ should be rendered by _and_, is
|
|
corroborated, if not absolutely confirmed, by the following passage in
|
|
Blackstone, which has before been cited. Speaking of the trial by jury,
|
|
as established by Magna Carta, he calls it,
|
|
|
|
"A privilege which is couched in almost the same words with that of
|
|
the Emperor Conrad two hundred years before: 'nemo beneficium suum
|
|
perdat, nisi secundum consuetudinem antecessorum nostrorum, _et_
|
|
judicium parium suorum.'" (No one shall lose his estate unless
|
|
according to the custom of our ancestors, and the judgment of his
|
|
peers.)--_3 Blackstone_, 350.
|
|
|
|
If the word _vel_ be rendered by _and_, (as I think it must be, at least
|
|
in some cases,) this chapter of Magna Carta will then read that no
|
|
freeman shall be arrested or punished, "unless according to the sentence
|
|
of his peers, _and_ the law of the land."
|
|
|
|
The difference between this reading and the other is important. In the
|
|
one case, there would be, at first view, some color of ground for saying
|
|
that a man might be punished in either of two ways, viz., according to
|
|
the sentence of his peers, _or_ according to the law of the land. In the
|
|
other case, it requires both the sentence of his peers _and_ the law of
|
|
the land (common law) to authorize his punishment.
|
|
|
|
If this latter reading be adopted, the provision would seem to exclude
|
|
all trials except trial by jury, and all causes of action except those
|
|
of the _common law_.
|
|
|
|
But I apprehend the word vel must be rendered both by _and_, and by
|
|
_or_; that in cases of a _judgment_, it should be rendered by _and_, so
|
|
as to require the concurrence both of "the judgment of the peers _and_
|
|
the law of the land," to authorize the king to make execution upon a
|
|
party's goods or person; but that in cases of arrest and imprisonment,
|
|
simply for the purpose of bringing a man to trial, _vel_ should be
|
|
rendered by or, because there can have been no judgment of a jury in
|
|
such a case, and "the law of the land" must therefore necessarily be the
|
|
only guide to, and restraint upon, the king. If this guide and restraint
|
|
were taken away, the king would be invested with an arbitrary and most
|
|
dangerous power in making arrests, and confining in prison, under
|
|
pretence of an intention to bring to trial.
|
|
|
|
Having thus examined the language of this chapter of Magna Carta, so far
|
|
as it relates to criminal cases, its legal import may be stated as
|
|
follows, viz.:
|
|
|
|
No freeman shall be arrested, or imprisoned, or deprived of his
|
|
freehold, or his liberties, or free customs, or be outlawed, or exiled,
|
|
or in any manner destroyed, (harmed,) nor will we (the king) proceed
|
|
against him, nor send any one against him, by force or arms, unless
|
|
according to (that is, in execution of) the sentence of his peers, _and_
|
|
(or _or_, as the case may require) the Common Law of England, (as it was
|
|
at the time of Magna Carta, in 1215.)
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 5: 1 Hume, Appendix 2.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 6: Crabbe's History of the English Law, 236.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 7: Coke says, "The king of England is armed with divers
|
|
councils, one whereof is called _commune concilium_, (the common
|
|
council,) and that is the court of parliament, and so it is _legally_
|
|
called in writs and judicial proceedings _commune concilium regni
|
|
Angliæ_, (the common council of the kingdom of England.) And another is
|
|
called _magnum concilium_, (great council;) this is sometimes applied to
|
|
the upper house of parliament, and sometimes, out of parliament time, to
|
|
the peers of the realm, lords of parliament, who are called _magnum
|
|
concilium regis_, (the great council of the king;) * * Thirdly, (as
|
|
every man knoweth,) the king hath a privy council for matters of state.
|
|
* * The fourth council of the king are his judges for law matters."
|
|
|
|
_1 Coke's Institutes, 110 a._]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 8: The Great Charter of Henry III., (1216 and 1225,) confirmed
|
|
by Edward I., (1297,) makes no provision whatever for, or mention of, a
|
|
parliament, unless the provision, (Ch. 37,) that "Escuage, (a military
|
|
contribution,) from henceforth shall be taken like as it was wont to be
|
|
in the time of King Henry our grandfather," mean that a parliament shall
|
|
be summoned for that purpose.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 9: The Magna Carta of John, (Ch. 17 and 18,) defines those who
|
|
were entitled to be summoned to parliament, to wit, "The Archbishops,
|
|
Bishops, Abbots, Earls, and Great Barons of the Realm, * * and all
|
|
others who hold of us _in chief_." Those who held land of the king _in
|
|
chief_ included none below the rank of knights.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 10: The parliaments of that time were, doubtless, such as
|
|
Carlyle describes them, when he says, "The parliament was at first a
|
|
most simple assemblage, quite cognate to the situation; that Red
|
|
William, or whoever had taken on him the terrible task of being King of
|
|
England, was wont to invite, oftenest about Christmas time, his
|
|
subordinate Kinglets, Barons as he called them, to give him the pleasure
|
|
of their company for a week or two; there, in earnest conference all
|
|
morning, in freer talk over Christmas cheer all evening, in some big
|
|
royal hall of Westminster, Winchester, or wherever it might be, with log
|
|
fires, huge rounds of roast and boiled, not lacking malmsey and other
|
|
generous liquor, they took counsel concerning the arduous matters of the
|
|
kingdom."]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 11: Hume, Appendix 2.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 12: This point will be more fully established hereafter.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 13: It is plain that the king and all his partisans looked
|
|
upon the charter as utterly prostrating the king's legislative supremacy
|
|
before the discretion of juries. When the schedule of liberties demanded
|
|
by the barons was shown to him, (of which the trial by jury was the most
|
|
important, because it was the only one that protected all the rest,)
|
|
"the king, falling into a violent passion, asked, _Why the barons did
|
|
not with these exactions demand his kingdom?_ * * _and with a solemn
|
|
oath protested, that he would never grant such liberties as would make
|
|
himself a slave_." * * But afterwards, "seeing himself deserted, and
|
|
fearing they would seize his castles, he sent the Earl of Pembroke and
|
|
other faithful messengers to them, to let them know _he would grant them
|
|
the laws and liberties they desired_." * * But after the charter had
|
|
been granted, "the king's mercenary soldiers, desiring war more than
|
|
peace, were by their leaders continually whispering in his ears, _that
|
|
he was now no longer king, but the scorn of other princes; and that it
|
|
was more eligible to be no king, than such a one as he_." * * He applied
|
|
"to the Pope, that he might by his apostolic authority make void what
|
|
the barons had done. * * At Rome he met with what success he could
|
|
desire, where all the transactions with the barons were fully
|
|
represented to the Pope, and the Charter of Liberties shown to him, in
|
|
writing; which, when he had carefully perused, he, with a furious look,
|
|
cried out, _What! Do the barons of England endeavor to dethrone a king,
|
|
who has taken upon him the Holy Cross, and is under the protection of
|
|
the Apostolic See; and would they force him to transfer the dominions of
|
|
the Roman Church to others? By St. Peter, this injury must not pass
|
|
unpunished._ Then debating the matter with the cardinals, he, by a
|
|
definitive sentence, damned and cassated forever the Charter of
|
|
Liberties, and sent the king a bull containing that sentence at
|
|
large."--_Echard's History of England_, p. 106-7.
|
|
|
|
These things show that the nature and effect of the charter were well
|
|
understood by the king and his friends; that they all agreed that he was
|
|
effectually stripped of power. _Yet the legislative power had not been
|
|
taken from him; but only the power to enforce his laws, unless juries
|
|
should freely consent to their enforcement._]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 14: The laws were, at that time, all written in Latin.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 15: "No man shall be condemned at the king's suit, either
|
|
before the king in his bench, where pleas are _coram rege_, (before the
|
|
king,) (and so are the words _nec super eum ibimus_, to be understood,)
|
|
nor before any other commissioner or judge whatsoever, and so are the
|
|
words _nec super eum mittemus_, to be understood, but by the judgment of
|
|
his peers, that is, equals, or according to the law of the land."--_2
|
|
Coke's Inst._, 46.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 16: Perhaps the assertion in the text should be made with this
|
|
qualification--that the words "_per legem terræ_," (according to the law
|
|
of the land,) and the words "_per legale judicium parium suorum_,"
|
|
(according to the _legal_ judgment of his peers,) imply that the king,
|
|
before proceeding to any _executive_ action, will take notice of "the
|
|
law of the land," and of the _legality_ of the judgment of the peers,
|
|
and will _execute_ upon the prisoner nothing except what the law of the
|
|
land authorizes, and no judgments of the peers, except _legal_ ones.
|
|
With this qualification, the assertion in the text is strictly
|
|
correct--that there is nothing in the whole chapter that grants to the
|
|
king, or his judges, any _judicial_ power at all. The chapter only
|
|
describes and _limits_ his _executive_ power.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 17: See Blackstone's Law Tracts, page 294, Oxford Edition.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 18: These Articles of the Charter are given in Blackstone's
|
|
collection of Charters, and are also printed with the _Statutes of the
|
|
Realm_. Also in Wilkins' Laws of the Anglo-Saxons, p. 356.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 19: Lingard says, "The words, '_We will not destroy him, nor
|
|
will we go upon him, nor will we send upon him_,' have been very
|
|
differently expounded by different legal authorities. Their real meaning
|
|
may be learned from John himself, who the next year promised by his
|
|
letters patent ... nec super eos _per vim vel per arma_ ibimus, nisi per
|
|
legem regni nostri, vel per judicium parium suorum in curia nostra, (nor
|
|
will we go upon them _by force or by arms_, unless by the law of our
|
|
kingdom, or the judgment of their peers in our court.) Pat. 16 Johan,
|
|
apud Drad. 11, app. no. 124. He had hitherto been in the habit of
|
|
_going_ with an armed force, or _sending_ an armed force on the lands,
|
|
and against the castles, of all whom he knew or suspected to be his
|
|
secret enemies, without observing any form of law."--3 Lingard, 47
|
|
note.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 20: "_Judgment, judicium._ * * The sentence of the law,
|
|
pronounced by the court, upon the matter contained in the record."--3
|
|
_Blackstone_, 395. _Jacob's Law Dictionary. Tomlin's do._
|
|
|
|
"_Judgment_ is the decision or sentence of the law, given by a court of
|
|
justice or other competent tribunal, as the result of the proceedings
|
|
instituted therein, for the redress of an injury."--_Bouvier's Law
|
|
Dict._
|
|
|
|
"_Judgment, judicium._ * * Sentence of a judge against a criminal. * *
|
|
Determination, decision in general."--_Bailey's Dict._
|
|
|
|
"_Judgment._ * * In a legal sense, a sentence or decision pronounced by
|
|
authority of a king, or other power, either by their own mouth, or by
|
|
that of their judges and officers, whom they appoint to administer
|
|
justice in their stead."--_Chambers' Dict._
|
|
|
|
"_Judgment._ * * In law, the sentence or doom pronounced in any case,
|
|
civil or criminal, by the judge or court by which it is
|
|
tried."--_Webster's Dict._
|
|
|
|
Sometimes the punishment itself is called _judicium_, _judgment_; or,
|
|
rather, it was at the time of Magna Carta. For example, in a statute
|
|
passed fifty-one years after Magna Carta, it was said that a baker, for
|
|
default in the weight of his bread, "debeat amerciari vel subire
|
|
_judicium_ pillorie;" that is, ought to be amerced, or suffer the
|
|
punishment, or judgment, of the pillory. Also that a brewer, for
|
|
"selling ale contrary to the assize," "debeat amerciari, vel pati
|
|
_judicium_ tumbrelli"; that is, ought to be amerced, or suffer the
|
|
punishment, or judgment, of the tumbrel.--51 _Henry_ 3, _St._ 6. (1266.)
|
|
|
|
Also the "_Statutes of uncertain date_," (but supposed to be prior to
|
|
Edward III., or 1326,) provide, in chapters 6, 7, and 10, for
|
|
"_judgment_ of the pillory."--_See 1 Ruffhead's Statutes_, 187, 188. 1
|
|
_Statutes of the Realm_, 203.
|
|
|
|
Blackstone, in his chapter "Of _Judgment_, and its Consequences," says,
|
|
|
|
"_Judgment_ (unless any matter be offered in arrest thereof) follows
|
|
upon conviction; being the pronouncing of that punishment which is
|
|
expressly ordained by law."--_Blackstone's Analysis of the Laws of
|
|
England, Book 4, Ch. 29, Sec. 1. Blackstone's Law Tracts_, 126.
|
|
|
|
Coke says, "_Judicium_ ... the judgment is the guide and direction of
|
|
the execution." 3 _Inst._ 210.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 21: This precedent from Germany is good authority, because the
|
|
trial by jury was in use, in the northern nations of Europe generally,
|
|
long before Magna Carta, and probably from time immemorial; and the
|
|
Saxons and Normans were familiar with it before they settled in
|
|
England.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 22: _Beneficium_ was the legal name of an estate held by a
|
|
feudal tenure. See Spelman's Glossary.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 23: _Contenement_ of a freeman was the means of living in the
|
|
condition of a freeman.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 24: _Waynage_ was a villein's plough-tackle and carts.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 25: Tomlin says, "The ancient practice was, when any such fine
|
|
was imposed, to inquire by a jury _quantum inde regi dare valeat per
|
|
annum, salva sustentatione sua et uxoris et liberorum suorum_, (how much
|
|
is he able to give to the king per annum, saving his own maintenance,
|
|
and that of his wife and children). And since the disuse of such
|
|
inquest, it is never usual to assess a larger fine than a man is able to
|
|
pay, without touching the implements of his livelihood; but to inflict
|
|
corporal punishment, or a limited imprisonment, instead of such a fine
|
|
as might amount to imprisonment for life. And this is the reason why
|
|
fines in the king's courts are frequently denominated ransoms, because
|
|
the penalty must otherwise fall upon a man's person, unless it be
|
|
redeemed or ransomed by a pecuniary fine."--_Tomlin's Law Dict., word
|
|
Fine._]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 26: Because juries were to fix the sentence, it must not be
|
|
supposed that the king was _obliged_ to carry the sentence into
|
|
execution; _but only that he could not go beyond the sentence_. He might
|
|
pardon, or he might acquit on grounds of law, notwithstanding the
|
|
sentence; but he could not punish beyond the extent of the sentence.
|
|
Magna Carta does not prescribe that the king _shall punish_ according to
|
|
the sentence of the peers; but only that he shall not punish _"unless
|
|
according to" that sentence_. He may acquit or pardon, notwithstanding
|
|
their sentence or judgment; but he cannot punish, except according to
|
|
their judgment.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 27: _The trial by battle_ was one in which the accused
|
|
challenged his accuser to single combat, and staked the question of his
|
|
guilt or innocence on the result of the duel. This trial was introduced
|
|
into England by the Normans, within one hundred and fifty years before
|
|
Magna Carta. It was not very often resorted to even by the Normans
|
|
themselves; probably never by the Anglo-Saxons, unless in their
|
|
controversies with the Normans. It was strongly discouraged by some of
|
|
the Norman princes, particularly by Henry II., by whom the trial by jury
|
|
was especially favored. It is probable that the trial by battle, so far
|
|
as it prevailed at all in England, was rather tolerated as a matter of
|
|
chivalry, than authorized as a matter of law. At any rate, it is not
|
|
likely that it was included in the "_legem terræ_" of Magna Carta,
|
|
although such duels have occasionally occurred since that time, and
|
|
have, by some, been supposed to be lawful. I apprehend that nothing can
|
|
be properly said to be a part of _lex terræ_, unless it can be shown
|
|
either to have been of Saxon origin, or to have been recognized by Magna
|
|
Carta.
|
|
|
|
_The trial by ordeal_ was of various kinds. In one ordeal the accused
|
|
was required to take hot iron in his hand; in another to walk blindfold
|
|
among red-hot ploughshares; in another to thrust his arm into boiling
|
|
water; in another to be thrown, with his hands and feet bound, into cold
|
|
water; in another to swallow the _morsel of execration_; in the
|
|
confidence that his guilt or innocence would be miraculously made known.
|
|
This mode of trial was nearly extinct at the time of Magna Carta, and it
|
|
is not likely that it was included in "_legem terræ_," as that term is
|
|
used in that instrument. This idea is corroborated by the fact that the
|
|
trial by ordeal was specially prohibited only four years after Magna
|
|
Carta, "by act of Parliament in 3 Henry III., according to Sir Edward
|
|
Coke, or rather by an order of the king in council."--_3 Blackstone_
|
|
345, _note_.
|
|
|
|
I apprehend that this trial was never forced upon accused persons, but
|
|
was only allowed to them, _as an appeal to God_, from the judgment of a
|
|
jury.[33]
|
|
|
|
_The trial by compurgators_ was one in which, if the accused could bring
|
|
twelve of his neighbors, who would make oath that they believed him
|
|
innocent, he was held to be so. It is probable that this trial was
|
|
really the trial by jury, or was allowed as an appeal from a jury. It is
|
|
wholly improbable that two different modes of trial, so nearly
|
|
resembling each other as this and the trial by jury do, should prevail
|
|
at the same time, and among a rude people, whose judicial proceedings
|
|
would naturally be of the simplest kind. But if this trial really were
|
|
any other than the trial by jury, it must have been nearly or quite
|
|
extinct at the time of Magna Carta; and there is no probability that it
|
|
was included in "_legem terræ_."]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 28: Coke attempts to show that there is a distinction between
|
|
amercements and fines--admitting that amercements must be fixed by one's
|
|
peers, but claiming that fines may be fixed by the government. (_2
|
|
Inst._ 27, _8 Coke's Reports_ 38.) But there seems to have been no
|
|
ground whatever for supposing that any such distinction existed at the
|
|
time of Magna Carta. If there were any such distinction in the time of
|
|
Coke, it had doubtless grown up within the four centuries that had
|
|
elapsed since Magna Carta, and is to be set down as one of the
|
|
numberless inventions of government for getting rid of the restraints of
|
|
Magna Carta, and for taking men out of the protection of their peers,
|
|
and subjecting them to such punishments as the government chooses to
|
|
inflict.
|
|
|
|
The first statute of Westminster, passed sixty years after Magna Carta,
|
|
treats the fine and amercement as synonymous, as follows:
|
|
|
|
"Forasmuch as _the common fine and amercement_ of the whole county in
|
|
Eyre of the justices for false judgments, or for other trespass, is
|
|
unjustly assessed by sheriffs and baretors in the shires, * * it is
|
|
provided, and the king wills, that from henceforth such sums shall be
|
|
assessed before the justices in Eyre, afore their departure, _by the
|
|
oath of knights and other honest men_," &c.--_3 Edward I., Ch._ 18.
|
|
(1275.)
|
|
|
|
And in many other statutes passed after Magna Carta, the terms _fine_
|
|
and _amercement_ seem to be used indifferently, in prescribing the
|
|
punishment for offences. As late as 1461, (246 years after Magna Carta,)
|
|
the statute _1 Edward IV., Ch._ 2, speaks of "_fines, ransoms, and
|
|
amerciaments_" as being levied upon criminals, as if they were the
|
|
common punishments of offences.
|
|
|
|
_St._ 2 and 3 _Philip and Mary, Ch._ 8, uses the terms, "_fines,
|
|
forfeitures, and amerciaments_" five times. (1555.)
|
|
|
|
_St. 5 Elizabeth, Ch._ 13, _Sec._ 10, uses the terms "_fines,
|
|
forfeitures, and amerciaments_."
|
|
|
|
That amercements were fines, or pecuniary punishments, inflicted for
|
|
offences, is proved by the following statutes, (all supposed to have
|
|
been passed within one hundred and fifteen years after Magna Carta,)
|
|
which speak of amercements as a species of "_judgment_," or punishment,
|
|
and as being inflicted for the same offences as other "judgments."
|
|
|
|
Thus one statute declares that a baker, for default in the weight of his
|
|
bread, "ought to be _amerced_, or suffer the _judgment_ of the pillory;"
|
|
and that a brewer, for "selling ale contrary to the assize," "ought to
|
|
be _amerced_, or suffer the _judgment_ of the tumbrel."--_51 Henry III.,
|
|
St._ 6. (1266.)
|
|
|
|
Among the "_Statutes of Uncertain Date_," but supposed to be prior to
|
|
Edward III., (1326,) are the following:
|
|
|
|
_Chap._ 6 provides that "if a brewer break the assize, (fixing the price
|
|
of ale,) the first, second, and third time, he shall be _amerced_; but
|
|
the fourth time he shall suffer _judgment_ of the pillory without
|
|
redemption."
|
|
|
|
_Chap._ 7 provides that "a butcher that selleth swine's flesh measled,
|
|
or flesh dead of the murrain, or that buyeth flesh of Jews, and selleth
|
|
the same unto Christians, after he shall be convict thereof, for the
|
|
first time he shall be grievously _amerced_; the second time he shall
|
|
suffer _judgment_ of the pillory; and the third time he shall be
|
|
imprisoned and make _fine_; and the fourth time he shall forswear the
|
|
town."
|
|
|
|
_Chap. 10_, a statute against _forestalling_, provides that,
|
|
|
|
"He that is convict thereof, the first time shall be _amerced_, and
|
|
shall lose the thing so bought, and that according to the custom of the
|
|
town; he that is convicted the second time shall have _judgment_ of the
|
|
pillory; at the third time he shall be imprisoned and make _fine_; the
|
|
fourth time he shall abjure the town. And this _judgment_ shall be given
|
|
upon all manner of forestallers, and likewise upon them that have given
|
|
them counsel, help, or favor."--_1 Ruffhead's Statutes_, 187, 188. _1
|
|
Statutes of the Realm_, 203.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 29: 1 Hume, Appendix, 1.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 30: Blackstone says, "Our ancient Saxon laws nominally
|
|
punished theft with death, if above the value of twelve pence; but the
|
|
criminal was permitted to redeem his life by a pecuniary ransom, as
|
|
among their ancestors, the Germans, by a stated number of cattle. But in
|
|
the ninth year of Henry the First, (1109,) this power of redemption was
|
|
taken away, and all persons guilty of larceny above the value of twelve
|
|
pence were directed to be hanged, which law continues in force to this
|
|
day."--_4 Blackstone_, 238.
|
|
|
|
I give this statement of Blackstone, because the latter clause may seem
|
|
to militate with the idea, which the former clause corroborates, viz.,
|
|
that at the time of Magna Carta, fines were the usual punishments of
|
|
offences. But I think there is no probability that a law so unreasonable
|
|
in itself, (unreasonable even after making all allowance for the
|
|
difference in the value of money,) and so contrary to immemorial custom,
|
|
could or did obtain any general or speedy acquiescence among a people
|
|
who cared little for the authority of kings.
|
|
|
|
Maddox, writing of the period from William the Conqueror to John, says:
|
|
|
|
"The amercements in criminal and common pleas, which were wont to be
|
|
imposed during this first period and afterwards, were of so many several
|
|
sorts, that it is not easy to place them under distinct heads. Let them,
|
|
for method's sake, be reduced to the heads following: Amercements for or
|
|
by reason of murders and manslaughters, for misdemeanors, for
|
|
disseisins, for recreancy, for breach of assize, for defaults, for
|
|
non-appearance, for false judgment, and for not making suit, or hue and
|
|
cry. To them may be added miscellaneous amercements, for trespasses of
|
|
divers kinds."--_1 Maddox' History of the Exchequer_, 542.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 31: Coke, in his exposition of the words _legem terræ_, gives
|
|
quite in detail the principles of the common law governing _arrests_;
|
|
and takes it for granted that the words "_nisi per legem terræ_" are
|
|
applicable to arrests, as well as to the indictment, &c.--2 _Inst._,
|
|
51,52.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 32: I cite the above extract from Mr. Hallam solely for the
|
|
sake of his authority for rendering the word _vel_ by _and_; and not by
|
|
any means for the purpose of indorsing the opinion he suggests, that
|
|
_legem terræ_ authorized "judgments by default or demurrer," _without
|
|
the intervention of a jury_. He seems to imagine that _lex terræ_, the
|
|
common law, at the time of Magna Carta, included everything, even to the
|
|
practice of courts, that is, _at this day_, called by the name of
|
|
_Common Law_; whereas much of what is _now_ called Common Law has grown
|
|
up, by usurpation, since the time of Magna Carta, in palpable violation
|
|
of the authority of that charter. He says, "Certainly there are many
|
|
legal procedures, besides _trial_ by jury, through which a party's goods
|
|
or person may be taken." Of course there are _now_ many such ways, in
|
|
which a party's goods or person _are_ taken, besides by the judgment of
|
|
a jury; but the question is, whether such takings are not in violation
|
|
of Magna Carta.
|
|
|
|
He seems to think that, in cases of "judgment by default or demurrer,"
|
|
there is no need of a jury, and thence to infer that _legem terræ_ may
|
|
not have required a jury in those cases. But this opinion is founded on
|
|
the erroneous idea that juries are required only for determining
|
|
contested _facts_, and not for judging of the law. In case of default,
|
|
the plaintiff must present a _prima facie_ case before he is entitled to
|
|
a judgment; and Magna Carta, (supposing it to require a jury trial in
|
|
civil cases, as Mr. Hallam assumes that it does,) as much requires that
|
|
this _prima facie_ case, both law and fact, be made out to the
|
|
satisfaction of a jury, as it does that a contested case shall be.
|
|
|
|
As for a demurrer, the jury must try a demurrer (having the advice and
|
|
assistance of the court, of course) as much as any other matter of law
|
|
arising in a case.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Hallam evidently thinks there is no use for a jury, except where
|
|
there is a "_trial_"--meaning thereby a contest on matters of _fact_.
|
|
His language is, that "there are many legal procedures, besides _trial_
|
|
by jury, through which a party's goods or person may be taken." Now
|
|
Magna Carta says nothing of _trial_ by jury; but only of the _judgment_,
|
|
or sentence, of a jury. It is only _by inference_ that we come to the
|
|
conclusion that there must be a _trial_ by jury. Since the jury alone
|
|
can give the _judgment_, or _sentence_, we _infer_ that they must _try_
|
|
the case; because otherwise they would be incompetent, and would have no
|
|
moral right, to give _judgment_. They must, therefore, examine the
|
|
grounds, (both of law and fact,) or rather _try_ the grounds, of every
|
|
action whatsoever, whether it be decided on "default, demurrer," or
|
|
otherwise, and render their judgment, or sentence, thereon, before any
|
|
judgment can be a legal one, on which "to take a party's goods or
|
|
person." In short, the principle of Magna Carta is, that no judgment can
|
|
be valid _against a party's goods or person_, (not even a judgment for
|
|
costs,) except a judgment rendered by a jury. Of course a jury must try
|
|
every question, both of law and fact, that is involved in the rendering
|
|
of that judgment. They are to have the assistance and advice of the
|
|
judges, so far as they desire them; but the judgment itself must be
|
|
theirs, and not the judgment of the court.
|
|
|
|
As to "process of attachment for contempt," it is of course lawful for a
|
|
judge, in his character of a peace officer, to issue a warrant for the
|
|
arrest of a man guilty of a contempt, as he would for the arrest of any
|
|
other offender, and hold him to bail, (or, in default of bail, commit
|
|
him to prison,) to answer for his offence before a jury. Or he may order
|
|
him into custody without a warrant when the offence is committed in the
|
|
judge's presence. But there is no reason why a judge should have the
|
|
power of _punishing_ for contempt, any more than for any other offence.
|
|
And it is one of the most dangerous powers a judge can have, because it
|
|
gives him absolute authority in a court of justice, and enables him to
|
|
tyrannize as he pleases over parties, counsel, witnesses, and jurors. If
|
|
a judge have power to punish for contempt, and to determine for himself
|
|
what is a contempt, the whole administration of justice (or injustice,
|
|
if he choose to make it so) is in his hands. And all the rights of
|
|
jurors, witnesses, counsel, and parties, are held subject to his
|
|
pleasure, and can be exercised only agreeably to his will. He can of
|
|
course control the entire proceedings in, and consequently the decision
|
|
of, every cause, by restraining and punishing every one, whether party,
|
|
counsel, witness, or juror, who presumes to offer anything contrary to
|
|
his pleasure.
|
|
|
|
This arbitrary power, which has been usurped and exercised by judges to
|
|
punish for contempt, has undoubtedly had much to do in subduing counsel
|
|
into those servile, obsequious, and cowardly habits, which so
|
|
universally prevail among them, and which have not only cost so many
|
|
clients their rights, but have also cost the people so many of their
|
|
liberties.
|
|
|
|
If any _summary_ punishment for contempt be ever necessary, (as it
|
|
probably is not,) beyond exclusion for the time being from the
|
|
court-room, (which should be done, not as a punishment, but for
|
|
self-protection, and the preservation of order,) the judgment for it
|
|
should be given by the jury, (where the trial is before a jury,) and not
|
|
by the court, for the jury, and not the court, are really the judges.
|
|
For the same reason, exclusion from the court-room should be ordered
|
|
only by the jury, in cases when the trial is before a jury, because
|
|
they, being the real judges and triers of the cause, are entitled, if
|
|
anybody, to the control of the court-room. In appeal courts, where no
|
|
juries sit, it may be necessary--not as a punishment, but for
|
|
self-protection, and the maintenance of order--that the court should
|
|
exercise the power of excluding a person, for the time being, from the
|
|
court-room; but there is no reason why they should proceed to sentence
|
|
him as a criminal, without his being tried by a jury.
|
|
|
|
If the people wish to have their rights respected and protected in
|
|
courts of justice, it is manifestly of the last importance that they
|
|
jealously guard the liberty of parties, counsel, witnesses, and jurors,
|
|
against all arbitrary power on the part of the court.
|
|
|
|
Certainly Mr. Hallam may very well say that "one may doubt whether these
|
|
(the several cases he has mentioned) were in contemplation of the
|
|
framers of Magna Carta"--that is, as exceptions to the rule requiring
|
|
that all judgments, that are to be enforced "_against a party's goods or
|
|
person_," be rendered by a jury.
|
|
|
|
Again, Mr. Hallam says, if the word _vel_ be rendered by _and_, "the
|
|
meaning will be, that no person shall be disseized, &c., _except upon a
|
|
lawful cause of action_." This is true; but it does not follow that any
|
|
cause of action, founded on _statute only_, is therefore a "_lawful_
|
|
cause of action," within the meaning of _legem terræ_, or the _Common
|
|
Law_. Within the meaning of the _legem terræ_ of Magna Carta, nothing
|
|
but a _common law_ cause of action is a "_lawful_" one.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 33: Hallam says, "It appears as if the ordeal were permitted
|
|
to persons already convicted by this verdict of a jury."--_2 Middle
|
|
Ages_, 446, _note_.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER III.
|
|
|
|
ADDITIONAL PROOFS OF THE RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF JURORS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
If any evidence, extraneous to the history and language of Magna Carta,
|
|
were needed to prove that, by that chapter which guaranties the trial by
|
|
jury, all was meant that has now been ascribed to it, and _that the
|
|
legislation of the king was to be of no authority with the jury beyond
|
|
what they chose to allow to it_, and that the juries were to limit the
|
|
punishments to be inflicted, we should find that evidence in various
|
|
sources, such as the laws, customs, and characters of their ancestors on
|
|
the continent, and of the northern Europeans generally; in the
|
|
legislation and customs that immediately succeeded Magna Carta; in the
|
|
oaths that have at different times been administered to jurors, &c., &c.
|
|
This evidence can be exhibited here but partially. To give it all would
|
|
require too much space and labor.
|
|
|
|
|
|
SECTION I.
|
|
|
|
_Weakness of the Regal Authority._
|
|
|
|
Hughes, in his preface to his translation of Horne's "_Mirror of
|
|
Justices_," (a book written in the time of Edward I., 1272 to 1307,)
|
|
giving a concise view of the laws of England generally, says:
|
|
|
|
"Although in the Saxon's time I find the usual words of the acts then
|
|
to have been _edictum_, (edict,) _constitutio_, (statute,) little
|
|
mention being made of the commons, yet I further find that, _tum
|
|
demum leges vim et vigerem habuerunt, cum fuerunt non modo institutæ
|
|
sed firmatæ approbatione communitatis_." (The laws had force and
|
|
vigor only when they were not only enacted, but confirmed by the
|
|
approval of the community.)
|
|
|
|
The _Mirror of Justices_ itself also says, (ch. 1, sec. 3,) in speaking
|
|
"_Of the first Constitutions of the Ancient Kings_:"
|
|
|
|
"Many ordinances were made by many kings, until the time of the king
|
|
that now is (Edward I.); the which ordinances were abused, _or not
|
|
used by many, nor very current_, because they were not put in
|
|
writing, and certainly published."--_Mirror of Justices_, p. 6.
|
|
|
|
Hallam says:
|
|
|
|
"The Franks, Lombards, and Saxons seem alike to have been jealous of
|
|
judicial authority; and averse to surrendering what concerned every
|
|
man's private right, out of the hands of his neighbors and
|
|
equals."--_1 Middle Ages_, 271.
|
|
|
|
The "judicial authority," here spoken of, was the authority of the
|
|
kings, (who at that time united the office of both legislators and
|
|
judges,) and not of a separate department of government, called the
|
|
judiciary, like what has existed in more modern times.[34]
|
|
|
|
Hume says:
|
|
|
|
"The government of the Germans, and that of all the northern nations,
|
|
who established themselves on the ruins of Rome, was always extremely
|
|
free; and those fierce people, accustomed to independence and inured
|
|
to arms, _were more guided by persuasion than authority, in the
|
|
submission which they paid to their princes_. The military despotism,
|
|
which had taken place in the Roman empire, and which, previously to
|
|
the irruption of those conquerors, had sunk the genius of men, and
|
|
destroyed every noble principle of science and virtue, was unable to
|
|
resist the vigorous efforts of a free people, and Europe, as from a
|
|
new epoch, rekindled her ancient spirit, and shook off the base
|
|
servitude to arbitrary will and authority under which she had so long
|
|
labored. The free constitutions then established, however impaired by
|
|
the encroachments of succeeding princes, still preserve an air of
|
|
independence and legal administration, which distinguished the
|
|
European nations; and if that part of the globe maintain sentiments
|
|
of liberty, honor, equity, and valor, superior to the rest of
|
|
mankind, it owes these advantages chiefly to the seeds implanted by
|
|
those generous barbarians.
|
|
|
|
"_The Saxons, who subdued Britain, as they enjoyed great liberty in
|
|
their own country, obstinately retained that invaluable possession in
|
|
their new settlement; and they imported into this island the same
|
|
principles of independence, which they had inherited from their
|
|
ancestors. The chieftains, (for such they were, more than kings or
|
|
princes,) who commanded them in those military expeditions, still
|
|
possessed a very limited authority_; and as the Saxons exterminated,
|
|
rather than subdued the ancient inhabitants, they were, indeed,
|
|
transplanted into a new territory, _but preserved unaltered all their
|
|
civil and military institutions_. The language was pure Saxon; even
|
|
the names of places, which often remain while the tongue entirely
|
|
changes, were almost all affixed by the conquerors; the manners and
|
|
customs were wholly German; and the same picture of a fierce and bold
|
|
liberty, which is drawn by the masterly pen of Tacitus, will suit
|
|
those founders of the English government. _The king, so far from
|
|
being invested with arbitrary power, was only considered as the first
|
|
among the citizens; his authority depended more on his personal
|
|
qualities than on his station; he was even so far on a level with the
|
|
people, that a stated price was fixed for his head, and a legal fine
|
|
was levied upon his murderer, which though proportionate to his
|
|
station, and superior to that paid for the life of a subject, was a
|
|
sensible mark of his subordination to the community._"--_1 Hume_,
|
|
_Appendix_, 1.
|
|
|
|
Stuart says:
|
|
|
|
"The Saxons brought along with them into Britain their own customs,
|
|
language, and civil institutions. Free in Germany, they renounced not
|
|
their independence, when they had conquered. Proud from victory, and
|
|
with their swords in their hands, would they surrender their
|
|
liberties to a private man? Would temporary leaders, limited in their
|
|
powers, and unprovided in resources, ever think to usurp an authority
|
|
over warriors, who considered themselves as their equals, were
|
|
impatient of control, and attached with devoted zeal to their
|
|
privileges? Or, would they find leisure to form resolutions, or
|
|
opportunities to put them in practice, amidst the tumult and
|
|
confusion of those fierce and bloody wars, which their nations first
|
|
waged with the Britons, and then engaged in among themselves?
|
|
Sufficiently flattered in leading the armies of their countrymen, the
|
|
ambition of commanders could as little suggest such designs, as the
|
|
liberty of the people could submit to them. The conquerors of Britain
|
|
retained their independence; and this island saw itself again in
|
|
that free state in which the Roman arms had discovered it.
|
|
|
|
"The same firmness of character, and generosity of manners, which, in
|
|
general, distinguished the Germans, were possessed in an eminent
|
|
degree by the Saxons; and while we endeavor to unfold their political
|
|
institutions, we must perpetually turn our observation to that
|
|
masterly picture in which the Roman historian has described these
|
|
nations. In the woods of Germany shall we find the principles which
|
|
directed the state of land, in the different kingdoms of Europe; and
|
|
there shall we find the foundation of those ranks of men, and of
|
|
those civil arrangements, which the barbarians everywhere
|
|
established; and which the English alone have had the good fortune,
|
|
or the spirit, to preserve."--_Stuart on the Constitution of
|
|
England_, p. 59-61.
|
|
|
|
"Kings they (the Germans) respected as the first magistrates of the
|
|
state; but the authority possessed by them was narrow and
|
|
limited."--_Ditto_, p. 134.
|
|
|
|
"Did he, (the king,) at any time, relax his activity and martial
|
|
ardor, did he employ his abilities to the prejudice of his nation, or
|
|
fancy he was superior to the laws; the same power which raised him to
|
|
honor, humbled and degraded him. The customs and councils of his
|
|
country pointed out to him his duty; and if he infringed on the
|
|
former, or disobeyed the latter, a fierce people set aside his
|
|
authority. * *
|
|
|
|
"His long hair was the only ornament he affected, and to be foremost
|
|
to attack an enemy was his chief distinction. Engaged in every
|
|
hazardous expedition, he was a stranger to repose; and, rivalled by
|
|
half the heroes of his tribe, he could obtain little power. Anxious
|
|
and watchful for the public interest, he felt every moment his
|
|
dependence, and gave proofs of his submission.
|
|
|
|
"He attended the general assembly of his nation, and was allowed the
|
|
privilege to harangue it first; but the arts of persuasion, though
|
|
known and respected by a rude people, were unequally opposed to the
|
|
prejudices and passions of men."--_Ditto_, p. 135-6.
|
|
|
|
"_The authority of a Saxon monarch was not more considerable. The
|
|
Saxons submitted not to the arbitrary rule of princes. They
|
|
administered an oath to their sovereigns, which bound them to
|
|
acknowledge the laws, and to defend the rights of the church and
|
|
people; and if they forgot this obligation, they forfeited their
|
|
office._ In both countries, a price was affixed on kings, a fine
|
|
expiated their murder, as well as that of the meanest citizen; and
|
|
the smallest violation of ancient usage, or the least step towards
|
|
tyranny, was always dangerous, and often fatal to them."--_Ditto_, p.
|
|
139-40.
|
|
|
|
"They were not allowed to impose taxes on the kingdom."--_Ditto_, p.
|
|
146.
|
|
|
|
"Like the German monarchs, they deliberated in the general assembly
|
|
of the nation; _but their legislative authority was not much
|
|
respected_; and their assent was considered in no better light than
|
|
as a form. This, however, was their chief prerogative; and they
|
|
employed it to acquire an ascendant in the state. To art and
|
|
insinuation they turned, as their only resource, and flattered a
|
|
people whom they could not awe; but address, and the abilities to
|
|
persuade, were a weak compensation for the absence of real power.
|
|
|
|
"They declared war, it is said, and made peace. In both cases,
|
|
however, they acted as the instruments of the state, and put in
|
|
execution the resolutions which its councils had decreed. If, indeed,
|
|
an enemy had invaded the kingdom, and its glory and its safety were
|
|
concerned, the great lords took the field at the call of their
|
|
sovereign. But had a sovereign declared war against a neighboring
|
|
state, without requiring their advice, or if he meant to revenge by
|
|
arms an insult offered to him by a subject, a haughty and independent
|
|
nobility refused their assistance. These they considered as the
|
|
quarrels of the king, and not of the nation; and in all such
|
|
emergencies he could only be assisted by his retainers and
|
|
dependents."--_Ditto_, p. 147-8.
|
|
|
|
"Nor must we imagine that the Saxon, any more than the German
|
|
monarchs, succeeded each other in a lineal descent,[35] or that they
|
|
disposed of the crown at their pleasure. In both countries, the free
|
|
election of the people filled the throne; and their choice was the
|
|
only rule by which princes reigned. The succession, accordingly, of
|
|
their kings was often broken and interrupted, and their depositions
|
|
were frequent and groundless. The will of a prince whom they had long
|
|
respected, and the favor they naturally transferred to his
|
|
descendant, made them often advance him to the royal dignity; but the
|
|
crown of his ancestor he considered as the gift of the people, and
|
|
neither expected nor claimed it as a right."--_Ditto_, p. 151-3.
|
|
|
|
In Germany "It was the business of the great to command in war, and in
|
|
peace they distributed justice. * *
|
|
|
|
"The _princes_ in Germany were _earls_ in England. The great
|
|
contended in both countries in the number of their retainers, and in
|
|
that splendor and magnificence which are so alluring to a rude
|
|
people; and though they joined to set bounds to regal power, they
|
|
were often animated against each other with the fiercest hatred. To a
|
|
proud and impatient nobility it seemed little and unsuiting to give
|
|
or accept compositions for the injuries they committed or received;
|
|
and their vassals adopting their resentment and passions, war and
|
|
bloodshed alone could terminate their quarrels. What necessarily
|
|
resulted from their situation in society, was continued as a
|
|
_privilege_; and the great, in both countries, made war, of their
|
|
private authority, on their enemies. The Saxon earls even carried
|
|
their arms against their sovereigns; and, surrounded with retainers,
|
|
or secure in fortresses and castles, they despised their resentment,
|
|
and defied their power.
|
|
|
|
"The judges of the people, they presided in both countries in courts
|
|
of law.[36] The particular districts over which they exerted their
|
|
authority were marked out in Germany by the council of the state; and
|
|
in England their jurisdiction extended over the fiefs and other
|
|
territories they possessed. All causes, both civil and criminal, were
|
|
tried before them; and they judged, except in cases of the utmost
|
|
importance, without appeal. They were even allowed to grant pardon to
|
|
criminals, and to correct by their clemency the rigors of justice.
|
|
Nor did the sovereign exercise any authority in their lands. In these
|
|
his officers formed no courts, and his _writ_ was disregarded. * *
|
|
|
|
"They had officers, as well as the king, who collected their
|
|
revenues, and added to their greatness; and the inhabitants of their
|
|
lands they distinguished by the name of _subjects_.
|
|
|
|
"But to attend the general assembly of their nation was the chief
|
|
prerogative of the German and Saxon princes; and as they consulted
|
|
the interest of their country, and deliberated concerning matters of
|
|
state, so in the _king's court_, of which also they were members,
|
|
they assisted to pronounce judgment in the complaints and appeals
|
|
which were lodged in it."--_Ditto_, p. 158 to 165.
|
|
|
|
Henry says:
|
|
|
|
"Nothing can be more evident than this important truth; that our
|
|
Anglo-Saxon kings were not absolute monarchs; but that their powers
|
|
and prerogatives were limited by the laws and customs of the country.
|
|
Our Saxon ancestors had been governed by limited monarchs in their
|
|
native seats on the continent; and there is not the least appearance
|
|
or probability that they relinquished their liberties, and submitted
|
|
to absolute government in their new settlements in this island. It is
|
|
not to be imagined that men, whose reigning passion was the love of
|
|
liberty, would willingly resign it; and their new sovereigns, who had
|
|
been their fellow-soldiers, had certainly no power to compel them to
|
|
such a resignation."--_3 Henry's History of Great Britain_, 358.
|
|
|
|
Mackintosh says: "The Saxon chiefs, who were called kings, originally
|
|
acquired power by the same natural causes which have gradually, and
|
|
everywhere, raised a few men above their fellows. They were,
|
|
doubtless, more experienced, more skilful, more brave, or more
|
|
beautiful, than those who followed them. * * A king was powerful in
|
|
war by the lustre of his arms, and the obvious necessity of
|
|
obedience. His influence in peace fluctuated with his personal
|
|
character. In the progress of usage his power became more fixed and
|
|
more limited. * * It would be very unreasonable to suppose that the
|
|
northern Germans who had conquered England, had so far changed their
|
|
characteristic habits from the age of Tacitus, that the victors
|
|
became slaves, and that their generals were converted into
|
|
tyrants."--_Mackintosh's Hist. of England, Ch. 2._ _45 Lardner's Cab.
|
|
Cyc._, 73-4.
|
|
|
|
Rapin, in his discourse on the "Origin and Nature of the English
|
|
Constitution," says:
|
|
|
|
"There are but two things the Saxons did not think proper to trust
|
|
their kings with; for being of like passions with other men, they
|
|
might very possibly abuse them; namely, the power of changing the
|
|
laws enacted by consent of king and people; and the power of raising
|
|
taxes at pleasure. From these two articles sprung numberless branches
|
|
concerning the liberty and property of the subject, which the king
|
|
cannot touch, without breaking the constitution, and they are the
|
|
distinguishing character of the English monarchy. The prerogatives of
|
|
the crown, and the rights and privileges of the people, flowing from
|
|
the two fore-mentioned articles, are the ground of all the laws that
|
|
from time to time have been made by unanimous consent of king and
|
|
people. The English government consists in the strict union of the
|
|
king's prerogatives with the people's liberties. * * But when kings
|
|
arose, as some there were, that aimed at absolute power, by changing
|
|
the old, and making new laws, at pleasure; by imposing illegal taxes
|
|
on the people; this excellent government being, in a manner,
|
|
dissolved by these destructive measures, confusion and civil wars
|
|
ensued, which some very wrongfully ascribe to the fickle and restless
|
|
temper of the English."--_Rapin's Preface to his History of England._
|
|
|
|
Hallam says that among the Saxons, "the royal authority was weak."--_2
|
|
Middle Ages_, 403.
|
|
|
|
But although the king himself had so little authority, that it cannot be
|
|
supposed for a moment that his laws were regarded as imperative by the
|
|
people, it has nevertheless been claimed, in modern times, by some who
|
|
seem determined to find or make a precedent for the present legislative
|
|
authority of parliament, that his laws were authoritative, _when
|
|
assented to_ by the _Witena-gemote_, or assembly of wise men--that is,
|
|
the bishops and barons. But this assembly evidently had no legislative
|
|
power whatever. The king would occasionally invite the bishops and
|
|
barons to meet him for consultation on public affairs, _simply as a
|
|
council_, and not as a legislative body. Such as saw fit to attend, did
|
|
so. If they were agreed upon what ought to be done, the king would pass
|
|
a law accordingly, and the barons and bishops would then return and
|
|
inform the people orally what laws had been passed, and use their
|
|
influence with them to induce them to conform to the law of the king,
|
|
and the recommendation of the council. And the people no doubt were much
|
|
more likely to accept a law of the king, if it had been approved by this
|
|
council, than if it had not. But it was still only a law of the king,
|
|
which they obeyed or disregarded according to their own notions of
|
|
expediency. The numbers who usually attended this council were too small
|
|
to admit of the supposition that they had any legislative authority
|
|
whatever, to impose laws upon the people against their will.
|
|
|
|
Lingard says:
|
|
|
|
"It was necessary that the king should obtain the assent of these
|
|
(the members of the Witena-gemotes) to all legislative enactments;
|
|
_because, without their acquiescence and support, it was impossible
|
|
to carry them into execution_. To many charters (laws) we have the
|
|
signatures of the Witan. _They seldom exceed thirty in number; they
|
|
never amount to sixty._"--_1 Lingard_, 486.
|
|
|
|
It is ridiculous to suppose that the assent of such an assembly gave any
|
|
_authority_ to the laws of the king, or had any influence in securing
|
|
obedience to them, otherwise than by way of persuasion. If this body had
|
|
had any real legislative authority, such as is accorded to legislative
|
|
bodies of the present day, they would have made themselves at once the
|
|
most conspicuous portion of the government, and would have left behind
|
|
them abundant evidence of their power, instead of the evidence simply of
|
|
their assent to a few laws passed by the king.
|
|
|
|
More than this. If this body had had any real legislative authority,
|
|
they would have constituted an aristocracy, having, in conjunction with
|
|
the king, absolute power over the people. Assembling voluntarily, merely
|
|
on the invitation of the king; deputed by nobody but themselves;
|
|
representing nobody but themselves; responsible to nobody but
|
|
themselves; their legislative authority, if they had had any, would of
|
|
necessity have made the government the government of an aristocracy
|
|
merely, _and the people slaves, of course_. And this would necessarily
|
|
have been the picture that history would have given us of the
|
|
Anglo-Saxon government, _and of Anglo-Saxon liberty_.
|
|
|
|
The fact that the people had no representation in this assembly, and the
|
|
further fact that, through their juries alone, they nevertheless
|
|
maintained that noble freedom, the very tradition of which (after the
|
|
substance of the thing itself has ceased to exist) has constituted the
|
|
greatest pride and glory of the nation to this day, _prove_ that this
|
|
assembly exercised no authority which juries of the people acknowledged,
|
|
except at their own discretion.[37]
|
|
|
|
There is not a more palpable truth, in the history of the Anglo-Saxon
|
|
government, than that stated in the Introduction to Gilbert's History of
|
|
the Common Pleas,[38] viz., "_that the County and Hundred Courts_," (to
|
|
which should have been added the other courts in which juries sat, the
|
|
courts-baron and court-leet,) "_in those times were the real and only
|
|
Parliaments of the kingdom_." And why were they the real and only
|
|
parliaments of the kingdom? Solely because, as will be hereafter shown,
|
|
the juries in those courts tried causes on their intrinsic merits,
|
|
according to their own ideas of justice, irrespective of the laws agreed
|
|
upon by kings, priests, and barons; and whatever principles they
|
|
uniformly, or perhaps generally, enforced, _and none others_, became
|
|
practically the law of the land as matter of course.[39]
|
|
|
|
Finally, on this point. Conclusive proof that the legislation of the
|
|
king was of little or no authority, is found in the fact _that the kings
|
|
enacted so few laws_. If their laws had been received as authoritative,
|
|
in the manner that legislative enactments are at this day, they would
|
|
have been making laws continually. Yet the codes of the most celebrated
|
|
kings are very small, and were little more than compilations of
|
|
immemorial customs. The code of Alfred would not fill twelve pages of
|
|
the statute book of Massachusetts, and was little or nothing else than a
|
|
compilation of the laws of Moses, and the Saxon customs, evidently
|
|
collected from considerations of convenience, rather than enacted on the
|
|
principle of authority. The code of Edward the Confessor would not fill
|
|
twenty pages of the statute book of Massachusetts, and, says Blackstone,
|
|
"seems to have been no more than a new edition, or fresh promulgation of
|
|
Alfred's code, or _dome-book_, with such additions and improvements as
|
|
the experience of a century and a half suggested."--_1 Blackstone_,
|
|
66.[40]
|
|
|
|
The Code of William the Conqueror[41] would fill less than seven pages
|
|
of the statute book of Massachusetts; and most of the laws contained in
|
|
it are taken from the laws of the preceding kings, and especially of
|
|
Edward the Confessor (whose laws William swore to observe); but few of
|
|
his own being added.
|
|
|
|
The codes of the other Saxon and Norman kings were, as a general rule,
|
|
less voluminous even than these that have been named; and probably did
|
|
not exceed them in originality.[42] The Norman princes, from William the
|
|
Conqueror to John, I think without exception, bound themselves, and, in
|
|
order to maintain their thrones, were obliged to bind themselves, to
|
|
observe the ancient laws and customs, in other words, the "_lex terræ_,"
|
|
or "_common law_" of the kingdom. Even Magna Carta contains hardly
|
|
anything other than this same "_common law_," with some new securities
|
|
for its observance.
|
|
|
|
How is this abstinence from legislation, on the part of the ancient
|
|
kings, to be accounted for, except on the supposition that the people
|
|
would accept, and juries enforce, few or no new laws enacted by their
|
|
kings? Plainly it can be accounted for in no other way. In fact, all
|
|
history informs us that anciently the attempts of the kings to introduce
|
|
or establish new laws, met with determined resistance from the people,
|
|
and generally resulted in failure. "_Nolumus Leges Angliæ mutari_," (we
|
|
will that the laws of England be not changed,) was a determined
|
|
principle with the Anglo-Saxons, from which they seldom departed, up to
|
|
the time of Magna Carta, and indeed until long after.[43]
|
|
|
|
|
|
SECTION II.
|
|
|
|
_The Ancient Common Law Juries were mere Courts of Conscience._
|
|
|
|
But it is in the administration of justice, or of law, that the freedom
|
|
or subjection of a people is tested. If this administration be in
|
|
accordance with the arbitrary will of the legislator--that is, if his
|
|
will, as it appears in his statutes, be the highest rule of decision
|
|
known to the judicial tribunals,--the government is a despotism, and the
|
|
people are slaves. If, on the other hand, the rule of decision be those
|
|
principles of natural equity and justice, which constitute, or at least
|
|
are embodied in, the general conscience of mankind, the people are free
|
|
in just so far as that conscience is enlightened.
|
|
|
|
That the authority of the king was of little weight with the _judicial
|
|
tribunals_, must necessarily be inferred from the fact already stated,
|
|
that his authority over the _people_ was but weak. If the authority of
|
|
his laws had been paramount in the judicial tribunals, it would have
|
|
been paramount with the people, of course; because they would have had
|
|
no alternative but submission. The fact, then, that his laws were _not_
|
|
authoritative with the people, is proof that they were _not_
|
|
authoritative with the tribunals--in other words, that they were not, as
|
|
matter of course, enforced by the tribunals.
|
|
|
|
But we have additional evidence that, up to the time of Magna Carta, the
|
|
laws of the king were not binding upon the judicial tribunals; and if
|
|
they were not binding before that time, they certainly were not
|
|
afterwards, as has already been shown from Magna Carta itself. It is
|
|
manifest from all the accounts we have of the courts in which juries
|
|
sat, prior to Magna Carta, such as the court-baron, the hundred court,
|
|
the court-leet, and the county court, _that they were mere courts of
|
|
conscience, and that the juries were the judges, deciding causes
|
|
according to their own notions of equity, and not according to any laws
|
|
of the king, unless they thought them just_.
|
|
|
|
These courts, it must be considered, were very numerous, and held very
|
|
frequent sessions. There were probably seven, eight, or nine hundred
|
|
courts _a month_, in the kingdom; the object being, as Blackstone says,
|
|
"_to bring justice home to every man's door_." (_3 Blackstone_, 30.) The
|
|
number of the _county_ courts, of course, corresponded to the number of
|
|
counties, (36.) The _court-leet_ was the criminal court for a district
|
|
less than a county. The _hundred court_ was the court for one of those
|
|
districts anciently called a _hundred_, because, at the time of their
|
|
first organization for judicial purposes, they comprised (as is
|
|
supposed) but a hundred families.[44] The court-baron was the court for
|
|
a single manor, and there was a court for every manor in the kingdom.
|
|
All these courts were holden as often as once in three or five weeks;
|
|
the county court once a month. The king's judges were present at none of
|
|
these courts; the only officers in attendance being sheriffs, bailiffs,
|
|
and stewards, merely ministerial, and not judicial, officers; doubtless
|
|
incompetent, and, if not incompetent, untrustworthy, for giving the
|
|
juries any reliable information in matters of law, beyond what was
|
|
already known to the jurors themselves. And yet these were the courts,
|
|
in which was done all the judicial business, both civil and criminal, of
|
|
the nation, except appeals, and some of the more important and difficult
|
|
cases.[45] It is plain that the juries, in these courts, must, of
|
|
necessity, have been the sole judges of all matters of law whatsoever;
|
|
because there was no one present, but sheriffs, bailiffs, and stewards,
|
|
to give them any instructions; and surely it will not be pretended that
|
|
the jurors were bound to take their law from such sources as these.
|
|
|
|
In the second place, it is manifest that the principles of law, by which
|
|
the juries determined causes, were, as a general rule, nothing else than
|
|
their own ideas of natural equity, _and not any laws of the king_;
|
|
because but few laws were enacted, and many of those were not written,
|
|
but only agreed upon in council.[46] Of those that were written, few
|
|
copies only were made, (printing being then unknown,) and not enough to
|
|
supply all, or any considerable number, of these numerous courts. Beside
|
|
and beyond all this, few or none of the jurors could have read the laws,
|
|
if they had been written; because few or none of the common people
|
|
could, at that time, read. Not only were the common people unable to
|
|
read their own language, but, at the time of Magna Carta, the laws were
|
|
written in Latin, a language that could be read by few persons except
|
|
the priests, who were also the lawyers of the nation. Mackintosh says,
|
|
"the first act of the House of Commons composed and recorded in the
|
|
English tongue," was in 1415, two centuries after Magna Carta.[47] Up to
|
|
this time, and for some seventy years later, the laws were generally
|
|
written either in Latin or French; both languages incapable of being
|
|
read by the common people, as well Normans as Saxons; and one of them,
|
|
the Latin, not only incapable of being read by them, but of being even
|
|
understood when it was heard by them.
|
|
|
|
To suppose that the people were bound to obey, and juries to enforce,
|
|
laws, many of which were unwritten, none of which _they_ could read, and
|
|
the larger part of which (those written in Latin) they could not
|
|
translate, or understand when they heard them read, is equivalent to
|
|
supposing the nation sunk in the most degrading slavery, instead of
|
|
enjoying a liberty of their own choosing.
|
|
|
|
Their knowledge of the laws passed by the king was, of course, derived
|
|
only from oral information; and "_the good laws_," as some of them were
|
|
called, in contradistinction to others--those which the people at large
|
|
esteemed to be good laws--were doubtless enforced by the juries, and the
|
|
others, as a general thing, disregarded.[48]
|
|
|
|
That such was the nature of judicial proceedings, and of the power of
|
|
juries, up to the time of Magna Carta, is further shown by the following
|
|
authorities.
|
|
|
|
"The sheriffs and bailiffs caused the free tenants of their bailiwics
|
|
to meet at their counties and hundreds; _at which justice was so
|
|
done, that every one so judged his neighbor by such judgment as a man
|
|
could not elsewhere receive in the like cases_, until such times as
|
|
the customs of the realm were put in writing, and certainly
|
|
published.
|
|
|
|
"And although a freeman commonly was not to serve (as a juror or
|
|
judge) without his assent, nevertheless it was assented unto that
|
|
free tenants should meet together in the counties and hundreds, and
|
|
lords courts, if they were not specially exempted to do such suits,
|
|
and _there judged their neighbors_."--_Mirror of Justices_, p. 7, 8.
|
|
|
|
Gilbert, in his treatise on the Constitution of England, says:
|
|
|
|
"In the county courts, if the debt was above forty shillings, there
|
|
issued a _justicies_ (a commission) to the sheriff, to enable him to
|
|
hold such a plea, _where the suitors_ (_jurors_) _are judges of the
|
|
law and fact_."--_Gilbert's Cases in Law and Equity, &c., &c._, 456.
|
|
|
|
All the ancient writs, given in Glanville, for summoning jurors,
|
|
indicate that the jurors judged of everything, _on their consciences
|
|
only_. The writs are in this form:
|
|
|
|
"Summon twelve free and legal men (or sometimes twelve knights) to be
|
|
in court, _prepared upon their oaths to declare whether A or B have
|
|
the greater right to the land_ (_or other thing_) _in question_." See
|
|
Writs in Beames' Glanville, p. 54 to 70, and 233-306 to 332.
|
|
|
|
Crabbe, speaking of the time of Henry I., (1100 to 1135,) recognizes the
|
|
fact that the jurors were the judges. He says:
|
|
|
|
"By one law, every one was to be tried by his peers, who were of the
|
|
same neighborhood as himself. * * By another law, _the judges, for so
|
|
the jury were called_, were to be chosen by the party impleaded,
|
|
after the manner of the Danish _nembas_; by which, probably, is to be
|
|
understood that the defendant had the liberty of taking exceptions
|
|
to, or challenging the jury, as it was afterwards called."--_Crabbe's
|
|
History of the English Law_, p. 55.
|
|
|
|
Reeve says:
|
|
|
|
"The great court for _civil_ business was the _county court_; held
|
|
once every four weeks. Here the sheriff presided; _but the suitors of
|
|
the court, as they were called, that is, the freemen or landholders
|
|
of the county, were the judges_; and the sheriff was to execute the
|
|
judgment. * *
|
|
|
|
"The _hundred court_ was held before _some bailiff_; the _leet_
|
|
before the lord of the manor's steward.[49] * *
|
|
|
|
"Out of the county court was derived an inferior court of _civil_
|
|
jurisdiction, called the _court-baron_. This was held from three
|
|
weeks to three weeks, and _was in every respect like the county
|
|
court_;" (_that is, the jurors were judges in it_;) "only the lord to
|
|
whom this franchise was granted, or _his steward_, _presided instead
|
|
of the sheriff_."--_1 Reeve's History of the English Law_, p. 7.
|
|
|
|
Chief Baron Gilbert says:
|
|
|
|
"Besides the tenants of the king, which held _per baroniam_, (by the
|
|
right of a baron,) and did suit and service (served as judges) at his
|
|
own court; and the burghers and tenants in ancient demesne, that did
|
|
suit and service (served as jurors or judges) in their own court in
|
|
person, and in the king's by proxy, there was also a set of
|
|
freeholders, that did suit and service (served as jurors) at the
|
|
county court. These were such as anciently held of the lord of the
|
|
county, and by the escheats of earldoms had fallen to the king; or
|
|
such as were granted out by service to hold of the king, but with
|
|
particular reservation to do suit and service (serve as jurors)
|
|
before the king's bailiff; _because it was necessary the sheriff, or
|
|
bailiff of the king, should have suitors_ (_jurors_) _at the county
|
|
court, that the business might be despatched. These suitors are the
|
|
pares_ (_peers_) _of the county court, and indeed the judges of it;
|
|
as the pares_ (_peers_) _were the judges in every court-baron_; and
|
|
therefore the king's bailiff having a court before him, there must be
|
|
_pares or judges, for the sheriff himself is not a judge_; and though
|
|
the style of the court is _Curia prima Comitatus E.C. Milit.'
|
|
vicecom' Comitat' præd' Tent' apud B._, &c. (First Court of the
|
|
county, E.C. knight, sheriff of the aforesaid county, held at B., &c.);
|
|
by which it appears that the court was the sheriff's; _yet, by
|
|
the old feudal constitutions, the lord was not judge, but the pares_
|
|
(_peers_) _only_; so that, even in a _justicies_, which was a
|
|
commission to the sheriff to hold plea of more than was allowed by
|
|
the natural jurisdiction of a county court, _the pares_ (_peers,
|
|
jurors_) _only were judges, and not the sheriff_; because it was to
|
|
hold plea in the same manner as they used to do in that (the lord's)
|
|
court."--_Gilbert on the Court of Exchequer_, ch. 5, p. 61-2.
|
|
|
|
"It is a distinguishing feature of the feudal system, to make civil
|
|
jurisdiction necessarily, and criminal jurisdiction ordinarily,
|
|
coëxtensive with tenure; and accordingly there is inseparably
|
|
incident to every manor a court-baron (curia baronum), _being a court
|
|
in which the freeholders of the manor are the sole judges_, but in
|
|
which the lord, by himself, or more commonly by his steward,
|
|
presides."--_Political Dictionary_, word _Manor_.
|
|
|
|
The same work, speaking of the county court, says: "_The judges were the
|
|
freeholders who did suit to the court._" See word _Courts_.
|
|
|
|
"In the case of freeholders attending as suitors, the county court
|
|
or court-baron, (as in the case of the ancient tenants _per baroniam_
|
|
attending Parliament,) _the suitors are the judges of the court, both
|
|
for law and for fact_, and the sheriff or the under sheriff in the
|
|
county court, and the lord or his steward in the court-baron, are
|
|
only presiding officers, _with no judicial authority_."--_Political
|
|
Dictionary_, word _Suit_.
|
|
|
|
"COURT, (curtis, curia aula); the space enclosed by the walls of a
|
|
feudal residence, in which the followers of a lord used to assemble
|
|
in the middle ages, to administer justice, and decide respecting
|
|
affairs of common interest, &c. It was next used for those who stood
|
|
in immediate connexion with the lord and master, the _pares curiæ_,
|
|
(peers of the court,) the limited portion of the general assembly, to
|
|
which was entrusted the pronouncing of judgment," &c.--_Encyclopedia
|
|
Americana_, word _Court_.
|
|
|
|
"In court-barons or county courts _the steward was not judge, but the
|
|
pares_ (_peers_, _jurors_); nor was the speaker in the House of Lords
|
|
judge, but the barons only."--_Gilbert on the Court of Exchequer_,
|
|
ch. 3, p. 42.
|
|
|
|
Crabbe, speaking of the Saxon times, says:
|
|
|
|
"The sheriff presided at the _hundred court_, * * and sometimes sat
|
|
in the place of the alderman (earl) in the _county
|
|
court_."--_Crabbe_, 23.
|
|
|
|
The sheriff afterwards became the sole presiding officer of the county
|
|
court.
|
|
|
|
Sir Thomas Smith, Secretary of State to Queen Elizabeth, writing more
|
|
than three hundred years after Magna Carta, in describing the difference
|
|
between the Civil Law and the English Law, says:
|
|
|
|
"_Judex_ is of us called Judge, but our fashion is so divers, that
|
|
they which give the deadly stroke, and either condemn or acquit the
|
|
man for guilty or not guilty, _are not called judges, but the twelve
|
|
men. And the same order as well in civil matters and pecuniary, as in
|
|
matters criminal_."--_Smith's Commonwealth of England_, ch. 9, p. 53,
|
|
Edition of 1621.
|
|
|
|
_Court-Leet._ "That the _leet_ is the most ancient court in the land
|
|
for _criminal_ matters, (the court-baron being of no less antiquity
|
|
in _civil_,) has been pronounced by the highest legal authority. * *
|
|
Lord Mansfield states that this court was coeval with the
|
|
establishment of the Saxons here, and its activity marked very
|
|
visibly both among the Saxons and Danes. * * The leet is a court of
|
|
record for the cognizance of criminal matters, or pleas of the crown;
|
|
and necessarily belongs to the king; though a subject, usually the
|
|
lord of the manor, may be, and is, entitled to the profits,
|
|
consisting of the essoign pence, fines, and amerciaments.
|
|
|
|
"_It is held before the steward, or was, in ancient times, before the
|
|
bailiff, of the lord._"--_Tomlin's Law Dict._, word _Court-Leet_.
|
|
|
|
Of course the jury were the judges in this court, where only a "steward"
|
|
or "bailiff" of a manor presided.
|
|
|
|
"No cause of consequence was determined without the king's writ; for
|
|
even in the county courts, of the debts, which were above forty
|
|
shillings, there issued a _Justicies_ (commission) to the sheriff, to
|
|
enable him to hold such plea, _where the suitors are judges of the
|
|
law and fact_."--_Gilbert's History of the Common Pleas,
|
|
Introduction_, p. 19.
|
|
|
|
"This position" (that "the matter of law was decided by the King's
|
|
Justices, but the matter of fact by the pares") "_is wholly
|
|
incompatible with the common law, for the Jurata (jury) were the sole
|
|
judges both of the law and the fact_."--_Gilbert's History of the
|
|
Common Pleas_, p. 70, _note_.
|
|
|
|
We come now to the challenge; and of old _the suitors in court, who
|
|
were judges_, could not be challenged; nor by the feudal law could
|
|
the _pares_ be even challenged, _Pares qui ordinariam jurisdictionem
|
|
habent recusari non possunt_; (the peers who have ordinary
|
|
jurisdiction cannot be rejected;) "_but those suitors who are judges
|
|
of the court_, could not be challenged; and the reason is, that there
|
|
are several qualifications required by the writ, viz., that they be
|
|
_liberos et legales homines de vincineto_ (free and legal men of the
|
|
neighborhood) of the place laid in the declaration," &c.,
|
|
&c.--_Ditto_, p. 93.
|
|
|
|
"_Ad questionem juris non respondent Juratores._" (To the question of
|
|
law the jurors do not answer.) "The Annotist says, that this is
|
|
indeed a maxim in the Civil-Law Jurisprudence, _but it does not bind
|
|
an English jury, for by the common law of the land the jury are
|
|
judges as well of the matter of law, as of the fact_, with this
|
|
difference only, that the (a Saxon word) or judge on the bench is to
|
|
give them no assistance in determining the matter of _fact_, but if
|
|
they have any doubt among themselves relating to matter of _law_,
|
|
they may then request him to explain it to them, which when he hath
|
|
done, and they are thus become well informed, they, and they only,
|
|
become competent judges of the matter of _law_. And this is the
|
|
province of the judge on the bench, namely, to show, or _teach_ the
|
|
law, but not to take upon him the trial of the delinquent, either in
|
|
matter of fact or in matter of law." (Here various Saxon laws are
|
|
quoted.) "In neither of these fundamental laws is there the least
|
|
word, hint, or idea, that the earl or alderman (that is to say, the
|
|
_Prepositus_ (presiding officer) of the court, which is tantamount to
|
|
_the judge on the bench_) is to take upon him to judge the delinquent
|
|
in any sense whatever, the sole purport of his office is to _teach_
|
|
the secular or worldly law."--_Ditto_, p. 57, _note_.
|
|
|
|
"The administration of justice was carefully provided for; it was not
|
|
the caprice of their lord, _but the sentence of their peers, that
|
|
they obeyed. Each was the judge of his equals, and each by his equals
|
|
was judged._"--_Introd. to Gilbert on Tenures_, p. 12.
|
|
|
|
Hallam says: "A respectable class of free socagers, having, in
|
|
general, full rights of alienating their lands, and holding them
|
|
probably at a small certain rent from the lord of the manor,
|
|
frequently occur in Domes-day Book. * * They undoubtedly were suitors
|
|
to the court-baron of the lord, to whose soc, or right of justice,
|
|
they belonged. _They were consequently judges in civil causes,
|
|
determined before the manorial tribunal._"--_2 Middle Ages_, 481.
|
|
|
|
Stephens adopts as correct the following quotations from Blackstone:
|
|
|
|
"The _Court-Baron_ is a court incident to every manor in the kingdom,
|
|
to be holden by the steward within the said manor." * * _It "is a
|
|
court of common law, and it is the court before the freeholders who
|
|
owe suit and service to the manor_," (are bound to serve as jurors in
|
|
the courts of the manor,) "_the steward being rather the registrar
|
|
than the judge_. * * The freeholders' court was composed of the
|
|
lord's tenants, who were the _pares_ (equals) of each other, and were
|
|
bound by their feudal tenure to assist their lord in the dispensation
|
|
of domestic justice. This was formerly held every three weeks; _and
|
|
its most important business was to determine, by writ of right, all
|
|
controversies relating to the right of lands within the manor_."--_3
|
|
Stephens' Commentaries_, 392-3. _3 Blackstone_, 32-3.
|
|
|
|
"A _Hundred Court_ is only a larger court-baron, being held for all
|
|
the inhabitants of a particular hundred, instead of a manor. _The
|
|
free suitors (jurors) are here also the judges, and the steward the
|
|
register._"--_3 Stephens_, 394. _3 Blackstone_, 33.
|
|
|
|
"The _County Court_ is a court incident to the jurisdiction of the
|
|
sheriff. * * _The freeholders of the county are the real judges in
|
|
this court, and the sheriff is the ministerial officer._"--_3
|
|
Stephens_, 395-6. _3 Blackstone_, 35-6.
|
|
|
|
Blackstone describes these courts, as courts "_wherein injuries were
|
|
redressed in an easy and expeditious manner, by the suffrage of
|
|
neighbors and friends_."--_3 Blackstone_, 30.
|
|
|
|
"When we read of a certain number of _freemen_ chosen by the parties
|
|
to decide in a dispute--all bound by oath to vote _in foro
|
|
conscientia_--and that _their_ decision, _not the will of the judge
|
|
presiding, ended the suit_, we at once perceive that a great
|
|
improvement has been made in the old form of compurgation--an
|
|
improvement which impartial observation can have no hesitation to
|
|
pronounce as identical in its main features with the trial by
|
|
jury."--_Dunham's Middle Ages_, Sec. 2, B. 2, Ch. 1. _57 Lardner's
|
|
Cab. Cyc._, 60.
|
|
|
|
"The bishop and the earl, or, in his absence, the gerefa, (sheriff,)
|
|
and sometimes both the earl and the gerefa, presided at the
|
|
_schyre-mote_ (county court); the gerefa (sheriff) usually alone
|
|
presided at the _mote_ (meeting or court) of the hundred. In the
|
|
cities and towns which were not within any peculiar jurisdiction,
|
|
there was held, at regular stated intervals, a _burgh mote_, (borough
|
|
court,) for the administration of justice, at which a gerefa, or a
|
|
magistrate appointed by the king, presided."--_Spence's Origin of the
|
|
Laws and Political Institutions of Modern Europe_, p. 444.
|
|
|
|
"The right of the plaintiff and defendant, and of the prosecutor and
|
|
criminal, _to challenge the judices_, (judges,) _or assessors,[50]
|
|
appointed to try the cause in civil matters, and to decide upon the
|
|
guilt or innocence of the accused in criminal matters_, is recognized
|
|
in the treatise called the Laws of Henry the First; but I cannot
|
|
discover, from the Anglo-Saxon laws or histories, that before the
|
|
Conquest the parties had any general right of challenge; _indeed, had
|
|
such right existed, the injunctions to all persons standing in the
|
|
situation of judges (jurors) to do right according to their
|
|
conscience_, would scarcely have been so frequently and anxiously
|
|
repeated."--_Spence_, 456.
|
|
|
|
Hale says:
|
|
|
|
"The administration of the common justice of the kingdom seems to be
|
|
wholly dispensed in the county courts, hundred courts, and
|
|
courts-baron; except some of the greater crimes reformed by the laws
|
|
of King Henry I., and that part thereof which was sometimes taken up
|
|
by the _Justitiarius Angliæ_."
|
|
|
|
This doubtless bred great inconvenience, uncertainty, and variety in
|
|
the laws, viz.:
|
|
|
|
"_First, by the ignorance of the judges, which were the freeholders
|
|
of the county._ * *
|
|
|
|
"Thirdly, a third inconvenience was, that all the business of any
|
|
moment was carried by parties and factions. _For the freeholders
|
|
being generally the judges_, and conversing one among another, _and
|
|
being as it were the chief judges, not only of the fact, but of the
|
|
law_; every man that had a suit there, sped according as he could
|
|
make parties."--_1 Hale's History of the Common Law_, p. 246.
|
|
|
|
"In all these tribunals," (county court, hundred court, &c.,) "_the
|
|
judges were the free tenants_, owing suit to the court, and
|
|
afterwards called its peers."--_1 Lingard's History of England_, 488.
|
|
|
|
Henry calls the twelve jurors "assessors," and says:
|
|
|
|
"These assessors, _who were in reality judges_, took a solemn oath,
|
|
that they would faithfully discharge the duties of their office, and
|
|
not suffer an innocent man to be condemned, nor any guilty person to
|
|
be acquitted."--_3 Henry's History of Great Britain_, 346.
|
|
|
|
Tyrrell says:
|
|
|
|
"Alfred cantoned his kingdom, first into _Trihings_ and _Lathes_, as
|
|
they are still called in Kent and other places, consisting of three
|
|
or four Hundreds; _in which, the freeholders being judges_, such
|
|
causes were brought as could not be determined in the Hundred
|
|
court."--_Tyrrell's Introduction to the History of England_, p. 80.
|
|
|
|
Of the _Hundred Court_ he says:
|
|
|
|
"In this court anciently, _one of the principal inhabitants, called
|
|
the alderman, together with the barons of the Hundred[51]--id est the
|
|
freeholders--was judge_."--_Ditto_, p. 80.
|
|
|
|
Also he says:
|
|
|
|
"By a law of Edward the Elder, 'Every sheriff shall convene the
|
|
people once a month, and do equal right to all, putting an end to
|
|
controversies at times appointed.'"--_Ditto_, p. 86.
|
|
|
|
"A statute, emphatically termed the 'Grand Assize,' enabled the
|
|
defendant, if he thought proper, to abide by the testimony of the
|
|
twelve good and lawful knights, chosen by four others of the
|
|
vicinage, _and whose oaths gave a final decision to the contested
|
|
claim_."--_1 Palgrave's Rise and Progress of the English
|
|
Commonwealth_, 261.
|
|
|
|
"From the moment when the crown became accustomed to the 'Inquest,' a
|
|
restraint was imposed upon every branch of the prerogative. _The king
|
|
could never be informed of his rights, but through the medium of the
|
|
people._ Every 'extent' by which he claimed the profits and
|
|
advantages resulting from the casualties of tenure, every process by
|
|
which he repressed the usurpations of the baronage, depended upon the
|
|
'good men and true' who were impanelled to 'pass' between the subject
|
|
and the sovereign; and the thunder of the Exchequer at Westminster
|
|
might be silenced by the honesty, the firmness, or the obstinacy, of
|
|
one sturdy knight or yeoman in the distant shire.
|
|
|
|
Taxation was controlled in the same manner by the voice of those who
|
|
were most liable to oppression. * * A jury was impanelled to adjudge
|
|
the proportion due to the sovereign; and this course was not
|
|
essentially varied, even after the right of granting aids to the
|
|
crown was fully acknowledged to be vested in the parliament of the
|
|
realm. The people taxed themselves; and the collection of the grants
|
|
was checked and controlled, and, perhaps, in many instances evaded,
|
|
by these virtual representatives of the community.
|
|
|
|
The principle of the jury was, therefore, not confined to its mere
|
|
application as a mode of trying contested facts, whether in civil or
|
|
criminal cases; and, both in its form and in its consequences, it had
|
|
a very material influence upon the general constitution of the realm.
|
|
* * The main-spring of the machinery of remedial justice existed in
|
|
the franchise of the lower and lowest orders of the political
|
|
hierarchy. Without the suffrage of the yeoman, the burgess, and the
|
|
churl, the sovereign could not exercise the most important and most
|
|
essential function of royalty; from them he received the power of
|
|
life and death; he could not wield the sword of justice until the
|
|
humblest of his subjects placed the weapon in his hand."--_1
|
|
Palgrave's Rise and Progress of the English Constitution_, 274-7.
|
|
|
|
Coke says, "The court of the county is no court of record,[52] _and the
|
|
suitors are the judges thereof_."--_4 Inst._, 266.
|
|
|
|
Also, "The court of the Hundred is no court of record, _and the suitors
|
|
be thereof judges_."--_4 Inst._, 267.
|
|
|
|
Also, "The court-baron is a court incident to every manor, and is not of
|
|
record, _and the suitors be thereof judges_."--_4 Inst._, 268.
|
|
|
|
Also, "The court of ancient demesne is in the nature of a court-baron,
|
|
_wherein the suitors are judges_, and is no court of record."--_4
|
|
Inst._, 269.
|
|
|
|
Millar says, "Some authors have thought that jurymen were originally
|
|
_compurgators_, called by a defendant to swear that they believed him
|
|
innocent of the facts with which he was charged.... But ... compurgators
|
|
were merely witnesses; _jurymen were, in reality, judges_. The former
|
|
were called to confirm the oath of the party by swearing, according to
|
|
their belief, that he had told the truth, (in his oath of purgation;)
|
|
_the latter were appointed to try, by witnesses, and by all other means
|
|
of proof, whether he was innocent or guilty_.... Juries were accustomed
|
|
to ascertain the truth of facts, by the defendant's oath of purgation,
|
|
together with that of his compurgators.... Both of them (jurymen and
|
|
compurgators) were obliged to swear that they would _tell the truth_....
|
|
According to the simple idea of our forefathers, guilt or innocence was
|
|
regarded as a mere matter of fact; and it was thought that no man, who
|
|
knew the real circumstances of a case, could be at a loss to determine
|
|
whether the culprit ought to be condemned or acquitted."--_1 Millar's
|
|
Hist. View of Eng. Gov._, ch. 12, p. 332-4.
|
|
|
|
Also, "The same form of procedure, which took place in the
|
|
administration of justice among the vassals of a barony, was gradually
|
|
extended to the courts held in the _trading towns_."--_Same_, p. 335.
|
|
|
|
Also, "The same regulations, concerning the distribution of justice by
|
|
the intervention of juries, ... _were introduced into the baron courts
|
|
of the king_, as into those of the nobility, or such of his subjects as
|
|
retained their allodial property."--_Same_, p. 337.
|
|
|
|
Also. "This tribunal" (the _aula regis_, or king's court, afterwards
|
|
divided into the courts of King's Bench, Common Pleas, and Exchequer)
|
|
"was properly the ordinary baron-court of the king; and, being in the
|
|
same circumstances with the baron-courts of the nobility, it was under
|
|
the same necessity of trying causes by the intervention of a
|
|
jury."--_Same_, vol. 2, p. 292.
|
|
|
|
Speaking of the times of Edward the First, (1272 to 1307,) Millar says:
|
|
|
|
"What is called the petty jury was therefore introduced into these
|
|
tribunals, (the King's Bench, the Common Pleas, and the _Exchequer_,) as
|
|
well as into their auxiliary courts employed to distribute justice in
|
|
the circuits; and was thus rendered essentially necessary in determining
|
|
causes of every sort, whether civil, criminal, or _fiscal_."--_Same_,
|
|
vol. 2, p. 293-4.
|
|
|
|
Also, "That this form of trial (by jury) obtained universally in all the
|
|
feudal governments, as well as in that of England, there can be no
|
|
reason to doubt. In France, in Germany, and in other European countries,
|
|
where we have any accounts of the constitution and procedure of the
|
|
feudal courts, it appears that lawsuits of every sort concerning the
|
|
freemen or vassals of a barony, were determined by the _pares curiæ_
|
|
(peers of the court;) _and that the judge took little more upon him than
|
|
to regulate the method of proceeding, or to declare the verdict of the
|
|
jury_."--_Same_, vol. 1, ch. 12, p. 329.
|
|
|
|
Also, "Among the Gothic nations of modern Europe, the custom of deciding
|
|
lawsuits by a jury seems to have prevailed universally; first in the
|
|
allodial courts of the county, or of the hundred, and afterwards in the
|
|
baron-courts of every feudal superior."--_Same_, vol. 2, p. 296.
|
|
|
|
Palgrave says that in Germany "The Graff (gerefa, sheriff) placed
|
|
himself in the seat of judgment, and gave the charge to the assembled
|
|
free Echevins, warning them to pronounce judgment according to right and
|
|
justice."--2 _Palgrave_, 147.
|
|
|
|
Also, that, in Germany, "The Echevins were composed of the villanage,
|
|
somewhat obscured in their functions by the learning of the grave
|
|
civilian who was associated to them, and somewhat limited by the
|
|
encroachments of modern feudality; _but they were still substantially
|
|
the judges of the court_."--_Same_, 148.
|
|
|
|
Palgrave also says, "Scotland, in like manner, had the laws of Burlaw,
|
|
or Birlaw, which were made and determined by the neighbors, elected by
|
|
common consent, in the Burlaw or Birlaw courts, wherein knowledge was
|
|
taken of complaints between neighbor and neighbor, _which men, so
|
|
chosen, were judges and arbitrators_, and called Birlaw men."--1
|
|
_Palgrave's Rise_, &c., p. 80.
|
|
|
|
But, in order to understand the common law trial by jury, as it existed
|
|
prior to Magna Carta, and as it was guaranteed by that instrument, it is
|
|
perhaps indispensable to understand more fully the nature of the courts
|
|
in which juries sat, and the extent of the powers exercised by juries in
|
|
those courts. I therefore give in a note extended extracts, on these
|
|
points, from Stuart on the Constitution of England, and from
|
|
Blackstone's Commentaries.[53]
|
|
|
|
That all these courts were mere _courts of conscience, in which the
|
|
juries were sole judges, administering justice according to their own
|
|
ideas of it_, is not only shown by the extracts already given, but is
|
|
explicitly acknowledged in the following one, in which the _modern
|
|
"courts of conscience"_ are compared with the _ancient hundred and
|
|
county courts_, and the preference given to the latter, on the ground
|
|
that the duties of the jurors in the one case, and of the commissioners
|
|
in the other, are the same, and that the consciences of a jury are a
|
|
safer and purer tribunal than the consciences of individuals specially
|
|
appointed, and holding permanent offices.
|
|
|
|
"But there is one species of courts constituted by act of Parliament,
|
|
in the city of London, and other trading and populous districts,
|
|
which, in their proceedings, so vary from the course of the common
|
|
law, that they deserve a more particular consideration. I mean the
|
|
court of requests, _or courts of conscience_, for the recovery of
|
|
small debts. The first of these was established in London so early as
|
|
the reign of Henry VIII., by an act of their common council; which,
|
|
however, was certainly insufficient for that purpose, and illegal,
|
|
till confirmed by statute 3 Jac. I., ch. 15, which has since been
|
|
explained and amended by statute 14 Geo. II., ch. 10. The
|
|
constitution is this: two aldermen and four commoners sit twice a
|
|
week to hear all causes of debt not exceeding the value of forty
|
|
shillings; which they examine in a summary way, by the oath of the
|
|
parties or other witnesses, _and make such order therein as is
|
|
consonant to equity and good conscience_.* * Divers trading towns and
|
|
other districts have obtained acts of Parliament, for establishing
|
|
in them _courts of conscience_ upon nearly the same plan as that in
|
|
the city of London.
|
|
|
|
"The anxious desire that has been shown to obtain these several acts,
|
|
proves clearly that the nation, in general, is truly sensible of the
|
|
great inconvenience arising from the disuse of the ancient county and
|
|
hundred courts, wherein causes of this small value were always
|
|
formerly decided with very little trouble and expense to the parties.
|
|
But it is to be feared that the general remedy, which of late hath
|
|
been principally applied to this inconvenience, (the erecting these
|
|
new jurisdictions,) may itself be attended in time with very ill
|
|
consequences; as the method of proceeding therein is entirely in
|
|
derogation of the common law; and their large discretionary powers
|
|
create a petty tyranny in a set of standing commissioners; and as the
|
|
disuse of the trial by jury may tend to estrange the minds of the
|
|
people from that valuable prerogative of Englishmen, which has
|
|
already been more than sufficiently excluded in many instances. _How
|
|
much rather is it to be wished that the proceedings in the county and
|
|
hundred courts could be again revived_, without burdening the
|
|
freeholders with too frequent and tedious attendances; and at the
|
|
same time removing the delays that have insensibly crept into their
|
|
proceedings, and the power that either party has of transferring at
|
|
pleasure their suits to the courts at Westminster! _And we may, with
|
|
satisfaction, observe, that this experiment has been actually tried,
|
|
and has succeeded in the populous county of Middlesex_, which might
|
|
serve as an example for others. For by statute 23 Geo. II., ch. 33,
|
|
it is enacted:
|
|
|
|
1. That a special county court shall be held at least once in a
|
|
month, in every hundred of the county of Middlesex, _by the county
|
|
clerk_.
|
|
|
|
2. _That twelve freeholders of that hundred, qualified to serve on
|
|
juries, and struck by the sheriff, shall be summoned to appear at
|
|
such court by rotation_; so as none shall be summoned oftener than
|
|
once a year.
|
|
|
|
3. That in all causes not exceeding the value of forty shillings,
|
|
_the county clerk and twelve suitors (jurors) shall proceed in a
|
|
summary way_, examining the parties and witnesses on oath, without
|
|
the formal process anciently used; _and shall make such order therein
|
|
as they shall judge agreeable to conscience_."--_3 Blackstone_,
|
|
81-83.
|
|
|
|
What are these but courts of conscience? And yet Blackstone tells us
|
|
they are a _revival of the ancient hundred and county courts_. And what
|
|
does this fact prove, but that the ancient common law courts, in which
|
|
juries sat, were mere courts of conscience?
|
|
|
|
It is perfectly evident that in all these courts the jurors were the
|
|
judges, and determined all questions of law for themselves; because the
|
|
only alternative to that supposition is, _that the jurors took their law
|
|
from sheriffs, bailiffs, and stewards_, of which there is not the least
|
|
evidence in history, nor the least probability in reason. It is evident,
|
|
also, that they judged independently of the laws of the king, for the
|
|
reasons before given, viz., that the authority of the king was held in
|
|
very little esteem; and, secondly, that the laws of the king (not being
|
|
printed, and the people being unable to read them if they had been
|
|
printed) must have been in a great measure unknown to them, and could
|
|
have been received by them only on the authority of the sheriff,
|
|
bailiff, or steward. If laws were to be received by them on the
|
|
authority of these officers, the latter would have imposed such laws
|
|
upon the people as they pleased.
|
|
|
|
These courts, that have now been described, were continued in full power
|
|
long after Magna Carta, no alteration being made in them by that
|
|
instrument, _nor in the mode of administering justice in them_.
|
|
|
|
There is no evidence whatever, so far as I am aware, that the juries had
|
|
any _less_ power in the courts held by the king's justices, than in
|
|
those held by sheriffs, bailiffs, and stewards; and there is no
|
|
probability whatever that they had. All the difference between the
|
|
former courts and the latter undoubtedly was, that, in the former, the
|
|
juries had the benefit of the advice and assistance of the justices,
|
|
which would, of course, be considered valuable in difficult cases, on
|
|
account of the justices being regarded as more learned, not only in the
|
|
laws of the king, but also in the common law, or "law of the land."
|
|
|
|
The conclusion, therefore, I think, inevitably must be, that neither the
|
|
laws of the king, nor the instructions of his justices, had any
|
|
authority over jurors beyond what the latter saw fit to accord to them.
|
|
And this view is confirmed by this remark of Hallam, the truth of which
|
|
all will acknowledge:
|
|
|
|
"The rules of legal decision, among a rude people, are always very
|
|
simple; not serving much to guide, far less to control the feelings
|
|
of natural equity."--_2 Middle Ages_, ch. 8, part 2, p. 465.
|
|
|
|
It is evident that it was in this way, _by the free and concurrent
|
|
judgments of juries, approving and enforcing certain laws and rules of
|
|
conduct, corresponding to their notions of right and justice_, that the
|
|
laws and customs, which, for the most part, made up the _common law_,
|
|
and were called, at that day, "_the good laws, and good customs_," and
|
|
"_the law of the land_," were established. How otherwise could they ever
|
|
have become established, as Blackstone says they were, "_by long and
|
|
immemorial usage, and by their universal reception throughout the
|
|
kingdom_,"[54] when, as the Mirror says, "_justice was so done, that
|
|
every one so judged his neighbor, by such judgment as a man could not
|
|
elsewhere receive in the like cases, until such times as the customs of
|
|
the realm were put in writing and certainly published_?"
|
|
|
|
The fact that, in that dark age, so many of the principles of natural
|
|
equity, as those then embraced in the _Common Law_, should have been so
|
|
uniformly recognized and enforced by juries, as to have become
|
|
established by general consent as "_the law of the land_;" and the
|
|
further fact that this "law of the land" was held so sacred that even
|
|
the king could not lawfully infringe or alter it, but was required to
|
|
swear to maintain it, are beautiful and impressive illustrations of the
|
|
truth that men's minds, even in the comparative infancy of other
|
|
knowledge, have clear and coincident ideas of the elementary principles,
|
|
and the paramount obligation, of justice. The same facts also prove that
|
|
the common mind, and the general, or, perhaps, rather, the universal
|
|
conscience, as developed in the untrammelled judgments of juries, may be
|
|
safely relied upon for the preservation of individual rights in civil
|
|
society; and that there is no necessity or excuse for that deluge of
|
|
arbitrary legislation, with which the present age is overwhelmed, under
|
|
the pretext that unless laws be _made_, the law will not be known; a
|
|
pretext, by the way, almost universally used for overturning, instead of
|
|
establishing, the principles of justice.
|
|
|
|
|
|
SECTION III.
|
|
|
|
_The Oaths of Jurors._
|
|
|
|
The oaths that have been administered to jurors, in England, and which
|
|
are their _legal_ guide to their duty, _all_ (so far as I have
|
|
ascertained them) corroborate the idea that the jurors are to try all
|
|
cases on their intrinsic merits, independently of any laws that they
|
|
deem unjust or oppressive. It is probable that an oath was never
|
|
administered to a jury in England, either in a civil or criminal case,
|
|
to try it _according to law_.
|
|
|
|
The earliest oath that I have found prescribed by law to be administered
|
|
to jurors is in the laws of Ethelred, (about the year 1015,) which
|
|
require that the jurors "_shall swear, with their hands upon a holy
|
|
thing, that they will condemn no man that is innocent, nor acquit any
|
|
that is guilty_."--_4 Blackstone_, 302. _2 Turner's History of the
|
|
Anglo-Saxons, 155. Wilkins' Laws of the Anglo-Saxons_, 117. _Spelman's
|
|
Glossary_, word _Jurata_.
|
|
|
|
Blackstone assumes that this was the oath of the _grand_ jury (_4
|
|
Blackstone_, 302); but there was but one jury at the time this oath was
|
|
ordained. The institution of two juries, grand and petit, took place
|
|
after the Norman Conquest.
|
|
|
|
Hume, speaking of the administration of justice in the time of Alfred,
|
|
says that, in every hundred,
|
|
|
|
"Twelve freeholders were chosen, who, having sworn, together with the
|
|
hundreder, or presiding magistrate of that division, _to administer
|
|
impartial justice_, proceeded to the examination of that cause which
|
|
was submitted to their jurisdiction."--_Hume_, ch. 2.
|
|
|
|
By a law of Henry II., in 1164, it was directed that the sheriff
|
|
"_faciet jurare duodecim legales homines de vicineto seu de villa, quod
|
|
inde veritatem secundum conscientiam suam manifestabunt_," (shall make
|
|
twelve legal men from the neighborhood _to swear that they will make
|
|
known the truth according to their conscience_.)--_Crabbe's History of
|
|
the English Law_, 119. _1 Reeves_, 87. _Wilkins_, 321-323.
|
|
|
|
Glanville, who wrote within the half century previous to Magna Carta,
|
|
says:
|
|
|
|
"Each of the knights summoned for this purpose (as jurors) ought to
|
|
swear that he will neither utter that which is false, nor knowingly
|
|
conceal the truth."--_Beames' Glanville_, 65.
|
|
|
|
Reeve calls the trial by jury "_the trial by twelve men sworn to speak
|
|
the truth_."--_1 Reeve's History of the English Law_, 87.
|
|
|
|
Henry says that the jurors "took a solemn oath, that they would
|
|
faithfully discharge the duties of their office, and not suffer an
|
|
innocent man to be condemned, nor any guilty person to be
|
|
acquitted."--_3 Henry's Hist. of Great Britain_, 346.
|
|
|
|
The _Mirror of Justices_, (written within a century after Magna Carta,)
|
|
in the chapter on the abuses of the Common Law, says:
|
|
|
|
"It is abuse to use the words, _to their knowledge_, in their oaths,
|
|
to make the jurors speak upon thoughts, _since the chief words of
|
|
their oaths be that they speak the truth_."--p. 249.
|
|
|
|
Smith, writing in the time of Elizabeth, says that, in _civil_ suits,
|
|
the jury "be sworn to declare the truth of that issue according to the
|
|
evidence, and their conscience."--_Smith's Commonwealth of England_,
|
|
edition of 1621, p. 73.
|
|
|
|
In _criminal_ trials, he says:
|
|
|
|
"The clerk giveth the juror an oath to go uprightly betwixt the
|
|
prince and the prisoner."--_Ditto_, p. 90.[55]
|
|
|
|
Hale says:
|
|
|
|
"Then twelve, and no less, of such as are indifferent and are
|
|
returned upon the principal panel, or the _tales_, are sworn to try
|
|
the same according to the evidence."--_2 Hale's History of the Common
|
|
Law_, 141.
|
|
|
|
It appears from Blackstone that, even _at this day, neither in civil nor
|
|
criminal cases_, are jurors in England sworn to try causes _according to
|
|
law_. He says that in civil suits the jury are
|
|
|
|
"Sworn well and truly to _try the issue_ between the parties, and a
|
|
true verdict to give according to the evidence."--_3 Blackstone_,
|
|
365.
|
|
|
|
"_The issue_" to be tried is whether A owes B anything; and if so, how
|
|
much? or whether A has in his possession anything that belongs to B; or
|
|
whether A has wronged B, and ought to make compensation; and if so, how
|
|
much?
|
|
|
|
No statute passed by a legislature, simply as a legislature, can alter
|
|
either of these "issues" in hardly any conceivable case, perhaps in
|
|
none. No _unjust_ law could ever alter them in any. They are all mere
|
|
questions of natural justice, which legislatures have no power to alter,
|
|
and with which they have no right to interfere, further than to provide
|
|
for having them settled by the most competent and impartial tribunal
|
|
that it is practicable to have, and then for having all just decisions
|
|
enforced. And any tribunal, whether judge or jury, that attempts to try
|
|
these issues, has no more moral right to be swerved from the line of
|
|
justice, by the will of a legislature, than by the will of any other
|
|
body of men whatever. And this oath does not require or permit a jury to
|
|
be so swerved.
|
|
|
|
In criminal cases, Blackstone says the oath of the jury in England is:
|
|
|
|
"Well and truly to try, and true deliverance make, between our
|
|
sovereign lord, the king, and the prisoner whom they have in charge,
|
|
and a true verdict to give according to the evidence."--_4
|
|
Blackstone_, 355.
|
|
|
|
"The issue" to be tried, in a criminal case, is "_guilty_," or "_not
|
|
guilty_." The laws passed by a legislature can rarely, if ever, have
|
|
anything to do with this issue. "_Guilt_" is an _intrinsic_ quality of
|
|
actions, and can neither be created, destroyed, nor changed by
|
|
legislation. And no tribunal that attempts to try this issue can have
|
|
any moral right to declare a man _guilty_, for an act that is
|
|
intrinsically innocent, at the bidding of a legislature, any more than
|
|
at the bidding of anybody else. And this oath does not require or permit
|
|
a jury to do so.
|
|
|
|
The words, "_according to the evidence_," have doubtless been introduced
|
|
into the above oaths in modern times. They are unquestionably in
|
|
violation of the Common Law, and of Magna Carta, if by them be meant
|
|
such evidence only as the government sees fit to allow to go to the
|
|
jury. If the government can dictate the evidence, and require the jury
|
|
to decide according to that evidence, it necessarily dictates the
|
|
conclusion to which they must arrive. In that case the trial is really a
|
|
trial by the government, and not by the jury. _The jury_ cannot _try an
|
|
issue_, unless _they_ determine what evidence shall be admitted. The
|
|
ancient oaths, it will be observed, say nothing about "_according to the
|
|
evidence_." They obviously take it for granted that the jury try the
|
|
whole case; and of course that _they_ decide what evidence shall be
|
|
admitted. It would be intrinsically an immoral and criminal act for a
|
|
jury to declare a man guilty, or to declare that one man owed money to
|
|
another, unless all the evidence were admitted, which _they_ thought
|
|
ought to be admitted, for ascertaining the truth.[56]
|
|
|
|
_Grand Jury._--If jurors are bound to enforce all laws passed by the
|
|
legislature, it is a very remarkable fact that the oath of grand juries
|
|
does not require them to be governed by the laws in finding indictments.
|
|
There have been various forms of oath administered to grand jurors; but
|
|
by none of them that I recollect ever to have seen, except those of the
|
|
States of Connecticut and Vermont, are they sworn to present men
|
|
_according to law_. The English form, as given in the essay on Grand
|
|
Juries, written near two hundred years ago, and supposed to have been
|
|
written by _Lord Somers_, is as follows:
|
|
|
|
"You shall diligently inquire, and true presentment make, of all such
|
|
articles, matters, and things, as shall be given you in charge, and
|
|
of all other matters and things as shall come to your knowledge
|
|
touching this present service. The king's council, your fellows, and
|
|
your own, you shall keep secret. You shall present no person for
|
|
hatred or malice; neither shall you leave any one unpresented for
|
|
favor, or affection, for love or gain, or any hopes thereof; but in
|
|
all things you shall present the truth, the whole truth, and nothing
|
|
but the truth, to the best of your knowledge. So help you God."
|
|
|
|
This form of oath is doubtless quite ancient, for the essay says "our
|
|
ancestors appointed" it.--_See Essay_, p. 33-34.
|
|
|
|
On the obligations of this oath, the essay says:
|
|
|
|
"If it be asked how, or in what manner, the (grand) juries shall
|
|
inquire, the answer is ready, _according to the best of their
|
|
understandings_. They only, not the judges, are sworn to search
|
|
diligently to find out all treasons, &c., within their charge, and
|
|
they must and ought to use their own discretion in the way and manner
|
|
of their inquiry. _No directions can legally be imposed upon them by
|
|
any court or judges_; an honest jury will thankfully accept good
|
|
advice from judges, as their assistants; but they are bound by their
|
|
oaths to present the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the
|
|
truth, to the best of their own, not the judge's, knowledge. Neither
|
|
can they, without breach of that oath, resign their consciences, or
|
|
blindly submit to the dictates of others; and therefore ought to
|
|
receive or reject such advices, as they judge them good or bad. * *
|
|
Nothing can be more plain and express than the words of the oath are
|
|
to this purpose. The jurors need not search the law books, nor tumble
|
|
over heaps of old records, for the explanation of them. Our greatest
|
|
lawyers may from hence learn more certainly our ancient law in this
|
|
case, than from all the books in their studies. The language wherein
|
|
the oath is penned is known and understood by every man, and the
|
|
words in it have the same signification as they have wheresoever else
|
|
they are used. The judges, without assuming to themselves a
|
|
legislative power, cannot put a new sense upon them, other than
|
|
according to their genuine, common meaning. They cannot magisterially
|
|
impose their opinions upon the jury, and make them forsake the direct
|
|
words of their oath, to pursue their glosses. The grand inquest are
|
|
bound to observe alike strictly every part of their oath, and to use
|
|
all just and proper ways which may enable them to perform it;
|
|
otherwise it were to say, that after men had sworn to inquire
|
|
diligently after the truth, according to the best of their knowledge,
|
|
they were bound to forsake all the natural and proper means which
|
|
their understandings suggest for the discovery of it, if it be
|
|
commanded by the judges."--_Lord Somers' Essay on Grand Juries_, p.
|
|
38.
|
|
|
|
What is here said so plainly and forcibly of the oath and obligations of
|
|
grand juries, is equally applicable to the oath and obligations of petit
|
|
juries. In both cases the simple oaths of the jurors, and not the
|
|
instructions of the judges, nor the statutes of kings nor legislatures,
|
|
are their legal guides to their duties.[57]
|
|
|
|
|
|
SECTION IV.
|
|
|
|
_The Right of Juries to fix the Sentence._
|
|
|
|
The nature of the common law courts existing prior to Magna Carta, such
|
|
as the county courts, the hundred courts, the court-leet, and the
|
|
court-baron, all prove, what has already been proved from Magna Carta,
|
|
that, in jury trials, the juries fixed the sentence; because, in those
|
|
courts, there was no one but the jury who could fix it, unless it were
|
|
the sheriff, bailiff, or steward; and no one will pretend that it was
|
|
fixed by them. The juries unquestionably gave the "judgment" in both
|
|
civil and criminal cases.
|
|
|
|
That the juries were to fix the sentence under Magna Carta, is also
|
|
shown by statutes subsequent to Magna Carta.
|
|
|
|
A statute passed fifty-one years after Magna Carta, says that a baker,
|
|
for default in the weight of his bread, "_debeat_ amerciari vel subire
|
|
judicium pilloræ,"--that is, "_ought_ to be amerced, or suffer the
|
|
sentence of the pillory." And that a brewer, for "selling ale, contrary
|
|
to the assize," "_debeat_ amerciari, vel pati judicium tumbrelli;" that
|
|
is, "_ought_ to be amerced, or suffer judgment of the tumbrel."--_51
|
|
Henry III._, st. 6. (1266.)
|
|
|
|
If the king (the legislative power) had had authority to fix the
|
|
punishments of these offences imperatively, he would naturally have said
|
|
these offenders _shall_ be amerced, and _shall_ suffer judgment of the
|
|
pillory and tumbrel, instead of thus simply expressing the opinion that
|
|
they _ought_ to be punished in that manner.
|
|
|
|
The statute of Westminster, passed sixty years after Magna Carta,
|
|
provides that,
|
|
|
|
"No city, borough, nor town, _nor any man_, be amerced, without
|
|
reasonable cause, and according to the quantity of the trespass; that
|
|
is to say, every freeman saving his freehold, a merchant saving his
|
|
merchandise, a villein his waynage, _and that by his or their
|
|
peers_."--_3 Edward I._, ch. 6. (1275.)
|
|
|
|
The same statute (ch. 18) provides further, that,
|
|
|
|
"Forasmuch as the _common fine and amercement_ of the whole county in
|
|
Eyre of the justices for false judgments, or for other trespass, is
|
|
unjustly assessed by sheriffs and baretors in the shires, so that the
|
|
sum is many times increased, and the parcels otherwise assessed than
|
|
they ought to be, to the damage of the people, which be many times
|
|
paid to the sheriffs and baretors, which do not acquit the payers; it
|
|
is provided, and the king wills, that from henceforth such sums shall
|
|
be assessed before the justices in Eyre, afore their departure, _by
|
|
the oath of knights and other honest men_, upon all such as ought to
|
|
pay; and the justices shall cause the parcels to be put into their
|
|
estreats, which shall be delivered up unto the exchequer, and not the
|
|
whole sum."--_St. 3 Edward I._, ch. 18, (1275.)[58]
|
|
|
|
The following statute, passed in 1341, one hundred and twenty-five years
|
|
after Magna Carta, providing for the trial of peers of the realm, and
|
|
the king's ministers, contains a recognition of the principle of Magna
|
|
Carta, that the jury are to fix the sentence.
|
|
|
|
"Whereas before this time the peers of the land have been arrested
|
|
and imprisoned, and their temporalities, lands, and tenements, goods
|
|
and cattels, asseized in the king's hands, and some put to death
|
|
without judgment of their peers: It is accorded and assented, that no
|
|
peer of the land, officer, nor other, because of his office, nor of
|
|
things touching his office, nor by other cause, shall be brought in
|
|
judgment to lose his temporalities, lands, tenements, goods and
|
|
cattels, nor to be arrested, nor imprisoned, outlawed, exiled, nor
|
|
forejudged, nor put to answer, nor be judged, but by _award_
|
|
(_sentence_) of the said peers in Parliament."--_15 Edward III._, st.
|
|
1, sec. 2.
|
|
|
|
Section 4, of the same statute provides,
|
|
|
|
"That in every Parliament, at the third day of every Parliament, the
|
|
king shall take in his hands the offices of all the ministers
|
|
aforesaid," (that is, "the chancellor, treasurer, barons, and
|
|
chancellor of the exchequer, the justices of the one bench and of the
|
|
other, justices assigned in the country, steward and chamberlain of
|
|
the king's house, keeper of the privy seal, treasurer of the
|
|
wardrobe, controllers, and they that be chief deputed to abide nigh
|
|
the king's son, Duke of Cornwall,") "and so they shall abide four or
|
|
five days; except the offices of justices of the one place or the
|
|
other, justices assigned, barons of exchequer; so always that they
|
|
and all other ministers be put to answer to every complaint; and if
|
|
default be found in any of the said ministers, by complaint or other
|
|
manner, and of that attainted in Parliament, he shall be punished by
|
|
judgment of the peers, and put out of his office, and another
|
|
convenient put in his place. And upon the same our said sovereign
|
|
lord the king shall do (cause) to be pronounced and made execution
|
|
without delay, _according to the judgment_ (_sentence_) of the said
|
|
peers in the Parliament."
|
|
|
|
Here is an admission that the peers were to fix the sentence, or
|
|
judgment, and the king promises to make execution "_according to_" that
|
|
sentence.
|
|
|
|
And this appears to be the law, under which peers of the realm and the
|
|
great officers of the crown were tried and sentenced, for four hundred
|
|
years after its passage, and, for aught I know, until this day.
|
|
|
|
The first case given in Hargrave's collection of English State Trials,
|
|
is that of _Alexander Nevil_, Archbishop of York, _Robert Vere_, Duke
|
|
of Ireland, _Michael de la Pole_, Earl of Suffolk, and _Robert
|
|
Tresilian_, Lord Chief Justice of England, with several others,
|
|
convicted of treason, before "the Lords of Parliament," in 1388. The
|
|
sentences in these cases were adjudged by the "Lords of Parliament," in
|
|
the following terms, as they are reported.
|
|
|
|
"Wherefore the said _Lords of Parliament_, there present, as judges
|
|
in Parliament, in this case, _by assent of the king, pronounced their
|
|
sentence_, and did adjudge the said archbishop, duke, and earl, with
|
|
Robert Tresilian, so appealed, as aforesaid, to be guilty, and
|
|
convicted of treason, and to be drawn and hanged, as traitors and
|
|
enemies to the king and kingdom; and that their heirs should be
|
|
disinherited forever, and their lands and tenements, goods and
|
|
chattels, forfeited to the king, and that the temporalities of the
|
|
Archbishop of York should be taken into the king's hands."
|
|
|
|
Also, in the same case, Sir _John Holt_, Sir _William Burgh_, Sir
|
|
_John Cary_, Sir _Roger Fulthorpe_, and _John Locton_, "_were by the
|
|
lords temporal, by the assent of the king_, adjudged to be drawn and
|
|
hanged, as traitors, their heirs disinherited, and their lands and
|
|
tenements, goods and chattels, to be forfeited to the king."
|
|
|
|
Also, in the same case, _John Blake_, "of council for the king," and
|
|
_Thomas Uske_, under sheriff of Middlesex, having been convicted of
|
|
treason,
|
|
|
|
"_The lords awarded, by assent of the king_, that they should both be
|
|
hanged and drawn as traitors, as open enemies to the king and
|
|
kingdom, and their heirs disinherited forever, and their lands and
|
|
tenements, goods and chattels, forfeited to the king."
|
|
|
|
Also, "_Simon Burleigh_, the king's chamberlain," being convicted of
|
|
treason, "_by joint consent of the king and the lords_, sentence was
|
|
pronounced against the said Simon Burleigh, that he should be drawn
|
|
from the town to Tyburn, and there be hanged till he be dead, and
|
|
then have his head struck from his body."
|
|
|
|
Also, "_John Beauchamp_, steward of the household to the king, _James
|
|
Beroverse_, and _John Salisbury_, knights, gentlemen of the privy
|
|
chamber, _were in like manner condemned_."--_1 Hargrave's State
|
|
Trials_, first case.
|
|
|
|
Here the sentences were all fixed by the peers, _with the assent of the
|
|
king_. But that the king should be consulted, and his assent obtained to
|
|
the sentence pronounced by the peers, does not imply any deficiency of
|
|
power on their part to fix the sentence independently of the king. There
|
|
are obvious reasons why they might choose to consult the king, and
|
|
obtain his approbation of the sentence they were about to impose,
|
|
without supposing any legal necessity for their so doing.
|
|
|
|
So far as we can gather from the reports of state trials, peers of the
|
|
realm were usually sentenced by those who tried them, _with the assent
|
|
of the king_. But in some instances no mention is made of the assent of
|
|
the king, as in the case of "Lionel, Earl of Middlesex, Lord High
|
|
Treasurer of England," in 1624, (four hundred years after Magna Carta,)
|
|
where the sentence was as follows:
|
|
|
|
"This High Court of Parliament doth adjudge, that Lionel, Earl of
|
|
Middlesex, now Lord Treasurer of England, shall lose all his offices
|
|
which he holds in this kingdom, and shall, hereafter, be made
|
|
incapable of any office, place, or employment in the state and
|
|
commonwealth. That he shall be imprisoned in the tower of London,
|
|
during the king's pleasure. That he shall pay unto our sovereign lord
|
|
the king a fine of 50,000 pounds. That he shall never sit in
|
|
Parliament any more, and that he shall never come within the verge of
|
|
the court."--_2 Howell's State Trials_, 1250.
|
|
|
|
Here was a peer of the realm, and a minister of the king, of the highest
|
|
grade; and if it were ever _necessary_ to obtain the assent of the king
|
|
to sentences pronounced by the peers, it would unquestionably have been
|
|
obtained in this instance, and his assent would have appeared in the
|
|
sentence.
|
|
|
|
_Lord Bacon_ was sentenced by the House of Lords, (1620,) _no mention
|
|
being made of the assent of the king_. The sentence is in these words:
|
|
|
|
"And, therefore, this High Court doth adjudge, That the Lord Viscount
|
|
St. Albans, Lord Chancellor of England, shall undergo fine and ransom
|
|
of 40,000 pounds. That he shall be imprisoned in the tower during the
|
|
king's pleasure. That he shall forever be incapable of any office,
|
|
place, or employment in the state or commonwealth. That he shall
|
|
never sit in Parliament, nor come within the verge of the court."
|
|
|
|
And when it was demanded of him, before sentence, whether it were his
|
|
hand that was subscribed to his confession, and whether he would stand
|
|
to it; he made the following answer, which implies that the lords were
|
|
the ones to determine his sentence.
|
|
|
|
"My lords, it is my act, my hand, my heart. _I beseech your lordships
|
|
to be merciful to a broken reed._"--_1 Hargrave's State Trials_,
|
|
386-7.
|
|
|
|
The sentence against Charles the First, (1648,) after reciting the
|
|
grounds of his condemnation, concludes in this form:
|
|
|
|
"For all which treasons and crimes, _this court doth adjudge_, that
|
|
he, the said Charles Stuart, as a tyrant, traitor, murderer, and
|
|
public enemy to the good people of this nation, shall be put to death
|
|
by the severing his head from his body."
|
|
|
|
The report then adds:
|
|
|
|
"This sentence being read, the president (of the court) spake as
|
|
followeth: 'This sentence now read and published, is the act,
|
|
sentence, judgment and resolution of the whole court.'"--_1
|
|
Hargrave's State Trials_, 1037.
|
|
|
|
Unless it had been the received "_law of the land_" that those who tried
|
|
a man should fix his sentence, it would have required an act of
|
|
Parliament to fix the sentence of Charles, and his sentence would have
|
|
been declared to be "_the sentence of the law_," instead of "_the act,
|
|
sentence, judgment, and resolution of the court_."
|
|
|
|
But the report of the proceedings in "the trial of Thomas, Earl of
|
|
Macclesfield, Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain, before the House of
|
|
Lords, for high crimes and misdemeanors in the execution of his office,"
|
|
in 1725, is so full on this point, and shows so clearly that it rested
|
|
wholly with the lords to fix the sentence, and that the assent of the
|
|
king was wholly unnecessary, that I give the report somewhat at length.
|
|
|
|
_After being found guilty_, the earl addressed the _lords_, for a
|
|
_mitigation of sentence_, as follows:
|
|
|
|
"'I am now to expect your lordships' judgment; and I hope that you
|
|
will be pleased to consider that I have suffered no small matter
|
|
already in the trial, in the expense I have been at, the fatigue, and
|
|
what I have suffered otherways. * * I have paid back 10,800 pounds of
|
|
the money already; I have lost my office; I have undergone the
|
|
censure of both houses of Parliament, which is in itself a severe
|
|
punishment,'" &c., &c.
|
|
|
|
On being interrupted, he proceeded:
|
|
|
|
"'My lords, I submit whether this be not proper in _mitigation of
|
|
your lordships' sentence_; but whether it be or not, I leave myself
|
|
to your lordships' justice and mercy; I am sure neither of them will
|
|
be wanting, and I entirely submit.' * *
|
|
|
|
"Then the said earl, as also the managers, were directed to withdraw;
|
|
and the House (of Lords) ordered Thomas, Earl of Macclesfield, to be
|
|
committed to the custody of the gentleman usher of the black rod; and
|
|
then proceeded to the consideration of what _judgment_," (that is,
|
|
_sentence_, for he had already been found _guilty_,) "to give upon
|
|
the impeachment against the said earl." * *
|
|
|
|
"The next day, the Commons, with their speaker, being present at the
|
|
bar of the House (of Lords), * * the speaker of the House of Commons
|
|
said as follows:
|
|
|
|
"'My Lords, the knights, citizens, and burgesses in Parliament
|
|
assembled, in the name of themselves, and of all the commons of Great
|
|
Britain, did at this bar impeach Thomas, Earl of Macclesfield, of
|
|
high crimes and misdemeanors, and did exhibit articles of impeachment
|
|
against him, and have made good their charge. I do, therefore, in the
|
|
name of the knights, citizens, and burgesses, in Parliament
|
|
assembled, and of all the commons of Great Britain, demand _judgment_
|
|
(_sentence_) of your lordships against Thomas, Earl of Macclesfield,
|
|
for the said high crimes and misdemeanors.'
|
|
|
|
"Then the Lord Chief Justice King, Speaker of the House of Lords,
|
|
said: 'Mr. Speaker, the Lords are now ready to proceed to judgment in
|
|
the case by you mentioned.
|
|
|
|
"'Thomas, Earl of Macclesfield, the Lords have unanimously found you
|
|
guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors, charged on you by the
|
|
impeachment of the House of Commons, and do now, according to law,
|
|
proceed to _judgment_ against you, which I am ordered to pronounce.
|
|
Their lordships' _judgment_ is, and this high court doth adjudge,
|
|
that you, Thomas, Earl of Macclesfield, be fined in the sum of thirty
|
|
thousand pounds unto our sovereign lord the king; and that you shall
|
|
be imprisoned in the tower of London, and there kept in safe custody,
|
|
until you shall pay the said fine.'"--_6 Hargrave's State Trials_,
|
|
762-3-4.
|
|
|
|
This case shows that the principle of Magna Carta, that a man should be
|
|
_sentenced only_ by his peers, was in force, and acted upon as law, in
|
|
England, so lately as 1725, (five hundred years after Magna Carta,) so
|
|
far as it applied to a _peer of the realm_.
|
|
|
|
But the same principle, on this point, that applies to a peer of the
|
|
realm, applies to every freeman. The only difference between the two is,
|
|
that the peers of the realm have had influence enough to preserve their
|
|
constitutional rights; while the constitutional rights of the people
|
|
have been trampled upon and rendered obsolete by the usurpation and
|
|
corruption of the government and the courts.
|
|
|
|
|
|
SECTION V.
|
|
|
|
_The Oaths of Judges._
|
|
|
|
As further proof that the legislation of the king, whether enacted with
|
|
or without the assent and advice of his parliaments, was of no authority
|
|
unless it were consistent with the _common law_, and unless juries and
|
|
judges saw fit to enforce it, it may be mentioned that it is probable
|
|
that no judge in England was ever sworn to observe the laws enacted
|
|
either by the king alone, or by the king with the advice and assent of
|
|
parliament.
|
|
|
|
The judges were sworn to "_do equal law, and execution of right, to all
|
|
the king's subjects, rich and poor, without having regard to any
|
|
person_;" and that they will "_deny no man common right_;"[59] but they
|
|
were _not_ sworn to obey or execute any statutes of the king, or of the
|
|
king and parliament. Indeed, they are virtually sworn _not_ to obey any
|
|
statutes that are against "_common right_," or contrary to "_the common
|
|
law_," or "_law of the land_;" but to "certify the king thereof"--that
|
|
is, notify him that his statutes are against the common law;--and then
|
|
proceed to execute the _common law_, notwithstanding such legislation to
|
|
the contrary. The words of the oath on this point are these:
|
|
|
|
"_That ye deny no man common right by (virtue of) the king's letters,
|
|
nor none other man's, nor for none other cause; and in case any
|
|
letters come to you contrary to the law_, (that is, the common law,
|
|
as will be seen on reference to the entire oath given in the note,)
|
|
_that ye do nothing by such letters, but certify the king thereof
|
|
and proceed to execute the law_, (that is, the common law,)
|
|
_notwithstanding the same letters_."
|
|
|
|
When it is considered that the king was the sole legislative power, and
|
|
that he exercised this power, to a great extent, by orders in council,
|
|
and by writs and "letters" addressed often-times to some sheriff, or
|
|
other person, and that his commands, when communicated to his justices,
|
|
or any other person, "by letters," or writs, _under seal_, had as much
|
|
legal authority as laws promulgated in any other form whatever, it will
|
|
be seen that this oath of the justices _absolutely required_ that they
|
|
disregard any legislation that was contrary to "_common right_," or
|
|
"_the common law_," and notify the king that it was contrary to common
|
|
right, or the common law, and then proceed to execute the common law,
|
|
notwithstanding such legislation.[60]
|
|
|
|
If there could be any doubt that such was the meaning of this oath, that
|
|
doubt would be removed by a statute passed by the king two years
|
|
afterwards, which fully explains this oath, as follows:
|
|
|
|
"Edward, by the Grace of God, &c., to the Sheriff of _Stafford_,
|
|
greeting: Because that by divers complaints made to us, we have
|
|
perceived that _the Law of the Land, which we by our oath are bound
|
|
to maintain_, is the less well kept, and the execution of the same
|
|
disturbed many times by maintenance and procurement, as well in the
|
|
court as in the country; we greatly moved of conscience in this
|
|
matter, and for this cause desiring as much for the pleasure of God,
|
|
and ease and quietness of our subjects, as to save our conscience,
|
|
and for to save and keep our said oath, by the assent of the great
|
|
men and other wise men of our council, we have ordained these things
|
|
following:
|
|
|
|
"First, we have commanded all our justices, that they shall from
|
|
henceforth _do equal law and execution of right_ to all our subjects,
|
|
rich and poor, without having regard to any person, _and without
|
|
omitting to do right for any letters or commandment which may come to
|
|
them from us, or from any other, or by any other cause. And if that
|
|
any letters, writs, or commandments come to the justices, or to other
|
|
deputed to do law and right according to the usage of the realm, in
|
|
disturbance of the law, or of the execution of the same, or of right
|
|
to the parties, the justices and other aforesaid shall proceed and
|
|
hold their courts and processes, where the pleas and matters be
|
|
depending before them, as if no such letters, writs, or commandments
|
|
were come to them; and they shall certify us and our council of such
|
|
commandments which be contrary to the law_, (that is, "the law of the
|
|
land," or common law,) _as afore is said_.[61] And to the intent that
|
|
our justices shall do even right to all people in the manner
|
|
aforesaid, without more favor showing to one than to another, we have
|
|
ordained and caused our said justices to be sworn, that they shall
|
|
not from henceforth, as long as they shall be in the office of
|
|
justice, take fee nor robe of any man, but of ourself, and that they
|
|
shall take no gift nor reward by themselves, nor by other, privily
|
|
nor apertly, of any man that hath to do before them by any way,
|
|
except meat and drink, and that of small value; and that they shall
|
|
give no counsel to great men or small, in case where we be party, or
|
|
which do or may touch us in any point, upon pain to be at our will,
|
|
body, lands, and goods, to do thereof as shall please us, in case
|
|
they do contrary. And for this cause we have increased the fees of
|
|
the same, our justices, in such manner as it ought reasonably to
|
|
suffice them."--_20 Edward III._, ch. 1. (1346.)
|
|
|
|
Other statutes of similar tenor have been enacted, as follows:
|
|
|
|
"It is accorded and established, that it shall not be commanded by
|
|
the great seal, nor the little seal, to disturb or delay _common
|
|
right_; and though such commandments do come, the justices shall not
|
|
therefore leave (omit) to do right in any point."--_St. 2 Edward
|
|
III._, ch. 8. (1328.)
|
|
|
|
"That by commandment of the great seal, or privy seal, no point of
|
|
this statute shall be put in delay; nor that the justices of
|
|
whatsoever place it be shall let (omit) to do the _common law_, by
|
|
commandment, which shall come to them under the great seal, or the
|
|
privy seal."--_14 Edward III._, st. 1, ch. 14. (1340.)
|
|
|
|
"It is ordained and established, that neither letters of the signet,
|
|
nor of the king's privy seal, shall be from henceforth sent in damage
|
|
or prejudice of the realm, nor in disturbance of the law" (the common
|
|
law).--_11 Richard II._, ch. 10. (1387.)
|
|
|
|
It is perfectly apparent from these statutes, and from the oath
|
|
administered to the justices, that it was a matter freely confessed by
|
|
the king himself, that his statutes were of no validity, if contrary to
|
|
the common law, or "common right."
|
|
|
|
The oath of the justices, before given, is, I presume, the same that has
|
|
been administered to judges in England from the day when it was first
|
|
prescribed to them, (1344,) until now. I do not find from the English
|
|
statutes that the oath has ever been changed. The Essay on Grand Juries,
|
|
before referred to, and supposed to have been written by _Lord Somers_,
|
|
mentions this oath (page 73) as being still administered to judges, that
|
|
is, in the time of Charles II., more than three hundred years after the
|
|
oath was first ordained. If the oath has never been changed, it follows
|
|
that judges have not only never been sworn to support any statutes
|
|
whatever of the king, or of parliament, but that, for five hundred
|
|
years past, they actually have been sworn to treat as invalid all
|
|
statutes that were contrary to the common law.
|
|
|
|
|
|
SECTION VI.
|
|
|
|
_The Coronation Oath._
|
|
|
|
That the legislation of the king was of no authority over a jury, is
|
|
further proved by the oath taken by the kings at their coronation. This
|
|
oath seems to have been substantially the same, from the time of the
|
|
_Saxon_ kings, down to the seventeenth century, as will be seen from the
|
|
authorities hereafter given.
|
|
|
|
The purport of the oath is, that the king swears _to maintain the law of
|
|
the land_--that is, _the common law_. In other words, he swears "_to
|
|
concede and preserve to the English people the laws and customs conceded
|
|
to them by the ancient, just, and pious English kings, * * and
|
|
especially the laws, customs, and liberties conceded to the clergy and
|
|
people by the illustrious king Edward;" * * and "the just laws and
|
|
customs which the common people have chosen, (quas vulgus elegit)_."
|
|
|
|
These are the same laws and customs which were called by the general
|
|
name of "_the law of the land_," or "_the common law_," and, with some
|
|
slight additions, were embodied in _Magna Carta_.
|
|
|
|
This oath not only forbids the king to enact any statutes contrary to
|
|
the common law, but it proves that his statutes could be of no authority
|
|
over the consciences of a jury; since, as has already been sufficiently
|
|
shown, it was one part of this very common law itself,--that is, of the
|
|
ancient "laws, customs, and liberties," mentioned in the oath,--that
|
|
juries should judge of all questions that came before them, according to
|
|
their own consciences, independently of the legislation of the king.
|
|
|
|
It was impossible that this right of the jury could subsist consistently
|
|
with any right, on the part of the king, to impose any authoritative
|
|
legislation upon them. His oath, therefore, to maintain the law of the
|
|
land, or the ancient "laws, customs, and liberties," was equivalent to
|
|
an oath that he would never _assume_ to impose laws upon juries, as
|
|
imperative rules of decision, or take from them the right to try all
|
|
cases according to their own consciences. It is also an admission that
|
|
he had no constitutional power to do so, if he should ever desire it.
|
|
This oath, then, is conclusive proof that his legislation was of no
|
|
authority with a jury, and that they were under no obligation whatever
|
|
to enforce it, unless it coincided with their own ideas of justice.
|
|
|
|
The ancient coronation oath is printed with the Statutes of the Realm,
|
|
vol. i., p. 168, and is as follows:[62]
|
|
|
|
TRANSLATION.
|
|
|
|
"_Form of the Oath of the King of England, on his Coronation._
|
|
|
|
(The Archbishop of Canterbury, to whom, of right and custom of the
|
|
Church of Canterbury, ancient and approved, it pertains to anoint and
|
|
crown the kings of England, on the day of the coronation of the king,
|
|
and before the king is crowned, shall propound the underwritten
|
|
questions to the king.)
|
|
|
|
The laws and customs, conceded to the English people by the ancient,
|
|
just, and pious English kings, will you concede and preserve to the
|
|
same people, with the confirmation of an oath? and especially the
|
|
laws, customs, and liberties conceded to the clergy and people by the
|
|
illustrious king Edward?
|
|
|
|
(And the king shall answer,) I do concede, and will preserve them,
|
|
and confirm them by my oath.
|
|
|
|
Will you preserve to the church of God, the clergy, and the people,
|
|
entire peace and harmony in God, according to your powers?
|
|
|
|
(And the king shall answer,) I will.
|
|
|
|
In all your judgments, will you cause equal and right justice and
|
|
discretion to be done, in mercy and truth, according to your powers?
|
|
|
|
(And the king shall answer,) I will.
|
|
|
|
Do you concede that the just laws and customs, _which the common
|
|
people have chosen_, shall be preserved; and do you promise that they
|
|
shall be protected by you, and strengthened to the honor of God,
|
|
according to your powers?
|
|
|
|
(And the king shall answer,) I concede and promise."
|
|
|
|
The language used in the last of these questions, "Do you concede that
|
|
the just laws and customs, _which the common people have chosen_, (_quas
|
|
vulgus elegit_,) shall be preserved?" &c., is worthy of especial notice,
|
|
as showing that the laws, which were to be preserved, were not
|
|
necessarily _all_ the laws which the kings enacted, _but only such of
|
|
them as the common people had selected or approved_.
|
|
|
|
And how had the common people made known their approbation or selection
|
|
of these laws? Plainly, in no other way than this--_that the juries
|
|
composed of the common people had voluntarily enforced them_. The common
|
|
people had no other legal form of making known their approbation of
|
|
particular laws.
|
|
|
|
The word "concede," too, is an important word. In the English statutes
|
|
it is usually translated _grant_--as if with an intention to indicate
|
|
that "the laws, customs, and liberties" of the English people were mere
|
|
_privileges, granted_ to them by the king; whereas it should be
|
|
translated _concede_, to indicate simply an _acknowledgment_, on the
|
|
part of the king, that such were the laws, customs, and liberties, which
|
|
had been chosen and established by the people themselves, and of right
|
|
belonged to them, and which he was bound to respect.
|
|
|
|
I will now give some authorities to show that the foregoing oath has,
|
|
_in substance_, been the coronation oath from the times of William the
|
|
Conqueror, (1066,) down to the time of James the First, and probably
|
|
until 1688.
|
|
|
|
It will be noticed, in the quotation from Kelham, that he says this oath
|
|
(or the oath of William the Conqueror) is "in sense and substance the
|
|
very same with that which the _Saxon_ kings used to take at their
|
|
coronations."
|
|
|
|
Hale says:
|
|
|
|
"Yet the English were very zealous for them," (that is, for the laws
|
|
of Edward the Confessor,) "no less or otherwise than they are at this
|
|
time for the Great Charter; insomuch that they were never satisfied
|
|
till the said laws were reënforced, and mingled, for the most part,
|
|
with the coronation oath of king William I., and some of his
|
|
successors."--_1 Hale's History of Common Law_, 157.
|
|
|
|
Also, "William, on his coronation, had sworn to govern by the laws of
|
|
Edward the Confessor, some of which had been reduced into writing,
|
|
but the greater part consisted of the immemorial customs of the
|
|
realm."--_Ditto_, p. 202, note L.
|
|
|
|
Kelham says:
|
|
|
|
"Thus stood the laws of England at the entry of William I., and it
|
|
seems plain that the laws, commonly called the laws of Edward the
|
|
Confessor, were at that time the standing laws of the kingdom, and
|
|
considered the great rule of their rights and liberties; and that the
|
|
English were so zealous for them, 'that they were never satisfied
|
|
till the said laws were reënforced, and mingled, for the most part,
|
|
with the coronation oath.' Accordingly, we find that this great
|
|
conqueror, at his coronation on the Christmas day succeeding his
|
|
victory, took an oath at the altar of St. Peter, Westminster, _in
|
|
sense and substance the very same with that which the Saxon kings
|
|
used to take at their coronations_. * * And at Barkhamstead, in the
|
|
fourth year of his reign, in the presence of Lanfranc, Archbishop of
|
|
Canterbury, for the quieting of the people, he swore that he would
|
|
inviolably observe the good and approved ancient laws which had been
|
|
made by the devout and pious kings of England, his ancestors, and
|
|
chiefly by King Edward; and we are told that the people then departed
|
|
in good humor."--_Kelham's Preliminary Discourse to the Laws of
|
|
William the Conqueror._ See, also, _1 Hale's History of the Common
|
|
Law_, 186.
|
|
|
|
Crabbe says that William the Conqueror "solemnly swore that he would
|
|
observe the good and approved laws of Edward the Confessor."--_Crabbe's
|
|
History of the English Law_, p. 43.
|
|
|
|
The successors of William, up to the time of Magna Carta, probably all
|
|
took the same oath, according to the custom of the kingdom; although
|
|
there may be no historical accounts extant of the oath of each separate
|
|
king. But history tells us specially that Henry I., Stephen, and Henry
|
|
II., confirmed these ancient laws and customs. It appears, also, that
|
|
the barons desired of John (what he afterwards granted by Magna Carta)
|
|
"_that the laws and liberties of King Edward_, with other privileges
|
|
granted to the kingdom and church of England, might be confirmed, as
|
|
they were contained in the charters of Henry the First; further
|
|
alleging, _that at the time of his absolution, he promised by his oath
|
|
to observe these very laws and liberties_."--_Echard's History of
|
|
England_, p. 105-6.
|
|
|
|
It would appear, from the following authorities, that since Magna Carta
|
|
the form of the coronation oath has been "_to maintain the law of the
|
|
land_,"--meaning that law as embodied in Magna Carta. Or perhaps it is
|
|
more probable that the ancient form has been still observed, but that,
|
|
as its substance and purport were "_to maintain the law of the land_,"
|
|
this latter form of expression has been used, in the instances here
|
|
cited, from motives of brevity and convenience. This supposition is the
|
|
more probable, from the fact that I find no statute prescribing a change
|
|
in the form of the oath until 1688.
|
|
|
|
That Magna Carta was considered as embodying "the law of the land," or
|
|
"common law," is shown by a statute passed by Edward I., wherein he
|
|
"grants," or concedes,
|
|
|
|
"That the Charter of Liberties and the Charter of the Forest * *
|
|
shall be kept in every point, without breach, * * and that our
|
|
justices, sheriffs, mayors, and other ministers, which, under us,
|
|
have the _laws of our land_[63] to guide, shall allow the said
|
|
charters pleaded before them in judgment, in all their points, that
|
|
is, to wit, _the Great Charter as the Common Law_, and the Charter of
|
|
the Forest for the wealth of the realm.
|
|
|
|
"And we will, that if any judgment be given from henceforth, contrary
|
|
to the points of the charters aforesaid, by the justices, or by any
|
|
other our ministers that hold plea before them against the points of
|
|
the charters, it shall be undone, and holden for naught."--_25 Edward
|
|
I._, ch. 1 and 2. (1297.)
|
|
|
|
Blackstone also says:
|
|
|
|
"It is agreed by all our historians that the Great Charter of King
|
|
John was, for the most part, _compiled from the ancient customs of
|
|
the realm, or the laws of Edward the Confessor; by which they usually
|
|
mean the old common law which was established under our Saxon
|
|
princes_."--_Blackstone's Introduction to the Charters._ See
|
|
_Blackstone's Law Tracts_, 289.
|
|
|
|
Crabbe says:
|
|
|
|
"It is admitted, on all hands, that it (Magna Carta) contains nothing
|
|
but what was confirmatory of the common law, and the ancient usages
|
|
of the realm, and is, properly speaking, only an enlargement of the
|
|
charter of Henry I., and his successors."--_Crabbe's History of the
|
|
English Law_, p. 127.
|
|
|
|
That the coronation oath of the kings subsequent to Magna Carta was, in
|
|
substance, if not in form, "_to maintain this law of the land, or common
|
|
law_," is shown by a statute of Edward Third, commencing as follows:
|
|
|
|
"Edward, by the Grace of God, &c., &c., to the Sheriff of Stafford,
|
|
Greeting: Because that by divers complaints made to us, we have
|
|
perceived that _the law of the land, which we by oath are bound to
|
|
maintain_," &c.--_St. 20 Edward III._ (1346.)
|
|
|
|
The following extract from Lord Somers' tract on Grand Juries shows that
|
|
the coronation oath continued the same as late as 1616, (four hundred
|
|
years after Magna Carta.) He says:
|
|
|
|
"King James, in his speech to the judges, in the Star Chamber, Anno
|
|
1616, told them, 'That he had, after many years, resolved to renew
|
|
his oath, made at his coronation, concerning justice, and the promise
|
|
therein contained for _maintaining the law of the land_.' And, in the
|
|
next page save one, says, '_I was sworn to maintain the law of the
|
|
land_, and therefore had been perjured if I had broken it. God is my
|
|
judge, I never intended it.'"--_Somers on Grand Juries_, p. 82.
|
|
|
|
In 1688, the coronation oath was changed by act of Parliament, and the
|
|
king was made to swear:
|
|
|
|
"To govern the people of this kingdom of England, and the dominions
|
|
thereto belonging, _according to the statutes in Parliament agreed
|
|
on, and the laws and customs of the same_."--_St. 1 William and
|
|
Mary_, ch. 6. (1688.)
|
|
|
|
The effect and legality of this oath will hereafter be considered. For
|
|
the present it is sufficient to show, as has been already sufficiently
|
|
done, that from the Saxon times until at least as lately as 1616, the
|
|
coronation oath has been, in substance, _to maintain the law of the
|
|
land, or the common law_, meaning thereby the ancient Saxon customs, as
|
|
embodied in the laws of Alfred, of Edward the Confessor, and finally in
|
|
Magna Carta.
|
|
|
|
It may here be repeated that this oath plainly proves that the statutes
|
|
of the king were of no authority over juries, if inconsistent with their
|
|
ideas of right; because it was one part of the common law that juries
|
|
should try all causes according to their own consciences, any
|
|
legislation of the king to the contrary notwithstanding.[64]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 34: Hale says:
|
|
|
|
"The trial by jury of twelve men was the usual trial among the
|
|
Normans, in most suits; especially in assizes, et juris utrum."--_1
|
|
Hale's History of the Common Law_, 219.
|
|
|
|
This was in Normandy, before the conquest of England by the Normans.
|
|
_See Ditto_, p. 218.
|
|
|
|
Crabbe says:
|
|
|
|
"It cannot be denied that the practice of submitting causes to the
|
|
decision of twelve men was universal among all the northern tribes
|
|
(of Europe) from the very remotest antiquity."--_Crabbe's History of
|
|
the English Law_, p. 32.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 35: "The people, who in every general council or assembly
|
|
could oppose and dethrone their sovereigns, were in little dread of
|
|
their encroachments on their liberties; and kings, who found sufficient
|
|
employment in keeping possession of their crowns, would not likely
|
|
attack the more important privileges of their subjects."]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 36: This office was afterwards committed to sheriffs. But even
|
|
while the court was held by the lord, "_the Lord was not judge, but the
|
|
Pares (peers) only_."--_Gilbert on the Court of Exchequer_, 61-2.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 37: The opinion expressed in the text, that the Witan had no
|
|
legislative authority, is corroborated by the following authorities:
|
|
|
|
"From the fact that the new laws passed by the king and the Witan were
|
|
laid before the shire-mote, (county court,) we should be almost
|
|
justified in the inference that a second sanction was necessary before
|
|
they could have the effect of law in that particular county."--_Dunham's
|
|
Middle Ages, Sec._ 2, _B._ 2, _Ch._ 1. _57 Lardner's Cab. Cyc._, 53.
|
|
|
|
The "_second sanction_" required to give the legislation of the king and
|
|
Witan the effect of law, was undoubtedly, I think, _as a general thing,
|
|
the sanction of a jury_. I know of no evidence whatever that laws were
|
|
ever submitted to popular vote in the county courts, as this author
|
|
seems to suppose possible. Another mode, sometimes resorted to for
|
|
obtaining the sanction of the people to the laws of the Witan, was, it
|
|
seems, to persuade the people themselves to swear to observe them.
|
|
Mackintosh says:
|
|
|
|
"The preambles of the laws (of the Witan) speak of the infinite number
|
|
of _liegemen_ who attended, as only applauding the measures of the
|
|
assembly. But this applause was neither so unimportant to the success of
|
|
the measures, nor so precisely distinguished from a share in
|
|
legislation, as those who read history with a modern eye might imagine.
|
|
It appears that under Athelstan expedients were resorted to, to obtain a
|
|
consent to the law from great bodies of the people in their districts,
|
|
which their numbers rendered impossible in a national assembly. That
|
|
monarch appears to have sent commissioners to hold _shire-gemotes_ or
|
|
county meetings, where they proclaimed the laws made by the king and his
|
|
counsellors, which, being acknowledged and sworn to at these
|
|
_folk-motes_ (meetings of the people) became, by their assent,
|
|
completely binding on the whole nation."--_Mackintosh's Hist. of
|
|
England_, _Ch._ 2. _45 Lardner's Cab. Cyc._, 75.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 38: Page 31.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 39: Hallam says, "It was, however, to the county court that an
|
|
English freeman chiefly looked for the maintenance of his civil
|
|
rights."--_2 Middle Ages_, 392.
|
|
|
|
Also, "This (the county court) was the great constitutional judicature
|
|
in all questions of civil right."--_Ditto_, 395.
|
|
|
|
Also, "The liberties of these Anglo-Saxon thanes were chiefly secured,
|
|
next to their swords and their free spirits, by the inestimable right of
|
|
deciding civil and criminal suits in their own county courts."--_Ditto_,
|
|
399.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 40: "Alfred may, in one sense, be called the founder of these
|
|
laws, (the Saxon,) for until his time they were an unwritten code, but
|
|
he expressly says, '_that I, Alfred, collected the good laws of our
|
|
forefathers into one code, and also I wrote them down_'--which is a
|
|
decisive fact in the history of our laws well worth noting."--_Introduction
|
|
to Gilbert's History of the Common Pleas_, p. 2, _note_.
|
|
|
|
Kelham says, "Let us consult our own lawyers and historians, and they
|
|
will tell us * * that Alfred, Edgar, and Edward the Confessor, were the
|
|
great _compilers and restorers_ of the English Laws."--_Kelham's
|
|
Preliminary Discourse to the Laws of William the Conqueror_, p. 12.
|
|
_Appendix to Kelham's Dictionary of the Norman Language._
|
|
|
|
"He (Alfred) also, like another Theodosius, _collected the various
|
|
customs_ that he found dispersed in the kingdom, and reduced and
|
|
digested them into one uniform system, or code of laws, in his
|
|
_som-bec_, or _liber judicialis_ (judicial book). This he _compiled_ for
|
|
the use of the court baron, hundred and county court, the court-leet and
|
|
sheriff's tourn, tribunals which he established for the trial of all
|
|
causes, civil and criminal, in the very districts wherein the complaints
|
|
arose."--_4 Blackstone_, 411.
|
|
|
|
Alfred himself says, "Hence I, King Alfred, gathered these together, and
|
|
commanded many of those to be written down which our forefathers
|
|
observed--those which I liked--and those which I did not like, by the
|
|
advice of my Witan, I threw aside. For I durst not venture to set down
|
|
in writing over many of my own, since I knew not what among them would
|
|
please those that should come after us. But those which I met with
|
|
either of the days of me, my kinsman, or of Offa, King of Mercia, or of
|
|
Æthelbert, who was the first of the English who received baptism--those
|
|
which appeared to me the justest--I have here collected, and abandoned
|
|
the others. Then I, Alfred, King of the West Saxons, showed these to all
|
|
my Witan, and they then said that they were all willing to observe
|
|
them."--_Laws of Alfred, translated by R. Price, prefixed to
|
|
Mackintosh's History of England_, _vol._ 1. _45 Lardner's Cab. Cyc._
|
|
|
|
"King Edward * * projected and begun what his grandson, King Edward the
|
|
Confessor, afterwards completed, viz., one uniform digest or body of
|
|
laws to be observed throughout the whole kingdom, _being probably no
|
|
more than a revival of King Alfred's code_, with some improvements
|
|
suggested by necessity and experience, particularly the incorporating
|
|
some of the British, or, rather, Mercian _customs_, and also _such of
|
|
the Danish_ (customs) as were reasonable and approved, into the _West
|
|
Saxon Lage_, which was still the ground-work of the whole. And this
|
|
appears to be the best supported and most plausible conjecture, (for
|
|
certainty is not to be expected,) of the rise and original of that
|
|
admirable system of maxims and unwritten customs which is now known by
|
|
the name of the _common law_, as extending its authority universally
|
|
over all the realm, and which is doubtless of Saxon parentage."--_4
|
|
Blackstone_, 412.
|
|
|
|
"By the _Lex Terræ_ and _Lex Regni_ is understood the laws of Edward the
|
|
Confessor, confirmed and enlarged as they were by William the Conqueror;
|
|
and this Constitution or Code of Laws is what even to this day are
|
|
called '_The Common Law of the Land_.'"--_Introduction to Gilbert's
|
|
History of the Common Pleas_, p. 22, _note_.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 41: Not the conqueror of the English people, (as the friends
|
|
of liberty maintain,) but only of Harold the usurper.--See _Hale's
|
|
History of the Common Law_, ch. 5.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 42: For all these codes see Wilkins' Laws of the Anglo-Saxons.
|
|
|
|
"Being regulations adapted to existing institutions, the Anglo-Saxon
|
|
statutes are concise and technical, alluding to the law which was then
|
|
living and in vigor, rather than defining it. The same clauses and
|
|
chapters are often repeated word for word, in the statutes of subsequent
|
|
kings, showing that enactments which bear the appearance of novelty are
|
|
merely declaratory. Consequently the appearance of a law, seemingly for
|
|
the first time, is by no means to be considered as a proof that the
|
|
matter which it contains is new; nor can we trace the progress of the
|
|
Anglo-Saxon institutions with any degree of certainty, by following the
|
|
dates of the statutes in which we find them first noticed. All arguments
|
|
founded on the apparent chronology of the subjects included in the laws,
|
|
are liable to great fallacies. Furthermore, a considerable portion of
|
|
the Anglo-Saxon law was never recorded in writing. There can be no doubt
|
|
but that the rules of inheritance were well established and defined; yet
|
|
we have not a single law, and hardly a single document from which the
|
|
course of the descent of land can be inferred. * * Positive proof cannot
|
|
be obtained of the commencement of any institution, because the first
|
|
written law relating to it may possibly be merely confirmatory or
|
|
declaratory; neither can the non-existence of any institution be
|
|
inferred from the absence of direct evidence. Written laws were modified
|
|
and controlled by customs of which no trace can be discovered, until
|
|
after the lapse of centuries, although those usages must have been in
|
|
constant vigor during the long interval of silence."--_1 Palgrave's Rise
|
|
and Progress of the English Commonwealth_, 58-9.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 43: Rapin says, "The customs now practised in England are, for
|
|
the most part, the same as the Anglo-Saxons brought with them from
|
|
Germany."--_Rapin's Dissertation on the Government of the Anglo-Saxons_,
|
|
vol. 2, Oct. Ed., p. 198. See _Kelham's Discourse before named_.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 44: Hallam says, "The county of Sussex contains sixty-five
|
|
('hundreds'); that of Dorset forty-three; while Yorkshire has only
|
|
twenty-six; and Lancashire but six."--_2 Middle Ages_, 391.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 45: Excepting also matters pertaining to the collection of the
|
|
revenue, which were determined in the king's court of exchequer. But
|
|
even in this court it was the law "_that none be amerced but by his
|
|
peers_."--_Mirror of Justices_, 49.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 46: "For the English laws, _although not written_, may, as it
|
|
should seem, and that without any absurdity, be termed laws, (since this
|
|
itself is law--that which pleases the prince has the force of law,) I
|
|
mean those laws which it is evident were promulgated by the advice of
|
|
the nobles and the authority of the prince, concerning doubts to be
|
|
settled in their assembly. For if from the mere want of writing only,
|
|
they should not be considered laws, then, unquestionably, writing would
|
|
seem to confer more authority upon laws themselves, than either the
|
|
equity of the persons constituting, or the reason of those framing
|
|
them."--_Glanville's Preface_, p. 38. (Glanville was chief justice of
|
|
Henry II., 1180.) _2 Turner's History of the Anglo-Saxons_, 280.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 47: Mackintosh's History of England, ch. 3. Lardner's Cabinet
|
|
Cyclopædia, 266.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 48: If the laws of the king were received as authoritative by
|
|
the juries, what occasion was there for his appointing special
|
|
commissioners for the trial of offences, without the intervention of a
|
|
jury, as he frequently did, in manifest and acknowledged violation of
|
|
Magna Carta, and "the law of the land?" These appointments were
|
|
undoubtedly made for no other reason than that the juries were not
|
|
sufficiently subservient, but judged according to their own notions of
|
|
right, instead of the will of the king--whether the latter were
|
|
expressed in his statutes, or by his judges.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 49: Of course, Mr. Reeve means to be understood that, in the
|
|
hundred court, and court-leet, _the jurors were the judges_, as he
|
|
declares them to have been in the county court; otherwise the "bailiff"
|
|
or "steward" must have been judge.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 50: The jurors were sometimes called "assessors," because they
|
|
assessed, or determined the amount of fines and amercements to be
|
|
imposed.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 51: "The barons of the Hundred" were the freeholders. Hallam
|
|
says: "The word _baro_, originally meaning only a man, was of very large
|
|
significance, and is not unfrequently applied to common freeholders, as
|
|
in the phrase _court-baron_."--_3 Middle Ages_, 14-15.
|
|
|
|
_Blackstone_ says: "The _court-baron_ * * is a court of common law, and
|
|
it is the court of the barons, by which name the freeholders were
|
|
sometimes anciently called; for that it is held before the freeholders
|
|
who owe suit and service to the manor."--_3 Blackstone_, 33.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 52: The ancient jury courts kept no records, because those who
|
|
composed the courts could neither make nor read records. Their decisions
|
|
were preserved by the memories of the jurors and other persons present.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 53: Stuart says:
|
|
|
|
"The courts, or civil arrangements, which were modelled in Germany,
|
|
preserved the independence of the people; and having followed the Saxons
|
|
into England, and continuing their importance, they supported the envied
|
|
liberty we boast of. * *
|
|
|
|
"As a chieftain led out his retainers to the field, and governed them
|
|
during war; so in peace he summoned them together, and exerted a civil
|
|
jurisdiction. He was at once their captain and their judge. They
|
|
constituted his court; and having inquired with him into the guilt of
|
|
those of their order whom justice had accused, they assisted him to
|
|
enforce his decrees.
|
|
|
|
"This court (the court-baron) was imported into England; but the
|
|
innovation which conquest introduced into the fashion of the times
|
|
altered somewhat its appearance. * *
|
|
|
|
"The head or lord of the manor called forth his attendants to his hall.
|
|
* * He inquired into the breaches of custom, and of justice, which were
|
|
committed within the precincts of his territory; and with his followers,
|
|
_who sat with him as judges_, he determined in all matters of debt, and
|
|
of trespass to a certain amount. He possessed a similar jurisdiction
|
|
with the chieftain in Germany, and his tenants enjoyed an equal
|
|
authority with the German retainers.
|
|
|
|
"But a mode of administration which intrusted so much power to the great
|
|
could not long be exercised without blame or injustice. The German,
|
|
guided by the candor of his mind, and entering into all his engagements
|
|
with the greatest ardor, perceived not, at first, that the chieftain to
|
|
whom he submitted his disputes might be swayed, in the judgments he
|
|
pronounced, by partiality, prejudice, or interest; and that the
|
|
influence he maintained with his followers was too strong to be
|
|
restrained by justice. Experience instructed him of his error; he
|
|
acknowledged the necessity of appealing from his lord; and the court of
|
|
the Hundred was erected.
|
|
|
|
"This establishment was formed both in Germany and England, by the
|
|
inhabitants of a certain division, who extended their jurisdiction over
|
|
the territory they occupied.[65] They bound themselves under a penalty
|
|
to assemble at stated times; _and having elected the wisest to preside
|
|
over them, they judged, not only all civil and criminal matters_, but of
|
|
those also which regarded religion and the priesthood. The judicial
|
|
power thus invested in the people was extensive; they were able to
|
|
preserve their rights, and attended this court in arms.
|
|
|
|
"As the communication, however, and intercourse, of the individuals of a
|
|
German community began to be wider, and more general, as their dealings
|
|
enlarged, and as disputes arose among the members of different hundreds,
|
|
the insufficiency of these courts for the preservation of order was
|
|
gradually perceived. The _shyre mote_, therefore, or _county court_, was
|
|
instituted; and it formed the chief source of justice both in Germany
|
|
and England.
|
|
|
|
"The powers, accordingly, which had been enjoyed by the court of the
|
|
_hundred_, were considerably impaired. It decided no longer concerning
|
|
capital offences; it decided not concerning matters of liberty, and the
|
|
property of estates, or of slaves; its judgments, in every case, became
|
|
subject to review; and it lost entirely the decision of causes, when it
|
|
delayed too long to consider them.
|
|
|
|
"Every subject of claim or contention was brought, in the first
|
|
instance, or by appeal, to the _county court_; and the _earl_, or
|
|
_eorldorman_, who presided there, was active to put the laws in
|
|
execution. He repressed the disorders which fell out within the circuit
|
|
of his authority; and the least remission in his duty, or the least
|
|
fraud he committed, was complained of and punished. He was elected from
|
|
among the great, and was above the temptation of a bribe; but, to
|
|
encourage his activity, he was presented with a share of the territory
|
|
he governed, or was entitled to a proportion of the fines and profits of
|
|
justice. Every man, in his district, was bound to inform him concerning
|
|
criminals, and to assist him to bring them to trial; and, as in rude and
|
|
violent times the poor and helpless were ready to be oppressed by the
|
|
strong, he was instructed particularly to defend them.
|
|
|
|
"His court was ambulatory, and assembled only twice a year, unless the
|
|
distribution of justice required that its meetings should be oftener.
|
|
Every freeholder in the county was obliged to attend it; and should he
|
|
refuse this service, his possessions were seized, and he was forced to
|
|
find surety for his appearance. The neighboring earls held not their
|
|
courts on the same day; and, what seems very singular, no judge was
|
|
allowed, after meals, to exercise his office.
|
|
|
|
"The druids also, or priests, in Germany, as we had formerly occasion to
|
|
remark, and the clergy in England, exercised a jurisdiction in the
|
|
_hundred_ and _county_ courts. They instructed the people in religious
|
|
duties, and in matters regarding the priesthood; and the princes, earls,
|
|
or _eorldormen_, related to them the laws and customs of the community.
|
|
These judges were mutually a check to each other; but it was expected
|
|
that they should agree in their judgments, and should willingly unite
|
|
their efforts for the public interest.[66]
|
|
|
|
"_But the prince or earl performed not, at all times, in person, the
|
|
obligations of his office._ The enjoyment of ease and of pleasure, to
|
|
which in Germany he had delivered himself over, when disengaged from
|
|
war, and the mean idea he conceived of the drudgery of civil affairs,
|
|
_made him often delegate to an inferior person the distribution of
|
|
justice in his district_. The same sentiments were experienced by the
|
|
Saxon nobility; and the service which they owed by their tenures, and
|
|
the high employments they sustained, called them often from the
|
|
management of their counties. The progress, too, of commerce, giving an
|
|
intricacy to cases, and swelling the civil code, added to the difficulty
|
|
of their office, and made them averse to its duties. _Sheriffs,
|
|
therefore, or deputies, were frequently appointed to transact their
|
|
business; and though these were at first under some subordination to the
|
|
earls, they grew at length to be entirely independent of them. The
|
|
connection of jurisdiction and territory ceasing to prevail, and the
|
|
civil being separated from the ecclesiastical power, they became the
|
|
sole and proper officers for the direction of justice in the counties._
|
|
|
|
"The _hundred_, however, and _county_ courts, were not equal of
|
|
themselves for the purposes of jurisdiction and order. It was necessary
|
|
that a court should be erected, of supreme authority, where the disputes
|
|
of the great should be decided, where the disagreeing sentiments of
|
|
judges should be reconciled, and where protection should be given to the
|
|
people against their fraud and injustice.
|
|
|
|
"The princes accordingly, or chief nobility, in the German communities,
|
|
assembled together to judge of such matters. The Saxon nobles continued
|
|
this prerogative; and the king, or, in his absence, the chief
|
|
_justiciary_, watched over their deliberations. But it was not on every
|
|
trivial occasion that this court interested itself. In smaller concerns,
|
|
justice was refused during three sessions of the _hundred_, and claimed
|
|
without effect, at four courts of the county, before there could lie an
|
|
appeal to it.
|
|
|
|
"So gradually were these arrangements established, and so naturally did
|
|
the varying circumstances in the situation of the Germans and
|
|
Anglo-Saxons direct those successive improvements which the preservation
|
|
of order, and the advantage of society, called them to adopt. The
|
|
admission of the people into the courts of justice preserved, among the
|
|
former, that equality of ranks for which they were remarkable; and it
|
|
helped to overturn, among the latter, those envious distinctions which
|
|
the feudal system tended to introduce, and prevented that venality in
|
|
judges, and those arbitrary proceedings, which the growing attachment to
|
|
interest, and the influence of the crown, might otherwise have
|
|
occasioned."--_Stuart on the Constitution of England_, p. 222 to 245.
|
|
|
|
"In the Anglo-Saxon period, accordingly, _twelve_ only were elected; and
|
|
these, together with the judge, or presiding officer of the district,
|
|
being sworn to regard justice, and the voice of reason, or conscience,
|
|
all causes were submitted to them."--_Ditto_, p. 260.
|
|
|
|
"Before the orders of men were very nicely distinguished, the jurors
|
|
were elected from the same rank. When, however, a regular subordination
|
|
of orders was established, and when a knowledge of property had inspired
|
|
the necessitous with envy, and the rich with contempt, _every man was
|
|
tried by his equals_. The same spirit of liberty which gave rise to this
|
|
regulation attended its progress. Nor could monarchs assume a more
|
|
arbitrary method of proceeding. 'I will not' (said the Earl of Cornwall
|
|
to his sovereign) 'render up my castles, nor depart the kingdom, but by
|
|
judgment of my peers.' Of this institution, so wisely calculated for the
|
|
preservation of liberty, all our historians have pronounced the
|
|
eulogium."--_Ditto_, p. 262-3.
|
|
|
|
Blackstone says:
|
|
|
|
"The policy of our ancient constitution, as regulated and established by
|
|
the great Alfred, was to bring justice home to every man's door, by
|
|
constituting as many courts of judicature as there are manors and towns
|
|
in the kingdom; _wherein injuries were redressed in an easy and
|
|
expeditious manner, by the suffrage of neighbors and friends_. These
|
|
little courts, however, communicated with others of a larger
|
|
jurisdiction, and those with others of a still greater power; ascending
|
|
gradually from the lowest to the supreme courts, which were respectively
|
|
constituted to correct the errors of the inferior ones, and to determine
|
|
such causes as, by reason of their weight and difficulty, demanded a
|
|
more solemn discussion. The course of justice flowing in large streams
|
|
from the king, as the fountain, to his superior courts of record; and
|
|
being then subdivided into smaller channels, till the whole and every
|
|
part of the kingdom were plentifully watered and refreshed. An
|
|
institution that seems highly agreeable to the dictates of natural
|
|
reason, as well as of more enlightened policy. * *
|
|
|
|
"These inferior courts, at least the name and form of them, still
|
|
continue in our legal constitution; but as the superior courts of record
|
|
have, in practice, obtained a concurrent original jurisdiction, and as
|
|
there is, besides, a power of removing plaints or actions thither from
|
|
all the inferior jurisdictions; upon these accounts (among others) it
|
|
has happened that these petty tribunals have fallen into decay, and
|
|
almost into oblivion; whether for the better or the worse may be matter
|
|
of some speculation, when we consider, on the one hand, the increase of
|
|
expense and delay, and, on the other, the more able and impartial
|
|
decisions that follow from this change of jurisdiction.
|
|
|
|
"The order I shall observe in discoursing on these several courts,
|
|
constituted for the redress of _civil_ injuries, (for with those of a
|
|
jurisdiction merely _criminal_ I shall not at present concern
|
|
myself,[67]) will be by beginning with the lowest, and those whose
|
|
jurisdiction, though public and generally dispersed through the kingdom,
|
|
is yet (with regard to each particular court) confined to very narrow
|
|
limits; and so ascending gradually to those of the most extensive and
|
|
transcendent power."--3 _Blackstone_, 30 to 32.
|
|
|
|
"The _court-baron_ is a court incident to every manor in the kingdom,
|
|
_to be holden by the steward within the said manor_. This court-baron is
|
|
of two natures; the one is a customary court, of which we formerly
|
|
spoke, appertaining entirely to the copy-holders, in which their estates
|
|
are transferred by surrender and admittance, and other matters
|
|
transacted relative to their tenures only. The other, of which we now
|
|
speak, is a court of common law, and it is a court of the barons, by
|
|
which name the freeholders were sometimes anciently called; _for that it
|
|
is held by the freeholders who owe suit and service to the manor, the
|
|
steward being rather the registrar than the judge_. These courts, though
|
|
in their nature distinct, are frequently confounded together. _The court
|
|
we are now considering, viz., the freeholders court, was composed of the
|
|
lord's tenants, who were the pares_ (equals) _of each other, and were
|
|
bound by their feudal tenure to assist their lord in the dispensation of
|
|
domestic justice_. This was formerly held every three weeks; and its
|
|
most important business is to determine, by writ of right, all
|
|
controversies relating to the right of lands within the manor. It may
|
|
also hold plea of any personal actions, of debt, trespass in the case,
|
|
or the like, where the debt or damages do not amount to forty shillings;
|
|
which is the same sum, or three marks, that bounded the jurisdiction of
|
|
the ancient Gothic courts in their lowest instance, or _fierding
|
|
courts_, so called because four were instituted within every superior
|
|
district or hundred."--3 _Blackstone_, 33, 34.
|
|
|
|
"A _hundred court_ is only a larger court-baron, being held for all the
|
|
inhabitants of a particular hundred, instead of a manor. _The free
|
|
suitors are here also the judges, and the steward the registrar, as in
|
|
the case of a court-baron._ It is likewise no court of record,
|
|
resembling the former at all points, except that in point of territory
|
|
it is of greater jurisdiction. This is said by Sir Edward Coke to have
|
|
been derived out of the county court for the ease of the people, that
|
|
they might have justice done to them at their own doors, without any
|
|
charge or loss of time; but its institution was probably coeval with
|
|
that of hundreds themselves, which were formerly observed to have been
|
|
introduced, though not invented, by Alfred, being derived from the
|
|
polity of the ancient Germans. The _centeni_, we may remember, were the
|
|
principal inhabitants of a district composed of different villages,
|
|
originally in number a _hundred_, but afterward only called by that
|
|
name, and who probably gave the same denomination to the district out of
|
|
which they were chosen. Cæsar speaks positively of the judicial power
|
|
exercised in their hundred courts and courts-baron. '_Princeps regiorum
|
|
atque pagorum_' (which we may fairly construe the lords of hundreds and
|
|
manors) '_inter suos jus dicunt, controversias que minuunt_.' (The
|
|
chiefs of the country and the villages declare the law among them, and
|
|
abate controversies.) And Tacitus, who had examined their constitution
|
|
still more attentively, informs us not only of the authority of the
|
|
lords, but that of the _centeni_, the hundreders, or jury, _who were
|
|
taken out of the common freeholders, and had themselves a share in the
|
|
determination. 'Eliguntur in conciliis et principes, qui jura per pagos
|
|
vicosque reddunt, centeni singulis, ex plebe comites concilium simul et
|
|
auctoritas adsunt_.' (The princes are chosen in the assemblies, who
|
|
administer the laws throughout the towns and villages, and with each one
|
|
are associated an hundred companions, taken from the people, for
|
|
purposes both of counsel and authority.) This hundred court was
|
|
denominated _hæreda_ in the Gothic constitution. But this court, as
|
|
causes are equally liable to removal from hence as from the common
|
|
court-baron, and by the same writs, and may also be reviewed by writ of
|
|
false judgment, is therefore fallen into equal disuse with regard to the
|
|
trial of actions."--_3 Blackstone_, 34, 35.
|
|
|
|
"The _county court_ is a court incident to the jurisdiction of the
|
|
_sheriff_. It is not a court of record, but may hold pleas of debt, or
|
|
damages, under the value of forty shillings; over some of which causes
|
|
these inferior courts have, by the express words of the statute of
|
|
Gloucester, (6 Edward I., ch. 8,) a jurisdiction totally exclusive of
|
|
the king's superior courts. * * The county court may also hold plea of
|
|
many real actions, and of all personal actions to any amount, by virtue
|
|
of a special writ, called a _justicies_, which is a writ empowering the
|
|
sheriff, for the sake of despatch, to do the same justice in his county
|
|
court as might otherwise be had at Westminster. _The freeholders of the
|
|
county court are the real judges in this court, and the sheriff is the
|
|
ministerial officer._ * * In modern times, as proceedings are removable
|
|
from hence into the king's superior courts, by writ of pone or
|
|
_recordari_, in the same manner as from hundred courts and courts-baron,
|
|
and as the same writ of false judgment may be had in nature of a writ of
|
|
error, this has occasioned the same disuse of bringing actions
|
|
therein."--_3 Blackstone_, 36, 37.
|
|
|
|
"Upon the whole, we cannot but admire the wise economy and admirable
|
|
provision of our ancestors in settling the distribution of justice in a
|
|
method so well calculated for cheapness, expedition, and ease. By the
|
|
constitution which they established, all trivial debts, and injuries of
|
|
small consequence, were to be recovered or redressed in every man's own
|
|
county, hundred, or perhaps parish."--_3 Blackstone_, 59.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 54: 1 Blackstone, 63-67.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 55: This quaint and curious book (Smith's Commonwealth of
|
|
England) describes the _minutiæ_ of trials, giving in detail the mode of
|
|
impanelling the jury, and then the conduct of the lawyers, witnesses,
|
|
and court. I give the following extracts, _tending to show that the
|
|
judges impose no law upon the juries, in either civil or criminal cases,
|
|
but only require them to determine the causes according to their
|
|
consciences_.
|
|
|
|
In civil causes he says:
|
|
|
|
"When it is thought that it is enough pleaded before them, and the
|
|
witnesses have said what they can, one of the judges, with a brief
|
|
and pithy recapitulation, reciteth to the twelve in sum the arguments
|
|
of the sergeants of either side, that which the witnesses have
|
|
declared, and the chief points of the evidence showed in writing, and
|
|
once again putteth them in mind of the issue, and sometime giveth it
|
|
them in writing, delivering to them the evidence which is showed on
|
|
either part, if any be, (evidence here is called writings of
|
|
contracts, authentical after the manner of England, that is to say,
|
|
written, sealed, and delivered,) and biddeth them go together."--p.
|
|
74.
|
|
|
|
This is the whole account given of the charge to the jury.
|
|
|
|
In criminal cases, after the witnesses have been heard, and the prisoner
|
|
has said what he pleases in his defence, the book proceeds:
|
|
|
|
"When the judge hath heard them say enough, he asketh if they can say
|
|
any more: If they say no, then he turneth his speech to the inquest.
|
|
'Good men, (saith he,) ye of the inquest, ye have heard what these
|
|
men say against the prisoner. You have also heard what the prisoner
|
|
can say for himself. _Have an eye to your oath, and to your duty, and
|
|
do that which God shall put in your minds to the discharge of your
|
|
consciences_, and mark well what is said.'"--p. 92.
|
|
|
|
This is the whole account given of the charge in a criminal case.
|
|
|
|
The following statement goes to confirm the same idea, that jurors in
|
|
England have formerly understood it to be their right and duty to judge
|
|
only according to their consciences, and not to submit to any dictation
|
|
from the court, either as to law or fact.
|
|
|
|
"If having pregnant evidence, nevertheless, the twelve do acquit the
|
|
malefactor, which they will do sometime, especially if they perceive
|
|
either one of the justices or of the judges, or some other man, to
|
|
pursue too much and too maliciously the death of the prisoner, * *
|
|
the prisoner escapeth; but the twelve (are) not only rebuked by the
|
|
judges, but also threatened of punishment; and many times commanded
|
|
to appear in the Star-Chamber, or before the Privy Council for the
|
|
matter. But this threatening chanceth oftener than the execution
|
|
thereof; _and the twelve answer with most gentle words, they did it
|
|
according to their consciences_, and pray the judges to be good unto
|
|
them, _they did as they thought right, and as they accorded all_, and
|
|
so it passeth away for the most part."--p. 100.
|
|
|
|
The account given of the trial of a peer of the realm corroborates the
|
|
same point:
|
|
|
|
"If any duke, marquis, or any other of the degrees of a baron, or
|
|
above, lord of the Parliament, be appeached of treason, or any other
|
|
capital crime, he is judged by his peers and equals; that is, the
|
|
yeomanry doth not go upon him, but an inquest of the Lords of
|
|
Parliament, and they give their voice not one for all, but each
|
|
severally as they do in Parliament, being (beginning) at the youngest
|
|
lord. And for judge one lord sitteth, who is constable of England for
|
|
that day. The judgment once given, he breaketh his staff, and
|
|
abdicateth his office. In the rest there is no difference from that
|
|
above written," (that is, in the case of a freeman.)--p. 98.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 56: "The present form of the jurors' oath is that they shall
|
|
'give a true verdict _according to the evidence_.' At what time this
|
|
form was introduced is uncertain; but for several centuries after the
|
|
Conquest, the jurors, _both in civil and criminal cases_, were sworn
|
|
merely to _speak the truth_. (Glanville, lib. 2, cap. 17; Bracton, lib.
|
|
3, cap. 22; lib. 4, p. 287, 291; Britton, p. 135.) Hence their decision
|
|
was accurately termed _veredictum_, or verdict, that is, 'a thing truly
|
|
said'; whereas the phrase 'true verdict' in the modern oath is not an
|
|
accurate expression."--_Political Dictionary_, word _Jury_.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 57: Of course, there can be no legal trial by jury, in either
|
|
civil or criminal cases, where the jury are sworn to try the cases
|
|
"_according to law_."]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 58: _Coke_, as late as 1588, admits that amercements must be
|
|
fixed by the peers (8 Coke's Rep. 38, 2 Inst. 27); but he attempts,
|
|
wholly without success, as it seems to me, to show a difference between
|
|
fines and amercements. The statutes are very numerous, running through
|
|
the three or four hundred years immediately succeeding Magna Carta, in
|
|
which fines, ransoms, and amercements are spoken of as if they were the
|
|
common punishments of offences, and as if they all meant the same thing.
|
|
If, however, any technical difference could be made out between them,
|
|
there is clearly none in principle; and the word amercement, as used in
|
|
Magna Carta, must be taken in its most comprehensive sense.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 59: "_Common right_" was the common law. _1 Coke's Inst._ 142
|
|
a. 2 _do._ 55, 6.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 60: The oath of the justices is in these words:
|
|
|
|
"Ye shall swear, that well and lawfully ye shall serve our lord the king
|
|
_and his people_, in the office of justice, and that lawfully ye shall
|
|
counsel the king in his business, and that ye shall not counsel nor
|
|
assent to anything which may turn him in damage or disherison in any
|
|
manner, way, or color. And that ye shall not know the damage or
|
|
disherison of him, whereof ye shall not cause him to be warned by
|
|
yourself, or by other; _and that ye shall do equal law and execution of
|
|
right to all his subjects, rich and poor, without having regard to any
|
|
person_. And that ye take not by yourself, or by other, privily nor
|
|
apertly, gift nor reward of gold nor silver, nor of any other thing that
|
|
may turn to your profit, unless it be meat or drink, and that of small
|
|
value, of any man that shall have any plea or process hanging before
|
|
you, as long as the same process shall be so hanging, nor after for the
|
|
same cause. And that ye take no fee, as long as ye shall be justice, nor
|
|
robe of any man great or small, but of the king himself. And that ye
|
|
give none advice or counsel to no man great or small, in no case where
|
|
the king is party. And in case that any, of what estate or condition
|
|
they be, come before you in your sessions with force and arms, or
|
|
otherwise against the peace, or against the form of the statute thereof
|
|
made, _to disturb execution of the common law_," (mark the term,
|
|
"_common law_,") "or to menace the people that they may not pursue the
|
|
law, that ye shall cause their bodies to be arrested and put in prison;
|
|
and in case they be such that ye cannot arrest them, that ye certify the
|
|
king of their names, and of their misprision, hastily, so that he may
|
|
thereof ordain a convenable remedy. And that ye by yourself, nor by
|
|
other, privily nor apertly, maintain any plea or quarrel hanging in the
|
|
king's court, or elsewhere in the country. _And that ye deny no man
|
|
common right by the king's letters, nor none other man's, nor for none
|
|
other cause; and in case any letters come to you contrary to the law,"
|
|
(that is, the "common law" before mentioned,) "that ye do nothing by
|
|
such letters, but certify the king thereof, and proceed to execute the
|
|
law," (the "common law" before mentioned,) "notwithstanding the same
|
|
letters._ And that ye shall do and procure the profit of the king and of
|
|
his crown, with all things where ye may reasonably do the same. And in
|
|
case ye be from henceforth found in default in any of the points
|
|
aforesaid, ye shall be at the king's will of body, lands, and goods,
|
|
thereof to be done as shall please him, as God you help and all
|
|
saints."--_18 Edward III._, st. 4. (1344.)]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 61: That the terms "_Law_" and "_Right_," as used in this
|
|
statute, mean the _common law_, is shown by the preamble, which declares
|
|
the motive of the statute to be that "_the Law of the Land, (the common
|
|
law,) which we (the king) by our oath are bound to maintain_," may be
|
|
the better kept, &c.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 62: The following is a copy of the original:
|
|
|
|
"_Forma Juramenti Regis Angliæ in Coronacione sua_:
|
|
|
|
(Archiepiscopus Cantuariæ, ad quo de jure et consuetudine Ecclesiæ
|
|
Cantuariæ, antiqua et approbata, pertinet Reges Angliæ inungere et
|
|
coronare, die coronacionis Regis, anteque Rex coronetur, faciet Regi
|
|
Interrogationes subscriptas.)
|
|
|
|
Si leges et consuetudines ab antiquis justis et Deo devotis Regibus
|
|
plebi Anglicano concessas, cum sacramenti confirmacione eidem plebi
|
|
concedere et servare (volueris:) Et præsertim leges et consuetudines
|
|
et libertates a glorioso Rege Edwardo clero populoque concessas?
|
|
|
|
(Et respondeat Rex,) Concedo et servare volo, et sacramento
|
|
confirmare.
|
|
|
|
Servabis Ecclesiæ Dei, Cleroque, et Populo, pacem ex integro et
|
|
concordiam in Deo secundum vires tuas?
|
|
|
|
(Et respondeat Rex,) Servabo.
|
|
|
|
Facies fieri in omnibus Judiciis tuis equam et rectam justiciam, et
|
|
discrecionem, in misericordia et veritate, secundum vires tuas?
|
|
|
|
(Et respondeat Rex,) Faciam.
|
|
|
|
Concedis justas, leges et consuetudines esse tenendas, et promittis
|
|
per te eas esse protegendas, et ad honorem Dei corroborandas, quas
|
|
vulgus elegit, secundum vires tuas?
|
|
|
|
(Et respondeat Rex,) Concedo et promitto."]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 63: It would appear, from the text, that the Charter of
|
|
Liberties and the Charter of the Forest were sometimes called "_laws of
|
|
the land_."]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 64: As the ancient coronation oath, given in the text, has
|
|
come down from the Saxon times, the following remarks of Palgrave will
|
|
be pertinent, in connection with the oath, as illustrating the fact
|
|
that, in those times, no special authority attached to the laws of the
|
|
king:
|
|
|
|
"The Imperial Witenagemot was not a legislative assembly, in the strict
|
|
sense of the term, for the whole Anglo-Saxon empire. Promulgating his
|
|
edicts amidst his peers and prelates, the king uses the language of
|
|
command; but the theoretical prerogative was modified by usage, and the
|
|
practice of the constitution required that the law should be accepted by
|
|
the legislatures (courts) of the several kingdoms. * * The 'Basileus'
|
|
speaks in the tone of prerogative: Edgar does not merely recommend, he
|
|
commands that the law shall be adopted by all the people, whether
|
|
English, Danes, or Britons, in every part of his empire. Let this
|
|
statute be observed, he continues, by Earl Oslac, and all the host who
|
|
dwell under his government, and let it be transmitted by writ to the
|
|
ealdormen of the other subordinate states. And yet, in defiance of this
|
|
positive injunction, the laws of Edgar were not accepted in Mercia until
|
|
the reign of Canute the Dane. It might be said that the course so
|
|
adopted may have been an exception to the general rule; but in the
|
|
scanty and imperfect annals of Anglo-Saxon legislation, we shall be able
|
|
to find so many examples of similar proceedings, _that this mode of
|
|
enactment must be considered as dictated by the constitution of the
|
|
empire_. Edward was the supreme lord of the Northumbrians, but more than
|
|
a century elapsed before they obeyed his decrees. The laws of the
|
|
glorious Athelstane had no effect in Kent, (county,) the dependent
|
|
appanage of his crown, until sanctioned by the _Witan_ of the _shire_
|
|
(county court). And the power of Canute himself, the 'King of all
|
|
England,' does not seem to have compelled the Northumbrians to receive
|
|
his code, until the reign of the Confessor, when such acceptance became
|
|
a part of the compact upon the accession of a new earl.
|
|
|
|
Legislation constituted but a small portion of the ordinary business
|
|
transacted by the Imperial Witenagemot. The wisdom of the assembly was
|
|
shown in avoiding unnecessary change. _Consisting principally of
|
|
traditionary usages and ancestorial customs, the law was upheld by
|
|
opinion. The people considered their jurisprudence as a part of their
|
|
inheritance._ Their privileges and their duties were closely conjoined;
|
|
_most frequently, the statutes themselves were only affirmances of
|
|
ancient customs, or declaratory enactments_. In the Anglo-Saxon
|
|
commonwealth, therefore, the legislative functions of the Witenagemot
|
|
were of far less importance than the other branches of its authority. *
|
|
* The members of the Witenagemot were the 'Pares Curiæ' (Peers of Court)
|
|
of the kingdom. How far, on these occasions, their opinion or their
|
|
equity controlled the power of the crown, cannot be ascertained. But the
|
|
form of inserting their names in the _'Testing Clause_' was retained
|
|
under the Anglo-Norman reigns; and the sovereign, who submitted his
|
|
Charter to the judgment of the _Proceres_, professed to be guided by the
|
|
opinion which they gave. As the '_Pares_' of the empire, the Witenagemot
|
|
decided the disputes between the great vassals of the crown. * * The
|
|
jurisdiction exercised in the Parliament of Edward I., when the barony
|
|
of a _Lord-Marcher_ became the subject of litigation, is entirely
|
|
analogous to the proceedings thus adopted by the great council of
|
|
Edward, the son of Alfred, the Anglo-Saxon king.
|
|
|
|
In this assembly, the king, the prelates, the dukes, the ealdormen, and
|
|
the optimates passed judgment upon all great offenders. * *
|
|
|
|
_The sovereign could not compel the obedience of the different nations
|
|
composing the Anglo-Saxon empire._ Hence, it became more necessary for
|
|
him to _conciliate their opinions_, if he solicited any service from a
|
|
vassal prince or a vassal state beyond the ordinary terms of the
|
|
compact; still more so, when he needed the support of a free burgh or
|
|
city. And we may view the assembly (the Witenagemot) as partaking of the
|
|
character of a political congress, in which the liegemen of the crown,
|
|
or the communities protected by the 'Basileus,' (sovereign,) were asked
|
|
or persuaded to relieve the exigences of the state, or to consider those
|
|
measures which might be required for the common weal. The sovereign was
|
|
compelled to parley with his dependents.
|
|
|
|
It may be doubted whether any one member of the empire had power to
|
|
legislate for any other member. The Regulus of Cumbria was unaffected by
|
|
the vote of the Earl of East Angliæ, if he chose to stand out against
|
|
it. These dignitaries constituted a congress, in which the sovereign
|
|
could treat more conveniently and effectually with his vassals than by
|
|
separate negotiations. * * But the determinations of the Witan bound
|
|
those only who were present, or who concurred in the proposition; and a
|
|
vassal denying his assent to the grant, might assert that the engagement
|
|
which he had contracted with his superior did not involve any pecuniary
|
|
subsidy, but only rendered him liable to perform service in the
|
|
field."--_1 Palgrave's Rise and Progress of the English Commonwealth_,
|
|
637 to 642.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 65: "It was the freemen in Germany, and the possessors of land
|
|
in England, who were _suitors_ (jurors) in the hundred court. These
|
|
ranks of men were the same. The alteration which had happened in
|
|
relation to property had invested the German freemen with land or
|
|
territory."]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 66: It would be wholly erroneous, I think, to infer from this
|
|
statement of Stuart, that either the "priests, princes, earls, or
|
|
_eorldormen_" exercised any authority over the jury in the trial of
|
|
causes, in the way of dictating the law to them. Henry's account of this
|
|
matter doubtless gives a much more accurate representation of the truth.
|
|
He says that _anciently_
|
|
|
|
"The meeting (the county court) was opened with a discourse by the
|
|
bishop, explaining, out of the Scriptures and ecclesiastical canons,
|
|
their several duties as good Christians and members of the church.
|
|
After this, the alderman, or one of his assessors, made a discourse
|
|
on the laws of the land, and the duties of good subjects and good
|
|
citizens. _When these preliminaries were over, they proceeded to try
|
|
and determine, first the causes of the church, next the pleas of the
|
|
crown, and last of all the controversies of private parties._"--3
|
|
_Henry's History of Great Britain_, 348.
|
|
|
|
This view is corroborated by Tyrrell's _Introduction to the History of
|
|
England_, p. 83-84, and by Spence's _Origin of the Laws and Political
|
|
Institutions of Modern Europe_, p. 447, and the note on the same page.
|
|
Also by a law of Canute to this effect, _In every county let there be
|
|
twice a year an assembly, whereat the bishop and the earl shall be
|
|
present, the one to instruct the people in divine, the other in human,
|
|
laws_.--_Wilkins_, p. 136.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 67: There was no distinction between the civil and criminal
|
|
counts, as to the rights or powers of juries.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IV.
|
|
|
|
THE RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF JURIES IN CIVIL SUITS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The evidence already given in the preceding chapters proves that the
|
|
rights and duties of jurors, in civil suits, were anciently the same as
|
|
in criminal ones; that the laws of the king were of no obligation upon
|
|
the consciences of the jurors, any further than the laws were seen by
|
|
them to be just; that very few laws were enacted applicable to civil
|
|
suits; that when a new law was enacted, the nature of it could have been
|
|
known to the jurors only by report, and was very likely not to be known
|
|
to them at all; that nearly all the law involved in civil suits was
|
|
_unwritten_; that there was _usually_ no one in attendance upon juries
|
|
who could possibly enlighten them, unless it were sheriffs, stewards,
|
|
and bailiffs, who were unquestionably too ignorant and untrustworthy to
|
|
instruct them authoritatively; that the jurors must therefore
|
|
necessarily have judged for themselves of the whole case; and that, _as
|
|
a general rule_, they could judge of it by no law but the law of nature,
|
|
or the principles of justice as they existed in their own minds.
|
|
|
|
The ancient oath of jurors in civil suits, viz., that "_they would make
|
|
known the truth according to their consciences_," implies that the
|
|
jurors were above the authority of all legislation. The modern oath, in
|
|
England, viz., that they "_will well and truly try the issue between the
|
|
parties, and a true verdict give, according to the evidence_," implies
|
|
the same thing. If the laws of the king had been binding upon a jury,
|
|
they would have been sworn to try the cases _according to law_, or
|
|
according to the laws.
|
|
|
|
The ancient writs, in civil suits, as given in Glanville, (within the
|
|
half century before Magna Carta,) to wit, "Summon twelve free and legal
|
|
men, (or sometimes twelve knights,) to be in court, _prepared upon their
|
|
oaths to declare whether A or B have the greater right to the land in
|
|
question_," indicate that the jurors judged of the whole matter on their
|
|
consciences only.
|
|
|
|
The language of Magna Carta, already discussed, establishes the same
|
|
point; for, although some of the words, such as "outlawed," and
|
|
"exiled," would apply only to criminal cases, nearly the whole chapter
|
|
applies as well to civil as to criminal suits. For example, how could
|
|
the payment of a debt ever be enforced against an unwilling debtor, if
|
|
he could neither be "arrested, imprisoned, nor deprived of his
|
|
freehold," and if the king could neither "proceed against him, nor send
|
|
any one against him, by force or arms"? Yet Magna Carta as much forbids
|
|
that any of these things shall be done against a debtor, as against a
|
|
criminal, _except according to, or in execution of_, "_a judgment of his
|
|
peers, or the law of the land_,"--a provision which, it has been shown,
|
|
gave the jury the free and absolute right to give or withhold "judgment"
|
|
according to their consciences, irrespective of all legislation.
|
|
|
|
The following provisions, in the Magna Carta of John, illustrate the
|
|
custom of referring the most important matters of a civil nature, even
|
|
where the king was a party, to the determination of the peers, or of
|
|
twelve men, acting by no rules but their own consciences. These examples
|
|
at least show that there is nothing improbable or unnatural in the idea
|
|
that juries should try all civil suits according to their own judgments,
|
|
independently of all laws of the king.
|
|
|
|
_Chap. 65._ "If we have disseized or dispossessed the Welsh of any
|
|
lands, liberties, or other things, without the legal judgment of
|
|
their peers, they shall be immediately restored to them. And if any
|
|
dispute arises upon this head, the matter shall be determined in the
|
|
Marches,[68] _by the judgment of their peers_," &c.
|
|
|
|
_Chap. 68._ "We shall treat with Alexander, king of Scots, concerning
|
|
the restoring of his sisters, and hostages, and rights and liberties,
|
|
in the same form and manner as we shall do to the rest of our barons
|
|
of England; unless by the engagements, which his father William, late
|
|
king of Scots, hath entered into with us, it ought to be otherwise;
|
|
_and this shall be left to the determination of his peers in our
|
|
court_."
|
|
|
|
_Chap. 56._ "All evil customs concerning forests, warrens, and
|
|
foresters, warreners, sheriffs, and their officers, rivers and their
|
|
keepers, shall forthwith be inquired into in each county, _by twelve
|
|
knights of the same shire_, chosen by the most creditable persons in
|
|
the same county, _and upon oath_; and within forty days after the
|
|
said inquest, be utterly abolished, so as never to be restored."
|
|
|
|
There is substantially the same reason why a jury _ought_ to judge of
|
|
the justice of laws, and hold all unjust laws invalid, in civil suits,
|
|
as in criminal ones. That reason is the necessity of guarding against
|
|
the tyranny of the government. Nearly the same oppressions can be
|
|
practised in civil suits as in criminal ones. For example, individuals
|
|
may be deprived of their liberty, and robbed of their property, by
|
|
judgments rendered in civil suits, as well as in criminal ones. If the
|
|
laws of the king were imperative upon a jury in civil suits, the king
|
|
might enact laws giving one man's property to another, or confiscating
|
|
it to the king himself, and authorizing civil suits to obtain possession
|
|
of it. Thus a man might be robbed of his property at the arbitrary
|
|
pleasure of the king. In fact, all the property of the kingdom would be
|
|
placed at the arbitrary disposal of the king, through the judgments of
|
|
juries in civil suits, if the laws of the king were imperative upon a
|
|
jury in such suits.[69]
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, it would be absurd and inconsistent to make a jury
|
|
paramount to legislation in _criminal_ suits, and subordinate to it in
|
|
_civil_ suits; because an individual, by resisting the execution of a
|
|
_civil_ judgment, founded upon an unjust law, could give rise to a
|
|
_criminal_ suit, in which the jury would be bound to hold the same law
|
|
invalid. So that, if an unjust law were binding upon a jury in _civil_
|
|
suits, a defendant, by resisting the execution of the judgment, could,
|
|
_in effect_, convert the civil action into a criminal one, in which the
|
|
jury would be paramount to the same legislation, to which, in the
|
|
_civil_ suit, they were subordinate. In other words, in the _criminal_
|
|
suit, the jury would be obliged to justify the defendant in resisting a
|
|
law, which, in the _civil_ suit, they had said he was bound to submit
|
|
to.
|
|
|
|
To make this point plain to the most common mind--suppose a law be
|
|
enacted that the property of A shall be given to B. B brings a civil
|
|
action to obtain possession of it. If the jury, in this _civil_ suit,
|
|
are bound to hold the law obligatory, they render a judgment in favor of
|
|
B, that he be put in possession of the property; _thereby declaring that
|
|
A is bound to submit to a law depriving him of his property_. But when
|
|
the execution of that judgment comes to be attempted--that is, when the
|
|
sheriff comes to take the property for the purpose of delivering it to
|
|
B--A acting, as he has a _natural_ right to do, in defence of his
|
|
property, resists and kills the sheriff. He is thereupon indicted for
|
|
murder. On this trial his plea is, that in killing the sheriff, he was
|
|
simply exercising his _natural_ right of defending his property against
|
|
an unjust law. The jury, not being bound, in a _criminal_ case, by the
|
|
authority of an unjust law, judge the act on its merits, and acquit the
|
|
defendant--thus declaring that he was _not_ bound to submit to the same
|
|
law which the jury, in the _civil_ suit, had, by their judgment,
|
|
declared that he _was_ bound to submit to. Here is a contradiction
|
|
between the two judgments. In the _civil_ suit, the law is declared to
|
|
be obligatory upon A; in the _criminal_ suit, the same law is declared
|
|
to be of no obligation.
|
|
|
|
It would be a solecism and absurdity in government to allow such
|
|
consequences as these. Besides, it would be practically impossible to
|
|
maintain government on such principles; for no government could enforce
|
|
its _civil_ judgments, unless it could support them by _criminal_ ones,
|
|
in case of resistance. A jury must therefore be paramount to legislation
|
|
in both civil and criminal cases, or in neither. If they are paramount
|
|
in neither, they are no protection to liberty. If they are paramount in
|
|
both, then all legislation goes only for what it may chance to be worth
|
|
in the estimation of a jury.
|
|
|
|
Another reason why Magna Carta makes the discretion and consciences of
|
|
juries paramount to all legislation in _civil_ suits, is, that if
|
|
legislation were binding upon a jury, the jurors--(by reason of their
|
|
being unable to read, as jurors in those days were, and also by reason
|
|
of many of the statutes being unwritten, or at least not so many copies
|
|
written as that juries could be supplied with them)--would have been
|
|
necessitated--at least in those courts in which the king's justices
|
|
sat--to take the word of those justices as to what the laws of the king
|
|
really were. In other words, they would have been necessitated _to take
|
|
the law from the court_, as jurors do now.
|
|
|
|
Now there were two reasons why, as we may rationally suppose, the people
|
|
did not wish juries to take their law from the king's judges. One was,
|
|
that, at that day, the people probably had sense enough to see, (what
|
|
we, at this day, have not sense enough to see, although we have the
|
|
evidence of it every day before our eyes,) that those judges, being
|
|
dependent upon the legislative power, (the king,) being appointed by it,
|
|
paid by it, and removable by it at pleasure, would be mere tools of that
|
|
power, and would hold all its legislation obligatory, whether it were
|
|
just or unjust. This was one reason, doubtless, why Magna Carta made
|
|
juries, in civil suits, paramount to all instructions of the king's
|
|
judges. The reason was precisely the same as that for making them
|
|
paramount to all instructions of judges in criminal suits, viz., that
|
|
the people did not choose to subject their rights of property, and all
|
|
other rights involved in civil suits, to the operation of such laws as
|
|
the king might please to enact. It was seen that to allow the king's
|
|
judges to dictate the law to the jury would be equivalent to making the
|
|
legislation of the king imperative upon the jury.
|
|
|
|
Another reason why the people did not wish juries, in civil suits, to
|
|
take their law from the king's judges, doubtless was, that, knowing the
|
|
dependence of the judges upon the king, and knowing that the king would,
|
|
of course, tolerate no judges who were not subservient to his will, they
|
|
necessarily inferred that the king's judges would be as corrupt, in the
|
|
administration of justice, as was the king himself, or as he wished them
|
|
to be. And how corrupt that was, may be inferred from the following
|
|
historical facts.
|
|
|
|
Hume says:
|
|
|
|
"It appears that the ancient kings of England put themselves entirely
|
|
upon the footing of the barbarous Eastern princes, whom no man must
|
|
approach without a present, who sell all their good offices, and who
|
|
intrude themselves into every business that they may have a pretence
|
|
for extorting money. Even justice was avowedly bought and sold; the
|
|
king's court itself, though the supreme judicature of the kingdom,
|
|
was open to none that brought not presents to the king; the bribes
|
|
given for expedition, delay, suspension, and doubtless for the
|
|
perversion of justice, were entered in the public registers of the
|
|
royal revenue, and remain as monuments of the perpetual iniquity and
|
|
tyranny of the times. The barons of the exchequer, for instance, the
|
|
first nobility of the kingdom, were not ashamed to insert, as an
|
|
article in their records, that the county of Norfolk paid a sum that
|
|
they might be fairly dealt with; the borough of Yarmouth, that the
|
|
king's charters, which they have for their liberties, might not be
|
|
violated; Richard, son of Gilbert, for the king's helping him to
|
|
recover his debt from the Jews; * * Serlo, son of Terlavaston, that
|
|
he might be permitted to make his defence, in case he were accused of
|
|
a certain homicide; Walter de Burton, for free law, if accused of
|
|
wounding another; Robert de Essart, for having an inquest to find
|
|
whether Roger, the butcher, and Wace and Humphrey, accused him of
|
|
robbery and theft out of envy and ill-will, or not; William Buhurst,
|
|
for having an inquest to find whether he were accused of the death of
|
|
one Godwin, out of ill-will, or for just cause. I have selected these
|
|
few instances from a great number of the like kind, which Madox had
|
|
selected from a still greater number, preserved in the ancient rolls
|
|
of the exchequer.
|
|
|
|
Sometimes a party litigant offered the king a certain portion, a
|
|
half, a third, a fourth, payable out of the debts which he, as the
|
|
executor of justice, should assist in recovering. Theophania de
|
|
Westland agreed to pay the half of two hundred and twelve marks, that
|
|
she might recover that sum against James de Fughleston; Solomon, the
|
|
Jew, engaged to pay one mark out of every seven that he should
|
|
recover against Hugh de la Hose; Nicholas Morrel promised to pay
|
|
sixty pounds, that the Earl of Flanders might be distrained to pay
|
|
him three hundred and forty-three pounds, which the earl had taken
|
|
from him; and these sixty pounds were to be paid out of the first
|
|
money that Nicholas should recover from the earl."--_Hume, Appendix
|
|
2._
|
|
|
|
"In the reign of Henry II., the best and most just of these (the
|
|
Norman) princes, * * Peter, of Blois, a judicious and even elegant
|
|
writer, of that age, gives a pathetic description of the _venality of
|
|
justice_, and the oppressions of the poor, * * and he scruples not to
|
|
complain to the king himself of these abuses. We may judge what the
|
|
case would be under the government of worse princes."--_Hume,
|
|
Appendix 2._
|
|
|
|
Carte says:
|
|
|
|
"The crown exercised in those days an exorbitant and inconvenient
|
|
power, ordering the justices of the king's court, in suits about
|
|
lands, to turn out, put, and keep in possession, which of the
|
|
litigants they pleased; to send contradictory orders; and take large
|
|
sums of money from each; to respite proceedings; to direct sentences;
|
|
and the judges, acting by their commission, conceived themselves
|
|
bound to observe such orders, to the great delay, interruption, and
|
|
preventing of justice; at least, this was John's practice."--_Carte's
|
|
History of England_, vol. 1, p. 832.
|
|
|
|
Hallam says:
|
|
|
|
"But of all the abuses that deformed the Anglo-Saxon government, none
|
|
was so flagitious as the sale of judicial redress. The king, we are
|
|
often told, is the fountain of justice; but in those ages it was one
|
|
which gold alone could unseal. Men fined (paid fines) to have right
|
|
done them; to sue in a certain court; to implead a certain person; to
|
|
have restitution of land which they had recovered at law. From the
|
|
sale of that justice which every citizen has a right to demand, it
|
|
was an easy transition to withhold or deny it. Fines were received
|
|
for the king's help against the adverse suitor; that is, for
|
|
perversion of justice, or for delay. Sometimes they were paid by
|
|
opposite parties, and, of course, for opposite ends."--_2 Middle
|
|
Ages_, 438.
|
|
|
|
In allusion to the provision of Magna Carta on this subject, Hallam
|
|
says:
|
|
|
|
"A law which enacts that justice shall neither be sold, denied, nor
|
|
delayed, stamps with infamy that government under which it had become
|
|
necessary."--_2 Middle Ages_, 451.
|
|
|
|
Lingard, speaking of the times of Henry II., (say 1184,) says:
|
|
|
|
"It was universally understood that money possessed greater influence
|
|
than justice in the royal courts, and instances are on record, in
|
|
which one party has made the king a present to accelerate, and the
|
|
other by a more valuable offer has succeeded in retarding a decision.
|
|
* * But besides the fines paid to the sovereigns, _the judges often
|
|
exacted presents for themselves_, and loud complaints existed against
|
|
their venality and injustice."--_2 Lingard_, 231.
|
|
|
|
In the narrative of "The costs and charges which I, Richard de Anesty,
|
|
bestowed in recovering the land of William, my uncle," (some fifty years
|
|
before Magna Carta,) are the following items:
|
|
|
|
"To Ralph, the king's physician, I gave thirty-six marks and one
|
|
half; to the king an hundred marks; and to the queen one mark of
|
|
gold." The result is thus stated. "At last, thanks to our lord the
|
|
king, and by judgment of his court, my uncle's land was adjudged to
|
|
me."--_2 Palgrave's Rise and Progress of the English Commonwealth_,
|
|
p. 9 and 24.
|
|
|
|
Palgrave also says:
|
|
|
|
"The precious ore was cast into the scales of justice, even when held
|
|
by the most conscientious of our Anglo-Saxon kings. A single case
|
|
will exemplify the practices which prevailed. Alfric, the heir of
|
|
'Aylwin, the black,' seeks to set aside the death-bed bequest, by
|
|
which his kinsman bestowed four rich and fertile manors upon St.
|
|
Benedict. Alfric, the claimant, was supported by extensive and
|
|
powerful connexions; and Abbot Alfwine, the defendant, was well aware
|
|
that there would be _danger_ in the discussion of the dispute in
|
|
public, or before the Folkmoot, (people's meeting, or county court);
|
|
or, in other words, that the Thanes of the shire would do their best
|
|
to give a judgment in favor of their compeer. The plea being removed
|
|
into the Royal Court, the abbot acted with that prudence which so
|
|
often calls forth the praises of the monastic scribe. He gladly
|
|
emptied twenty marks of gold into the sleeve of the Confessor,
|
|
(Edward,) and five marks of gold presented to Edith, the Fair,
|
|
encouraged her to aid the bishop, and to exercise her gentle
|
|
influence in his favor. Alfric, with equal wisdom, withdrew from
|
|
prosecuting the hopeless cause, in which his opponent might possess
|
|
an advocate in the royal judge, and a friend in the king's consort.
|
|
Both parties, therefore, found it desirable to come to an
|
|
agreement."--_1 Palgrave's Rise and Progress, &c._, p. 650.
|
|
|
|
But Magna Carta has another provision for the trial of _civil_ suits,
|
|
that obviously had its origin in the corruption of the king's judges.
|
|
The provision is, that four knights, to be chosen in every county, by
|
|
the people of the county, shall sit with the king's judges, in the
|
|
Common Pleas, in jury trials, (assizes,) on the trial of three certain
|
|
kinds of suits, that were among the most important that were tried at
|
|
all. The reason for this provision undoubtedly was, that the corruption
|
|
and subserviency of the king's judges were so well known, that the
|
|
people would not even trust them to sit alone in a jury trial of any
|
|
considerable importance. The provision is this:
|
|
|
|
_Chap. 22_, (of John's Charter.) "Common Pleas shall not follow our
|
|
court, but shall be holden in some certain place. Trials upon the
|
|
writ of _novel disseisin_, and of _Mort d'Ancester_, and of _Darrein
|
|
Presentment_, shall be taken but in their proper counties, and after
|
|
this manner: We, or, if we should be out of our realm, our chief
|
|
justiciary, shall send two justiciaries through every county four
|
|
times a year;[70] _who, with four knights chosen out of every shire,
|
|
by the people, shall hold the assizes_ (juries) _in the county, on
|
|
the day and at the place appointed_."
|
|
|
|
It would be very unreasonable to suppose that the king's judges were
|
|
allowed to _dictate_ the law to the juries, when the people would not
|
|
even suffer them to sit alone in jury trials, but themselves chose four
|
|
men to sit with them, to keep them honest.[71]
|
|
|
|
This practice of sending the king's judges into the counties to preside
|
|
at jury trials, was introduced by the Norman kings. Under the Saxons it
|
|
was not so. _No officer of the king was allowed to preside at a jury
|
|
trial; but only magistrates chosen by the people._[72]
|
|
|
|
But the following chapter of John's charter, which immediately succeeds
|
|
the one just quoted, and refers to the same suits, affords very strong,
|
|
not to say conclusive, proof, that juries judged of the law in civil
|
|
suits--that is, _made the law_, so far as their deciding according to
|
|
their own notions of justice could make the law.
|
|
|
|
_Chap. 23._ "And if, on the county day, the aforesaid assizes cannot
|
|
be taken, _so many knights and freeholders shall remain, of those who
|
|
shall have been present on said day, as that the judgments may be
|
|
rendered by them_, whether the business be more or less."
|
|
|
|
The meaning of this chapter is, that so many of the _civil_ suits, as
|
|
could not be tried on the day when the king's justices were present,
|
|
should be tried afterwards, _by the four knights before mentioned, and
|
|
the freeholders, that is, the jury_. It must be admitted, of course,
|
|
that the juries, in these cases, judged the matters of law, as well as
|
|
fact, unless it be presumed that the _knights_ dictated the law to the
|
|
jury--a thing of which there is no evidence at all.
|
|
|
|
As a final proof on this point, there is a statute enacted seventy years
|
|
after Magna Carta, which, although it is contrary to the common law, and
|
|
therefore void, is nevertheless good evidence, inasmuch as it contains
|
|
an acknowledgment, on the part of the king himself, that juries had a
|
|
right to judge of the whole matter, law and fact, in civil suits. The
|
|
provision is this:
|
|
|
|
"It is ordained, that the justices assigned to take the assizes,
|
|
shall not compel the jurors to say precisely whether it be disseisin,
|
|
or not, so that they do show the truth of the deed, and seek aid of
|
|
the justices. But if they will, of their own accord, say that it is
|
|
disseisin, or not, their verdict shall be admitted at their own
|
|
peril."--_13 Edward I._, st. 1, ch. 3, sec. 2. (1285.)
|
|
|
|
The question of "disseisin, or not," was a question of law, as well as
|
|
fact. This statute, therefore, admits that the law, as well as the fact,
|
|
was in the hands of the jury. The statute is nevertheless void, because
|
|
the king had no authority to give jurors a dispensation from the
|
|
obligation imposed upon them by their oaths and the "law of the land,"
|
|
that they should "make known the truth according their (own)
|
|
consciences." This they were bound to do, and there was no power in the
|
|
king to absolve them from the duty. And the attempt of the king thus to
|
|
absolve them, and authorize them to throw the case into the hands of the
|
|
judges for decision, was simply an illegal and unconstitutional attempt
|
|
to overturn the "law of the land," which he was sworn to maintain, and
|
|
gather power into his own hands, through his judges. He had just as much
|
|
constitutional power to enact that the jurors should not be compelled to
|
|
declare the _facts_, but that they might leave _them_ to be determined
|
|
by the king's judges, as he had to enact that they should not be
|
|
compelled to declare the _law_, but might leave _it_ to be decided by
|
|
the king's judges. It was as much the legal duty of the jury to decide
|
|
the law as to decide the fact; and no law of the king could affect their
|
|
obligation to do either. And this statute is only one example of the
|
|
numberless contrivances and usurpations which have been resorted to, for
|
|
the purpose of destroying the original and genuine trial by jury.
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 68: _Marches_, the limits, or boundaries, between England and
|
|
Wales.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 69: That the kings would have had no scruples to enact laws
|
|
for the special purpose of plundering the people, by means of the
|
|
judgments of juries, if they could have got juries to acknowledge the
|
|
authority of their laws, is evident from the audacity with which they
|
|
plundered them, without any judgments of juries to authorize them.
|
|
|
|
It is not necessary to occupy space here to give details as to these
|
|
robberies; but only some evidence of the general fact.
|
|
|
|
Hallam says, that "For the first three reigns (of the Norman kings) *
|
|
* the intolerable exactions of tribute, the rapine of purveyance, the
|
|
iniquity of royal courts, are continually in the mouths of the
|
|
historians. 'God sees the wretched people,' says the Saxon
|
|
Chronicler, 'most unjustly oppressed; first they are despoiled of
|
|
their possessions, and then butchered.' This was a grievous year
|
|
(1124). Whoever had any property, lost it by heavy taxes and unjust
|
|
decrees."--_2 Middle Ages_, 435-6.
|
|
|
|
"In the succeeding reign of _John_, all the rapacious exactions usual
|
|
to these Norman kings were not only redoubled, but mingled with
|
|
outrages of tyranny still more intolerable. * *
|
|
|
|
"In 1207 John took a seventh of the movables of lay and spiritual
|
|
persons, all murmuring, but none daring to speak against
|
|
it."--_Ditto_, 446.
|
|
|
|
In Hume's account of the extortions of those times, the following
|
|
paragraph occurs:
|
|
|
|
"But the most barefaced acts of tyranny and oppression were practised
|
|
against the Jews, who were entirely out of the protection of the law,
|
|
and were abandoned to the immeasurable rapacity of the king and his
|
|
ministers. Besides many other indignities, to which they were
|
|
continually exposed, it appears that they were once all thrown into
|
|
prison, and the sum of 66,000 marks exacted for their liberty. At
|
|
another time, Isaac, the Jew, paid alone 5100 marks; Brun, 3000
|
|
marks; Jurnet, 2000; Bennet, 500. At another, Licorica, widow of
|
|
David, the Jew of Oxford, was required to pay 6000 marks."--_Hume's
|
|
Hist. Eng., Appendix_ 2.
|
|
|
|
Further accounts of the extortions and oppressions of the kings may be
|
|
found in Hume's History, Appendix 2, and in Hallam's Middle Ages, vol.
|
|
2, p. 435 to 446.
|
|
|
|
By Magna Carta John bound himself to make restitution for some of the
|
|
spoliations he had committed upon individuals "_without the legal
|
|
judgment of their peers_."--_See Magna Carta of John_, ch. 60, 61, 65
|
|
and 66.
|
|
|
|
One of the great charges, on account of which the nation rose against
|
|
John, was, that he plundered individuals of their property, "_without
|
|
legal judgment of their peers_." Now it was evidently very weak and
|
|
short-sighted in John to expose himself to such charges, _if his laws
|
|
were really obligatory upon the peers_; because, in that case, he could
|
|
have enacted any laws that were necessary for his purpose, and then, by
|
|
civil suits, have brought the cases before juries for their "judgment,"
|
|
and thus have accomplished all his robberies in a perfectly legal
|
|
manner.
|
|
|
|
There would evidently have been no sense in these complaints, that he
|
|
deprived men of their property "_without legal judgment of their
|
|
peers_," if his laws had been binding upon the peers; because he could
|
|
then have made the same spoliations as well with the judgment of the
|
|
peers as without it. Taking the judgment of the peers in the matter,
|
|
would have been only a ridiculous and useless formality, if they were to
|
|
exercise no discretion or conscience of their own, independently of the
|
|
laws of the king.
|
|
|
|
It may here be mentioned, in passing, that the same would be true in
|
|
criminal matters, if the king's laws were obligatory upon juries.
|
|
|
|
As an illustration of what tyranny the kings would sometimes practise,
|
|
Hume says:
|
|
|
|
"It appears from the Great Charter itself, that not only John, a
|
|
tyrannical prince, and Richard, a violent one, but their father
|
|
Henry, under whose reign the prevalence of gross abuses is the least
|
|
to be suspected, were accustomed, from their sole authority, without
|
|
process of law, to imprison, banish, and attaint the freemen of their
|
|
kingdom."--_Hume, Appendix_ 2.
|
|
|
|
The provision, also, in the 64th chapter of Magna Carta, that "all
|
|
unjust and illegal fines, and all amercements, _imposed unjustly, and
|
|
contrary to the Law of the Land, shall be entirely forgiven_," &c.; and
|
|
the provision, in chapter 61, that the king "will cause full justice to
|
|
be administered" in regard to "all those things, of which any person
|
|
has, without legal judgment of his peers, been dispossessed or deprived,
|
|
either by King Henry, our father, or our brother, King Richard,"
|
|
indicate the tyrannical practices that prevailed.
|
|
|
|
We are told also that John himself "had dispossessed several great
|
|
men without any judgment of their peers, condemned others to cruel
|
|
deaths, * * insomuch that his tyrannical will stood instead of a
|
|
law."--_Echard's History of England_, 106.
|
|
|
|
Now all these things were very unnecessary and foolish, if his laws were
|
|
binding upon juries; because, in that case, he could have procured the
|
|
conviction of these men in a legal manner, and thus have saved the
|
|
necessity of such usurpation. In short, if the laws of the king had been
|
|
binding upon juries, there is no robbery, vengeance, or oppression,
|
|
which he could not have accomplished through the judgments of juries.
|
|
This consideration is sufficient, of itself, to prove that the laws of
|
|
the king were of no authority over a jury, in either civil or criminal
|
|
cases, unless the juries regarded the laws as just in themselves.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 70: By the Magna Carta of Henry III. this is changed to once a
|
|
year.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 71: From the provision of Magna Carta, cited in the text, it
|
|
must be inferred that there can be no legal trial by jury, in civil
|
|
cases, if only the king's justices preside; that, to make the trial
|
|
legal, there must be other persons, chosen by the people, to sit with
|
|
them; the object being to prevent the jury's being deceived by the
|
|
justices. I think we must also infer that the king's justices could sit
|
|
only in the three actions specially mentioned. We cannot go beyond the
|
|
letter of Magna Carta, in making innovations upon the common law, which
|
|
required all presiding officers in jury trials to be elected by the
|
|
people.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 72: "The earls, sheriffs, and head-boroughs were annually
|
|
elected in the full folcmote, (people's meeting)."--_Introduction to
|
|
Gilbert's History of the Common Pleas_, p. 2, _note_.
|
|
|
|
"It was the especial province of the earldomen or earl to attend the
|
|
shyre-meeting, (the county court,) twice a year, and there officiate as
|
|
the county judge in expounding the secular laws, as appears by the fifth
|
|
of Edgar's laws."--_Same_, p. 2, _note_.
|
|
|
|
"Every ward had its proper alderman, who was _chosen_, and not imposed
|
|
by the prince."--_Same_, p. 4, _text_.
|
|
|
|
"As the aldermen, or earls, were always _chosen_" (by the people) "from
|
|
among the greatest thanes, who in those times were generally more
|
|
addicted to arms than to letters, they were but ill-qualified for the
|
|
administration of justice, and performing the civil duties of their
|
|
office."--_3 Henry's History of Great Britain_, 343.
|
|
|
|
"But none of these thanes were annually elected in the full folcmote,
|
|
(people's meeting,) _as the earls, sheriffs, and head-boroughs were_;
|
|
nor did King Alfred (as this author suggests) deprive the people of the
|
|
election of those last mentioned magistrates and nobles, much less did
|
|
he appoint them himself."--_Introd. to Gilbert's Hist. Com. Pleas_, p.
|
|
2, _note_.
|
|
|
|
"The sheriff was usually not appointed by the lord, but elected by the
|
|
freeholders of the district."--_Political Dictionary_, word _Sheriff_.
|
|
|
|
"Among the most remarkable of the Saxon laws we may reckon * * the
|
|
election of their magistrates by the people, originally even that of
|
|
their kings, till dear-bought experience evinced the convenience and
|
|
necessity of establishing an hereditary succession to the crown. But
|
|
that (the election) of all subordinate magistrates, their military
|
|
officers or heretochs, their sheriffs, their conservators of the peace,
|
|
their coroners, their portreeves, (since changed into mayors and
|
|
bailiffs,) and even their tithing-men and borsholders at the last,
|
|
continued, some, till the Norman conquest, others for two centuries
|
|
after, and some remain to this day."--_4 Blackstone_, 413.
|
|
|
|
"The election of sheriffs was left to the people, _according to ancient
|
|
usage_."--_St. West._ 1, c. 27.--_Crabbe's History of English Law_,
|
|
181.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER V.
|
|
|
|
OBJECTIONS ANSWERED
|
|
|
|
|
|
The following objections will be made to the doctrines and the evidence
|
|
presented in the preceding chapters.
|
|
|
|
1. That it is a _maxim_ of the law, that the judges respond to the
|
|
question of law, and juries only to the question of fact.
|
|
|
|
The answer to this objection is, that, since Magna Carta, judges have
|
|
had more than six centuries in which to invent and promulgate pretended
|
|
maxims to suit themselves; and this is one of them. Instead of
|
|
expressing the law, it expresses nothing but the ambitious and lawless
|
|
will of the judges themselves, and of those whose instruments they
|
|
are.[73]
|
|
|
|
2. It will be asked, Of what use are the justices, if the jurors judge
|
|
both of law and fact?
|
|
|
|
The answer is, that they are of use, 1. To assist and enlighten the
|
|
jurors, if they can, by their advice and information; such advice and
|
|
information to be received only for what they may chance to be worth in
|
|
the estimation of the jurors. 2. To do anything that may be necessary in
|
|
regard to granting appeals and new trials.
|
|
|
|
3. It is said that it would be absurd that twelve ignorant men should
|
|
have power to judge of the law, while justices learned in the law should
|
|
be compelled to sit by and see the law decided erroneously.
|
|
|
|
One answer to this objection is, that the powers of juries are not
|
|
granted to them on the supposition that they know the law better than
|
|
the justices; but on the ground that the justices are untrustworthy,
|
|
that they are exposed to bribes, are themselves fond of power and
|
|
authority, and are also the dependent and subservient creatures of the
|
|
legislature; and that to allow them to dictate the law, would not only
|
|
expose the rights of parties to be sold for money, but would be
|
|
equivalent to surrendering all the property, liberty, and rights of the
|
|
people, unreservedly into the hands of arbitrary power, (the
|
|
legislature,) to be disposed of at its pleasure. The powers of juries,
|
|
therefore, not only place a curb upon the powers of legislators and
|
|
judges, but imply also an imputation upon their integrity and
|
|
trustworthiness; and _these_ are the reasons why legislators and judges
|
|
have formerly entertained the intensest hatred of juries, and, so fast
|
|
as they could do it without alarming the people for their liberties,
|
|
have, by indirection, denied, undermined, and practically destroyed
|
|
their power. And it is only since all the real power of juries has been
|
|
destroyed, and they have become mere tools in the hands of legislators
|
|
and judges, that they have become favorites with them.
|
|
|
|
Legislators and judges are necessarily exposed to all the temptations of
|
|
money, fame, and power, to induce them to disregard justice between
|
|
parties, and sell the rights, and violate the liberties of the people.
|
|
Jurors, on the other hand, are exposed to none of these temptations.
|
|
They are not liable to bribery, for they are unknown to the parties
|
|
until they come into the jury-box. They can rarely gain either fame,
|
|
power, or money, by giving erroneous decisions. Their offices are
|
|
temporary, and they know that when they shall have executed them, they
|
|
must return to the people, to hold all their own rights in life subject
|
|
to the liability of such judgments, by their successors, as they
|
|
themselves have given an example for. The laws of human nature do not
|
|
permit the supposition that twelve men, taken by lot from the mass of
|
|
the people, and acting under such circumstances, will _all_ prove
|
|
dishonest. It is a supposable case that they may not be sufficiently
|
|
enlightened to know and do their whole duty, in all cases whatsoever;
|
|
but that they should _all_ prove _dishonest_, is not within the range
|
|
of probability. A jury, therefore, insures to us--what no other court
|
|
does--that first and indispensable requisite in a judicial tribunal,
|
|
integrity.
|
|
|
|
4. It is alleged that if juries are allowed to judge of the law, _they
|
|
decide the law absolutely; that their decision must necessarily stand,
|
|
be it right or wrong_; and that this power of absolute decision would be
|
|
dangerous in their hands, by reason of their ignorance of the law.
|
|
|
|
One answer is, that this power, which juries have of _judging_ of the
|
|
law, is not a power of _absolute decision in all cases_. For example, it
|
|
is a power to declare imperatively that a man's property, liberty, or
|
|
life, shall _not_ be taken from him; but it is not a power to declare
|
|
imperatively that they _shall_ be taken from him.
|
|
|
|
Magna Carta does not provide that the judgments of the peers _shall be
|
|
executed_; but only that _no other than their judgments_ shall ever be
|
|
executed, _so far as to take a party's goods, rights, or person,
|
|
thereon_.
|
|
|
|
A judgment of the peers may be reviewed, and invalidated, and a new
|
|
trial granted. So that practically a jury has no absolute power to take
|
|
a party's goods, rights, or person. They have only an absolute veto upon
|
|
their being taken by the government. The government is not bound to do
|
|
everything that a jury may adjudge. It is only prohibited from doing
|
|
anything--(that is, from taking a party's goods, rights, or
|
|
person)--unless a jury have first adjudged it to be done.
|
|
|
|
But it will, perhaps, be said, that if an erroneous judgment of one jury
|
|
should be reaffirmed by another, on a new trial, it must _then_ be
|
|
executed. But Magna Carta does not command even this--although it might,
|
|
perhaps, have been reasonably safe for it to have done so--for if two
|
|
juries unanimously affirm the same thing, after all the light and aid
|
|
that judges and lawyers can afford them, that fact probably furnishes as
|
|
strong a presumption in favor of the correctness of their opinion, as
|
|
can ordinarily be obtained in favor of a judgment, by any measures of a
|
|
practical character for the administration of justice. Still, there is
|
|
nothing in Magna Carta that _compels_ the execution of even a second
|
|
judgment of a jury. The only injunction of Magna Carta upon the
|
|
government, as to what it _shall do_, on this point, is that it shall
|
|
"do justice and right," without sale, denial, or delay. But this leaves
|
|
the government all power of determining what is justice and right,
|
|
except that it shall not consider anything as justice and right--so far
|
|
as to carry it into execution against the goods, rights, or person of a
|
|
party--unless it be something which a jury have sanctioned.
|
|
|
|
If the government had no alternative but to execute all judgments of a
|
|
jury indiscriminately, the power of juries would unquestionably be
|
|
dangerous; for there is no doubt that they may sometimes give hasty and
|
|
erroneous judgments. But when it is considered that their judgments can
|
|
be reviewed, and new trials granted, this danger is, for all practical
|
|
purposes, obviated.
|
|
|
|
If it be said that juries may _successively_ give erroneous judgments,
|
|
and that new trials cannot be granted indefinitely, the answer is, that
|
|
so far as Magna Carta is concerned, there is nothing to prevent the
|
|
granting of new trials indefinitely, if the judgments of juries are
|
|
contrary to "justice and right." So that Magna Carta does not _require_
|
|
any judgment whatever to be executed--so far as to take a party's goods,
|
|
rights, or person, thereon--unless it be concurred in by both court and
|
|
jury.
|
|
|
|
Nevertheless, we may, for the sake of the argument, suppose the
|
|
existence of a _practical_, if not _legal_, necessity, for executing
|
|
_some_ judgment or other, in cases where juries persist in disagreeing
|
|
with the courts. In such cases, the principle of Magna Carta
|
|
unquestionably is, that the uniform judgments of _successive_ juries
|
|
shall prevail over the opinion of the court. And the reason of this
|
|
principle is obvious, viz., that it is the will of the country, and not
|
|
the will of the court, or the government, that must determine what laws
|
|
shall be established and enforced; that the concurrent judgments of
|
|
successive juries, given in opposition to all the reasoning which judges
|
|
and lawyers can offer to the contrary, must necessarily be presumed to
|
|
be a truer exposition of the will of the country, than are the opinions
|
|
of the judges.
|
|
|
|
But it may be said that, unless jurors submit to the control of the
|
|
court, in matters of law, they may disagree among themselves, and
|
|
_never_ come to any judgment; and thus justice fail to be done.
|
|
|
|
Such a case is perhaps possible; but, if possible, it can occur but
|
|
rarely; because, although one jury may disagree, a succession of juries
|
|
are not likely to disagree--that is, _on matters of natural law, or
|
|
abstract justice_.[74] If such a thing should occur, it would almost
|
|
certainly be owing to the attempt of the court to mislead them. It is
|
|
hardly possible that any other cause should be adequate to produce such
|
|
an effect; because justice comes very near to being a self-evident
|
|
principle. The mind perceives it almost intuitively. If, in addition to
|
|
this, the court be uniformly on the side of justice, it is not a
|
|
reasonable supposition that a succession of juries should disagree about
|
|
it. If, therefore, a succession of juries do disagree on the law of any
|
|
case, the presumption is, not that justice fails of being done, but that
|
|
injustice is prevented--_that_ injustice, which would be done, if the
|
|
opinion of the court were suffered to control the jury.
|
|
|
|
For the sake of the argument, however, it may be admitted to be possible
|
|
that justice should sometimes fail of being done through the
|
|
disagreements of jurors, notwithstanding all the light which judges and
|
|
lawyers can throw upon the question in issue. If it be asked what
|
|
provision the trial by jury makes for such cases, the answer is, _it
|
|
makes none; and justice must fail of being done, from the want of its
|
|
being made sufficiently intelligible_.
|
|
|
|
Under the trial by jury, justice can never be done--that is, by a
|
|
judgment that shall take a party's goods, rights, or person--until that
|
|
justice can be made intelligible or perceptible to the minds of _all_
|
|
the jurors; or, at least, until it obtain the voluntary assent of
|
|
all--an assent, which ought not to be given until the justice itself
|
|
shall have become perceptible to all.
|
|
|
|
The principles of the trial by jury, then, are these:
|
|
|
|
1. That, in criminal cases, the accused is presumed innocent.
|
|
|
|
2. That, in civil cases, possession is presumptive proof of property;
|
|
or, in other words, every man is presumed to be the rightful proprietor
|
|
of whatever he has in his possession.
|
|
|
|
3. That these presumptions shall be overcome, in a court of justice,
|
|
only by evidence, the sufficiency of which, and by law, the justice of
|
|
which, are satisfactory to the understanding and consciences of _all_
|
|
the jurors.
|
|
|
|
These are the bases on which the trial by jury places the property,
|
|
liberty, and rights of every individual.
|
|
|
|
But some one will say, if these are the principles of the trial by jury,
|
|
then it is plain that justice must often fail to be done. Admitting, for
|
|
the sake of the argument, that this may be true, the compensation for it
|
|
is, that positive _injustice_ will also often fail to be done; whereas
|
|
otherwise it would be done frequently. The very precautions used to
|
|
prevent _injustice_ being done, may often have the effect to prevent
|
|
_justice_ being done. But are we, therefore, to take no precautions
|
|
against injustice? By no means, all will agree. The question then
|
|
arises--Does the trial by jury, _as here explained_, involve such
|
|
extreme and unnecessary precautions against injustice, as to interpose
|
|
unnecessary obstacles to the doing of justice? Men of different minds
|
|
may very likely answer this question differently, according as they have
|
|
more or less confidence in the wisdom and justice of legislators, the
|
|
integrity and independence of judges, and the intelligence of jurors.
|
|
This much, however, may be said in favor of these precautions, viz.,
|
|
that the history of the past, as well as our constant present
|
|
experience, prove how much injustice may, and certainly will, be done,
|
|
systematically and continually, _for the want of these precautions_--that
|
|
is, while the law is authoritatively made and expounded by legislators and
|
|
judges. On the other hand, we have no such evidence of how much justice
|
|
may fail to be done, _by reason of these precautions_--that is, by reason
|
|
of the law being left to the judgments and consciences of jurors. We can
|
|
determine the former point--that is, how much positive injustice is done
|
|
under the first of these two systems--because the system is in full
|
|
operation; but we cannot determine how much justice would fail to be
|
|
done under the latter system, because we have, in modern times, had no
|
|
experience of the use of the precautions themselves. In ancient times,
|
|
when these precautions were _nominally_ in force, such was the tyranny of
|
|
kings, and such the poverty, ignorance, and the inability of concert and
|
|
resistance, on the part of the people, that the system had no full or fair
|
|
operation. It, nevertheless, under all these disadvantages, impressed
|
|
itself upon the understandings, and imbedded itself in the hearts, of the
|
|
people, so as no other system of civil liberty has ever done.
|
|
|
|
But this view of the two systems compares only the injustice done, and
|
|
the justice omitted to be done, in the individual cases adjudged,
|
|
without looking beyond them. And some persons might, on first thought,
|
|
argue that, if justice failed of being done under the one system,
|
|
oftener than positive injustice were done under the other, the balance
|
|
was in favor of the latter system. But such a weighing of the two
|
|
systems against each other gives no true idea of their comparative
|
|
merits or demerits; for, possibly, in this view alone, the balance would
|
|
not be very great in favor of either. To compare, or rather to contrast,
|
|
the two, we must consider that, under the jury system, the failures to
|
|
do justice would be only rare and exceptional cases; and would be owing
|
|
either to the intrinsic difficulty of the questions, or to the fact that
|
|
the parties had transacted their business in a manner unintelligible to
|
|
the jury, and the effects would be confined to the individual or
|
|
individuals interested in the particular suits. No permanent law would
|
|
be established thereby destructive of the rights of the people in other
|
|
like cases. And the people at large would continue to enjoy all their
|
|
natural rights as before. But under the other system, whenever an unjust
|
|
law is enacted by the legislature, and the judge imposes it upon the
|
|
jury as authoritative, and they give a judgment in accordance therewith,
|
|
the authority of the law is thereby established, and the whole people
|
|
are thus brought under the yoke of that law; because they then
|
|
understand that the law will be enforced against them in future, if they
|
|
presume to exercise their rights, or refuse to comply with the
|
|
exactions of the law. In this manner all unjust laws are established,
|
|
and made operative against the rights of the people.
|
|
|
|
The difference, then, between the two systems is this: Under the one
|
|
system, a jury, at distant intervals, would (not enforce any positive
|
|
injustice, but only) fail of enforcing justice, in a dark and difficult
|
|
case, or in consequence of the parties not having transacted their
|
|
business in a manner intelligible to a jury; and the plaintiff would
|
|
thus fail of obtaining what was rightfully due him. And there the matter
|
|
would end, _for evil_, though not for good; for thenceforth parties,
|
|
warned of the danger of losing their rights, would be careful to
|
|
transact their business in a more clear and intelligible manner. Under
|
|
the other system--the system of legislative and judicial
|
|
authority--positive injustice is not only done in every suit arising
|
|
under unjust laws,--that is, men's property, liberty, or lives are not
|
|
only unjustly taken on those particular judgments,--but the rights of
|
|
the whole people are struck down by the authority of the laws thus
|
|
enforced, and a wide-sweeping tyranny at once put in operation.
|
|
|
|
But there is another ample and conclusive answer to the argument that
|
|
justice would often fail to be done, if jurors were allowed to be
|
|
governed by their own consciences, instead of the direction of the
|
|
justices, in matters of law. That answer is this:
|
|
|
|
Legitimate government can be formed only by the voluntary association of
|
|
all who contribute to its support. As a voluntary association, it can
|
|
have for its objects only those things in which the members of the
|
|
association are _all agreed_. If, therefore, there be any _justice_, in
|
|
regard to which all the parties to the government _are not agreed_, the
|
|
objects of the association do not extend to it.[75]
|
|
|
|
If any of the members wish more than this,--if they claim to have
|
|
acquired a more extended knowledge of justice than is common to all, and
|
|
wish to have their pretended discoveries carried into effect, in
|
|
reference to themselves,--they must either form a separate association
|
|
for that purpose, or be content to wait until they can make their views
|
|
intelligible to the people at large. They cannot claim or expect that
|
|
the whole people shall practise the folly of taking on trust their
|
|
pretended superior knowledge, and of committing blindly into their hands
|
|
all their own interests, liberties, and rights, to be disposed of on
|
|
principles, the justness of which the people themselves cannot
|
|
comprehend.
|
|
|
|
A government of the whole, therefore, must necessarily confine itself to
|
|
the administration of such principles of law as _all_ the people, who
|
|
contribute to the support of the government, can comprehend and see the
|
|
justice of. And it can be confined within those limits only by allowing
|
|
the jurors, who represent all the parties to the compact, to judge of
|
|
the law, and the justice of the law, in all cases whatsoever. And if any
|
|
justice be left undone, under these circumstances, it is a justice for
|
|
which the nature of the association does not provide, which the
|
|
association does not undertake to do, and which, as an association, it
|
|
is under no obligation to do.
|
|
|
|
The people at large, the unlearned and common people, have certainly an
|
|
indisputable right to associate for the establishment and maintenance of
|
|
such a government as _they themselves_ see the justice of, and feel the
|
|
need of, for the promotion of their own interests, and the safety of
|
|
their own rights, without at the same time surrendering all their
|
|
property, liberty, and rights into the hands of men, who, under the
|
|
pretence of a superior and incomprehensible knowledge of justice, may
|
|
dispose of such property, liberties, and rights, in a manner to suit
|
|
their own selfish and dishonest purposes.
|
|
|
|
If a government were to be established and supported _solely_ by that
|
|
portion of the people who lay claim to superior knowledge, there would
|
|
be some consistency in their saying that the common people should not be
|
|
received as jurors, with power to judge of the justice of the laws. But
|
|
so long as the whole people (or all the male adults) are presumed to be
|
|
voluntary parties to the government, and voluntary contributors to its
|
|
support, there is no consistency in refusing to any one of them more
|
|
than to another the right to sit as juror, with full power to decide for
|
|
himself whether any law that is proposed to be enforced in any
|
|
particular case, be within the objects of the association.
|
|
|
|
The conclusion, therefore, is, that, in a government formed by voluntary
|
|
association, or on the _theory_ of voluntary association, and voluntary
|
|
support, (as all the North American governments are,) no law can
|
|
rightfully be enforced by the association in its corporate capacity,
|
|
against the goods, rights, or person of any individual, except it be
|
|
such as _all_ the members of the association agree that it may enforce.
|
|
To enforce any other law, to the extent of taking a man's goods, rights,
|
|
or person, would be making _some_ of the parties to the association
|
|
accomplices in what they regard as acts of injustice. It would also be
|
|
making them consent to what they regard as the destruction of their own
|
|
rights. These are things which no legitimate system or theory of
|
|
government can require of any of the parties to it.
|
|
|
|
The mode adopted, by the trial by jury, for ascertaining whether all the
|
|
parties to the government do approve of a particular law, is to take
|
|
twelve men at random from the whole people, and accept their unanimous
|
|
decision as representing the opinions of the whole. Even this mode is
|
|
not theoretically accurate; for theoretical accuracy would require that
|
|
every man, who was a party to the government, should individually give
|
|
his consent to the enforcement of every law in every separate case. But
|
|
such a thing would be impossible in practice. The consent of twelve men
|
|
is therefore taken instead; with the privilege of appeal, and (in case
|
|
of error found by the appeal court) a new trial, to guard against
|
|
possible mistakes. This system, it is assumed, will ascertain the sense
|
|
of the whole people--"the country"--with sufficient accuracy for all
|
|
practical purposes, and with as much accuracy as is practicable without
|
|
too great inconvenience and expense.
|
|
|
|
5. Another objection that will perhaps be made to allowing jurors to
|
|
judge of the law, and the justice of the law, is, that the law would be
|
|
uncertain.
|
|
|
|
If, by this objection, it be meant that the law would be uncertain to
|
|
the minds of the people at large, so that they would not know what the
|
|
juries would sanction and what condemn, and would not therefore know
|
|
practically what their own rights and liberties were under the law, the
|
|
objection is thoroughly baseless and false. No system of law that was
|
|
ever devised could be so entirely intelligible and certain to the minds
|
|
of the people at large as this. Compared with it, the complicated
|
|
systems of law that are compounded of the law of nature, of
|
|
constitutional grants, of innumerable and incessantly changing
|
|
legislative enactments, and of countless and contradictory judicial
|
|
decisions, with no uniform principle of reason or justice running
|
|
through them, are among the blindest of all the mazes in which
|
|
unsophisticated minds were ever bewildered and lost. The uncertainty of
|
|
the law under these systems has become a proverb. So great is this
|
|
uncertainty, that nearly all men, learned as well as unlearned, shun the
|
|
law as their enemy, instead of resorting to it for protection. They
|
|
usually go into courts of justice, so called, only as men go into
|
|
battle--when there is no alternative left for them. And even then they
|
|
go into them as men go into dark labyrinths and caverns--with no
|
|
knowledge of their own, but trusting wholly to their guides. Yet, less
|
|
fortunate than other adventurers, they can have little confidence even
|
|
in their guides, for the reason that the guides themselves know little
|
|
of the mazes they are threading. They know the mode and place of
|
|
entrance; but what they will meet with on their way, and what will be
|
|
the time, mode, place, or condition of their exit; whether they will
|
|
emerge into a prison, or not; whether _wholly_ naked and destitute, or
|
|
not; whether with their reputations left to them, or not; and whether in
|
|
time or eternity; experienced and honest guides rarely venture to
|
|
predict. Was there ever such fatuity as that of a nation of men madly
|
|
bent on building up such labyrinths as these, for no other purpose than
|
|
that of exposing all their rights of reputation, property, liberty, and
|
|
life, to the hazards of being lost in them, instead of being content to
|
|
live in the light of the open day of their own understandings?
|
|
|
|
What honest, unsophisticated man ever found himself involved in a
|
|
lawsuit, that he did not desire, of all things, that his cause might be
|
|
judged of on principles of natural justice, as those principles were
|
|
understood by plain men like himself? He would then feel that he could
|
|
foresee the result. These plain men are the men who pay the taxes, and
|
|
support the government. Why should they not have such an administration
|
|
of justice as they desire, and can understand?
|
|
|
|
If the jurors were to judge of the law, and the justice of the law,
|
|
there would be something like certainty in the administration of
|
|
justice, and in the popular knowledge of the law, and men would govern
|
|
themselves accordingly. There would be something like certainty, because
|
|
every man has himself something like definite and clear opinions, and
|
|
also knows something of the opinions of his neighbors, on matters of
|
|
justice. And he would know that no statute, unless it were so clearly
|
|
just as to command the unanimous assent of twelve men, who should be
|
|
taken at random from the whole community, could be enforced so as to
|
|
take from him his reputation, property, liberty, or life. What greater
|
|
certainty can men require or need, as to the laws under which they are
|
|
to live? If a statute were enacted by a legislature, a man, in order to
|
|
know what was its true interpretation, whether it were constitutional,
|
|
and whether it would be enforced, would not be under the necessity of
|
|
waiting for years until some suit had arisen and been carried through
|
|
all the stages of judicial proceeding, to a final decision. He would
|
|
need only to use his own reason as to its meaning and its justice, and
|
|
then talk with his neighbors on the same points. Unless he found them
|
|
nearly unanimous in their interpretation and approbation of it, he would
|
|
conclude that juries would not unite in enforcing it, and that it would
|
|
consequently be a dead letter. And he would be safe in coming to this
|
|
conclusion.
|
|
|
|
There would be something like certainty in the administration of
|
|
justice, and in the popular knowledge of the law, for the further reason
|
|
that there would be little legislation, and men's rights would be left
|
|
to stand almost solely upon the law of nature, or what was once called
|
|
in England "the _common law_," (before so much legislation and
|
|
usurpation had become incorporated into the common law,)--in other
|
|
words, upon the principles of natural justice.
|
|
|
|
Of the certainty of this law of nature, or the ancient English common
|
|
law, I may be excused for repeating here what I have said on another
|
|
occasion.
|
|
|
|
"Natural law, so far from being uncertain, when compared with
|
|
statutory and constitutional law, is the only thing that gives any
|
|
certainty at all to a very large portion of our statutory and
|
|
constitutional law. The reason is this. The words in which statutes
|
|
and constitutions are written are susceptible of so many different
|
|
meanings,--meanings widely different from, often directly opposite
|
|
to, each other, in their bearing upon men's rights,--that, unless
|
|
there were some rule of interpretation for determining which of these
|
|
various and opposite meanings are the true ones, there could be no
|
|
certainty at all as to the meaning of the statutes and constitutions
|
|
themselves. Judges could make almost anything they should please out
|
|
of them. Hence the necessity of a rule of interpretation. _And this
|
|
rule is, that the language of statutes and constitutions shall be
|
|
construed, as nearly as possible, consistently with natural law._
|
|
|
|
The rule assumes, what is true, that natural law is a thing certain
|
|
in itself; also that it is capable of being learned. It assumes,
|
|
furthermore, that it actually is understood by the legislators and
|
|
judges who make and interpret the written law. Of necessity,
|
|
therefore, it assumes further, that they (the legislators and judges)
|
|
are _incompetent_ to make and interpret the _written_ law, unless
|
|
they previously understand the natural law applicable to the same
|
|
subject. It also assumes that the _people_ must understand the
|
|
natural law, before they can understand the written law.
|
|
|
|
It is a principle perfectly familiar to lawyers, and one that must be
|
|
perfectly obvious to every other man that will reflect a moment,
|
|
that, as a general rule, _no one can know what the written law is,
|
|
until he knows what it ought to be_; that men are liable to be
|
|
constantly misled by the various and conflicting senses of the same
|
|
words, unless they perceive the true legal sense in which the words
|
|
_ought to be taken_. And this true legal sense is the sense that is
|
|
most nearly consistent with natural law of any that the words can be
|
|
made to bear, consistently with the laws of language, and
|
|
appropriately to the subjects to which they are applied.
|
|
|
|
Though the words _contain_ the law, the _words_ themselves are not
|
|
the law. Were the words themselves the law, each single written law
|
|
would be liable to embrace many different laws, to wit, as many
|
|
different laws as there were different senses, and different
|
|
combinations of senses, in which each and all the words were capable
|
|
of being taken.
|
|
|
|
Take, for example, the Constitution of the United States. By adopting
|
|
one or another sense of the single word "_free_," the whole
|
|
instrument is changed. Yet the word _free_ is capable of some ten or
|
|
twenty different senses. So that, by changing the sense of that
|
|
single word, some ten or twenty different constitutions could be made
|
|
out of the same written instrument. But there are, we will suppose, a
|
|
thousand other words in the constitution, each of which is capable of
|
|
from two to ten different senses. So that, by changing the sense of
|
|
only a single word at a time, several thousands of different
|
|
constitutions would be made. But this is not all. Variations could
|
|
also be made by changing the senses of two or more words at a time,
|
|
and these variations could be run through all the changes and
|
|
combinations of senses that these thousand words are capable of. We
|
|
see, then, that it is no more than a literal truth, that out of that
|
|
single instrument, as it now stands, without altering the location of
|
|
a single word, might be formed, by construction and interpretation,
|
|
more different constitutions than figures can well estimate.
|
|
|
|
But each written law, in order to be a law, must be taken only in
|
|
some _one_ definite and distinct sense; and that definite and
|
|
distinct sense must be selected from the almost infinite variety of
|
|
senses which its words are capable of. How is this selection to be
|
|
made? It can be only by the aid of that perception of natural law, or
|
|
natural justice, which men naturally possess.
|
|
|
|
Such, then, is the comparative certainty of the natural and the
|
|
written law. Nearly all the certainty there is in the latter, so far
|
|
as it relates to principles, is based upon, and derived from, the
|
|
still greater certainty of the former. In fact, nearly all the
|
|
uncertainty of the laws under which we live,--which are a mixture of
|
|
natural and written laws,--arises from the difficulty of construing,
|
|
or, rather, from the facility of misconstruing, the _written_ law;
|
|
while natural law has nearly or quite the same certainty as
|
|
mathematics. On this point, Sir William Jones, one of the most
|
|
learned judges that have ever lived, learned in Asiatic as well as
|
|
European law, says,--and the fact should be kept forever in mind, as
|
|
one of the most important of all truths:--"_It is pleasing to remark
|
|
the similarity, or, rather, the identity of those conclusions which
|
|
pure, unbiassed reason, in all ages and nations, seldom fails to
|
|
draw, in such juridical inquiries as are not fettered and manacled by
|
|
positive institutions._"[76] In short, the simple fact that the
|
|
written law must be interpreted by the natural, is, of itself, a
|
|
sufficient confession of the superior certainty of the latter.
|
|
|
|
The written law, then, even where it can be construed consistently
|
|
with the natural, introduces labor and obscurity, instead of shutting
|
|
them out. And this must always be the case, because words do not
|
|
create ideas, but only recall them; and the same word may recall many
|
|
different ideas. For this reason, nearly all abstract principles can
|
|
be seen by the single mind more clearly than they can be expressed by
|
|
words to another. This is owing to the imperfection of language, and
|
|
the different senses, meanings, and shades of meaning, which
|
|
different individuals attach to the same words, in the same
|
|
circumstances.[77]
|
|
|
|
Where the written law cannot be construed consistently with the
|
|
natural, there is no reason why it should ever be enacted at all. It
|
|
may, indeed, be sufficiently plain and certain to be easily
|
|
understood; but its certainty and plainness are but a poor
|
|
compensation for its injustice. Doubtless a law forbidding men to
|
|
drink water, on pain of death, might be made so intelligible as to
|
|
cut off all discussion as to its meaning; but would the
|
|
intelligibleness of such a law be any equivalent for the right to
|
|
drink water? The principle is the same in regard to all unjust laws.
|
|
Few persons could reasonably feel compensated for the arbitrary
|
|
destruction of their rights, by having the order for their
|
|
destruction made known beforehand, in terms so distinct and
|
|
unequivocal as to admit of neither mistake nor evasion. Yet this is
|
|
all the compensation that such laws offer.
|
|
|
|
Whether, therefore, written laws correspond with, or differ from, the
|
|
natural, they are to be condemned. In the first case, they are
|
|
useless repetitions, introducing labor and obscurity. In the latter
|
|
case, they are positive violations of men's rights.
|
|
|
|
There would be substantially the same reason in enacting mathematics
|
|
by statute, that there is in enacting natural law. Whenever the
|
|
natural law is sufficiently certain to all men's minds to justify its
|
|
being enacted, it is sufficiently certain to need no enactment. On
|
|
the other hand, until it be thus certain, there is danger of doing
|
|
injustice by enacting it; it should, therefore, be left open to be
|
|
discussed by anybody who may be disposed to question it, and to be
|
|
judged of by the proper tribunal, the judiciary.[78]
|
|
|
|
It is not necessary that legislators should enact natural law in
|
|
order that it may be known to the _people_, because that would be
|
|
presuming that the legislators already understand it better than the
|
|
people,--a fact of which I am not aware that they have ever
|
|
heretofore given any very satisfactory evidence. The same sources of
|
|
knowledge on the subject are open to the people that are open to the
|
|
legislators, and the people must be presumed to know it as well as
|
|
they.
|
|
|
|
The objections made to natural law, on the ground of obscurity, are
|
|
wholly unfounded. It is true, it must be learned, like any other
|
|
science; but it is equally true that it is very easily learned.
|
|
Although as illimitable in its applications as the infinite relations
|
|
of men to each other, it is, nevertheless, made up of simple
|
|
elementary principles, of the truth and justice of which every
|
|
ordinary mind has an almost intuitive perception. _It is the science
|
|
of justice_,--and almost all men have the same perceptions of what
|
|
constitutes justice, or of what justice requires, when they
|
|
understand alike the facts from which their inferences are to be
|
|
drawn. Men living in contact with each other, and having intercourse
|
|
together, _cannot avoid_ learning natural law, to a very great
|
|
extent, even if they would. The dealings of men with men, their
|
|
separate possessions, and their individual wants, are continually
|
|
forcing upon their minds the questions,--Is this act just? or is it
|
|
unjust? Is this thing mine? or is it his? And these are questions of
|
|
natural law; questions, which, in regard to the great mass of cases,
|
|
are answered alike by the human mind everywhere.
|
|
|
|
Children learn many principles of natural law at a very early age.
|
|
For example: they learn that when one child has picked up an apple or
|
|
a flower, it is his, and that his associates must not take it from
|
|
him against his will. They also learn that if he voluntarily exchange
|
|
his apple or flower with a playmate, for some other article of
|
|
desire, he has thereby surrendered his right to it, and must not
|
|
reclaim it. These are fundamental principles of natural law, which
|
|
govern most of the greatest interests of individuals and society; yet
|
|
children learn them earlier than they learn that three and three are
|
|
six, or five and five, ten. Talk of enacting natural law by statute,
|
|
that it may be known! It would hardly be extravagant to say, that, in
|
|
nine cases in ten, men learn it before they have learned the language
|
|
by which we describe it. Nevertheless, numerous treatises are written
|
|
on it, as on other sciences. The decisions of courts, containing
|
|
their opinions upon the almost endless variety of cases that have
|
|
come before them, are reported; and these reports are condensed,
|
|
codified, and digested, so as to give, in a small compass, the facts,
|
|
and the opinions of the courts as to the law resulting from them. And
|
|
these treatises, codes, and digests are open to be read of all men.
|
|
And a man has the same excuse for being ignorant of arithmetic, or
|
|
any other science, that he has for being ignorant of natural law. He
|
|
can learn it as well, if he will, without its being enacted, as he
|
|
could if it were.
|
|
|
|
If our governments would but themselves adhere to natural law, there
|
|
would be little occasion to complain of the ignorance of the people
|
|
in regard to it. The popular ignorance of law is attributable mainly
|
|
to the innovations that have been made upon natural law by
|
|
legislation; whereby our system has become an incongruous mixture of
|
|
natural and statute law, with no uniform principle pervading it. To
|
|
learn such a system,--if system it can be called, and if learned it
|
|
can be,--is a matter of very similar difficulty to what it would be
|
|
to learn a system of mathematics, which should consist of the
|
|
mathematics of nature, interspersed with such other mathematics as
|
|
might be created by legislation, in violation of all the natural
|
|
principles of numbers and quantities.
|
|
|
|
But whether the difficulties of learning natural law be greater or
|
|
less than here represented, they exist in the nature of things, and
|
|
cannot be removed. Legislation, instead of removing, only increases
|
|
them. This it does by innovating upon natural truths and principles,
|
|
and introducing jargon and contradiction, in the place of order,
|
|
analogy, consistency, and uniformity.
|
|
|
|
Further than this; legislation does not even profess to remove the
|
|
obscurity of natural law. That is no part of its object. It only
|
|
professes to substitute something arbitrary in the place of natural
|
|
law. Legislators generally have the sense to see that legislation
|
|
will not make natural law any clearer than it is. Neither is it the
|
|
object of legislation to establish the authority of natural law.
|
|
Legislators have the sense to see that they can add nothing to the
|
|
authority of natural law, and that it will stand on its own
|
|
authority, unless they overturn it.
|
|
|
|
The whole object of legislation, excepting that legislation which
|
|
merely makes regulations, and provides instrumentalities for carrying
|
|
other laws into effect, is to overturn natural law, and substitute
|
|
for it the arbitrary will of power. In other words, the whole object
|
|
of it is to destroy men's rights. At least, such is its only effect;
|
|
and its designs must be inferred from its effect. Taking all the
|
|
statutes in the country, there probably is not one in a
|
|
hundred,--except the auxiliary ones just mentioned,--that does not
|
|
violate natural law; that does not invade some right or other.
|
|
|
|
Yet the advocates of arbitrary legislation are continually practising
|
|
the fraud of pretending that unless the legislature _make_ the laws,
|
|
the laws will not be known. The whole object of the fraud is to
|
|
secure to the government the authority of making laws that never
|
|
ought to be known."
|
|
|
|
In addition to the authority already cited, of Sir William Jones, as to
|
|
the certainty of natural law, and the uniformity of men's opinions in
|
|
regard to it, I may add the following:
|
|
|
|
"There is that great simplicity and plainness in the Common Law, that
|
|
Lord Coke has gone so far as to assert, (and Lord Bacon nearly
|
|
seconds him in observing,) that 'he never knew two questions arise
|
|
merely upon common law; but that they were mostly owing to statutes
|
|
ill-penned and overladen with provisos.'"--_3 Eunomus_, 157-8.
|
|
|
|
If it still be said that juries would disagree, as to what was natural
|
|
justice, and that one jury would decide one way, and another jury
|
|
another; the answer is, that such a thing is hardly credible, as that
|
|
twelve men, taken at random from the people at large, should
|
|
_unanimously_ decide a question of natural justice one way, and that
|
|
twelve other men, selected in the same manner, should _unanimously_
|
|
decide the same question the other way, _unless they were misled by the
|
|
justices_. If, however, such things should sometimes happen, from any
|
|
cause whatever, the remedy is by appeal, and new trial.
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 73: Judges do not even live up to that part of their own
|
|
maxim, which requires jurors to try the matter of fact. By dictating to
|
|
them the laws of evidence,--that is, by dictating what evidence they may
|
|
hear, and what they may not hear, and also by dictating to them rules
|
|
for weighing such evidence as they permit them to hear,--they of
|
|
necessity dictate the conclusion to which they shall arrive. And thus
|
|
the court really tries the question of fact, as well as the question of
|
|
law, in every cause. It is clearly impossible, in the nature of things,
|
|
for a jury to try a question of fact, without trying every question of
|
|
law on which the fact depends.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 74: Most disagreements of juries are on matters of fact, which
|
|
are admitted to be within their province. We have little or no evidence
|
|
of their disagreements on matters of natural justice. The disagreements
|
|
of _courts_ on matters of law, afford little or no evidence that juries
|
|
would also disagree on matters of law--that is, _of justice_; because
|
|
the disagreements of courts are generally on matters of _legislation_,
|
|
and not on those principles of abstract justice, by which juries would
|
|
be governed, and in regard to which the minds of men are nearly
|
|
unanimous.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 75: This is the principle of all voluntary associations
|
|
whatsoever. No voluntary association was ever formed, and in the nature
|
|
of things there never can be one formed, for the accomplishment of any
|
|
objects except those in which all the parties to the association are
|
|
agreed. Government, therefore, must be kept within these limits, or it
|
|
is no longer a voluntary association of all who contribute to its
|
|
support, but a mere tyranny established by a part over the rest.
|
|
|
|
All, or nearly all, voluntary associations give to a majority, or to
|
|
some other portion of the members less than the whole, the right to use
|
|
some _limited_ discretion as to the means to be used to accomplish the
|
|
ends in view; but _the ends themselves to be accomplished_ are always
|
|
precisely defined, and are such as every member necessarily agrees to,
|
|
else he would not voluntarily join the association.
|
|
|
|
Justice is the object of government, and those who support the
|
|
government, must be agreed as to the justice to be executed by it, or
|
|
they cannot rightfully unite in maintaining the government itself.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 76: Jones on Bailments, 133.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 77: Kent, describing the difficulty of construing the written
|
|
law, says:
|
|
|
|
"Such is the imperfection of language, and the want of technical skill
|
|
in the makers of the law, that statutes often give occasion to the most
|
|
perplexing and distressing doubts and discussions, arising from the
|
|
ambiguity that attends them. It requires great experience, as well as
|
|
the command of a perspicuous diction, to frame a law in such clear and
|
|
precise terms, as to secure it from ambiguous expressions, and from all
|
|
doubts and criticisms upon its meaning."--_Kent_, 460.
|
|
|
|
The following extract from a speech of Lord Brougham, in the House of
|
|
Lords, confesses the same difficulty:
|
|
|
|
"There was another subject, well worthy of the consideration of
|
|
government during the recess,--the expediency, _or rather the absolute
|
|
necessity_, of some arrangement for the preparation of bills, not merely
|
|
private, but public bills, _in order that legislation might be
|
|
consistent and systematic, and that the courts might not have so large a
|
|
portion of their time occupied in endeavoring to construe acts of
|
|
Parliament, in many cases unconstruable, and in most cases difficult to
|
|
be construed_."--_Law Reporter_, 1848, p. 525.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 78: This condemnation of written laws must, of course, be
|
|
understood as applying only to cases where principles and rights are
|
|
involved, and not as condemning any governmental arrangements, or
|
|
instrumentalities, that are consistent with natural right, and which
|
|
must be agreed upon for the purpose of carrying natural law into effect.
|
|
These things may be varied, as expediency may dictate, so only that they
|
|
be allowed to infringe no principle of justice. And they must, of
|
|
course, be written, because they do not exist as fixed principles, or
|
|
laws in nature.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VI.
|
|
|
|
JURIES OF THE PRESENT DAY ILLEGAL.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It may probably be safely asserted that there are, at this day, no legal
|
|
juries, either in England or America. And if there are no legal juries,
|
|
there is, of course, no legal trial, nor "judgment," by jury.
|
|
|
|
In saying that there are probably no legal juries, I mean that there are
|
|
probably no juries appointed in conformity with the principles of the
|
|
_common law_.
|
|
|
|
The term _jury_ is a technical one, derived from the common law; and
|
|
when the American constitutions provide for the trial by jury, they
|
|
provide for the _common law_ trial by jury; and not merely for any trial
|
|
by jury that the government itself may chance to invent, and call by
|
|
that name. It is the _thing_, and not merely the _name_, that is
|
|
guarantied. Any legislation, therefore, that infringes any _essential
|
|
principle_ of the _common law_, in the selection of jurors, is
|
|
unconstitutional; and the juries selected in accordance with such
|
|
legislation are, of course, illegal, and their judgments void.
|
|
|
|
It will also be shown, in a subsequent chapter,[79] that since Magna
|
|
Carta, the legislative power in England (whether king or parliament) has
|
|
never had any constitutional authority to infringe, by legislation, any
|
|
essential principle of the common law in the selection of jurors. All
|
|
such legislation is as much unconstitutional and void, as though it
|
|
abolished the trial by jury altogether. In reality it does abolish it.
|
|
|
|
What, then, are the _essential principles_ of the common law,
|
|
controlling the selection of jurors?
|
|
|
|
They are two.
|
|
|
|
1. That _all_ the freemen, or adult male members of the state, shall be
|
|
eligible as jurors.[80]
|
|
|
|
Any legislation which requires the selection of jurors to be made from a
|
|
less number of freemen than the whole, makes the jury selected an
|
|
illegal one.
|
|
|
|
If a part only of the freemen, or members of the state, are eligible as
|
|
jurors, the jury no longer represent "the country," but only a part of
|
|
"the country."
|
|
|
|
If the selection of jurors can be restricted to any less number of
|
|
freemen than the whole, it can be restricted to a very small proportion
|
|
of the whole; and thus the government be taken out of the hands of "the
|
|
country," or the whole people, and be thrown into the hands of a few.
|
|
|
|
That, at common law, the whole body of freemen were eligible as jurors
|
|
is sufficiently proved, not only by the reason of the thing, but by the
|
|
following evidence:
|
|
|
|
1. Everybody must be presumed eligible, until the contrary be shown. We
|
|
have no evidence, that I am aware of, of a prior date to Magna Carta, to
|
|
_disprove_ that all freemen were eligible as jurors, unless it be the
|
|
law of Ethelred, which requires that they be elderly[81] men. Since no
|
|
specific age is given, it is probable, I think, that this statute meant
|
|
nothing more than that they be more than twenty-one years old. If it
|
|
meant anything more, it was probably contrary to the common law, and
|
|
therefore void.
|
|
|
|
2. Since Magna Carta, we have evidence showing quite conclusively that
|
|
all freemen, above the age of twenty-one years, were eligible as jurors.
|
|
|
|
The _Mirror of Justices_, (written within a century after Magna Carta,)
|
|
in the section "_Of Judges_"--that is, _jurors_--says:
|
|
|
|
"All those who are not forbidden by law may be judges (jurors). To
|
|
women it is forbidden by law that they be judges; and thence it is,
|
|
that feme coverts are exempted to do suit in inferior courts. On the
|
|
other part, a villein cannot be a judge, by reason of the two
|
|
estates, which are repugnants; persons attainted of false judgments
|
|
cannot be judges, nor infants, nor any under the age of twenty-one
|
|
years, nor infected persons, nor idiots, nor madmen, nor deaf, nor
|
|
dumb, nor parties in the pleas, nor men excommunicated by the bishop,
|
|
nor criminal persons. * * And those who are not of the Christian
|
|
faith cannot be judges, nor those who are out of the king's
|
|
allegiance."--_Mirror of Justices_, 59-60.
|
|
|
|
In the section "_Of Inferior Courts_," it is said:
|
|
|
|
"From the first assemblies came consistories, which we now call
|
|
courts, and that in divers places, and in divers manners; whereof the
|
|
sheriffs held one monthly, or every five weeks, according to the
|
|
greatness or largeness of the shires. And these courts are called
|
|
county courts, _where the judgment is by the suitors_, if there be no
|
|
writ, and is by warrant of jurisdiction ordinary. The other inferior
|
|
courts are the courts of every lord of the fee, to the likeness of
|
|
the hundred courts. * * There are other inferior courts which the
|
|
bailiffs hold in every hundred, from three weeks to three weeks, _by
|
|
the suitors of the freeholders of the hundred. All the tenants within
|
|
the fees are bounden to do their suit there_, and that not for the
|
|
service of their persons, but for the service of their fees. But
|
|
women, infants within the age of twenty-one years, deaf, dumb,
|
|
idiots, those who are indicted or appealed of mortal felony, before
|
|
they be acquitted, diseased persons, and excommunicated persons are
|
|
exempted from doing suit."--_Mirror of Justices_, 50-51.
|
|
|
|
In the section "_Of the Sheriff's Turns_," it is said:
|
|
|
|
"The sheriffs by ancient ordinances hold several meetings twice in
|
|
the year in every hundred; _where all the freeholders within the
|
|
hundred_ are bound to appear for the service of their fees."--_Mirror
|
|
of Justices_, 50.
|
|
|
|
The following statute was passed by Edward I., seventy years after Magna
|
|
Carta:
|
|
|
|
"Forasmuch also as sheriffs, hundreders, and bailiffs of liberties,
|
|
have used to grieve those which be placed under them, putting in
|
|
assizes and juries men diseased and decrepit, and having continual or
|
|
sudden disease; and men also that dwelled not in the country at the
|
|
time of the summons; and summon also an unreasonable number of
|
|
jurors, for to extort money from some of them, for letting them go
|
|
in peace, and so the assizes and juries pass many times by poor men,
|
|
and the rich abide at home by reason of their bribes; it is ordained
|
|
that from henceforth in one assize no more shall be summoned than
|
|
four and twenty; and old men above three score and ten years, being
|
|
continually sick, or being diseased at the time of the summons, or
|
|
not dwelling in that country, shall not be put in juries of petit
|
|
assizes."--_St. 13 Edward I._, ch. 38. (1285.)
|
|
|
|
Although this command to the sheriffs and other officers, not to summon,
|
|
as jurors, those who, from age and disease, were physically incapable of
|
|
performing the duties, may not, of itself, afford any absolute or legal
|
|
implication, by which we can determine precisely who were, and who were
|
|
not, eligible as jurors at common law, yet the exceptions here made
|
|
nevertheless carry a seeming confession with them that, at common law,
|
|
all male adults were eligible as jurors.
|
|
|
|
But the main principle of the feudal system itself shows that _all_ the
|
|
full and free adult male members of the state--that is, all who were
|
|
free born, and had not lost their civil rights by crime, or
|
|
otherwise--_must_, at common law, have been eligible as jurors. What was
|
|
that principle? It was, that the state rested for support upon the land,
|
|
and not upon taxation levied upon the people personally. The lands of
|
|
the country were considered the property of the state, and were made to
|
|
support the state _in this way_. A portion of them was set apart to the
|
|
king, the rents of which went to pay his personal and official
|
|
expenditures, not including the maintenance of armies, or the
|
|
administration of justice. War and the administration of justice were
|
|
provided for in the following manner. The freemen, or the freeborn adult
|
|
male members of the state--who had not forfeited their political
|
|
rights--were entitled to land _of right_, (until all the land was taken
|
|
up,) on condition of their rendering certain military and civil services
|
|
to the state. The military services consisted in serving personally as
|
|
soldiers, or contributing an equivalent in horses, provisions, or other
|
|
military supplies. The civil services consisted, among other things, in
|
|
serving as jurors (and, it would appear, as witnesses) in the courts of
|
|
justice. For these services they received no compensation other than
|
|
the use of their lands. In this way the state was sustained; and the
|
|
king had no power to levy additional burdens or taxes upon the people.
|
|
The persons holding lands on these terms were called _freeholders_--in
|
|
later times _freemen_--meaning free and full members of the state.
|
|
|
|
Now, as the principle of the system was that the freeholders held their
|
|
lands of the state, on the condition of rendering these military and
|
|
civil services as _rents_ for their lands, the principle implies that
|
|
_all_ the freeholders were liable to these rents, and were therefore
|
|
eligible as jurors. Indeed, I do not know that it has ever been doubted
|
|
that, at common law, _all_ the freeholders were eligible as jurors. If
|
|
all had not been eligible, we unquestionably should have had abundant
|
|
evidence of the exceptions. And if anybody, at this day, allege any
|
|
exceptions, the burden will be on him to prove them. The presumption
|
|
clearly is that _all_ were eligible.
|
|
|
|
The first invasion, which I find made, by the English statutes, upon
|
|
this common law principle, was made in 1285, seventy years after Magna
|
|
Carta. It was then enacted as follows:
|
|
|
|
"Nor shall any be put in assizes or juries, though they ought to be
|
|
taken in their own shire, that hold a tenement of less than the value
|
|
of _twenty shillings yearly_. And if such assizes and juries be taken
|
|
out of the shire, no one shall be placed in them who holds a tenement
|
|
of less value than forty shillings yearly at the least, except such
|
|
as be witnesses in deeds or other writings, whose presence is
|
|
necessary, so that they be able to travel."--_St. 13 Edward I._, ch.
|
|
38. (1285.)
|
|
|
|
The next invasion of the common law, in this particular, was made in
|
|
1414, about two hundred years after Magna Carta, when it was enacted:
|
|
|
|
"That no person shall be admitted to pass in any inquest upon trial
|
|
of the death of a man, nor in any inquest betwixt party and party in
|
|
plea real, nor in plea personal, whereof the debt or the damage
|
|
declared amount to forty marks, if the same person have not lands or
|
|
tenements of the yearly value of _forty shillings above all charges
|
|
of the same_."--_2 Henry V._, st. 2, ch. 3. (1414.)
|
|
|
|
Other statutes on this subject of the property qualifications of jurors,
|
|
are given in the note.[82]
|
|
|
|
From these statutes it will be seen that, since 1285, seventy years
|
|
after Magna Carta, the common law right of all free British subjects to
|
|
eligibility as jurors has been abolished, and the qualifications of
|
|
jurors have been made a subject of arbitrary legislation. In other
|
|
words, the government has usurped the authority of _selecting_ the
|
|
jurors that were to sit in judgment upon its own acts. This is
|
|
destroying the vital principle of the trial by jury itself, which is
|
|
that the legislation of the government shall be subjected to the
|
|
judgment of a tribunal, taken indiscriminately from the whole people,
|
|
without any choice by the government, and over which the government can
|
|
exercise no control. If the government can select the jurors, it will,
|
|
of course, select those whom it supposes will be favorable to its
|
|
enactments. And an exclusion of _any_ of the freemen from eligibility is
|
|
a _selection_ of those not excluded.
|
|
|
|
It will be seen, from the statutes cited, that the most absolute
|
|
authority over the jury box--that is, over the right of the people to
|
|
sit in juries--has been usurped by the government; that the
|
|
qualifications of jurors have been repeatedly changed, and made to vary
|
|
from a freehold of _ten shillings yearly_, to one of "_twenty pounds by
|
|
the year at least above reprises_." They have also been made different,
|
|
in the counties of Southampton, Surrey, and Sussex, from what they were
|
|
in the other counties; different in Wales from what they were in
|
|
England; and different in the city of London, and in the county of
|
|
Middlesex, from what they were in any other part of the kingdom.
|
|
|
|
But this is not all. The government has not only assumed arbitrarily to
|
|
classify the people, on the basis of property, but it has even assumed
|
|
to give to some of its judges entire and absolute personal discretion in
|
|
the selection of the jurors to be impanelled in criminal cases, as the
|
|
following statutes show.
|
|
|
|
"Be it also ordained and enacted by the same authority, that all
|
|
panels hereafter to be returned, which be not at the suit of any
|
|
party, that shall be made and put in afore any justice of gaol
|
|
delivery or justices of peace in their open sessions _to inquire for
|
|
the king, shall hereafter be reformed by additions and taking out of
|
|
names of persons by discretion of the same justices before whom such
|
|
panel shall be returned; and the same justices shall hereafter
|
|
command the sheriff, or his ministers in his absence, to put other
|
|
persons in the same panel by their discretions; and that panel so
|
|
hereafter to be made, to be good and lawful_. This act to endure only
|
|
to the next Parliament."--_11 Henry VII._, ch. 24, sec. 6. (1495.)
|
|
|
|
This act was continued in force by 1 Henry VIII., ch. 11, (1509,) to the
|
|
end of the then next Parliament.
|
|
|
|
It was reënacted, and made perpetual, by 3 Henry VIII., ch. 12. (1511.)
|
|
|
|
_These acts gave unlimited authority to the king's justices to pack
|
|
juries at their discretion; and abolished the last vestige of the common
|
|
law right of the people to sit as jurors, and judge of their own
|
|
liberties, in the courts to which the acts applied._
|
|
|
|
Yet, as matters of law, these statutes were no more clear violations of
|
|
the common law, the fundamental and paramount "law of the land," than
|
|
were those statutes which affixed the property qualifications before
|
|
named; because, if the king, or the government, can select the jurors on
|
|
the ground of property, it can select them on any other ground
|
|
whatever.
|
|
|
|
Any infringement or restriction of the common law right of the whole
|
|
body of the freemen of the kingdom to eligibility as jurors, was legally
|
|
an abolition of the trial by jury itself. The juries no longer
|
|
represented "the country," but only a part of the country; that part,
|
|
too, on whose favor the government chose to rely for the maintenance of
|
|
its power, and which it therefore saw fit to select as being the most
|
|
reliable instruments for its purposes of oppression towards the rest.
|
|
And the selection was made on the same principle, on which tyrannical
|
|
governments generally select their supporters, viz., that of
|
|
conciliating those who would be most dangerous as enemies, and most
|
|
powerful as friends--that is, the wealthy.[83]
|
|
|
|
These restrictions, or indeed any one of them, of the right of
|
|
eligibility as jurors, was, in principle, a complete abolition of the
|
|
English constitution; or, at least, of its most vital and valuable part.
|
|
It was, in principle, an assertion of a right, on the part of the
|
|
government, to _select_ the individuals who were to determine the
|
|
authority of its own laws, and the extent of its own powers. It was,
|
|
therefore, _in effect_, the assertion of a right, on the part of the
|
|
government itself, to determine its own powers, and the authority of its
|
|
own legislation, over the people; and a denial of all right, on the part
|
|
of the people, to judge of or determine their own liberties against the
|
|
government. It was, therefore, in reality, a declaration of entire
|
|
absolutism on the part of the government. It was an act as purely
|
|
despotic, _in principle_, as would have been the express abolition of
|
|
all juries whatsoever. By "the law of the land," which the kings were
|
|
sworn to maintain, every free adult male British subject was eligible to
|
|
the jury box, with full power to exercise his own judgment as to the
|
|
authority and obligation of every statute of the king, which might come
|
|
before him. But the principle of these statutes (fixing the
|
|
qualifications of jurors) is, that nobody is to sit in judgment upon the
|
|
acts or legislation of the king, or the government, except those whom
|
|
the government itself shall select for that purpose. A more complete
|
|
subversion of the essential principles of the English constitution could
|
|
not be devised.
|
|
|
|
The juries of England are illegal for another reason, viz., that the
|
|
statutes cited require the jurors (except in London and a few other
|
|
places) to be _freeholders_. All the other free British subjects are
|
|
excluded; whereas, at common law, all such subjects are eligible to sit
|
|
in juries, whether they be freeholders or not.
|
|
|
|
It is true, the ancient common law required the jurors to be
|
|
freeholders; but the term _freeholder_ no longer expresses the same idea
|
|
that it did in the ancient common law; because no land is now holden in
|
|
England on the same principle, or by the same tenure, as that on which
|
|
all the land was held in the early times of the common law.
|
|
|
|
As has heretofore been mentioned, in the early times of the common law
|
|
the land was considered the property of the state; and was all holden by
|
|
the _tenants_, so called, (that is, _holders_,) on the condition of
|
|
their rendering certain military and civil services to the state, (or to
|
|
the king as the representative of the state,) under the name of _rents_.
|
|
Those who held lands on these terms were called free _tenants_, that is,
|
|
_free holders_--meaning free persons, or members of the state, holding
|
|
lands--to distinguish them from villeins, or serfs, who were not members
|
|
of the state, but held their lands by a more servile tenure, and also to
|
|
distinguish them from persons of foreign birth, outlaws, and all other
|
|
persons, who were not members of the state.
|
|
|
|
Every freeborn adult male Englishman (who had not lost his civil rights
|
|
by crime or otherwise) was entitled to land of _right_; that is, by
|
|
virtue of his civil freedom, or membership of the body politic. Every
|
|
member of the state was therefore a freeholder; and every freeholder was
|
|
a member of the state. And the members of the state were therefore
|
|
called freeholders. But what is material to be observed, is, that a
|
|
man's right to land was an incident to his _civil freedom_; not his
|
|
civil freedom an incident to his right to land. He was a freeholder
|
|
because he was a _freeborn_ member of the state; and not a freeborn
|
|
member of the state because he was a freeholder; for this last would be
|
|
an absurdity.
|
|
|
|
As the tenures of lands changed, the term _freeholder_ lost its original
|
|
significance, and no longer described a man who held land of the state
|
|
by virtue of his civil freedom, but only one who held it in
|
|
fee-simple--that is, free of any liability to military or civil
|
|
services. But the government, in fixing the qualifications of jurors,
|
|
has adhered to the term _freeholder_ after that term has ceased to
|
|
express the _thing_ originally designated by it.
|
|
|
|
The principle, then, of the common law, was, that every freeman, or
|
|
freeborn male Englishman, of adult age, &c., was eligible to sit in
|
|
juries, by virtue of his civil freedom, or his being a member of the
|
|
state, or body politic. But the principle of the present English
|
|
statutes is, that a man shall have a right to sit in juries because he
|
|
owns lands in fee-simple. At the common law a man was _born_ to the
|
|
right to sit in juries. By the present statutes he _buys_ that right
|
|
when he buys his land. And thus this, the greatest of all the political
|
|
rights of an Englishman, has become a mere article of merchandise; a
|
|
thing that is bought and sold in the market for what it will bring.
|
|
|
|
Of course, there can be no legality in such juries as these; but only in
|
|
juries to which every free or natural born adult male Englishman is
|
|
eligible.
|
|
|
|
The second essential principle of the common law, controlling the
|
|
selection of jurors, is, that when the selection of the actual jurors
|
|
comes to be made, (from the whole body of male adults,) that selection
|
|
shall be made in some mode that excludes the possibility of choice _on
|
|
the part of the government_.
|
|
|
|
Of course, this principle forbids the selection to be made _by any
|
|
officer of the government_.
|
|
|
|
There seem to have been at least three modes of selecting the jurors, at
|
|
the common law. 1. By lot.[84] 2. Two knights, or other freeholders,
|
|
were appointed, (probably by the sheriff,) to select the jurors. 3. By
|
|
the sheriff, bailiff, or other person, who held the court, or rather
|
|
acted as its ministerial officer. Probably the latter mode may have been
|
|
the most common, although there may be some doubt on this point.
|
|
|
|
At the common law the sheriffs, bailiffs, and other officers _were
|
|
chosen by the people, instead of being appointed by the king_. (_4
|
|
Blackstone_, 413. _Introduction to Gilbert's History of the Common
|
|
Pleas_, p. 2, _note_, and p. 4.) This has been shown in a former
|
|
chapter.[85] At common law, therefore, jurors selected by these officers
|
|
were legally selected, so far as the principle now under discussion is
|
|
concerned; that is, they were not selected by any officer who was
|
|
dependent on the government.
|
|
|
|
But in the year 1315, one hundred years after Magna Carta, the choice of
|
|
sheriffs was taken from the people, and it was enacted:
|
|
|
|
"That the sheriffs shall henceforth be assigned by the chancellor,
|
|
treasurer, barons of the exchequer, and by the justices. And in the
|
|
absence of the chancellor, by the treasurer, barons and
|
|
justices."--_9 Edward II._, st. 2. (1315.)
|
|
|
|
These officers, who appointed the sheriffs, were themselves appointed by
|
|
the king, and held their offices during his pleasure. Their appointment
|
|
of sheriffs was, therefore, equivalent to an appointment by the king
|
|
himself. And the sheriffs, thus appointed, held their offices only
|
|
during the pleasure of the king, and were of course mere tools of the
|
|
king; and their selection of jurors was really a selection by the king
|
|
himself. In this manner the king usurped the selection of the jurors who
|
|
were to sit in judgment upon his own laws.
|
|
|
|
Here, then, was another usurpation, by which the common law trial by
|
|
jury was destroyed, so far as related to the county courts, in which the
|
|
sheriffs presided, and which were the most important courts of the
|
|
kingdom. From this cause alone, if there were no other, there has not
|
|
been a legal jury in a _county_ court in England, for more than five
|
|
hundred years.
|
|
|
|
In nearly or quite all the States of the United States the juries are
|
|
illegal, for one or the other of the same reasons that make the juries
|
|
in England illegal.
|
|
|
|
In order that the juries in the United States may be legal--that is, in
|
|
accordance with the principles of the common law--it is necessary that
|
|
every adult male member of the state should have his name in the jury
|
|
box, or be eligible as a juror. Yet this is the case in hardly a single
|
|
state.
|
|
|
|
In New Jersey, Maryland, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Mississippi, the
|
|
jurors are required to be _freeholders_. But this requirement is
|
|
illegal, for the reason that the term _freeholder_, in this country, has
|
|
no meaning analogous to the meaning it had in the ancient common law.
|
|
|
|
In Arkansas, Missouri, Indiana, and Alabama, jurors are required to be
|
|
"freeholders or householders." Each of these requirements is illegal.
|
|
|
|
In Florida, they are required to be "householders."
|
|
|
|
In Connecticut, Maine, Ohio, and Georgia, jurors are required to have
|
|
the qualifications of "electors."
|
|
|
|
In Virginia, they are required to have a property qualification of one
|
|
hundred dollars.
|
|
|
|
In Maine, Massachusetts, Vermont, Connecticut, New York, Ohio, Indiana,
|
|
Michigan, and Wisconsin, certain civil authorities of the towns, cities,
|
|
and counties are authorized to select, once in one, two, or three years,
|
|
a certain number of the people--a small number compared with the
|
|
whole--from whom jurors are to be taken when wanted; thus disfranchising
|
|
all except the few thus selected.
|
|
|
|
In Maine and Vermont, the inhabitants, by vote in town meeting, have a
|
|
veto upon the jurors selected by the authorities of the town.
|
|
|
|
In Massachusetts, the inhabitants, by vote in town meeting, can strike
|
|
out any names inserted by the authorities, and insert others; thus
|
|
making jurors elective by the people, and, of course, representatives
|
|
only of a majority of the people.
|
|
|
|
In Illinois, the jurors are selected, for each term of court, by the
|
|
county commissioners.
|
|
|
|
In North Carolina, "_the courts of pleas and quarter sessions_ * * shall
|
|
select the names of such persons only as are freeholders, and as are
|
|
well qualified to act as jurors, &c.; thus giving the courts power to
|
|
pack the juries."--(_Revised Statutes_, 147.)
|
|
|
|
In Arkansas, too, "It shall be the duty of the _county court_ of each
|
|
county * * to make out and cause to be delivered to the sheriff a list
|
|
of not less than sixteen, nor more than twenty-three persons, qualified
|
|
to serve as _grand_ jurors;" and the sheriff is to summon such persons
|
|
to serve as _grand_ jurors.
|
|
|
|
In Tennessee, also, the jurors are to be selected by the _county
|
|
courts_.
|
|
|
|
In Georgia, the jurors are to be selected by "the justices of the
|
|
inferior courts of each county, together with the sheriff and clerk, or
|
|
a majority of them."
|
|
|
|
In Alabama, "the sheriff, judge of the county court, and clerks of the
|
|
circuit and county courts," or "a majority of" them, select the jurors.
|
|
|
|
In Virginia, the jurors are selected by the sheriffs; but the sheriffs
|
|
are appointed by the governor of the state, and that is enough to make
|
|
the juries illegal. Probably the same objection lies against the
|
|
legality of the juries in some other states.
|
|
|
|
How jurors are appointed, and what are their qualifications, in New
|
|
Hampshire, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, Delaware, South Carolina,
|
|
Kentucky, Iowa, Texas, and California, I know not. There is little doubt
|
|
that there is some valid objection to them, of the kinds already
|
|
suggested, in all these states.
|
|
|
|
In regard to jurors in the courts of the United States, it is enacted,
|
|
by act of Congress:
|
|
|
|
"That jurors to serve in the courts of the United States, in each
|
|
state respectively, shall have the like qualifications, and be
|
|
entitled to the like exemptions, as jurors of the highest court of
|
|
law of such state now have and are entitled to, and shall hereafter,
|
|
from time to time, have and be entitled to, and shall be designated
|
|
by ballot, lot, or otherwise, according to the mode of forming such
|
|
juries now practised and hereafter to be practised therein, in so far
|
|
as such mode may be practicable by the courts of the United States,
|
|
or the officers thereof; and for this purpose, the said courts shall
|
|
have power to make all necessary rules and regulations for conforming
|
|
the designation and empanelling of jurors, in substance, to the laws
|
|
and usages now in force in such state; and, further, shall have
|
|
power, by rule or order, from time to time, to conform the same to
|
|
any change in these respects which may be hereafter adopted by the
|
|
legislatures of the respective states for the state courts."--_St._
|
|
1840, ch. 47, _Statutes at Large_, vol. 5, p. 394.
|
|
|
|
In this corrupt and lawless manner, Congress, instead of taking care to
|
|
preserve the trial by jury, so far as they might, by providing for the
|
|
appointment of legal juries--incomparably the most important of all our
|
|
judicial tribunals, and the only ones on which the least reliance can be
|
|
placed for the preservation of liberty--have given the selection of them
|
|
over entirely to the control of an indefinite number of state
|
|
legislatures, and thus authorized each state legislature to adapt the
|
|
juries of the United States to the maintenance of any and every system
|
|
of tyranny that may prevail in such state.
|
|
|
|
Congress have as much constitutional right to give over all the
|
|
functions of the United States government into the hands of the state
|
|
legislatures, to be exercised within each state in such manner as the
|
|
legislature of such state shall please to exercise them, as they have to
|
|
thus give up to these legislatures the selection of juries for the
|
|
courts of the United States.
|
|
|
|
There has, probably, never been a legal jury, nor a legal trial by jury,
|
|
in a single court of the United States, since the adoption of the
|
|
constitution.
|
|
|
|
These facts show how much reliance can be placed in written
|
|
constitutions, to control the action of the government, and preserve the
|
|
liberties of the people.
|
|
|
|
If the real trial by jury had been preserved in the courts of the United
|
|
States--that is, if we had had legal juries, and the jurors had known
|
|
their rights--it is hardly probable that one tenth of the past
|
|
legislation of Congress would ever have been enacted, or, at least,
|
|
that, if enacted, it could have been enforced.
|
|
|
|
Probably the best mode of appointing jurors would be this: Let the names
|
|
of _all_ the adult male members of the state, in each township, be kept
|
|
in a jury box, by the officers of the township; and when a court is to
|
|
be held for a county or other district, let the officers of a sufficient
|
|
number of townships be required (without seeing the names) to draw out a
|
|
name from their boxes respectively, to be returned to the court as a
|
|
juror. This mode of appointment would guard against collusion and
|
|
selection; and juries so appointed would be likely to be a fair epitome
|
|
of "the country."
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 79: On the English Constitution.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 80: Although all the freemen are legally eligible as jurors,
|
|
any one may nevertheless be challenged and set aside, at the trial, for
|
|
any special _personal_ disqualification; such as mental or physical
|
|
inability to perform the duties; having been convicted, or being under
|
|
charge, of crime; interest, bias, &c. But it is clear that the common
|
|
law allows none of these points to be determined by the court, but only
|
|
by "_triers_."]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 81: What was the precise meaning of the Saxon word, which I
|
|
have here called _elderly_, I do not know. In the Latin translations it
|
|
is rendered by _seniores_, which may perhaps mean simply those who have
|
|
attained their majority.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 82: In 1483 it was enacted, by a statute entitled "Of what
|
|
credit and estate those jurors must be which shall be impanelled in the
|
|
Sheriff's Turn."
|
|
|
|
"That no bailiff nor other officer from henceforth return or impanel
|
|
any such person in any shire of England, to be taken or put in or
|
|
upon any inquiry in any of the said Turns, but such as be of good
|
|
name and fame, and having lands and tenements of freehold within the
|
|
same shires, to the yearly value of _twenty shillings_ at the least,
|
|
or else lands and tenements holden by custom of manor, commonly
|
|
called _copy-hold_, within the said shires, to the yearly value of
|
|
twenty-six shillings eight pence over all charges at the least."--_1
|
|
Richard III._, ch. 4. (1483.)
|
|
|
|
In 1486 it was enacted, "That the justices of the peace of every
|
|
shire of this realm for the time being may take, by their discretion,
|
|
an inquest, whereof every man shall have lands and tenements to the
|
|
yearly value of _forty shillings_ at the least, to inquire of the
|
|
concealments of others," &c., &c.--_3 Henry VII._, ch. 1 (1486.)
|
|
|
|
A statute passed in 1494, in regard to jurors in the city of London,
|
|
enacts:
|
|
|
|
"That no person nor persons hereafter be impanelled, summoned, or
|
|
sworn in any jury or inquest in courts within the same city, (of
|
|
London,) except he be of lands, tenements, or goods and chattels, to
|
|
the value of _forty marks_;[86] and that no person or persons
|
|
hereafter be impanelled, summoned, nor sworn in any jury or inquest
|
|
in any court within the said city, for lands or tenements, or action
|
|
personal, wherein the debt or damage amounteth to the sum of forty
|
|
marks, or above, except he be in lands, tenements, goods, or
|
|
chattels, to the value of _one hundred marks_."--_11 Henry VII._, ch.
|
|
21. (1494.)
|
|
|
|
The statute _4 Henry VIII._, ch. 3, sec. 4, (1512) requires jurors in
|
|
London to have "_goods_ to the value of one hundred marks."
|
|
|
|
In 1494 it was enacted that "It shall be lawful to every sheriff of
|
|
the counties of _Southampton_, _Surrey_, _and Sussex_, to impanel and
|
|
summons twenty-four lawful men of such, inhabiting within the
|
|
precinct of his or their turns, as owe suit to the same turn, whereof
|
|
every one hath lands or freehold to the yearly value of _ten_
|
|
shillings, or copy-hold lands to the yearly value of _thirteen
|
|
shillings four pence_, above all charges within any of the said
|
|
counties, or men of less livelihood, if there be not so many there,
|
|
notwithstanding the statute of _1 Richard III._, ch. 4. To endure to
|
|
the next parliament."--_11 Henry VII._, ch. 26. (1494.)
|
|
|
|
This statute was continued in force by _19 Henry VII._, ch. 16. (1503.)
|
|
|
|
In 1531 it was enacted, "That every person or persons, being the
|
|
king's natural subject born, which either by the name of citizen, or
|
|
of a freeman, or any other name, doth enjoy and use the liberties and
|
|
privileges of any city, borough, or town corporate, where he dwelleth
|
|
and maketh his abode, being worth in _movable goods and substance_ to
|
|
the clear value of _forty pounds_, be henceforth admitted in trials
|
|
of murders and felonies in every sessions and gaol delivery, to be
|
|
kept and holden in and for the liberty of such cities, boroughs, and
|
|
towns corporate, albeit they have no freehold; any act, statute, use,
|
|
custom, or ordinance to the contrary hereof notwithstanding."--_23
|
|
Henry VIII._, ch. 13. (1531.)
|
|
|
|
In 1585 it was enacted, "That in all cases where any jurors to be
|
|
returned for trial of any issue or issues joined in any of the
|
|
Queen's majesty's courts of King's Bench, Common Pleas, and the
|
|
Exchequer, or before justices of assize, by the laws of this realm
|
|
now in force, ought to have estate of freehold in lands, tenements,
|
|
or hereditaments, of the clear yearly value of _forty shillings_,
|
|
that in every such case the jurors that shall be returned from and
|
|
after the end of this present session of parliament, shall every of
|
|
them have estate of freehold in lands, tenements, or hereditaments,
|
|
to the clear yearly value of _four pounds_ at the least."--_27
|
|
Elizabeth_, ch. 6. (1585.)
|
|
|
|
In 1664-5 it was enacted, "That all jurors (other than strangers upon
|
|
trials _per medietatem linguæ_) who are to be returned for the trials
|
|
of issues joined in any of (his) majesty's courts of king's bench,
|
|
common pleas, or the exchequer, or before justices of assize, or nisi
|
|
prius, oyer and terminer, gaol delivery, or general or quarter
|
|
sessions of the peace, from and after the twentieth day of April,
|
|
which shall be in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred and
|
|
sixty-five, in any county of this realm of England, shall every of
|
|
them thon have, in their own name, or in trust for them, within the
|
|
same county, _twenty pounds by the year_, at least, above reprises,
|
|
in their own or their wives' right, of freehold lands, or of ancient
|
|
demesne, or of rents in fee, fee-tail, or for life. And that in every
|
|
county within the dominion of Wales every such juror shall then have,
|
|
within the same, _eight pounds by the year_, at the least, above
|
|
reprises, in manner aforesaid. All which persons having such estate
|
|
as aforesaid are hereby enabled and made liable to be returned and
|
|
serve as jurors for the trial of issues before the justices
|
|
aforesaid, any law or statute to the contrary in any wise
|
|
notwithstanding."--_16 and 17 Charles II._, ch. 3. (1664-5.)
|
|
|
|
By a statute passed in 1692, jurors in England are to have landed
|
|
estates of the value of _ten pounds a year_; and jurors in Wales to have
|
|
similar estates of the realm of _six pounds a year_.--_4 and 5 William
|
|
and Mary_, ch. 24, sec. 14. (1692.)
|
|
|
|
By the same statute, (sec. 18,) persons may be returned to serve upon
|
|
the _tales_ in any county of England, who shall have, within the same
|
|
county, _five pounds by the year_, above reprises, in the manner
|
|
aforesaid.
|
|
|
|
By _St_. 3 _George II_., ch. 25, sec. 19, 20, no one is to be a juror in
|
|
London, who shall not be "an householder within the said city, and have
|
|
lands, tenements, or personal estate, to the value of _one hundred
|
|
pounds_."
|
|
|
|
By another statute, applicable only to the county of _Middlesex_, it is
|
|
enacted,
|
|
|
|
"That all leaseholders, upon leases where the improved rents or value
|
|
shall amount to _fifty pounds or upwards per annum_, over and above
|
|
all ground rents or other reservations payable by virtue of the said
|
|
leases, shall be liable and obliged to serve upon juries when they
|
|
shall be legally summoned for that purpose."--_4 George II._, ch. 7,
|
|
sec. 3. (1731.)]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 83: Suppose these statutes, instead of disfranchising all
|
|
whose freeholds were of less than the standard value fixed by the
|
|
statutes, had disfranchised all whose freeholds were of greater value
|
|
than the same standard--would anybody ever have doubted that such
|
|
legislation was inconsistent with the English constitution; or that it
|
|
amounted to an entire abolition of the trial by jury? Certainly not. Yet
|
|
it was as clearly inconsistent with the common law, or the English
|
|
constitution, to disfranchise those whose freeholds fell below any
|
|
arbitrary standard fixed by the government, as it would have been to
|
|
disfranchise all whose freeholds rose above that standard.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 84: _Lingard_ says: "These compurgators or jurors * * were
|
|
sometimes * * _drawn by lot_."--_1 Lingard's History of England_, p.
|
|
300.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 85: Chapter 4, p. 120, note.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 86: A mark was thirteen shillings and four pence.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VII.
|
|
|
|
ILLEGAL JUDGES.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It is a principle of Magna Carta, and therefore of the trial by jury,
|
|
(for all parts of Magna Carta must be construed together,) that no judge
|
|
or other officer _appointed by the king_, shall preside in jury trials,
|
|
_in criminal cases_, or "pleas of the crown."
|
|
|
|
This provision is contained in the great charters of both John and
|
|
Henry, and is second in importance only to the provision guaranteeing
|
|
the trial by jury, of which it is really a part. Consequently, without
|
|
the observance of this prohibition, there can be no genuine or
|
|
_legal_--that is, _common law_--trial by jury.
|
|
|
|
At the common law, all officers who held jury trials, whether in civil
|
|
or criminal cases, were chosen by the people.[87]
|
|
|
|
But previous to Magna Carta, the kings had adopted the practice of
|
|
sending officers of their own appointment, called justices, into the
|
|
counties, to hold jury trials in some cases; and Magna Carta authorizes
|
|
this practice to be continued so far as it relates to _three_ kinds of
|
|
_civil_ actions, to wit: "novel disseisin, mort de ancestor, and darrein
|
|
presentment;"[88] but specially forbids its being extended to criminal
|
|
cases, or pleas of the crown.
|
|
|
|
This prohibition is in these words:
|
|
|
|
"Nullus vicecomes, constabularius, coronator, _vel alii balivi
|
|
nostri_, teneant placita coronæ nostræ." (No sheriff, constable,
|
|
coroner, _or other our bailiffs_, shall hold pleas of our
|
|
crown.)--_John's Charter_, ch. 53. _Henry's ditto_, ch. 17.
|
|
|
|
Some persons seem to have supposed that this was a prohibition merely
|
|
upon officers _bearing the specific names of_ "_sheriffs, constables,
|
|
coroners and bailiffs_," to hold criminal trials. But such is not the
|
|
meaning. If it were, the _name_ could be changed, and the _thing_
|
|
retained; and thus the prohibition be evaded. The prohibition applies
|
|
(as will presently be seen) to all officers of the king whatsoever; and
|
|
it sets up a distinction between officers _of the king_, ("_our_
|
|
bailiffs,") and officers chosen by the people.
|
|
|
|
The prohibition upon the king's _justices_ sitting in criminal trials,
|
|
is included in the words "_vel alii balivi nostri_," (or other our
|
|
bailiffs.) The word _bailiff_ was anciently a sort of general name for
|
|
_judicial officers_ and persons employed in and about the administration
|
|
of justice. In modern times its use, as applied to the higher grades of
|
|
judicial officers, has been superseded by other words; and it therefore
|
|
now, more generally, if not universally, signifies an executive or
|
|
police officer, _a servant of courts_, rather than one whose functions
|
|
are purely judicial.
|
|
|
|
The word is a French word, brought into England by the Normans.
|
|
|
|
Coke says, "_Baylife_ is a French word, and signifies an officer
|
|
concerned in the administration of justice of a certain province; and
|
|
because a sheriff hath an office concerning the administration of
|
|
justice within his county, or bailiwick, therefore he called his
|
|
county _baliva sua_, (his bailiwick.)
|
|
|
|
"I have heard great question made what the true exposition of this
|
|
word _balivus_ is. In the statute of Magna Carta, cap. 28, the letter
|
|
of that statute is, _nullus balivus de cætero ponat aliquem ad legem
|
|
manifestam nec ad juramentum simplici loquela sua sine testibus
|
|
fidelibus ad hoc inductis_." (No bailiff from henceforth shall put
|
|
any one to his open law, nor to an oath (of self-exculpation) upon
|
|
his own simple accusation, or complaint, without faithful witnesses
|
|
brought in for the same.) "And some have said that _balivus_ in this
|
|
statute signifieth _any judge_; for the law must be waged and made
|
|
before the judge. And this statute (say they) extends to _the courts
|
|
of common pleas_, _king's bench_, &c., for they must bring with them
|
|
_fideles testes_, (faithful witnesses,) &c., _and so hath been the
|
|
usage to this day_."--_1 Coke's Inst._, 168 b.
|
|
|
|
Coke makes various references, in his margin to Bracton, Fleta, and
|
|
other authorities, which I have not examined, but which, I presume,
|
|
support the opinion expressed in this quotation.
|
|
|
|
Coke also, in another place, under the head of the chapter just cited
|
|
from Magna Carta, that "_no bailiff shall put any man to his open law_,"
|
|
&c., gives the following commentary upon it, from the _Mirror of
|
|
Justices_, from which it appears that in the time of Edward I., (1272 to
|
|
1307,) this word _balivus_ was understood to include _all judicial_, as
|
|
well as all other, officers of the king.
|
|
|
|
The Mirror says: "The point which forbiddeth that no _bailiff_ put a
|
|
freeman to his oath without suit, is to be understood in this
|
|
manner,--_that no justice, no minister of the king_, nor other
|
|
steward, nor bailiff, have power to make a freeman make oath, (of
|
|
self-exculpation,) _without the king's command_,[89] nor receive any
|
|
plaint, without witnesses present who testify the plaint to be
|
|
true."--_Mirror of Justices_, ch. 5, sec. 2, p. 257.
|
|
|
|
Coke quotes this commentary, (in the original French,) and then endorses
|
|
it in these words:
|
|
|
|
"By this it appeareth, that under this word _balivus_, in this act,
|
|
is comprehended _every justice, minister of the king_, steward, and
|
|
bailiff."--2 _Inst._, 44.
|
|
|
|
Coke also, in his commentary upon this very chapter of Magna Carta, that
|
|
provides that "_no sheriff, constable, coroner, or other our bailiffs,
|
|
shall hold pleas of our crown_," expresses the opinion that it "_is a
|
|
general law_," (that is, applicable to all officers of the king,) "by
|
|
reason of the words _vel alii balivi nostri_, (or other our bailiffs,)
|
|
_under which words are comprehended all judges or justices of any courts
|
|
of justice_." And he cites a decision in the king's bench, in the 17th
|
|
year of Edward I., (1289,) as authority; which decision he calls "a
|
|
notable and leading judgment."--_2 Inst._, 30--1.
|
|
|
|
And yet Coke, in flat contradiction of this decision, which he quotes
|
|
with such emphasis and approbation, and in flat contradiction also of
|
|
the definition he repeatedly gives of the word _balivus_, showing that
|
|
it embraced _all ministers of the king whatsoever_, whether high or low,
|
|
judicial or executive, fabricates an entirely gratuitous interpretation
|
|
of this chapter of Magna Carta, and pretends that after all it only
|
|
required that _felonies_ should be tried before the king's _justices, on
|
|
account of their superior learning_; and that it permitted all lesser
|
|
offences to be tried before inferior officers, (meaning of course the
|
|
_king's_ inferior officers.)--_2 Inst._, 30.
|
|
|
|
And thus this chapter of Magna Carta, which, according to his own
|
|
definition of the word _balivus_, applies to all officers of the king;
|
|
and which, according to the common and true definition of the term
|
|
"pleas of the crown," applies to all criminal cases without distinction,
|
|
and which, therefore, forbids any officer or minister of the king to
|
|
preside in a jury trial in any criminal case whatsoever, he coolly and
|
|
gratuitously interprets into a mere senseless provision for simply
|
|
restricting the discretion of the king in giving _names_ to his own
|
|
officers who should preside at the trials of particular offences; as if
|
|
the king, who made and unmade all his officers by a word, could not
|
|
defeat the whole object of the prohibition, by appointing such
|
|
individuals as he pleased, to try such causes as he pleased, and calling
|
|
them by such names as he pleased, _if he were but permitted to appoint
|
|
and name such officers at all_; and as if it were of the least
|
|
importance what _name_ an officer bore, whom the king might appoint to a
|
|
particular duty.[90]
|
|
|
|
Coke evidently gives this interpretation solely because, as he was
|
|
giving a general commentary on Magna Carta, he was bound to give some
|
|
interpretation or other to every chapter of it; and for this chapter he
|
|
could invent, or fabricate, (for it is a sheer fabrication,) no
|
|
interpretation better suited to his purpose than this. It seems never to
|
|
have entered his mind, (or if it did, he intended that it should never
|
|
enter the mind of anybody else,) that the object of the chapter could be
|
|
to deprive the king of the power of putting his creatures into criminal
|
|
courts, to pack, cheat, and browbeat juries, and thus maintain his
|
|
authority by procuring the conviction of those who should transgress his
|
|
laws, or incur his displeasure.
|
|
|
|
This example of Coke tends to show how utterly blind, or how utterly
|
|
corrupt, English judges, (dependent upon the crown and the legislature),
|
|
have been in regard to everything in Magna Carta, that went to secure
|
|
the liberties of the people, or limit the power of the government.
|
|
|
|
Coke's interpretation of this chapter of Magna Carta is of a piece with
|
|
his absurd and gratuitous interpretation of the words "_nec super eum
|
|
ibimus, nec super eum mittemus_," which was pointed out in a former
|
|
article, and by which he attempted to give a _judicial_ power to the
|
|
king and his judges, where Magna Carta had given it only to a jury. It
|
|
is also of a piece with his pretence that there was a difference
|
|
between _fine_ and _amercement_, and that _fines_ might be imposed by
|
|
the king, and that juries were required only for fixing _amercements_.
|
|
|
|
These are some of the innumerable frauds by which the English people
|
|
have been cheated out of the trial by jury.
|
|
|
|
_Ex uno disce omnes._ From one judge learn the characters of all.[91]
|
|
|
|
I give in the note additional and abundant authorities for the meaning
|
|
ascribed to the word _bailiff_. The importance of the principle involved
|
|
will be a sufficient excuse for such an accumulation of authorities as
|
|
would otherwise be tedious and perhaps unnecessary.[92]
|
|
|
|
The foregoing interpretation of the chapter of Magna Carta now under
|
|
discussion, is corroborated by another chapter of Magna Carta, which
|
|
specially provides that the king's justices shall "go through every
|
|
county" to "take the assizes" (hold jury trials) in three kinds of
|
|
_civil_ actions, to wit, "novel disseisin, mort de ancestor, and darrein
|
|
presentment;" but makes no mention whatever of their holding jury trials
|
|
in _criminal_ cases,--an omission wholly unlikely to be made, if it
|
|
were designed they should attend the trial of such causes. Besides, the
|
|
chapter here spoken of (in John's charter) does not allow these justices
|
|
to sit _alone_ in jury trials, even in _civil_ actions; but provides
|
|
that four knights, chosen by the county, shall sit with them to keep
|
|
them honest. When the king's justices were known to be so corrupt and
|
|
servile that the people would not even trust them to sit alone, in jury
|
|
trials, in _civil_ actions, how preposterous is it to suppose that they
|
|
would not only suffer them to sit, but to sit alone, in _criminal_ ones.
|
|
|
|
It is entirely incredible that Magna Carta, which makes such careful
|
|
provision in regard to the king's justices sitting in civil actions,
|
|
should make no provision whatever as to their sitting in _criminal_
|
|
trials, if they were to be allowed to sit in them at all. Yet Magna
|
|
Carta has no provision whatever on the subject.[93]
|
|
|
|
But what would appear to make this matter absolutely certain is, that
|
|
unless the prohibition that "no bailiff, &c., _of ours_ shall hold pleas
|
|
of our crown," apply to all officers of the king, justices as well as
|
|
others, it would be wholly nugatory for any practical or useful purpose,
|
|
because the prohibition could be evaded by the king, at any time, by
|
|
simply changing the titles of his officers. Instead of calling them
|
|
"sheriffs, coroners, constables and bailiffs," he could call them
|
|
"_justices_," or anything else he pleased; and this prohibition, so
|
|
important to the liberty of the people, would then be entirely defeated.
|
|
The king also could make and unmake "justices" at his pleasure; and if
|
|
he could appoint any officers whatever to preside over juries in
|
|
criminal trials, he could appoint any tool that he might at any time
|
|
find adapted to his purpose. It was as easy to make justices of Jeffreys
|
|
and Scroggs, as of any other material; and to have prohibited all the
|
|
king's officers, _except his justices_, from presiding in criminal
|
|
trials, would therefore have been mere fool's play.
|
|
|
|
We can all perhaps form some idea, though few of us will be likely to
|
|
form any adequate idea, of what a different thing the trial by jury
|
|
would have been _in practice_, and of what would have been the
|
|
difference to the liberties of England, for five hundred years last
|
|
past, had this prohibition of Magna Carta, upon the king's officers
|
|
sitting in the trial of criminal cases, been observed.
|
|
|
|
The principle of this chapter of Magna Carta, as applicable to the
|
|
governments of the United States of America, forbids that any officer
|
|
appointed either by the executive or _legislative_ power, or dependent
|
|
upon them for their salaries, or responsible to them by impeachment,
|
|
should preside over a jury in criminal trials. To have the trial a legal
|
|
(that is, a _common law_) and true trial by jury, the presiding officers
|
|
must be chosen by the people, and be entirely free from all dependence
|
|
upon, and all accountability to, the executive and legislative branches
|
|
of the government.[94]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 87: The proofs of this principle of the common law have
|
|
already been given on page 120, _note_.
|
|
|
|
There is much confusion and contradiction among authors as to the manner
|
|
in which sheriffs and other officers were appointed; some maintaining
|
|
that they were appointed by the king, others that they were elected by
|
|
the people. I imagine that both these opinions are correct, and that
|
|
several of the king's officers bore the same official names as those
|
|
chosen by the people; and that this is the cause of the confusion that
|
|
has arisen on the subject.
|
|
|
|
It seems to be a perfectly well established fact that, at common law,
|
|
several magistrates, bearing the names of aldermen, sheriffs, stewards,
|
|
coroners and bailiffs, were chosen by the people; and yet it appears,
|
|
from Magna Carta itself, that some of the _king's_ officers (of whom he
|
|
must have had many) were also called "sheriffs, constables, coroners,
|
|
and bailiffs."
|
|
|
|
But Magna Carta, in various instances, speaks of sheriffs and bailiffs
|
|
as "_our_ sheriffs and bailiffs;" thus apparently intending to recognize
|
|
the distinction between officers _of the king_, bearing those names, and
|
|
other officers, bearing the same official names, but chosen by the
|
|
people. Thus it says that "no sheriff or bailiff _of ours_, or any other
|
|
(officer), shall take horses or carts of any freeman for carriage,
|
|
unless with the consent of the freeman himself."--_John's Charter_, ch.
|
|
36.
|
|
|
|
In a kingdom subdivided into so many counties, hundreds, tithings,
|
|
manors, cities and boroughs, each having a judicial or police
|
|
organization of its own, it is evident that many of the officers must
|
|
have been chosen by the people, else the government could not have
|
|
maintained its popular character. On the other hand, it is evident that
|
|
the king, the executive power of the nation, must have had large numbers
|
|
of officers of his own in every part of the kingdom. And it is perfectly
|
|
natural that these different sets of officers should, in many instances,
|
|
bear the same official names; and, consequently that the king, when
|
|
speaking of his own officers, as distinguished from those chosen by the
|
|
people, should call them "our sheriffs, bailiffs," &c., as he does in
|
|
Magna Carta.
|
|
|
|
I apprehend that inattention to these considerations has been the cause
|
|
of all the confusion of ideas that has arisen on this subject,--a
|
|
confusion very evident in the following paragraph from Dunham, which may
|
|
be given as an illustration of that which is exhibited by others on the
|
|
same points.
|
|
|
|
"Subordinate to the ealdormen were the _gerefas_, the sheriffs, or
|
|
reeves, _of whom there were several in every shire, or county_.
|
|
_There was one in every borough, as a judge._ There was one at every
|
|
gate, who witnessed purchases outside the walls; and there was one,
|
|
higher than either,--the high sheriff,--who was probably the reeve of
|
|
the shire. This last _appears_ to have been appointed by the king.
|
|
Their functions were to execute the decrees of the king, or
|
|
ealdormen, to arrest prisoners, to require bail for their appearance
|
|
at the sessions, to collect fines or penalties levied by the court of
|
|
the shire, to preserve the public peace, _and to preside in a
|
|
subordinate tribunal of their own_."--_Dunham's Middle Ages_, sec. 2,
|
|
B. 2, ch. 1. 57 _Lardner's Cab. Cyc._, p. 41.
|
|
|
|
The confusion of _duties_ attributed to these officers indicates clearly
|
|
enough that different officers, bearing, the same official names, must
|
|
have had different duties, and have derived their authority from
|
|
different sources,--to wit, the king, and the people.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 88: _Darrein presentment_ was an inquest to discover who
|
|
presented the last person to a church; _mort de ancestor_, whether the
|
|
last possessor was seized of land in demesne of his own fee; and _novel
|
|
disseisin_, whether the claimant had been unjustly disseized of his
|
|
freehold.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 89: He has no power to do it, _either with, or without, the
|
|
king's command_. The prohibition is absolute, containing no such
|
|
qualification as is here interpolated, viz., "_without the king's
|
|
command_." If it could be done _with_ the king's command, the king would
|
|
be invested with arbitrary power in the matter.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 90: The absurdity of this doctrine of Coke is made more
|
|
apparent by the fact that, at that time, the "justices" and other
|
|
persons appointed by the king to hold courts were not only dependent
|
|
upon the king for their offices, and removable at his pleasure, _but
|
|
that the usual custom was, not to appoint them with any view to
|
|
permanency, but only to give them special commissions for trying a
|
|
single cause, or for holding a single term of a court, or for making a
|
|
single circuit; which, being done, their commissions expired_. The king,
|
|
therefore, could, _and undoubtedly did, appoint any individual he
|
|
pleased, to try any cause he pleased, with a special view to the
|
|
verdicts he desired to obtain in the particular cases_.
|
|
|
|
This custom of commissioning particular persons to hold jury trials, in
|
|
_criminal_ cases, (and probably also in _civil_ ones,) was of course a
|
|
usurpation upon the common law, but had been practised more or less from
|
|
the time of William the Conqueror. Palgrave says:
|
|
|
|
"The frequent absence of William from his insular dominions
|
|
occasioned another mode of administration, _which ultimately produced
|
|
still greater changes in the law_. It was the practice of appointing
|
|
justiciars to represent the king's person, to hold his court, to
|
|
decide his pleas, to dispense justice on his behalf, to command the
|
|
military levies, and to act as conservators of the peace in the
|
|
king's name.[95] ... The justices who were assigned in the name of
|
|
the sovereign, and whose powers were revocable at his pleasure,
|
|
derived their authority merely from their grant.... Some of those
|
|
judges were usually deputed for the purpose of relieving the king
|
|
from the burden of his judicial functions.... The number as well as
|
|
the variety of names of the justices appearing in the early
|
|
chirographs of 'Concords,' leave reason for doubting whether,
|
|
anterior to the reign of Henry III., (1216 to 1272,) _a court, whose
|
|
members were changing at almost every session, can be said to have
|
|
been permanently constituted. It seems more probable that the
|
|
individuals who composed the tribunal were selected as suited the
|
|
pleasure of the sovereign, and the convenience of the clerks and
|
|
barons_; and the history of our legal administration will be much
|
|
simplified, if we consider all those courts which were afterwards
|
|
denominated the Exchequer, the King's Bench, the Common Pleas, and
|
|
the Chancery, _as being originally committees, selected by the king
|
|
when occasion required_, out of a large body, for the despatch of
|
|
peculiar branches of business, _and which committees, by degrees,
|
|
assumed an independent and permanent existence_.... Justices
|
|
itinerant, who, despatched throughout the land, decided the 'Pleas of
|
|
the Crown,' may be obscurely traced in the reign of the Conqueror;
|
|
_not, perhaps, appointed with much regularity, but despatched upon
|
|
peculiar occasions and emergencies_."--_1 Palgrave's Rise and
|
|
Progress_, &c., p. 289 to 293.
|
|
|
|
The following statute, passed in 1354, (139 years after Magna Carta,)
|
|
shows that even after this usurpation of appointing "justices" of his
|
|
own, to try criminal cases, had probably become somewhat established in
|
|
practice, in defiance of Magna Carta, the king was in the habit of
|
|
granting special commissions to still other persons, (especially to
|
|
sheriffs,--_his_ sheriffs, no doubt,) to try particular cases:
|
|
|
|
"Because that the people of the realm have suffered many evils and
|
|
mischiefs, for that sheriffs of divers counties, by virtue of
|
|
commissions and general writs granted to them at their own suit, for
|
|
their singular profit to gain of the people, have made and taken
|
|
divers inquests to cause to indict the people at their will, and have
|
|
taken fine and ransom of them to their own use, and have delivered
|
|
them; whereas such persons indicted were not brought before the
|
|
king's justices to have their deliverance, it is accorded and
|
|
established, for to eschew all such evils and mischiefs, that such
|
|
commissions and writs before this time made shall be utterly
|
|
repealed, and that from henceforth no such commissions shall be
|
|
granted."--_St. 28 Edward III._, ch. 9, (1354.)
|
|
|
|
How silly to suppose that the illegality of these commissions to try
|
|
criminal cases, could have been avoided by simply granting them to
|
|
persons under the title of "_justices_," instead of granting them to
|
|
"_sheriffs_." The statute was evidently a cheat, or at least designed as
|
|
such, inasmuch as it virtually asserts the right of the king to appoint
|
|
his tools, under the name of "justices," to try criminal cases, while it
|
|
_disavows_ his right to appoint them under the name of "sheriffs."
|
|
|
|
Millar says: "When the king's bench came to have its usual residence
|
|
at Westminster, the sovereign was induced to _grant special
|
|
commissions, for trying particular crimes_, in such parts of the
|
|
country as were found most convenient; and this practice was
|
|
_gradually_ modelled into a regular appointment of certain
|
|
commissioners, empowered, at stated seasons, to perform circuits over
|
|
the kingdom, and to hold courts in particular towns, for the trial of
|
|
all sorts of crimes. These judges of the circuit, however, _never
|
|
obtained an ordinary jurisdiction, but continued, on every occasion,
|
|
to derive their authority from two special commissions_: that of
|
|
_oyer and terminer_, by which they were appointed to hear and
|
|
determine all treasons, felonies and misdemeanors, within certain
|
|
districts; and that of _gaol delivery_, by which they were directed
|
|
to try every prisoner confined in the gaols of the several towns
|
|
falling under their inspection."--_Millar's Hist. View of Eng. Gov._,
|
|
vol. 2, ch. 7, p. 282.
|
|
|
|
The following extract from Gilbert shows to what lengths of usurpation
|
|
the kings would sometimes go, in their attempts to get the judicial
|
|
power out of the hands of the people, and entrust it to instruments of
|
|
their own choosing:
|
|
|
|
"From the time of the _Saxons_," (that is, from the commencement of
|
|
the reign of William the Conqueror,) "till the reign of Edward the
|
|
first, (1272 to 1307,) the several county courts and sheriffs courts
|
|
did decline in their interest and authority. The methods by which
|
|
they were broken were two-fold. _First, by granting commissions to
|
|
the sheriffs by writ of_ JUSTICIES, _whereby the sheriff had a
|
|
particular jurisdiction granted him to be judge of a particular
|
|
cause, independent of the suitors of the county court_," (that is,
|
|
without a jury;) "_and these commissions were after the Norman form,
|
|
by which (according to which) all power of judicature was immediately
|
|
derived from the king_."--_Gilbert on the Court of Chancery_, p. 1.
|
|
|
|
The several authorities now given show that it was the custom of the
|
|
_Norman_ kings, not only to appoint persons to sit as judges in jury
|
|
trials, in criminal cases, but that they also commissioned individuals
|
|
to sit in singular and particular cases, as occasion required; and that
|
|
they therefore readily _could_, and naturally _would_, and therefore
|
|
undoubtedly _did_, commission individuals with a special view to their
|
|
adaptation or capacity to procure such judgments as the kings desired.
|
|
|
|
The extract from Gilbert suggests also the usurpation of the _Norman_
|
|
kings, in their assumption that _they_, (and _not the people_, as by the
|
|
_common law_,) were the fountains of justice. It was only by virtue of
|
|
this illegal assumption that they could claim to appoint their tools to
|
|
hold courts.
|
|
|
|
All these things show how perfectly lawless and arbitrary the kings were
|
|
both before and after Magna Carta, and how necessary to liberty was the
|
|
principle of Magna Carta and the common law, that no person appointed by
|
|
the king should hold jury trials in criminal cases.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 91: The opinions and decisions of judges and courts are
|
|
undeserving of the least reliance, (beyond the intrinsic merit of the
|
|
arguments offered to sustain them,) and are unworthy even to be quoted
|
|
as evidence of the law, _when those opinions or decisions are favorable
|
|
to the power of the government, or unfavorable to the liberties of the
|
|
people_. The only reasons that their opinions, _when in favor of
|
|
liberty_, are entitled to any confidence, are, first, that all
|
|
presumptions of law are in favor of liberty; and, second, that the
|
|
admissions of all men, the innocent and the criminal alike, _when made
|
|
against their own interests_, are entitled to be received as true,
|
|
because it is contrary to human nature for a man to confess anything but
|
|
truth against himself.
|
|
|
|
More solemn farces, or more gross impostures, were never practised upon
|
|
mankind, than are all, or very nearly all, those oracular responses by
|
|
which courts assume to determine that certain statutes, in restraint of
|
|
individual liberty, are within the constitutional power of the
|
|
government, and are therefore valid and binding upon the people.
|
|
|
|
The reason why these courts are so intensely servile and corrupt, is,
|
|
that they are not only parts of, but the veriest creatures of, the very
|
|
governments whose oppressions they are thus seeking to uphold. They
|
|
receive their offices and salaries from, and are impeachable and
|
|
removable by, the very governments upon whose acts they affect to sit in
|
|
judgment. Of course, no one with his eyes open ever places himself in a
|
|
position so incompatible with the liberty of declaring his honest
|
|
opinion, unless he do it with the intention of becoming a mere
|
|
instrument in the hands of the government for the execution of all its
|
|
oppressions.
|
|
|
|
As proof of this, look at the judicial history of England for the last
|
|
five hundred years, and of America from its settlement. In all that time
|
|
(so far as I know, or presume) no bench of judges, (probably not even
|
|
any single judge,) dependent upon the legislature that passed the
|
|
statute, has ever declared a single _penal_ statute invalid, on account
|
|
of its being in conflict either with the common law, which the judges in
|
|
England have been sworn to preserve, or with the written constitutions,
|
|
(recognizing men's natural rights,) which the American judges were under
|
|
oath to maintain. Every oppression, every atrocity even, that has ever
|
|
been enacted in either country, by the legislative power, in the shape
|
|
of a criminal law, (or, indeed, in almost any other shape,) has been as
|
|
sure of a sanction from the judiciary that was dependent upon, and
|
|
impeachable by, the legislature that enacted the law, as if there were a
|
|
physical necessity that the legislative enactment and the judicial
|
|
sanction should go together. Practically speaking, the sum of their
|
|
decisions, all and singular, has been, that there are no limits to the
|
|
power of the government, and that the people have no rights except what
|
|
the government pleases to allow to them.
|
|
|
|
It is extreme folly for a people to allow such dependent, servile, and
|
|
perjured creatures to sit either in civil or criminal trials; but to
|
|
allow them to sit in criminal trials, and judge of the people's
|
|
liberties, is not merely fatuity,--it is suicide.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 92: Coke, speaking of the word _bailiffs_, as used in the
|
|
statute of 1 _Westminster_, ch. 35, (1275,) says:
|
|
|
|
"Here _bailiffs_ are taken for the _judges of the court_, as
|
|
manifestly appeareth hereby."--2 _Inst._, 229.
|
|
|
|
Coke also says, "It is a maxim in law, _aliquis non debet esse judex in
|
|
propria causa_, (no one ought to be judge in his own cause;) and
|
|
therefore a fine levied before the _baylifes of Salop_ was reversed,
|
|
because one of the _baylifes_ was party to the fine, _quia non potest
|
|
esse judex et pars_," (because one cannot be _judge_ and party.)--_1
|
|
Inst._, 141 a.
|
|
|
|
In the statute of Gloucester, ch. 11 and 12, (1278,) "the mayor and
|
|
_bailiffs_ of London (undoubtedly chosen by the people, or at any rate
|
|
not appointed by the king) are manifestly spoken of as _judges_, or
|
|
magistrates, holding _jury_ trials, as follows:
|
|
|
|
_Ch. II._ "It is provided, also, that if any man lease his tenement
|
|
in the city of London, for a term of years, and he to whom the
|
|
freehold belongeth causeth himself to be impleaded by collusion, and
|
|
maketh default after default, or cometh into court and giveth it up,
|
|
for to make the termor (lessee) lose his term, (lease,) and the
|
|
demandant hath his suit, so that the termor may recover by writ of
|
|
covenant; _the mayor and bailiffs may inquire by a good inquest_,
|
|
(_jury_,) in the presence of the termor and the demandant, whether
|
|
the demandant moved his plea upon good right that he had, or by
|
|
collusion, or fraud, to make the termor lose his term; and if it be
|
|
found by the inquest (jury) that the demandant moved his plea upon
|
|
good right that he had, the judgment shall be given forthwith; and if
|
|
it be found by the inquest (jury) that he impleaded him (self) by
|
|
fraud, to put the termor from his term, then shall the termor enjoy
|
|
his term, and the execution of judgment for the demandant shall be
|
|
suspended until the term be expired."--_6 Edward I._, ch. 11, (1278.)
|
|
|
|
Coke, in his commentary on this chapter, calls this court of "the
|
|
mayor and _bailiffs_" of London, "_the court of the hustings, the
|
|
greatest and highest court in London;_" and adds, "other cities have
|
|
the like court, and so called, as York, Lincoln, Winchester, &c. Here
|
|
the city of London is named; but it appeareth by that which hath been
|
|
said out of Fleta, that this act extends to such cities and boroughs
|
|
privileged,--that is, such as have such privilege to hold plea as
|
|
London hath."--_2 Inst._, 322.
|
|
|
|
The 12th chapter of the same statute is in the following words, which
|
|
plainly recognize the fact that "the mayor and _bailiffs_ of London" are
|
|
judicial officers holding courts in London.
|
|
|
|
"It is provided, also, that if a man, impleaded for a tenement in the
|
|
same city, (London,) doth vouch a foreigner to warranty, that he
|
|
shall come into the chancery, and have a writ to summon his warrantor
|
|
at a certain day before the justices of the bench, _and another writ
|
|
to the mayor and bailiffs of London, that they shall surcease_
|
|
(suspend proceedings) _in the matter that is before them by writ_,
|
|
until the plea of the warrantee be determined before the justices of
|
|
the bench; and when the plea at the bench shall be determined, then
|
|
shall he that is vouched be commanded to go into the city," (that is,
|
|
before "the mayor and _bailiffs'_" court,) "to answer unto the chief
|
|
plea; and a writ shall be awarded at the suit of the demandant by the
|
|
justices _unto the mayor and bailiffs, that they shall proceed in the
|
|
plea_," &c.--_6 Edward I._, ch. 12, (1278.)
|
|
|
|
Coke, in his commentary on this chapter, also speaks repeatedly of "the
|
|
mayor and _bailiffs_" _as judges holding courts_; and also speaks of
|
|
this chapter as applicable not only to "the citie of London, specially
|
|
named for the cause aforesaid, but extended by equity to all other
|
|
privileged places," (that is, privileged to have a court of "mayor and
|
|
_bailiffs_,") "where foreign voucher is made, as to Chester, Durham,
|
|
Salop," &c.--_2 Inst._, 325-7.
|
|
|
|
BAILIE.--In Scotch law, a municipal magistrate, corresponding with the
|
|
English _alderman_.[96]--_Burrill's Law Dictionary_.
|
|
|
|
BAILIFFE.--_Baillif._ Fr. A bailiff: a ministerial officer with duties
|
|
similar to those of a sheriff.... _The judge of a court._ A municipal
|
|
magistrate, &c.--_Burrill's Law Dict._
|
|
|
|
BAILIFF.... The word _bailiff_ is of Norman origin, and was applied in
|
|
England, at an early period, (after the example, it is said, of the
|
|
French,) to the chief magistrates of counties, or shires, such as the
|
|
alderman, the reeve, or sheriff, and also of inferior jurisdictions,
|
|
such as hundreds and wapentakes.--_Spelman, voc. Balivus; 1 Bl. Com._,
|
|
344. _See Bailli_, _Ballivus_. The Latin _ballivus_ occurs, indeed, in
|
|
the laws of Edward the Confessor, but Spelman thinks it was introduced
|
|
by a later hand. _Balliva_ (bailiwick) was the word formed from
|
|
_ballivus_, to denote the extent of territory comprised within a
|
|
bailiff's jurisdiction; and _bailiwick_ is still retained in writs and
|
|
other proceedings, as the name of a sheriff's county.--_1 Bl. Com._,
|
|
344. _See Balliva._ _The office of bailiff was at first strictly, though
|
|
not exclusively, a judicial one._ In France, the word had the sense of
|
|
what Spelman calls _justitia tutelaris_. _Ballivus_ occurs frequently in
|
|
the _Regiam Majestatem_, in the sense of a _judge_.--_Spelman._ In its
|
|
sense of a _deputy_, it was formerly applied, in England, to those
|
|
officers who, by virtue of a deputation, either from the sheriff or the
|
|
lords of private jurisdictions, exercised within the hundred, or
|
|
whatever might be the limits of their bailiwick, certain _judicial_ and
|
|
ministerial functions. With the disuse of private and local
|
|
jurisdictions, the meaning of the term became commonly restricted to
|
|
such persons as were deputed by the sheriff to assist him in the merely
|
|
ministerial portion of his duty; such as the summoning of juries, and
|
|
the execution of writs.--_Brande._ ... The word _bailiff_ is also
|
|
applied in England to the chief magistrates of certain towns and
|
|
jurisdictions, to the keepers of castles, forests and other places, and
|
|
to the stewards or agents of lords of manors.--_Burrill's Law Dict._
|
|
|
|
"BAILIFF, (from the Lat. _ballivus_; Fr. _baillif_, i.e., _Præfectus
|
|
provinciæ_,) signifies an officer appointed for the administration of
|
|
justice within a certain district. The office, as well as the name,
|
|
appears to have been derived from the French," &c.,--_Brewster's
|
|
Encyclopedia._
|
|
|
|
Millar says, "The French monarchs, about this period, were not content
|
|
with the power of receiving appeals from the several courts of their
|
|
barons. An expedient was devised of sending royal _bailiffs_ into
|
|
different parts of the kingdom, with a commission to take cognizance of
|
|
all those causes in which the sovereign was interested, and in reality
|
|
for the purpose of abridging and limiting the subordinate jurisdiction
|
|
of the neighboring feudal superiors. By an edict of Phillip Augustus, in
|
|
the year 1190, those _bailiffs_ were appointed in all the principal
|
|
towns of the kingdom."--_Millar's Hist. View of the Eng. Gov._, vol.
|
|
ii., ch. 3, p. 126.
|
|
|
|
"BAILIFF-_office_.--Magistrates who formerly administered justice in
|
|
the parliaments or courts of France, answering to the English
|
|
sheriffs, as mentioned by Bracton."--_Bouvier's Law Dict._
|
|
|
|
"There be several officers called _bailiffs_, whose offices and
|
|
employments seem quite different from each other.... The chief
|
|
magistrate, in divers ancient corporations, are called _bailiffs_, as
|
|
in Ipswich, Yarmouth, Colchester, &c. There are, likewise, officers
|
|
of the forest, who are termed bailiffs."--_1 Bacon's Abridgment_,
|
|
498-9.
|
|
|
|
"BAILIFF signifies a keeper or superintendent, and is directly
|
|
derived from the French word _bailli_, which appears to come from the
|
|
word _balivus_, and that from _bagalus_, a Latin word signifying
|
|
generally a governor, tutor, or superintendent.... The French word
|
|
_bailli_ is thus explained by Richelet, (_Dictionaire_, &c.:)
|
|
_Bailli._--_He who in a province has the superintendence of justice,
|
|
who is the ordinary judge of the nobles_, who is their head for the
|
|
_ban_ and _arriere ban_,[97] and who maintains the right and property
|
|
of others against those who attack them.... All the various officers
|
|
who are called by this name, though differing as to the nature of
|
|
their employments, seem to have some kind of superintendence
|
|
intrusted to them by their superior."--_Political Dictionary._
|
|
|
|
"BAILIFF, _balivus_. From the French word _bayliff_, that is, _præfectus
|
|
provinciæ_, and as the name, so the office itself was answerable to that
|
|
of France, where there were eight parliaments, which were high courts
|
|
from whence there lay no appeal, and within the precincts of the several
|
|
parts of that kingdom which belonged to each parliament, _there were
|
|
several provinces to which justice was administered by certain officers
|
|
called bailiffs_; and in England we have several counties in which
|
|
justice hath been, and still is, in small suits, administered to the
|
|
inhabitants by the officer whom we now call _sheriff_, or _viscount_;
|
|
(one of which names descends from the Saxons, the other from the
|
|
Normans.) And, though the sheriff is not called _bailiff_, yet it was
|
|
probable that was one of his names also, because the county is often
|
|
called _balliva_; as in the return of a writ, where the person is not
|
|
arrested, the sheriff saith, _infra-nominatus_, _A.B. non est inventus
|
|
in balliva mea_, &c.; (the within named A.B. is not found in my
|
|
bailiwick, &c.) And in the statute of Magna Carta, ch. 28, and 14 Ed. 3,
|
|
ch. 9, the word _bailiff_ seems to comprise as well sheriffs, as
|
|
bailiffs of hundreds.
|
|
|
|
"_Bailies_, in Scotland, are magistrates of burghs, possessed of certain
|
|
jurisdictions, having the same power within their territory as sheriffs
|
|
in the county....
|
|
|
|
"As England is divided into counties, so every county is divided into
|
|
hundreds; within which, in ancient times, the people had justice
|
|
administered to them by the several officers of every hundred, which
|
|
were the _bailiffs_. And it appears by Bracton, (_lib. 3, tract_. 2, ch.
|
|
34,) that _bailiffs_ of hundreds might anciently hold plea of appeal and
|
|
approvers; but since that time the hundred courts, except certain
|
|
franchises, are swallowed in the county courts; and now the _bailiff's_
|
|
name and office is grown into contempt, they being generally officers to
|
|
serve writs, &c., within their liberties; though, in other respects, the
|
|
name is still in good esteem, for the chief magistrates in divers towns
|
|
are called _bailiffs_; and sometimes the persons to whom the king's
|
|
castles are committed are termed _bailiffs_, as the _bailiff_ of Dover
|
|
Castle, &c.
|
|
|
|
"Of the ordinary _bailiffs_ there are several sorts, viz., _bailiffs_ of
|
|
liberties; sheriffs' _bailiffs_; _bailiffs_ of lords of manors;
|
|
_bailiffs_ of husbandry, &c....
|
|
|
|
"_Bailiffs_ of liberties or franchises are to be sworn to take
|
|
distresses, truly impanel jurors, make returns by indenture between them
|
|
and sheriffs, &c....
|
|
|
|
"_Bailiffs of courts baron_ summon those courts, and execute the process
|
|
thereof....
|
|
|
|
"Besides these, there are also _bailiffs of the forest_ ..."--_Jacob's
|
|
Law Dict. Tomlin's do._
|
|
|
|
"BAILIWICK, _balliva_,--is not only taken for the county, but signifies
|
|
generally that liberty which is exempted from the sheriff of the county,
|
|
over which the lord of the liberty appointeth a _bailiff_, with such
|
|
powers within his precinct as an under-sheriff exerciseth under the
|
|
sheriff of the county; such as the _bailiff_ of Westminster."--_Jacob's
|
|
Law Dict. Tomlin's do._
|
|
|
|
"_A bailiff of a Leet, Court-baron, Manor, Balivus Letæ, Baronis,
|
|
Manerii._--He is one that is appointed by the lord, or his steward,
|
|
within every manor, to do such offices as appertain thereunto, as to
|
|
summon the court, warn the tenants and resiants; also, to summon the
|
|
Leet and Homage, levy fines, and make distresses, &c., of which you may
|
|
read at large in _Kitchen's Court-leet and Court-baron_."--_A Law
|
|
Dictionary, anonymous_, (_in Suffolk Law Library_.)
|
|
|
|
"BAILIFF.--In England an officer appointed by the sheriff. Bailiffs are
|
|
either special, and appointed, for their adroitness, to arrest persons;
|
|
or bailiffs of hundreds, who collect fines, summon juries, attend the
|
|
assizes, and execute writs and processes. _The sheriff in England is the
|
|
king's bailiff...._
|
|
|
|
"_The office of bailiff formerly was high and honorable in England, and
|
|
officers under that title on the continent are still invested with
|
|
important functions._"--_Webster._
|
|
|
|
"BAILLI, (Scotland.)--An alderman; a magistrate who is second in rank in
|
|
a royal burgh."--_Worcester._
|
|
|
|
"_Baili, or Bailiff._--(Sorte d'officier de justice.) A bailiff; a sort
|
|
of magistrate."--_Boyer's French Dict._
|
|
|
|
"By some opinions, a _bailiff_, in Magna Carta, ch. 28, signifies _any
|
|
judge_."--_Cunningham's Law Dict._
|
|
|
|
"BAILIFF.--In the court of the Greek emperors there was a grand
|
|
_bajulos_, first tutor of the emperor's children. The superintendent of
|
|
foreign merchants seems also to have been called _bajulos_; and, as he
|
|
was appointed by the Venetians, this title (balio) was transferred to
|
|
the Venetian ambassador. From Greece, the official _bajulos_
|
|
(_ballivus_, _bailli_, in France; _bailiff_, in England,) was introduced
|
|
into the south of Europe, and denoted a superintendent; hence the eight
|
|
_ballivi_ of the knights of St. John, which constitute its supreme
|
|
council. In France, the royal bailiffs were commanders of the militia,
|
|
administrators or stewards of the domains, _and judges of their
|
|
districts_. In the course of time, only the first duty remained to the
|
|
bailiff; hence he was _bailli d'épée_, _and laws were administered in
|
|
his name by a lawyer, as his deputy, lieutenant de robe_. The
|
|
seigniories, with which high courts were connected, employed bailiffs,
|
|
who thus constituted, almost everywhere, _the lowest order of judges_.
|
|
From the courts of the nobility, the appellation passed to the royal
|
|
courts; from thence to the parliaments. In the greater bailiwicks of
|
|
cities of importance, Henry II. established a collegial constitution
|
|
under the name of _presidial courts_.... _The name of bailiff was
|
|
introduced into England with William I._ The counties were also called
|
|
_bailiwicks_, (_ballivæ_,) while the subdivisions were called
|
|
_hundreds_; but, as the courts of the hundreds have long since ceased,
|
|
the English bailiffs are only a kind of subordinate officers of justice,
|
|
like the French _huissiers_. These correspond very nearly to the
|
|
officers called _constables_ in the United States. Every sheriff has
|
|
some of them under him, for whom he is answerable. In some cities the
|
|
highest municipal officer yet bears this name, as the high bailiff of
|
|
Westminster. In London, the Lord Mayor is at the same time bailiff,
|
|
(which title he bore before the present became usual,) _and administers,
|
|
in this quality, the criminal jurisdiction of the city, in the court of
|
|
old Bailey_, where there are, annually, eight sittings of the court, for
|
|
the city of London and the county of Middlesex. _Usually, the recorder
|
|
of London supplies his place as judge._ In some instances the term
|
|
_bailiff_, in England, is applied to the chief magistrates of towns, or
|
|
to the commanders of particular castles, as that of Dover. The term
|
|
_baillie_, in Scotland, is applied to a judicial police-officer, having
|
|
powers very similar to those of justices of peace in the United
|
|
States."--_Encyclopædia Americana._]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 93: Perhaps it may be said (and such, it has already been
|
|
seen, is the opinion of Coke and others) that the chapter of Magna
|
|
Carta, that "no _bailiff_ from henceforth shall put any man to his open
|
|
law, (put him on trial,) nor to an oath (that is, an oath of
|
|
self-exculpation) upon his (the bailiff's) own accusation or testimony,
|
|
without credible witnesses brought in to prove the charge," _is itself_
|
|
a "provision in regard to the king's justices sitting in criminal
|
|
trials," and therefore implies that _they are to sit_ in such trials.
|
|
|
|
But, although the word _bailiff_ includes all _judicial_, as well as
|
|
other, officers, and would therefore in this case apply to the king's
|
|
justices, if they were to sit in criminal trials; yet this particular
|
|
chapter of Magna Carta evidently does not contemplate "_bailiffs_" while
|
|
acting in their _judicial_ capacity, (for they were not allowed to sit
|
|
in criminal trials at all,) but only in the character of _witnesses_;
|
|
and that the meaning of the chapter is, that the simple testimony
|
|
(simplici loquela) of "no bailiff," (of whatever kind,) unsupported by
|
|
other and "credible witnesses," shall be sufficient to put any man on
|
|
trial, or to his oath of self-exculpation.[98]
|
|
|
|
It will be noticed that the words of this chapter are _not_, "no bailiff
|
|
_of ours_,"--that is, _of the king_,--as in some other chapters of Magna
|
|
Carta; but simply "no bailiff," &c. The prohibition, therefore, applies
|
|
to all "bailiffs,"--to those chosen by the people, as well as those
|
|
appointed by the king. And the prohibition is obviously founded upon the
|
|
idea (a very sound one in that age certainly, and probably also in this)
|
|
that public officers (whether appointed by king or people) have
|
|
generally, or at least frequently, too many interests and animosities
|
|
against accused persons, to make it safe to convict any man on their
|
|
testimony alone.
|
|
|
|
The idea of Coke and others, that the object of this chapter was simply
|
|
to forbid _magistrates_ to put a man on trial, when there were no
|
|
witnesses against him, but only the simple accusation or testimony of
|
|
the magistrates themselves, before whom he was to be tried, is
|
|
preposterous; for that would be equivalent to supposing that magistrates
|
|
acted in the triple character of judge, jury and witnesses, _in the same
|
|
trial_; and that, therefore, _in such cases_, they needed to be
|
|
prohibited from condemning a man on their own accusation or testimony
|
|
alone. But such a provision would have been unnecessary and senseless,
|
|
for two reasons; first, because the bailiffs or magistrates had no power
|
|
to "hold pleas of the crown," still less to try or condemn a man; that
|
|
power resting wholly with the juries; second, because if bailiffs or
|
|
magistrates could try and condemn a man, without a jury, the prohibition
|
|
upon their doing so upon their own accusation or testimony alone, would
|
|
give no additional protection to the accused, so long as these same
|
|
bailiffs or magistrates were allowed to decide what weight should be
|
|
given, _both to their own testimony and that of other witnesses_; for,
|
|
if they wished to convict, they would of course decide that any
|
|
testimony, however frivolous or irrelevant, _in addition to their own_,
|
|
was sufficient. Certainly a magistrate could always procure witnesses
|
|
enough to testify to something or other, which _he himself_ could decide
|
|
to be corroborative of his own testimony. And thus the prohibition would
|
|
be defeated in fact, though observed in form.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 94: In this chapter I have called the justices "_presiding_
|
|
officers," solely for the want of a better term. They are not
|
|
"_presiding_ officers," in the sense of having any authority over the
|
|
jury; but are only assistants to, and teachers and servants of, the
|
|
jury. The foreman of the jury is properly the "presiding officer," so
|
|
far as there is such an officer at all. The sheriff has no authority
|
|
except over other persons than the jury.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 95: In this extract, Palgrave seems to assume that the king
|
|
himself had a right to sit as judge, in _jury_ trials, in the _county_
|
|
courts, in both civil and criminal cases. I apprehend he had no such
|
|
power at the _common law_, but only to sit in the trial of appeals, and
|
|
in the trial of peers, and of civil suits in which peers were parties,
|
|
and possibly in the courts of ancient demesne.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 96: _Alderman_ was a title anciently given to various
|
|
_judicial_ officers, as the Alderman of all England, Alderman of the
|
|
King, Alderman of the County, Alderman of the City or Borough, Alderman
|
|
of the Hundred or Wapentake. These were all _judicial_ officers. See Law
|
|
Dictionaries.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 97: "_Ban and arriere ban_, a proclamation, whereby all that
|
|
hold lands of the crown, (except some privileged officers and citizens,)
|
|
are summoned to meet at a certain place in order to serve the king in
|
|
his wars, either personally, or by proxy."--_Boyer._]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 98: At the common law, parties, in both civil and criminal
|
|
cases, were allowed to swear in their own behalf; and it will be so
|
|
again, if the true trial by jury should be reëstablished.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VIII.
|
|
|
|
THE FREE ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The free administration of justice was a principle of the common law;
|
|
and it must necessarily be a part of every system of government which is
|
|
not designed to be an engine in the hands of the rich for the oppression
|
|
of the poor.
|
|
|
|
In saying that the free administration of justice was a principle of the
|
|
common law, I mean only that parties were subjected to no costs for
|
|
jurors, witnesses, writs, or other necessaries for the trial,
|
|
_preliminary to the trial itself_. Consequently, no one could lose the
|
|
benefit of a trial, for the want of means to defray expenses. _But after
|
|
the trial_, the plaintiff or defendant was liable to be amerced, (by the
|
|
jury, of course,) for having troubled the court with the prosecution or
|
|
defence of an unjust suit.[99] But it is not likely that the losing
|
|
party was subjected to an amercement as a matter of course, but only in
|
|
those cases where the injustice of his cause was so evident as to make
|
|
him inexcusable in bringing it before the courts.
|
|
|
|
All the freeholders were required to attend the courts, that they might
|
|
serve as jurors and witnesses, and do any other service that could
|
|
legally be required of them; and their attendance was paid for by the
|
|
state. In other words, their attendance and service at the courts were
|
|
part of the rents which they paid the state for their lands.
|
|
|
|
The freeholders, who were thus required always to attend the courts,
|
|
were doubtless the only witnesses who were _usually_ required in _civil_
|
|
causes. This was owing to the fact that, in those days, when the people
|
|
at large could neither write nor read, few contracts were put in
|
|
writing. The expedient adopted for proving contracts, was that of making
|
|
them in the presence of witnesses, who could afterwards testify to the
|
|
transactions. Most contracts in regard to lands were made at the courts,
|
|
in the presence of the freeholders there assembled.[100]
|
|
|
|
In the king's courts it was specially provided by Magna Carta that
|
|
"justice and right" should not be "sold;" that is, that the king should
|
|
take nothing from the parties for administering justice.
|
|
|
|
The oath of a party to the justice of his cause was all that was
|
|
necessary to entitle him to the benefit of the courts free of all
|
|
expense; (except the risk of being amerced after the trial, in case the
|
|
jury should think he deserved it.[101])
|
|
|
|
_This principle of the free administration of justice connects itself
|
|
necessarily with the trial by jury, because a jury could not rightfully
|
|
give judgment against any man, in either a civil or criminal case, if
|
|
they had any reason to suppose he had been unable to procure his
|
|
witnesses._
|
|
|
|
The true trial by jury would also compel the free administration of
|
|
justice from another necessity, viz., that of preventing private
|
|
quarrels; because, unless the government enforced a man's rights and
|
|
redressed his wrongs, _free of expense to him_, a jury would be bound to
|
|
protect him in taking the law into his own hands. A man has a natural
|
|
right to enforce his own rights and redress his own wrongs. If one man
|
|
owe another a debt, and refuse to pay it, the creditor has a natural
|
|
right to seize sufficient property of the debtor, wherever he can find
|
|
it, to satisfy the debt. If one man commit a trespass upon the person,
|
|
property or character of another, the injured party has a natural right,
|
|
either to chastise the aggressor, or to take compensation for the injury
|
|
out of his property. But as the government is an impartial party as
|
|
between these individuals, it is more likely to do _exact_ justice
|
|
between them than the injured individual himself would do. The
|
|
government, also, having more power at its command, is likely to right a
|
|
man's wrongs more peacefully than the injured party himself could do it.
|
|
If, therefore, the government will do the work of enforcing a man's
|
|
rights, and redressing his wrongs, _promptly, and free of expense to
|
|
him_, he is under a moral obligation to leave the work in the hands of
|
|
the government; but not otherwise. When the government forbids him to
|
|
enforce his own rights or redress his own wrongs, and deprives him of
|
|
all means of obtaining justice, except on the condition of his employing
|
|
the government to obtain it for him, _and of paying the government for
|
|
doing it_, the government becomes itself the protector and accomplice of
|
|
the wrong-doer. If the government will forbid a man to protect his own
|
|
rights, it is bound to do it for him, _free of expense to him_. And so
|
|
long as government refuses to do this, juries, if they knew their
|
|
duties, would protect a man in defending his own rights.
|
|
|
|
Under the prevailing system, probably one half of the community are
|
|
virtually deprived of all protection for their rights, except what the
|
|
criminal law affords them. Courts of justice, for all civil suits, are
|
|
as effectually shut against them, as though it were done by bolts and
|
|
bars. Being forbidden to maintain their own rights by force,--as, for
|
|
instance, to compel the payment of debts,--and being unable to pay the
|
|
expenses of civil suits, they have no alternative but submission to many
|
|
acts of injustice, against which the government is bound either to
|
|
protect them, _free of expense_, or allow them to protect themselves.
|
|
|
|
There would be the same reason in compelling a party to pay the judge
|
|
and jury for their services, that there is in compelling him to pay the
|
|
witnesses, or any other _necessary_ charges.[102]
|
|
|
|
This compelling parties to pay the expenses of civil suits is one of the
|
|
many cases in which government is false to the fundamental principles on
|
|
which free government is based. What is the object of government, but to
|
|
protect men's rights? On what principle does a man pay his taxes to the
|
|
government, except on that of contributing his proportion towards the
|
|
necessary cost of protecting the rights of all? Yet, when his own rights
|
|
are actually invaded, the government, which he contributes to support,
|
|
instead of fulfilling its implied contract, becomes his enemy, and not
|
|
only refuses to protect his rights, (except at his own cost,) but even
|
|
forbids him to do it himself.
|
|
|
|
All free government is founded on the theory of voluntary association;
|
|
and on the theory that all the parties to it _voluntarily_ pay their
|
|
taxes for its support, on the condition of receiving protection in
|
|
return. But the idea that any _poor_ man would voluntarily pay taxes to
|
|
build up a government, which will neither protect his rights, (except at
|
|
a cost which he cannot meet,) nor suffer himself to protect them by such
|
|
means as may be in his power, is absurd.
|
|
|
|
Under the prevailing system, a large portion of the lawsuits determined
|
|
in courts, are mere contests of purses rather than of rights. And a
|
|
jury, sworn to decide causes "according to the evidence" produced, are
|
|
quite likely, _for aught they themselves can know_, to be deciding
|
|
merely the comparative length of the parties' purses, rather than the
|
|
intrinsic strength of their respective rights. Jurors ought to refuse to
|
|
decide a cause at all, except upon the assurance that all the evidence,
|
|
necessary to a full knowledge of the cause, is produced. This assurance
|
|
they can seldom have, unless the government itself produces all the
|
|
witnesses the parties desire.
|
|
|
|
In criminal cases, the atrocity of accusing a man of crime, and then
|
|
condemning him unless he prove his innocence at his own charges, is so
|
|
evident that a jury could rarely, if ever, be justified in convicting a
|
|
man under such circumstances.
|
|
|
|
But the free administration of justice is not only indispensable to the
|
|
maintenance of right between man and man; it would also promote
|
|
simplicity and stability in the laws. The mania for legislation would
|
|
be, in an important degree, restrained, if the government were compelled
|
|
to pay the expenses of all the suits that grew out of it.
|
|
|
|
The free administration of justice would diminish and nearly extinguish
|
|
another great evil,--that of malicious _civil_ suits. It is an old
|
|
saying, that "_multi litigant in foro, non ut aliquid lucrentur, sed ut
|
|
vexant alios_." (Many litigate in court, not that they may gain
|
|
anything, but that they may harass others.) Many men, from motives of
|
|
revenge and oppression, are willing to spend their own money in
|
|
prosecuting a groundless suit, if they can thereby compel their victims,
|
|
who are less able than themselves to bear the loss, to spend money in
|
|
the defence. Under the prevailing system, in which the parties pay the
|
|
expenses of their suits, nothing but money is necessary to enable any
|
|
malicious man to commence and prosecute a groundless suit, to the
|
|
terror, injury, and perhaps ruin, of another man. In this way, a court
|
|
of justice, into which none but a conscientious _plaintiff_ certainly
|
|
should ever be allowed to enter, becomes an arena into which any rich
|
|
and revengeful oppressor may drag any man poorer than himself, and
|
|
harass, terrify, and impoverish him, to almost any extent. It is a
|
|
scandal and an outrage, that government should suffer itself to be made
|
|
an instrument, in this way, for the gratification of private malice. We
|
|
might nearly as well have no courts of justice, as to throw them open,
|
|
as we do, for such flagitious uses. Yet the evil probably admits of no
|
|
remedy except a free administration of justice. Under a free system,
|
|
plaintiffs could rarely be influenced by motives of this kind; because
|
|
they could put their victim to little or no expense, _neither pending
|
|
the suit_, (which it is the object of the oppressor to do,) nor at its
|
|
termination. Besides, if the ancient common law practice should be
|
|
adopted, of amercing a party for troubling the courts with groundless
|
|
suits, the prosecutor himself would, in the end, be likely to be amerced
|
|
by the jury, in such a manner as to make courts of justice a very
|
|
unprofitable place for a man to go to seek revenge.
|
|
|
|
In estimating the evils of this kind, resulting from the present system,
|
|
we are to consider that they are not, by any means, confined to the
|
|
actual suits in which this kind of oppression is practised; but we are
|
|
to include all those cases in which the fear of such oppression is used
|
|
as a weapon to compel men into a surrender of their rights.
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 99: _2 Sullivan Lectures_, 234-5. _3 Blackstone_, 274-5, 376.
|
|
Sullivan says that both plaintiffs and defendants were liable to
|
|
amercement. Blackstone speaks of plaintiffs being liable, without saying
|
|
whether defendants were so or not. What the rule really was I do not
|
|
know. There would seem to be some reason in allowing defendants to
|
|
defend themselves, _at their own charges_, without exposing themselves
|
|
to amercement in case of failure.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 100: When any other witnesses than freeholders were required
|
|
in a civil suit, I am not aware of the manner in which their attendance
|
|
was procured; but it was doubtless done at the expense either of the
|
|
state or of the witnesses themselves. And it was doubtless the same in
|
|
criminal cases.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 101: "All claims were established in the first stage by the
|
|
oath of the plaintiff, except when otherwise specially directed by the
|
|
law. The oath, by which any claim was supported, was called the
|
|
fore-oath, or 'Præjuramentum,' and it was the foundation of his suit.
|
|
One of the cases which did not require this initiatory confirmation, was
|
|
when cattle could be tracked into another man's land, and then the
|
|
foot-mark stood for the fore-oath."--_2 Palgrave's Rise and Progress_,
|
|
&c., 114.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 102: Among the necessary expenses of suits, should be reckoned
|
|
reasonable compensation to counsel, for they are nearly or quite as
|
|
important to the administration of justice, as are judges, jurors, or
|
|
witnesses; and the universal practice of employing them, both on the
|
|
part of governments and of private persons, shows that their importance
|
|
is generally understood. As a mere matter of economy, too, it would be
|
|
wise for the government to pay them, rather than they should not be
|
|
employed; because they collect and arrange the testimony and the law
|
|
beforehand, so as to be able to present the whole case to the court and
|
|
jury intelligibly, and in a short space of time. Whereas, if they were
|
|
not employed, the court and jury would be under the necessity either of
|
|
spending much more time than now in the investigation of causes, or of
|
|
despatching them in haste, and with little regard to justice. They would
|
|
be very likely to do the latter, thus defeating the whole object of the
|
|
people in establishing courts.
|
|
|
|
To prevent the abuse of this right, it should perhaps be left
|
|
discretionary with the jury in each case to determine whether the
|
|
counsel should receive any pay--and, if any, how much--from the
|
|
government.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IX.
|
|
|
|
THE CRIMINAL INTENT.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It is a maxim of the common law that there can be no crime without a
|
|
criminal intent. And it is a perfectly clear principle, although one
|
|
which judges have in a great measure overthrown in practice, that
|
|
_jurors_ are to judge of the moral intent of an accused person, and hold
|
|
him guiltless, whatever his act, unless they find him to have acted with
|
|
a criminal intent; that is, with a design to do what he knew to be
|
|
criminal.
|
|
|
|
This principle is clear, because the question for a jury to determine
|
|
is, whether the accused be _guilty_, or _not guilty_. _Guilt_ is a
|
|
personal quality of the actor,--not _necessarily_ involved in the act,
|
|
but depending also upon the intent or motive with which the act was
|
|
done. Consequently, the jury must find that he acted from a criminal
|
|
motive, before they can declare him _guilty_.
|
|
|
|
There is no moral justice in, nor any political necessity for, punishing
|
|
a man for any act whatever that he may have committed, if he have done
|
|
it without any criminal intent. There can be no _moral justice_ in
|
|
punishing for such an act, because, there having been no _criminal
|
|
motive_, there can have been no other motive which justice can take
|
|
cognizance of, as demanding or justifying punishment. There can be no
|
|
_political necessity_ for punishing, to warn against similar acts in
|
|
future, because, if one man have injured another, however
|
|
unintentionally, he is liable, and justly liable, to a _civil_ suit for
|
|
damages; and in this suit he will be compelled to make compensation for
|
|
the injury, notwithstanding his innocence of any intention to injure. He
|
|
must bear the consequences of his own act, instead of throwing them upon
|
|
another, however innocent he may have been of any intention to do
|
|
wrong. And the damages he will have to pay will be a sufficient warning
|
|
to him not to do the like act again.
|
|
|
|
If it be alleged that there are crimes against the public, (as treason,
|
|
for example, or any other resistance to government,) for which private
|
|
persons can recover no damages, and that there is a political necessity
|
|
for punishing for such offences, even though the party acted
|
|
conscientiously, the answer is,--the government must bear with all
|
|
resistance that is not so clearly wrong as to give evidence of criminal
|
|
intent. In other words, the government, in all its acts, must keep
|
|
itself so _clearly_ within the limits of justice, as that twelve men,
|
|
taken at random, will all agree that it is in the right, or it must
|
|
incur the risk of resistance, without any power to punish it. This is
|
|
the mode in which the trial by jury operates to prevent the government
|
|
from falling into the hands of a party, or a faction, and to keep it
|
|
within such limits as _all_, or substantially _all_, the people are
|
|
agreed that it may occupy.
|
|
|
|
This necessity for a criminal intent, to justify conviction, is proved
|
|
by the issue which the jury are to try, and the verdict they are to
|
|
pronounce. The "issue" they are to try is, "_guilty_" or "_not guilty_."
|
|
And those are the terms they are required to use in rendering their
|
|
verdicts. But it is a plain falsehood to say that a man is "_guilty_,"
|
|
unless he have done an act which he knew to be criminal.
|
|
|
|
This necessity for a criminal intent--in other words, for _guilt_--as a
|
|
preliminary to conviction, makes it impossible that a man can be
|
|
rightfully convicted for an act that is intrinsically innocent, though
|
|
forbidden by the government; because guilt is an intrinsic quality of
|
|
actions and motives, and not one that can be imparted to them by
|
|
arbitrary legislation. All the efforts of the government, therefore, to
|
|
"_make offences by statute_," out of acts that are not criminal by
|
|
nature, must necessarily be ineffectual, unless a jury will declare a
|
|
man "_guilty_" for an act that is really innocent.
|
|
|
|
The corruption of judges, in their attempts to uphold the arbitrary
|
|
authority of the government, by procuring the conviction of individuals
|
|
for acts innocent in themselves, and forbidden only by some tyrannical
|
|
statute, and the commission of which therefore indicates no criminal
|
|
intent, is very apparent.
|
|
|
|
To accomplish this object, they have in modern times held it to be
|
|
unnecessary that indictments should charge, as by the common law they
|
|
were required to do, that an act was done "_wickedly_," "_feloniously_,"
|
|
"_with malice aforethought_," or in any other manner that implied a
|
|
criminal intent, without which there can be no criminality; but that it
|
|
is sufficient to charge simply that it was done "_contrary to the form
|
|
of the statute in such case made and provided_." This form of indictment
|
|
proceeds plainly upon the assumption that the government is absolute,
|
|
and that it has authority to prohibit any act it pleases, however
|
|
innocent in its nature the act may be. Judges have been driven to the
|
|
alternative of either sanctioning this new form of indictment, (which
|
|
they never had any constitutional right to sanction,) or of seeing the
|
|
authority of many of the statutes of the government fall to the ground;
|
|
because the acts forbidden by the statutes were so plainly innocent in
|
|
their nature, that even the government itself had not the face to allege
|
|
that the commission of them implied or indicated any criminal intent.
|
|
|
|
To get rid of the necessity of showing a criminal intent, and thereby
|
|
further to enslave the people, by reducing them to the necessity of a
|
|
blind, unreasoning submission to the arbitrary will of the government,
|
|
and of a surrender of all right, on their own part, to judge what are
|
|
their constitutional and natural rights and liberties, courts have
|
|
invented another idea, which they have incorporated among the pretended
|
|
_maxims_, upon which they act in criminal trials, viz., that "_ignorance
|
|
of the law excuses no one_." As if it were in the nature of things
|
|
possible that there could be an excuse more absolute and complete. What
|
|
else than ignorance of the law is it that excuses persons under the
|
|
years of discretion, and men of imbecile minds? What else than ignorance
|
|
of the law is it that excuses judges themselves for all their erroneous
|
|
decisions? Nothing. They are every day committing errors, which would be
|
|
crimes, but for their ignorance of the law. And yet these same judges,
|
|
who claim to be _learned_ in the law, and who yet could not hold their
|
|
offices for a day, but for the allowance which the law makes for their
|
|
ignorance, are continually asserting it to be a "maxim" that "ignorance
|
|
of the law excuses no one;" (by which, of course, they really mean that
|
|
it excuses no one but themselves; and especially that it excuses no
|
|
_unlearned_ man, who comes before them charged with crime.)
|
|
|
|
This preposterous doctrine, that "ignorance of the law excuses no one,"
|
|
is asserted by courts because it is an indispensable one to the
|
|
maintenance of absolute power in the government. It is indispensable for
|
|
this purpose, because, if it be once admitted that the people _have_ any
|
|
rights and liberties which the government cannot lawfully take from
|
|
them, then the question arises in regard to every statute of the
|
|
government, whether it be law, or not; that is, whether it infringe, or
|
|
not, the rights and liberties of the people. Of this question every man
|
|
must of course judge according to the light in his own mind. And no man
|
|
can be convicted unless the jury find, not only that the statute is
|
|
_law_,--that it does _not_ infringe the rights and liberties of the
|
|
people,--but also that it was so clearly law, so clearly consistent with
|
|
the rights and liberties of the people, as that the individual himself,
|
|
who transgressed it, _knew it to be so_, and therefore had no moral
|
|
excuse for transgressing it. Governments see that if ignorance of the
|
|
law were allowed to excuse a man for any act whatever, it must excuse
|
|
him for transgressing all statutes whatsoever, which he himself thinks
|
|
inconsistent with his rights and liberties. But such a doctrine would of
|
|
course be inconsistent with the maintenance of arbitrary power by the
|
|
government; and hence governments will not allow the plea, although they
|
|
will not confess their true reasons for disallowing it.
|
|
|
|
The only reasons, (if they deserve the name of reasons), that I ever
|
|
knew given for the doctrine that ignorance of the law excuses no one,
|
|
are these:
|
|
|
|
1. "The reason for the maxim is that of necessity. It prevails, 'not
|
|
that all men know the law, but because it is an excuse which every
|
|
man will make, and no man can tell how to confute him.'--_Selden_,
|
|
(as quoted in the 2d edition of _Starkie on Slander_, Prelim. Disc.,
|
|
p. 140, note.)"--_Law Magazine_, (_London_,) vol. 27, p. 97.
|
|
|
|
This reason impliedly admits that ignorance of the law is,
|
|
_intrinsically_, an ample and sufficient excuse for a crime; and that
|
|
the excuse ought to be allowed, if the fact of ignorance could but be
|
|
ascertained. But it asserts that this fact is incapable of being
|
|
ascertained, and that therefore there is a necessity for punishing the
|
|
ignorant and the knowing--that is, the innocent and the guilty--without
|
|
discrimination.
|
|
|
|
This reason is worthy of the doctrine it is used to uphold; as if a plea
|
|
of ignorance, any more than any other plea, must necessarily be believed
|
|
simply because it is urged; and as if it were not a common and every-day
|
|
practice of courts and juries, in both civil and criminal cases, to
|
|
determine the mental capacity of individuals; as, for example, to
|
|
determine whether they are of sufficient mental capacity to make
|
|
reasonable contracts; whether they are lunatic; whether they are
|
|
_compotes mentis_, "of sound mind and memory," &c. &c. And there is
|
|
obviously no more difficulty in a jury's determining whether an accused
|
|
person knew the law in a criminal case, than there is in determining any
|
|
of these other questions that are continually determined in regard to a
|
|
man's mental capacity. For the question to be settled by the jury is not
|
|
whether the accused person knew the particular _penalty_ attached to his
|
|
act, (for at common law no one knew what penalty a _jury_ would attach
|
|
to an offence,) but whether he knew that his act was _intrinsically
|
|
criminal_. If it were _intrinsically criminal_, it was criminal at
|
|
common law. If it was not intrinsically criminal, it was not criminal at
|
|
common law. (At least, such was the general principle of the common law.
|
|
There may have been exceptions in practice, owing to the fact that the
|
|
opinions of men, as to what was intrinsically criminal, may not have
|
|
been in all cases correct.)
|
|
|
|
A jury, then, in judging whether an accused person knew his act to be
|
|
illegal, were bound first to use their own judgments, as to whether the
|
|
act were _intrinsically_ criminal. If their own judgments told them the
|
|
act was _intrinsically_ and _clearly_ criminal, they would naturally and
|
|
reasonably infer that the accused also understood that it was
|
|
intrinsically criminal, (and consequently illegal,) unless it should
|
|
appear that he was either below themselves in the scale of intellect, or
|
|
had had less opportunities of knowing what acts were criminal. In
|
|
short, they would judge, from any and every means they might have of
|
|
judging; and if they had any reasonable doubt that he knew his act to be
|
|
criminal in itself, they would be bound to acquit him.
|
|
|
|
The second reason that has been offered for the doctrine that ignorance
|
|
of the law excuses no one, is this:
|
|
|
|
"Ignorance of the municipal law of the kingdom, or of the penalty
|
|
thereby inflicted on offenders, doth not excuse any that is of the
|
|
age of discretion and compos mentis, from the penalty of the breach
|
|
of it; because every person, of the age of discretion and compos
|
|
mentis, _is bound to know the law_, and presumed to do so.
|
|
_Ignorantia eorum, quæ quis scire tenetur non excusat_." (Ignorance
|
|
of those things which every one is bound to know, does not
|
|
excuse.)--_1 Hale's Pleas of the Crown_, 42. _Doctor and Student,
|
|
Dialog. 2_, ch. 46. _Law Magazine_, (_London_,) vol. 27, p. 97.
|
|
|
|
The sum of this reason is, that ignorance of the law excuses no one,
|
|
(who is of the age of discretion and is compos mentis,) because every
|
|
such person "_is bound to know the law_." But this is giving no reason
|
|
at all for the doctrine, since saying that a man "is bound to know the
|
|
law," is only saying, _in another form_, that "ignorance of the law does
|
|
not excuse him." There is no difference at all in the two ideas. To say,
|
|
therefore, that "ignorance of the law excuses no one, _because_ every
|
|
one is bound to know the law," is only equivalent to saying that
|
|
"ignorance of the law excuses no one, _because_ ignorance of the law
|
|
excuses no one." It is merely reässerting the doctrine, without giving
|
|
any reason at all.
|
|
|
|
And yet these reasons, which are really no reasons at all, are the only
|
|
ones, so far as I know, that have ever been offered for this absurd and
|
|
brutal doctrine.
|
|
|
|
The idea suggested, that "the age of discretion" determines the guilt of
|
|
a person,--that there is a particular age, prior to which _all_ persons
|
|
alike should be held incapable of knowing _any_ crime, and subsequent to
|
|
which _all_ persons alike should be held capable of knowing _all_
|
|
crimes,--is another of this most ridiculous nest of ideas. All mankind
|
|
acquire their knowledge of crimes, as they do of other things,
|
|
_gradually_. Some they learn at an early age; others not till a later
|
|
one. One individual acquires a knowledge of crimes, as he does of
|
|
arithmetic, at an earlier age than others do. And to apply the same
|
|
presumption to all, on the ground of age alone, is not only gross
|
|
injustice, but gross folly. A universal presumption might, with nearly
|
|
or quite as much reason, be founded upon weight, or height, as upon
|
|
age.[103]
|
|
|
|
This doctrine, that "ignorance of the law excuses no one," is constantly
|
|
repeated in the form that "every one is bound to know the law." The
|
|
doctrine is true in civil matters, especially in contracts, so far as
|
|
this: that no man, who has the _ordinary_ capacity to make reasonable
|
|
contracts, can escape the consequences of his own agreement, on the
|
|
ground that he did not know the law applicable to it. When a man makes a
|
|
contract, he gives the other party rights; and he must of necessity
|
|
judge for himself, and take his own risk, as to what those rights
|
|
are,--otherwise the contract would not be binding, and men could not
|
|
make contracts that would convey rights to each other. Besides, the
|
|
capacity to make reasonable contracts, _implies and includes_ a
|
|
capacity to form a reasonable judgment as to the law applicable to them.
|
|
But in _criminal_ matters, where the question is one of punishment, or
|
|
not; where no second party has acquired any right to have the crime
|
|
punished, unless it were committed with criminal intent, (but only to
|
|
have it compensated for by damages in a civil suit;) and when the
|
|
criminal intent is the only moral justification for the punishment, the
|
|
principle does not apply, and a man is bound to know the law _only as
|
|
well as he reasonably may_. The criminal law requires neither
|
|
impossibilities nor extraordinaries of any one. It requires only
|
|
thoughtfulness and a good conscience. It requires only that a man fairly
|
|
and properly use the judgment he possesses, and the means he has of
|
|
learning his duty. It requires of him only the same care to know his
|
|
duty in regard to the law, that he is morally bound to use in other
|
|
matters of equal importance. _And this care it does require of him._ Any
|
|
ignorance of the law, therefore, that is unnecessary, or that arises
|
|
from indifference or disregard of one's duty, is no excuse. An accused
|
|
person, therefore, may be rightfully held responsible for such a
|
|
knowledge of the law as is common to men in general, having no greater
|
|
natural capacities than himself, and no greater opportunities for
|
|
learning the law. And he can rightfully be held to no greater knowledge
|
|
of the law than this. To hold him responsible for a greater knowledge of
|
|
the law than is common to mankind, when other things are equal, would be
|
|
gross injustice and cruelty. The mass of mankind can give but little of
|
|
their attention to acquiring a knowledge of the law. Their other duties
|
|
in life forbid it. Of course, they cannot investigate abstruse or
|
|
difficult questions. All that can rightfully be required of each of
|
|
them, then, is that he exercise such a candid and conscientious judgment
|
|
as it is common for mankind generally to exercise in such matters. If he
|
|
have done this, it would be monstrous to punish him criminally for his
|
|
errors; errors not of conscience, but only of judgment. It would also be
|
|
contrary to the first principles of a free government (that is, a
|
|
government formed by voluntary association) to punish men in such cases,
|
|
because it would be absurd to suppose that any man would voluntarily
|
|
assist to establish or support a government that would punish himself
|
|
for acts which he himself did not know to be crimes. But a man may
|
|
reasonably unite with his fellow-men to maintain a government to punish
|
|
those acts which he himself considers criminal, and may reasonably
|
|
acquiesce in his own liability to be punished for such acts. As those
|
|
are the only grounds on which any one can be supposed to render any
|
|
voluntary support to a government, it follows that a government formed
|
|
by voluntary association, and of course having no powers except such as
|
|
_all_ the associates have consented that it may have, can have no power
|
|
to punish a man for acts which he did not himself know to be criminal.
|
|
|
|
The safety of society, which is the only object of the criminal law,
|
|
requires only that those acts _which are understood by mankind at large
|
|
to be intrinsically criminal_, should be punished as crimes. The
|
|
remaining few (if there are any) may safely be left to go unpunished.
|
|
Nor does the safety of society require that any individuals, other than
|
|
those who have sufficient mental capacity to understand that their acts
|
|
are criminal, should be criminally punished. All others may safely be
|
|
left to their liability, under the _civil_ law, to compensate for their
|
|
unintentional wrongs.
|
|
|
|
The only real object of this absurd and atrocious doctrine, that
|
|
"ignorance of the law (that is, of crime) excuses no one," and that
|
|
"every one is bound to know the _criminal_ law," (that is, bound to know
|
|
what is a crime,) is to maintain an entirely arbitrary authority on the
|
|
part of the government, and to deny to the people all right to judge for
|
|
themselves what their own rights and liberties are. In other words, the
|
|
whole object of the doctrine is to deny to the people themselves all
|
|
right to judge what statutes and other acts of the government are
|
|
consistent or inconsistent with their own rights and liberties; and thus
|
|
to reduce the people to the condition of mere slaves to a despotic
|
|
power, such as the people themselves would never have voluntarily
|
|
established, and the justice of whose laws the people themselves cannot
|
|
understand.
|
|
|
|
Under the true trial by jury all tyranny of this kind would be
|
|
abolished. A jury would not only judge what acts were really criminal,
|
|
but they would judge of the mental capacity of an accused person, and of
|
|
his opportunities for understanding the true character of his conduct.
|
|
In short, they would judge of his moral intent from all the
|
|
circumstances of the case, and acquit him, if they had any reasonable
|
|
doubt that he knew that he was committing a crime.[104]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 103: This presumption, founded upon age alone, is as absurd in
|
|
civil matters as in criminal. What can be more entirely ludicrous than
|
|
the idea that all men (not manifestly imbecile) become mentally
|
|
competent to make all contracts whatsoever on the day they become
|
|
twenty-one years of age?--and that, previous to that day, no man becomes
|
|
competent to make any contract whatever, except for the present supply
|
|
of the most obvious wants of nature? In reason, a man's _legal_
|
|
competency to make _binding_ contracts, in any and every case whatever,
|
|
depends wholly upon his _mental_ capacity to make _reasonable_ contracts
|
|
in each particular case. It of course requires more capacity to make a
|
|
reasonable contract in some cases than in others. It requires, for
|
|
example, more capacity to make a reasonable contract in the purchase of
|
|
a large estate, than in the purchase of a pair of shoes. But the mental
|
|
capacity to make a reasonable contract, in any particular case, is, in
|
|
reason, the only legal criterion of the legal competency to make a
|
|
binding contract in that case. The age, whether more or less than
|
|
twenty-one years, is of no legal consequence whatever, except that it is
|
|
entitled to some consideration as _evidence of capacity_.
|
|
|
|
It may be mentioned, in this connection, that the rules that prevail,
|
|
that every man is entitled to freedom from parental authority at
|
|
twenty-one years of age, and no one before that age, are of the same
|
|
class of absurdities with those that have been mentioned. The only
|
|
ground on which a parent is ever entitled to exercise authority over his
|
|
child, is that the child is incapable of taking reasonable care of
|
|
himself. The child would be entitled to his freedom from his birth, if
|
|
he were at that time capable of taking reasonable care of himself. Some
|
|
become capable of taking care of themselves at an earlier age than
|
|
others. And whenever any one becomes capable of taking reasonable care
|
|
of himself, and not until then, he is entitled to his freedom, be his
|
|
age more or less.
|
|
|
|
These principles would prevail under the true trial by jury, the jury
|
|
being the judges of the capacity of every individual whose capacity
|
|
should be called in question.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 104: In contrast to the doctrines of the text, it may be
|
|
proper to present more distinctly the doctrines that are maintained by
|
|
judges, and that prevail in courts of justice.
|
|
|
|
Of course, no judge, either of the present day, or perhaps within the
|
|
last five hundred years, has admitted the right of a jury to judge of
|
|
the _justice_ of a law, or to hold any law invalid for its injustice.
|
|
Every judge asserts the power of the government to punish for acts that
|
|
are intrinsically innocent, and which therefore involve or evince no
|
|
criminal intent. To accommodate the administration of law to this
|
|
principle, all judges, so far as I am aware, hold it to be unnecessary
|
|
that an indictment should charge, or that a jury should find, that an
|
|
act was done with a criminal intent, except in those cases where the act
|
|
is _malum in se_,--criminal in itself. In all other cases, so far as I
|
|
am aware, they hold it sufficient that the indictment charge, and
|
|
consequently that the jury find, simply that the act was done "contrary
|
|
to the form of the statute in such case made and provided;" in other
|
|
words, contrary to the orders of the government.
|
|
|
|
All these doctrines prevail universally among judges, and are, I think,
|
|
uniformly practised upon in courts of justice; and they plainly involve
|
|
the most absolute despotism on the part of the government.
|
|
|
|
But there is still another doctrine that extensively, and perhaps most
|
|
generally, prevails in practice, although judges are not agreed in
|
|
regard to its soundness. It is this: that it is not even necessary that
|
|
the jury should see or know, _for themselves_, what the law _is_ that is
|
|
charged to have been violated; nor to see or know, _for themselves_,
|
|
that the act charged was in violation of any law whatever;--but that it
|
|
is sufficient that they be simply _told by the judge_ that any act
|
|
whatever, charged in an indictment, is in violation of law, and that
|
|
they are then bound blindly to receive the declaration as true, and
|
|
convict a man accordingly, if they find that he has done the act
|
|
charged.
|
|
|
|
This doctrine is adopted by many among the most eminent judges, and the
|
|
reasons for it are thus given by Lord Mansfield:
|
|
|
|
"They (the jury) do not know, and are not presumed to know, the law.
|
|
They are not sworn to decide the law;[105] they are not required to
|
|
do it.... The jury ought not to assume the jurisdiction of law. They
|
|
do not know, and are not presumed to know, anything of the matter.
|
|
They do not understand the language in which it is conceived, or the
|
|
meaning of the terms. They have no rule to go by but their passions
|
|
and wishes."--_3 Term Rep._, 428, note.
|
|
|
|
What is this but saying that the people, who are supposed to be
|
|
represented in juries, and who institute and support the government, (of
|
|
course for the protection of their own rights and liberties, _as they
|
|
understand them_, for plainly no other motive can be attributed to
|
|
them,) are really the slaves of a despotic power, whose arbitrary
|
|
commands even they are not supposed competent to understand, but for the
|
|
transgression of which they are nevertheless to be punished as
|
|
criminals?
|
|
|
|
This is plainly the sum of the doctrine, because the jury are the peers
|
|
(equals) of the accused, and are therefore supposed to know the law as
|
|
well as he does, and as well as it is known by the people at large. If
|
|
_they_ (the jury) are not presumed to know the law, neither the accused
|
|
nor the people at large can be presumed to know it. Hence, it follows
|
|
that one principle of the _true_ trial by jury is, that no accused
|
|
person shall be held responsible for any other or greater knowledge of
|
|
the law than is common to his political equals, who will generally be
|
|
men of nearly similar condition in life. But the doctrine of Mansfield
|
|
is, that the body of the people, from whom jurors are taken, are
|
|
responsible to a law, _which it is agreed they cannot understand_. What
|
|
is this but despotism?--and not merely despotism, but insult and
|
|
oppression of the intensest kind?
|
|
|
|
This doctrine of Mansfield is the doctrine of all who deny the right of
|
|
juries to judge of the law, although all may not choose to express it in
|
|
so blunt and unambiguous terms. But the doctrine evidently admits of no
|
|
other interpretation or defence.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 105: This declaration of Mansfield, that juries in England
|
|
"are not sworn to decide the law" in criminal cases, is a plain
|
|
falsehood. They are sworn to try the whole case at issue between the
|
|
king and the prisoner, and that includes the law as well as the fact.
|
|
See _juror's oath_, page 86.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER X.
|
|
|
|
MORAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR JURORS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The trial by jury must, if possible, be construed to be such that a man
|
|
can rightfully sit in a jury, and unite with his fellows in giving
|
|
judgment. But no man can rightfully do this, unless he hold in his own
|
|
hand alone a veto upon any judgment or sentence whatever to be rendered
|
|
by the jury against a defendant, which veto he must be permitted to use
|
|
according to his own discretion and conscience, and not bound to use
|
|
according to the dictation of either legislatures or judges.
|
|
|
|
The prevalent idea, that a juror may, at the mere dictation of a
|
|
legislature or a judge, and without the concurrence of his own
|
|
conscience or understanding, declare a man "_guilty_," and thus in
|
|
effect license the government to punish him; and that the legislature or
|
|
the judge, and not himself, has in that case all the moral
|
|
responsibility for the correctness of the principles on which the
|
|
judgment was rendered, is one of the many gross impostures by which it
|
|
could hardly have been supposed that any sane man could ever have been
|
|
deluded, but which governments have nevertheless succeeded in inducing
|
|
the people at large to receive and act upon.
|
|
|
|
As a moral proposition, it is perfectly self-evident that, unless juries
|
|
have all the legal rights that have been claimed for them in the
|
|
preceding chapters,--that is, the rights of judging what the law is,
|
|
whether the law be a just one, what evidence is admissible, what weight
|
|
the evidence is entitled to, whether an act were done with a criminal
|
|
intent, and the right also to _limit_ the sentence, free of all
|
|
dictation from any quarter,--they have no _moral_ right to sit in the
|
|
trial at all, and cannot do so without making themselves accomplices in
|
|
any injustice that they may have reason to believe may result from
|
|
their verdict. It is absurd to say that they have no moral
|
|
responsibility for the use that may be made of their verdict by the
|
|
government, when they have reason to suppose it will be used for
|
|
purposes of injustice.
|
|
|
|
It is, for instance, manifestly absurd to say that jurors have no moral
|
|
responsibility for the enforcement of an unjust law, when they consent
|
|
to render a verdict of _guilty_ for the transgression of it; which
|
|
verdict they know, or have good reason to believe, will be used by the
|
|
government as a justification for inflicting a penalty.
|
|
|
|
It is absurd, also, to say that jurors have no moral responsibility for
|
|
a punishment inflicted upon a man _against law_, when, at the dictation
|
|
of a judge as to what the law is, they have consented to render a
|
|
verdict against their own opinions of the law.
|
|
|
|
It is absurd, too, to say that jurors have no moral responsibility for
|
|
the conviction and punishment of an innocent man, when they consent to
|
|
render a verdict against him on the strength of evidence, or laws of
|
|
evidence, dictated to them by the court, if any evidence or laws of
|
|
evidence have been excluded, which _they_ (the jurors) think ought to
|
|
have been admitted in his defence.
|
|
|
|
It is absurd to say that jurors have no moral responsibility for
|
|
rendering a verdict of "_guilty_" against a man, for an act which he did
|
|
not know to be a crime, and in the commission of which, therefore, he
|
|
could have had no criminal intent, in obedience to the instructions of
|
|
courts that "ignorance of the law (that is, of crime) excuses no one."
|
|
|
|
It is absurd, also, to say that jurors have no moral responsibility for
|
|
any cruel or unreasonable _sentence_ that may be inflicted even upon a
|
|
_guilty_ man, when they consent to render a verdict which they have
|
|
reason to believe will be used by the government as a justification for
|
|
the infliction of such sentence.
|
|
|
|
The consequence is, that jurors must have the whole case in their hands,
|
|
and judge of law, evidence, and sentence, or they incur the moral
|
|
responsibility of accomplices in any injustice which they have reason to
|
|
believe will be done by the government on the authority of their
|
|
verdict.
|
|
|
|
The same principles apply to civil cases as to criminal. If a jury
|
|
consent, at the dictation of the court, as to either law or evidence, to
|
|
render a verdict, on the strength of which they have reason to believe
|
|
that a man's property will be taken from him and given to another,
|
|
against their own notions of justice, they make themselves morally
|
|
responsible for the wrong.
|
|
|
|
Every man, therefore, ought to refuse to sit in a jury, and to take the
|
|
oath of a juror, unless the form of the oath be such as to allow him to
|
|
use his own judgment, on every part of the case, free of all dictation
|
|
whatsoever, and to hold in his own hand a veto upon any verdict that can
|
|
be rendered against a defendant, and any sentence that can be inflicted
|
|
upon him, even if he be guilty.
|
|
|
|
Of course, no man can rightfully take an oath as juror, to try a case
|
|
"according to law," (if by law be meant anything other than his own
|
|
ideas of justice,) nor "according to the law and the evidence, _as they
|
|
shall be given him_." Nor can he rightfully take an oath even to try a
|
|
case "_according to the evidence_," because in all cases he may have
|
|
good reason to believe that a party has been unable to produce all the
|
|
evidence legitimately entitled to be received. The only oath which it
|
|
would seem that a man can rightfully take as juror, in either a civil or
|
|
criminal case, is, that he "will try the case _according to his
|
|
conscience_." Of course, the form may admit of variation, but this
|
|
should be the substance. Such, we have seen, were the ancient common law
|
|
oaths.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XI.
|
|
|
|
AUTHORITY OF MAGNA CARTA.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Probably no political compact between king and people was ever entered
|
|
into in a manner to settle more authoritatively the fundamental law of a
|
|
nation, than was Magna Carta. Probably no people were ever more united
|
|
and resolute in demanding from their king a definite and unambiguous
|
|
acknowledgment of their rights and liberties, than were the English at
|
|
that time. Probably no king was ever more completely stripped of all
|
|
power to maintain his throne, and at the same time resist the demands of
|
|
his people, than was John on the 15th day of June, 1215. Probably no
|
|
king ever consented, more deliberately or explicitly, to hold his throne
|
|
subject to specific and enumerated limitations upon his power, than did
|
|
John when he put his seal to the Great Charter of the Liberties of
|
|
England. And if any political compact between king and people was ever
|
|
valid to settle the liberties of the people, or to limit the power of
|
|
the crown, that compact is now to be found in Magna Carta. If,
|
|
therefore, the constitutional authority of Magna Carta had rested solely
|
|
upon the compact of John with his people, that authority would have been
|
|
entitled to stand forever as the supreme law of the land, unless revoked
|
|
by the will of the people themselves.
|
|
|
|
But the authority of Magna Carta does not rest alone upon the compact
|
|
with _John_. When, in the next year, (1216,) his son, Henry III., came
|
|
to the throne, the charter was ratified by him, and again in 1217, and
|
|
again in 1225, in substantially the same form, and especially without
|
|
allowing any new powers, legislative, judicial, or executive, to the
|
|
king or his judges, and without detracting in the least from the powers
|
|
of the jury. And from the latter date to this, the charter has remained
|
|
unchanged.
|
|
|
|
In the course of two hundred years the charter was confirmed by Henry
|
|
and his successors more than thirty times. And although they were guilty
|
|
of numerous and almost continual breaches of it, and were constantly
|
|
seeking to evade it, yet such were the spirit, vigilance and courage of
|
|
the nation, that the kings held their thrones only on the condition of
|
|
their renewed and solemn promises of observance. And it was not until
|
|
1429, (as will be more fully shown hereafter,) when a truce between
|
|
themselves, and a formal combination against the mass of the people, had
|
|
been entered into, by the king, the nobility, and the "_forty shilling
|
|
freeholders_," (a class whom Mackintosh designates as "_a few
|
|
freeholders then accounted wealthy_,"[106]) by the exclusion of all
|
|
others than such freeholders from all voice in the election of knights
|
|
to represent the counties in the House of Commons, that a repetition of
|
|
these confirmations of Magna Carta ceased to be demanded and
|
|
obtained.[107]
|
|
|
|
The terms and the formalities of some of these "confirmations" make them
|
|
worthy of insertion at length.
|
|
|
|
Hume thus describes one which took place in the 38th year of Henry III.
|
|
(1253):
|
|
|
|
"But as they (the barons) had experienced his (the king's) frequent
|
|
breach of promise, they required that he should ratify the Great
|
|
Charter in a manner still more authentic and solemn than any which he
|
|
had hitherto employed. All the prelates and abbots were assembled.
|
|
They held burning tapers in their hands. The Great Charter was read
|
|
before them. They denounced the sentence of excommunication against
|
|
every one who should thenceforth violate that fundamental law. They
|
|
threw their tapers on the ground, and exclaimed, _May the soul of
|
|
every one who incurs this sentence so stink and corrupt in hell!_ The
|
|
king bore a part in this ceremony, and subjoined, 'So help me God! I
|
|
will keep all these articles inviolate, as I am a man, as I am a
|
|
Christian, as I am a knight, and as I am a king crowned and
|
|
anointed.'"--_Hume_, ch. 12. See also _Blackstone's Introd. to the
|
|
Charters. Black. Law Tracts_, Oxford ed., p. 332. _Mackintosh's Hist.
|
|
of Eng._, ch. 3. _Lardner's Cab. Cyc._, vol. 45, p. 233-4.
|
|
|
|
The following is the form of "the sentence of excommunication" referred
|
|
to by Hume:
|
|
|
|
"_The Sentence of Curse, Given by the Bishops, against the Breakers
|
|
of the Charters._
|
|
|
|
"The year of our Lord a thousand two hundred and fifty-three, the
|
|
third day of May, in the great Hall of the King at Westminster, _in
|
|
the presence, and by the assent, of the Lord Henry, by the Grace of
|
|
God King of England_, and the Lords Richard, Earl of Cornwall, his
|
|
brother, Roger (Bigot) Earl of Norfolk and Suffolk, marshal of
|
|
England, Humphrey, Earl of Hereford, Henry, Earl of Oxford, John,
|
|
Earl of Warwick, and other estates of the Realm of England: We,
|
|
Boniface, by the mercy of God Archbishop of Canterbury, Primate of
|
|
all England, F. of London, H. of Ely, S. of Worcester, E. of Lincoln,
|
|
W. of Norwich, P. of Hereford, W. of Salisbury, W. of Durham, R. of
|
|
Exeter, M. of Carlisle, W. of Bath, E. of Rochester, T. of Saint
|
|
David's, Bishops, apparelled in Pontificals, with tapers burning,
|
|
against the breakers of the Church's Liberties, and of the Liberties
|
|
or free customs of the Realm of England, and especially of those
|
|
which are contained in the Charter of the Common Liberties of the
|
|
Realm, and the Charter of the Forest, have solemnly denounced the
|
|
sentence of Excommunication in this form. By the authority of
|
|
Almighty God, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, and of the
|
|
glorious Mother of God, and perpetual Virgin Mary, of the blessed
|
|
Apostles Peter and Paul, and of all apostles, of the blessed Thomas,
|
|
Archbishop and Martyr, and of all martyrs, of blessed Edward of
|
|
England, and of all Confessors and virgins, and of all the saints of
|
|
heaven: We excommunicate, accurse, and from the thresholds
|
|
(liminibus) of our Holy Mother the Church, We sequester, all those
|
|
that hereafter willingly and maliciously deprive or spoil the Church
|
|
of her right: And all those that by any craft or wiliness do violate,
|
|
break, diminish, or change the Church's Liberties, or the ancient
|
|
approved customs of the Realm, and especially the Liberties and free
|
|
Customs contained in the Charters of the Common Liberties, and of the
|
|
Forest, conceded by our Lord the King, to Archbishops, Bishops, and
|
|
other Prelates of England; and likewise to the Earls, Barons,
|
|
Knights, and other Freeholders of the Realm: And all that secretly,
|
|
or openly, by deed, word, or counsel, _do make statutes, or observe
|
|
them being made_, and that bring in Customs, or keep them when they
|
|
be brought in, against the said Liberties, or any of them, the
|
|
Writers and Counsellors of said statutes, and the Executors of them,
|
|
and all those that shall presume to judge according to them. All and
|
|
every which persons before mentioned, that wittingly shall commit
|
|
anything of the premises, let them well know that they incur the
|
|
aforesaid sentence, _ipso facto_, (i.e., upon the deed being done.)
|
|
And those that ignorantly do so, and be admonished, except they
|
|
reform themselves within fifteen days after the time of the
|
|
admonition, and make full satisfaction for that they have done, at
|
|
the will of the ordinary, shall be from that time forth included in
|
|
the same sentence. And with the same sentence we burden all those
|
|
that presume to perturb the peace of our sovereign Lord the King, and
|
|
of the Realm. To the perpetual memory of which thing, We, the
|
|
aforesaid Prelates, have put our seals to these presents."--_Statutes
|
|
of the Realm_, vol. 1, p. 6. _Ruffhead's Statutes_, vol. 1, p. 20.
|
|
|
|
One of the Confirmations of the Charters, by Edward I., was by statute,
|
|
in the 25th year of his reign, (1297,) in the following terms. The
|
|
statute is usually entitled "_Confirmatio Cartarum_," (Confirmation of
|
|
the Charters.)
|
|
|
|
_Ch. 1._ "Edward, by the Grace of God, King of England, Lord of
|
|
Ireland, and Duke of Guyan, To all those that these presents shall
|
|
hear or see, Greeting. Know ye, that We, to the honor of God, and of
|
|
Holy Church, and to the profit of our Realm, have granted, for us and
|
|
our heirs, that the Charter of Liberties, and the Charter of the
|
|
Forest, which were made by common assent of all the Realm, in the
|
|
time of King Henry our Father, shall be kept in every point without
|
|
breach. And we will that the same Charters shall be sent under our
|
|
seal, as well to our justices of the Forest, as to others, and to all
|
|
Sheriffs of shires, and to all our other officers, and to all our
|
|
cities throughout the Realm, together with our writs, in the which it
|
|
shall be contained, that they cause the aforesaid Charters to be
|
|
published, and to declare to the people that We have confirmed them
|
|
at all points; and to our Justices, Sheriffs, Mayors, and other
|
|
ministers, which under us have the Laws of our Land to guide, that
|
|
they allow the same Charters, in all their points, in pleas before
|
|
them, and in judgment; that is, to wit, the Great Charter as the
|
|
Common Law, and the Charter of the Forest for the wealth of our
|
|
Realm.
|
|
|
|
_Ch. 2._ "And we will that if any judgment be given from henceforth
|
|
contrary to the points of the charters aforesaid by the justices, or
|
|
by any others our ministers that hold plea before them, against the
|
|
points of the Charters, it shall be undone and holden for naught.
|
|
|
|
_Ch. 3._ "And we will, that the same Charters shall be sent, under
|
|
our seal, to Cathedral Churches throughout our Realm, there to
|
|
remain, and shall be read before the people two times in the year.
|
|
|
|
_Ch. 4._ "And that all Archbishops and Bishops shall pronounce the
|
|
sentence of excommunication against all those that by word, deed, or
|
|
counsel, do contrary to the foresaid charters, or that in any point
|
|
break or undo them. And that the said Curses be twice a year
|
|
denounced and published by the prelates aforesaid. And if the same
|
|
prelates, or any of them, be remiss in the denunciation of the said
|
|
sentences, the Archbishops of Canterbury and York, for the time
|
|
being, shall compel and distrain them to make the denunciation in the
|
|
form aforesaid."--_St. 25 Edward I._, (1297.) _Statutes of the
|
|
Realm_, vol. 1, p. 123.
|
|
|
|
It is unnecessary to repeat the terms of the various confirmations, most
|
|
of which were less formal than those that have been given, though of
|
|
course equally authoritative. Most of them are brief, and in the form of
|
|
a simple statute, or promise, to the effect that "The Great Charter, and
|
|
the Charter of the Forest, shall be firmly kept and maintained in all
|
|
points." They are to be found printed with the other statutes of the
|
|
realm. One of them, after having "again granted, renewed and confirmed"
|
|
the charters, requires as follows:
|
|
|
|
"That the Charters be delivered to every sheriff of England under the
|
|
king's seal, to be read four times in the year before the people in
|
|
the full county," (that is, at the county court,) "that is, to wit,
|
|
the next county (court) after the feast of Saint Michael, and the
|
|
next county (court) after Christmas, and at the next county (court)
|
|
after Easter, and at the next county (court) after the feast of Saint
|
|
John."--_28 Edward I._, ch. 1, (1300.)
|
|
|
|
Lingard says, "The Charter was ratified four times by Henry III.,
|
|
twice by Edward I., fifteen times by Edward III., seven times by
|
|
Richard II., six times by Henry IV., and once by Henry V.;" making
|
|
thirty-five times in all.--_3 Lingard_, 50, note, Philad. ed.
|
|
|
|
Coke says Magna Carta was confirmed thirty-two times.--Preface_ to_ 2
|
|
_Inst_., p. 6.
|
|
|
|
Lingard calls these "thirty-five successive ratifications" of the
|
|
charter, "a sufficient proof how much its provisions were abhorred
|
|
by the sovereign, and how highly they were prized by the nation."--_3
|
|
Lingard_, 50.
|
|
|
|
Mackintosh says, "For almost five centuries (that is, until 1688) it
|
|
(Magna Carta) was appealed to as the decisive authority on behalf of
|
|
the people, though commonly so far only as the necessities of each
|
|
case demanded."--_Mackintosh's Hist. of Eng._ ch. 3. _45 Lardner's
|
|
Cab. Cyc._, 221.
|
|
|
|
Coke, who has labored so hard to overthrow the most vital principles of
|
|
Magna Carta, and who, therefore, ought to be considered good authority
|
|
when he speaks in its favor,[108] says:
|
|
|
|
"It is called Magna Carta, not that it is great in quantity, for
|
|
there be many voluminous charters commonly passed, specially in these
|
|
later times, longer than this is; nor comparatively in respect that
|
|
it is greater than _Charta de Foresta_, but in respect of the great
|
|
importance and weightiness of the matter, as hereafter shall appear;
|
|
and likewise for the same cause _Charta de Foresta_; and both of them
|
|
are called _Magnæ Chartæ Libertatum Angliæ_, (The Great Charters of
|
|
the Liberties of England.) ...
|
|
|
|
"And it is also called _Charta Libertatum regni_, (Charter of the
|
|
Liberties of the kingdom;) and upon great reason it is so called of
|
|
the effect, _quia liberos facit_, (because it makes men free.)
|
|
Sometime for the same cause (it is called) _communis libertas_,
|
|
(common liberty,) and _le chartre des franchises_, (the charter of
|
|
franchises.) ...
|
|
|
|
"It was for the most part declaratory of the principal grounds of the
|
|
fundamental laws of England, and for the residue it is additional to
|
|
supply some defects of the common law....
|
|
|
|
"Also, by the said act of 25 Edward I., (called _Confirmatio
|
|
Chartarum_,) it is adjudged in parliament that the Great Charter and
|
|
the Charter of the Forest shall be taken as the common law....
|
|
|
|
"They (Magna Carta and Carta de Foresta) were, for the most part, but
|
|
declarations of the ancient common laws of England, to the
|
|
observation and keeping whereof, the king was bound and sworn.
|
|
|
|
"After the making of Magna Charta, and Charta de Foresta, divers
|
|
learned men in the laws, that I may use the words of the record, kept
|
|
schools of the law in the city of London, and taught such as resorted
|
|
to them the laws of the realm, taking their foundation of Magna
|
|
Charta and Charta de Foresta.
|
|
|
|
"And the said two charters have been confirmed, established, and
|
|
commanded to be put in execution by thirty-two several acts of
|
|
parliament in all.
|
|
|
|
"This appeareth partly by that which hath been said, for that it hath
|
|
so often been confirmed by the wise providence of so many acts of
|
|
parliament.
|
|
|
|
"And albeit judgments in the king's courts are of high regard in law,
|
|
and _judicia_ (judgments) are accounted as _jurisdicta_, (the speech
|
|
of the law itself,) yet it is provided by act of parliament, that if
|
|
any judgment be given contrary to any of the points of the Great
|
|
Charter and Charta de Foresta, by the justices, or by any other of
|
|
the king's ministers, &c., it shall be undone, and holden for naught.
|
|
|
|
"And that both the said charters shall be sent under the great seal
|
|
to all cathedral churches throughout the realm, there to remain, and
|
|
shall be read to the people twice every year.
|
|
|
|
"The highest and most binding laws are the statutes which are
|
|
established by parliament; and by authority of that highest court it
|
|
is enacted (only to show their tender care of Magna Carta and Carta
|
|
de Foresta) that if any statute be made contrary to the Great
|
|
Charter, or the Charter of the Forest, that shall be holden for none;
|
|
by which words all former statutes made against either of those
|
|
charters are now repealed; and the nobles and great officers were to
|
|
be sworn to the observation of Magna Charta and Charta de Foresta.
|
|
|
|
"_Magna fuit quondam magnæ reverentia chartæ._" (Great was formerly
|
|
the reverence for Magna Carta.)--_Coke's Proem to 2 Inst._, p. 1 to
|
|
7.
|
|
|
|
Coke also says, "All pretence of prerogative against Magna Charta is
|
|
taken away."--_2 Inst._, 36.
|
|
|
|
He also says, "That after this parliament (_52 Henry_ III., in 1267)
|
|
neither Magna Carta nor Carta de Foresta was ever attempted to be
|
|
impugned or questioned."--_2 Inst._, 102.[109]
|
|
|
|
To give all the evidence of the authority of Magna Carta, it would be
|
|
necessary to give the constitutional history of England since the year
|
|
1215. This history would show that Magna Carta, although continually
|
|
violated and evaded, was still acknowledged as law by the government,
|
|
and was held up by the people as the great standard and proof of their
|
|
rights and liberties. It would show also that the judicial tribunals,
|
|
_whenever it suited their purposes to do so_, were in the habit of
|
|
referring to Magna Carta as authority, in the same manner, and with the
|
|
same real or pretended veneration, with which American courts now refer
|
|
to the constitution of the United States, or the constitutions of the
|
|
states. And, what is equally to the point, it would show that these same
|
|
tribunals, the mere tools of kings and parliaments, would resort to the
|
|
same artifices of assumption, _precedent_, construction, and false
|
|
interpretation, to evade the requirements of Magna Carta, and to
|
|
emasculate it of all its power for the preservation of liberty, that are
|
|
resorted to by American courts to accomplish the same work on our
|
|
American constitutions.
|
|
|
|
I take it for granted, therefore, that if the authority of Magna Carta
|
|
had rested simply upon its character as a _compact_ between the king and
|
|
the people, it would have been forever binding upon the king, (that is,
|
|
upon the government, for the king was the government,) in his
|
|
legislative, judicial, and executive character; and that there was no
|
|
_constitutional_ possibility of his escaping from its restraints, unless
|
|
the people themselves should freely discharge him from them.
|
|
|
|
But the authority of Magna Carta does not rest, either wholly or mainly,
|
|
upon its character as a compact. For centuries before the charter was
|
|
granted, its main principles constituted "the Law of the Land,"--the
|
|
fundamental and constitutional law of the realm, which the kings were
|
|
sworn to maintain. And the principal benefit of the charter was, that it
|
|
contained a _written_ description and acknowledgment, by the king
|
|
himself, of what the constitutional law of the kingdom was, which his
|
|
coronation oath bound him to observe. Previous to Magna Carta, this
|
|
constitutional law rested mainly in precedents, customs, and the
|
|
memories of the people. And if the king could but make one innovation
|
|
upon this law, without arousing resistance, and being compelled to
|
|
retreat from his usurpation, he would cite that innovation as a
|
|
precedent for another act of the same kind; next, assert a custom; and,
|
|
finally, raise a controversy as to what the Law of the Land really was.
|
|
The great object of the barons and people, in demanding from the king a
|
|
written description and acknowledgment of the Law of the Land, was to
|
|
put an end to all disputes of this kind, and to put it out of the power
|
|
of the king to plead any misunderstanding of the constitutional law of
|
|
the kingdom. And the charter, no doubt, accomplished very much in this
|
|
way. After Magna Carta, it required much more audacity, cunning, or
|
|
strength, on the part of the king, than it had before, to invade the
|
|
people's liberties with impunity. Still, Magna Carta, like all other
|
|
written constitutions, proved inadequate to the full accomplishment of
|
|
its purpose; for when did a parchment ever have power adequately to
|
|
restrain a government, that had either cunning to evade its
|
|
requirements, or strength to overcome those who attempted its defence?
|
|
The work of usurpation, therefore, though seriously checked, still went
|
|
on, to a great extent, after Magna Carta. Innovations upon the Law of
|
|
the Land are still made by the government. One innovation was cited as a
|
|
precedent; precedents made customs; and customs became laws, so far as
|
|
practice was concerned; until the government, composed of the king, the
|
|
high functionaries of the church, the nobility, a House of Commons
|
|
representing the "forty shilling freeholders," and a dependent and
|
|
servile judiciary, all acting in conspiracy against the mass of the
|
|
people, became practically absolute, as it is at this day.
|
|
|
|
As proof that Magna Carta embraced little else than what was previously
|
|
recognized as the common law, or Law of the Land, I repeat some
|
|
authorities that have been already cited.
|
|
|
|
Crabbe says, "It is admitted on all hands that it (Magna Carta)
|
|
contains nothing but what was confirmatory of the common law and the
|
|
ancient usages of the realm; and is, properly speaking, only an
|
|
enlargement of the charter of Henry I. and his
|
|
successors."--_Crabbe's Hist. of the Eng. Law_, p. 127.
|
|
|
|
Blackstone says, "It is agreed by all our historians that the Great
|
|
Charter of King John was, for the most part, compiled from the
|
|
ancient customs of the realm, or the laws of Edward the Confessor; by
|
|
which they mean the old common law which was established under our
|
|
Saxon princes."--_Blackstone's Introd. to the Charters._ See
|
|
_Blackstone's Law Tracts_, Oxford ed., p. 289.
|
|
|
|
Coke says, "The common law is the most general and ancient law of
|
|
the realm.... The common law appeareth in the statute of _Magna
|
|
Carta_, and other ancient statutes, (which for the most part are
|
|
affirmations of the common law,) in the original writs, in judicial
|
|
records, and in our books of terms and years."--_1 Inst._, 115 b.
|
|
|
|
Coke also says, "It (Magna Carta) was for the most part declaratory
|
|
of the principal grounds of the fundamental laws of England, and for
|
|
the residue it was additional to supply some defects of the common
|
|
law.... They (Magna Carta and Carta de Foresta) were, for the most
|
|
part, but declarations of the ancient common laws of England, _to the
|
|
observation and keeping whereof the king was bound and
|
|
sworn_."--_Preface to 2 Inst._, p. 3 and 5.
|
|
|
|
Hume says, "We may now, from the tenor of this charter, (Magna
|
|
Carta,) conjecture what those laws were of King Edward, (the
|
|
Confessor,) which the English nation during so many generations still
|
|
desired, with such an obstinate perseverance, to have recalled and
|
|
established. They were chiefly these latter articles of Magna Carta;
|
|
and the barons who, at the beginning of these commotions, demanded
|
|
the revival of the Saxon laws, undoubtedly thought that they had
|
|
sufficiently satisfied the people, by procuring them this concession,
|
|
which comprehended the principal objects to which they had so long
|
|
aspired."--_Hume_, ch. 11.
|
|
|
|
Edward the First confessed that the Great Charter was substantially
|
|
identical with the common law, as far as it went, when he commanded his
|
|
justices to allow "the Great Charter as the Common Law," "in pleas
|
|
before them, and in judgment," as has been already cited in this
|
|
chapter.--_25 Edward_ I., ch. 1, (1297.)
|
|
|
|
In conclusion of this chapter, it may be safely asserted that the
|
|
veneration, attachment, and pride, which the English nation, for more
|
|
than six centuries, have felt towards Magna Carta, are in their nature
|
|
among the most irrefragable of all proofs that it was the fundamental
|
|
law of the land, and constitutionally binding upon the government; for,
|
|
otherwise, it would have been, in their eyes, an unimportant and
|
|
worthless thing. What those sentiments were I will use the words of
|
|
others to describe,--the words, too, of men, who, like all modern
|
|
authors who have written on the same topic, had utterly inadequate ideas
|
|
of the true character of the instrument on which they lavished their
|
|
eulogiums.
|
|
|
|
Hume, speaking of the Great Charter and the Charter of the Forest, as
|
|
they were confirmed by Henry III., in 1217, says:
|
|
|
|
"Thus these famous charters were brought nearly to the shape in which
|
|
they have ever since stood; and they were, during many generations,
|
|
the peculiar favorites of the English nation, and esteemed the most
|
|
sacred rampart to national liberty and independence. As they secured
|
|
the rights of all orders of men, they were anxiously defended by all,
|
|
and became the basis, in a manner, of the English monarchy, and a
|
|
kind of original contract, which both limited the authority of the
|
|
king and ensured the conditional allegiance of his subjects. Though
|
|
often violated, they were still claimed by the nobility and people;
|
|
and, as no precedents were supposed valid that infringed them, they
|
|
rather acquired than lost authority, from the frequent attempts made
|
|
against them in several ages, by regal and arbitrary power."--_Hume_,
|
|
ch. 12.
|
|
|
|
Mackintosh says, "It was understood by the simplest of the unlettered
|
|
age for whom it was intended. It was remembered by them.... For
|
|
almost five centuries it was appealed to as the decisive authority on
|
|
behalf of the people.... To have produced it, to have preserved it,
|
|
to have matured it, constitute the immortal claim of England on the
|
|
esteem of mankind. Her Bacons and Shakspeares, her Miltons and
|
|
Newtons, with all the truth which they have revealed, and all the
|
|
generous virtues which they have inspired, are of inferior value when
|
|
compared with the subjection of men and their rulers to the
|
|
principles of justice; if, indeed, it be not more true that these
|
|
mighty spirits could not have been formed except under equal laws,
|
|
nor roused to full activity without the influence of that spirit
|
|
which the Great Charter breathed over their
|
|
forefathers."--_Mackintosh's Hist. of Eng._, ch. 3.[110]
|
|
|
|
Of the Great Charter, the trial by jury is the vital part, and the only
|
|
part that places the liberties of the people in their own keeping. Of
|
|
this Blackstone says:
|
|
|
|
"The trial by jury, or the country, _per patriam_, is also that trial
|
|
by the peers of every Englishman, which, as the grand bulwark of his
|
|
liberties, is secured to him by the Great Charter; _nullus liber homo
|
|
capiatur, vel imprisonetur, aut exuletur, aut aliquo modo destruatur,
|
|
nisi per legale judicium parium suorum, vel per legem terrae...._
|
|
|
|
The liberties of England cannot but subsist so long as this palladium
|
|
remains sacred and inviolate, not only from all open attacks, which
|
|
none will be so hardy as to make, but also from all secret
|
|
machinations which may sap and undermine it."[111]
|
|
|
|
"The trial by jury ever has been, and I trust ever will be, looked
|
|
upon as the glory of the English law.... It is the most transcendent
|
|
privilege which any subject can enjoy or wish for, that he cannot be
|
|
affected in his property, his liberty, or his person, but by the
|
|
unanimous consent of twelve of his neighbors and equals."[112]
|
|
|
|
Hume calls the trial by jury "An institution admirable in itself, and
|
|
the best calculated for the preservation of liberty and the
|
|
administration of justice, that ever was devised by the wit of
|
|
man."[113]
|
|
|
|
An old book, called "English Liberties," says:
|
|
|
|
"English Parliaments have all along been most zealous for preserving
|
|
this great Jewel of Liberty, trials by juries having no less than
|
|
fifty-eight several times, since the Norman Conquest, been
|
|
established and confirmed by the legislative power, no one privilege
|
|
besides having been ever so often remembered in parliament."[114]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 106: _Mackintosh's Hist. of Eng._, ch. 3. _45 Lardner's Cab.
|
|
Cyc._, 354.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 107: "_Forty shilling freeholders_" were those "people
|
|
dwelling and resident in the same counties, whereof every one of them
|
|
shall have free land or tenement to the value of forty shillings by the
|
|
year at the least above all charges." By statute _8 Henry_ 6, ch. 7,
|
|
(1429,) these freeholders only were allowed to vote for members of
|
|
Parliament from the _counties_.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 108: He probably speaks in its favor only to blind the eyes of
|
|
the people to the frauds he has attempted upon its true meaning.]
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 109: It will be noticed that Coke calls these confirmations of
|
|
the charter "acts of parliament," instead of acts of the king alone.
|
|
This needs explanation.
|
|
|
|
It was one of Coke's ridiculous pretences, that laws anciently enacted
|
|
by the king, at the request, or with the consent, or by the advice, of
|
|
his parliament, was "an act of parliament," instead of the act of the
|
|
king. And in the extracts cited, he carries this idea so far as to
|
|
pretend that the various confirmations of the Great Charter were "acts
|
|
of parliament," instead of the acts of the kings. He might as well have
|
|
pretended that the original grant of the Charter was an "act of
|
|
parliament;" because it was not only granted at the request, and with
|
|
the consent, and by the advice, but on the compulsion even, of those who
|
|
commonly constituted his parliaments. Yet this did not make the grant of
|
|
the charter "an act of parliament." It was simply an act of the king.
|
|
|
|
The object of Coke, in this pretence, was to furnish some color for the
|
|
palpable falsehood that the legislative authority, which parliament was
|
|
trying to assume in his own day, and which it finally succeeded in
|
|
obtaining, had a precedent in the ancient constitution of the kingdom.
|
|
|
|
There would be as much reason in saying that, because the ancient kings
|
|
were in the habit of passing laws in special answer to the _petitions_
|
|
of their subjects, therefore those _petitioners_ were a part of the
|
|
legislative power of the kingdom.
|
|
|
|
One great objection to this argument of Coke, for the legislative
|
|
authority of the ancient parliaments, is that a very large--probably
|
|
much the larger--number of legislative acts were done _without_ the
|
|
advice, consent, request, or even presence, of a parliament. Not only
|
|
were many formal statutes passed without any mention of the consent or
|
|
advice of parliament, but a simple order of the king in council, or a
|
|
simple proclamation, writ, or letter under seal, issued by his command,
|
|
had the same force as what Coke calls "an act of parliament." And this
|
|
practice continued, to a considerable extent at least, down to Coke's
|
|
own time.
|
|
|
|
The kings were always in the habit of consulting their parliaments, more
|
|
or less, in regard to matters of legislation,--not because their consent
|
|
was constitutionally necessary, but in order to make influence in favor
|
|
of their laws, and thus induce the people to observe them, and the
|
|
juries to enforce them.
|
|
|
|
The general duties of the ancient parliaments were not legislative, but
|
|
judicial, as will be shown more fully hereafter. The _people_ were not
|
|
represented in the parliaments at the time of Magna Carta, but only the
|
|
archbishops, bishops, earls, barons, and knights; so that little or
|
|
nothing would have been gained for liberty by Coke's idea that
|
|
parliament had a legislative power. He would only have substituted an
|
|
aristocracy for a king. Even after the Commons were represented in
|
|
parliament, they for some centuries appeared only as _petitioners_,
|
|
except in the matter of taxation, when their _consent_ was asked. And
|
|
almost the only source of their influence on legislation was this: that
|
|
they would sometimes refuse their consent to the taxation, unless the
|
|
king would pass such laws as they petitioned for; or, as would seem to
|
|
have been much more frequently the case, unless he would abolish such
|
|
laws and practices as they remonstrated against.
|
|
|
|
The _influence_ or power of parliament, and especially of the Commons,
|
|
in the general legislation of the country, was a thing of slow growth,
|
|
having its origin in a device of the king to get money contrary to law,
|
|
(as will be seen in the next volume,) and not at all a part of the
|
|
constitution of the kingdom, nor having its foundation in the consent of
|
|
the people. The power, _as at present exercised_, was not fully
|
|
established until 1688, (near five hundred years after Magna Carta,)
|
|
when the House of Commons (falsely so called) had acquired such
|
|
influence as the representative, _not of the people, but of the wealth,
|
|
of the nation_, that they compelled the king to discard the oath fixed
|
|
by the constitution of the kingdom; (which oath has been already given
|
|
in a former chapter,(page 101) and was, in substance, to preserve and
|
|
execute the Common Law, the Law of the Land,--or, in the words of the
|
|
oath, "_the just laws and customs which the common people had chosen_;")
|
|
and to swear that he would "govern the people of this kingdom of
|
|
England, and the dominions thereto belonging, _according to the statutes
|
|
in parliament agreed on_, and the laws and customs of the same."[115]
|
|
|
|
The passage and enforcement of this statute, and the assumption of this
|
|
oath by the king, were plain violations of the English constitution,
|
|
inasmuch as they abolished, so far as such an oath could abolish, the
|
|
legislative power of the king, and also "those just laws and customs
|
|
which the common people (through their juries) had chosen," and
|
|
substituted the will of parliament in their stead.
|
|
|
|
Coke was a great advocate for the legislative power of parliament, as a
|
|
means of restraining the power of the king. As he denied all power to
|
|
_juries_ to decide upon the obligation of laws, and as he held that the
|
|
legislative power was "_so transcendent and absolute as (that) it cannot
|
|
be confined, either for causes or persons, within any bounds_,"[116] he
|
|
was perhaps honest in holding that it was safer to trust this terrific
|
|
power in the hands of parliament, than in the hands of the king. His
|
|
error consisted in holding that either the king or parliament had any
|
|
such power, or that they had any power at all to pass laws that should
|
|
be binding upon a jury.
|
|
|
|
These declarations of Coke, that the charter was confirmed by thirty-two
|
|
"acts of parliament," have a mischievous bearing in another respect.
|
|
They tend to weaken the authority of the charter, by conveying the
|
|
impression that the charter itself might be _abolished_ by "act of
|
|
parliament." Coke himself admits that it could not be revoked or
|
|
rescinded by the _king_; for he says, "All pretence of prerogative
|
|
against Magna Carta is taken away." (_2 Inst._, 36.)
|
|
|
|
He knew perfectly well, and the whole English nation knew, that the
|
|
_king_ could not lawfully infringe Magna Carta. Magna Carta, therefore,
|
|
made it impossible that absolute power could ever be practically
|
|
established in England, _in the hands of the king_. Hence, as Coke was
|
|
an advocate for absolute power,--that is, for a legislative power "so
|
|
transcendent and absolute as (that) it cannot be confined, either for
|
|
causes or persons, within any bounds,"--there was no alternative for him
|
|
but to vest this absolute power in parliament. Had he not vested it in
|
|
parliament, he would have been obliged to abjure it altogether, and to
|
|
confess that the people, _through their juries_, had the right to judge
|
|
of the obligation of all legislation whatsoever; in other words, that
|
|
they had the right to confine the government within the limits of "those
|
|
just laws and customs which the common people (acting as jurors) had
|
|
chosen." True to his instincts, as a judge, and as a tyrant, he assumed
|
|
that this absolute power was vested in the hands of parliament.
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|
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|
But the truth was that, as by the English constitution parliament had no
|
|
authority at all for _general_ legislation, it could no more confirm,
|
|
than it could abolish, Magna Carta.
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|
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|
These thirty-two confirmations of Magna Carta, which Coke speaks of as
|
|
"acts of parliament," were merely acts of the king. The parliaments,
|
|
indeed, by refusing to grant him money, except on that condition, and
|
|
otherwise, had contributed to oblige him to make the confirmations; just
|
|
as they had helped to oblige him by arms to grant the charter in the
|
|
first place. But the confirmations themselves were nevertheless
|
|
constitutionally, as well as formally, the acts of the king alone.]
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[Footnote 110: Under the head of "_John._"]
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[Footnote 111: _4 Blackstone_, 349-50.]
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[Footnote 112: _3 Blackstone_, 379.]
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[Footnote 113: _Hume_, ch. 2.]
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[Footnote 114: Page 203, 5th edition, 1721.]
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[Footnote 115: St. 1 _William and Mary_, ch. 6, (1688.)]
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[Footnote 116: 4 _Inst._, 36.]
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CHAPTER XII.
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LIMITATIONS IMPOSED UPON THE MAJORITY BY THE TRIAL BY JURY.
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The principal objection, that will be made to the doctrine of this
|
|
essay, is, that under it, a jury would paralyze the power of the
|
|
majority, and veto all legislation that was not in accordance with the
|
|
will of the whole, or nearly the whole, people.
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The answer to this objection is, that the limitation, which would be
|
|
thus imposed upon the legislative power, (whether that power be vested
|
|
in the majority, or minority, of the people,) is the crowning merit of
|
|
the trial by jury. It has other merits; but, though important in
|
|
themselves, they are utterly insignificant and worthless in comparison
|
|
with this.
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|
It is this power of vetoing all partial and oppressive legislation, and
|
|
of restricting the government to the maintenance of such laws as the
|
|
_whole_, or substantially the whole, people _are agreed in_, that makes
|
|
the trial by jury "the palladium of liberty." Without this power it
|
|
would never have deserved that name.
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|
The will, or the pretended will, of the majority, is the last lurking
|
|
place of tyranny at the present day. The dogma, that certain individuals
|
|
and families have a divine appointment to govern the rest of mankind, is
|
|
fast giving place to the one that the larger number have a right to
|
|
govern the smaller; a dogma, which may, or may not, be less oppressive
|
|
in its practical operation, but which certainly is no less false or
|
|
tyrannical in principle, than the one it is so rapidly supplanting.
|
|
Obviously there is nothing in the nature of majorities, that insures
|
|
justice at their hands. They have the same passions as minorities, and
|
|
they have no qualities whatever that should be expected to prevent them
|
|
from practising the same tyranny as minorities, if they think it will
|
|
be for their interest to do so.
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|
There is no particle of truth in the notion that the majority have a
|
|
_right_ to rule, or to exercise arbitrary power over, the minority,
|
|
simply because the former are more numerous than the latter. Two men
|
|
have no more natural right to rule one, than one has to rule two. Any
|
|
single man, or any body of men, many or few, have a natural right to
|
|
maintain justice for themselves, and for any others who may need their
|
|
assistance, against the injustice of any and all other men, without
|
|
regard to their numbers; and majorities have no right to do any more
|
|
than this. The relative numbers of the opposing parties have nothing to
|
|
do with the question of right. And no more tyrannical principle was ever
|
|
avowed, than that the will of the majority ought to have the force of
|
|
law, without regard to its justice; or, what is the same thing, that the
|
|
will of the majority ought always to be presumed to be in accordance
|
|
with justice. Such a doctrine is only another form of the doctrine that
|
|
might makes right.
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|
When _two_ men meet _one_ upon the highway, or in the wilderness, have
|
|
they a right to dispose of his life, liberty, or property at their
|
|
pleasure, simply because they are the more numerous party? Or is he
|
|
bound to submit to lose his life, liberty, or property, if they demand
|
|
it, merely because he is the less numerous party? Or, because they are
|
|
more numerous than he, is he bound to presume that they are governed
|
|
only by superior wisdom, and the principles of justice, and by no
|
|
selfish passion that can lead them to do him a wrong? Yet this is the
|
|
principle, which it is claimed should govern men in all their civil
|
|
relations to each other. Mankind fall in company with each other on the
|
|
highway or in the wilderness of life, and it is claimed that the more
|
|
numerous party, simply by virtue of their superior numbers, have the
|
|
right arbitrarily to dispose of the life, liberty, and property of the
|
|
minority; and that the minority are bound, by reason of their inferior
|
|
numbers, to practise abject submission, and consent to hold their
|
|
natural rights,--any, all, or none, as the case may be,--at the mere
|
|
will and pleasure of the majority; as if all a man's natural rights
|
|
expired, or were suspended by the operation of a paramount law, the
|
|
moment he came into the presence of superior numbers.
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|
If such be the true nature of the relations men hold to each other in
|
|
this world, it puts an end to all such things as crimes, unless they be
|
|
perpetrated upon those who are equal or superior, in number, to the
|
|
actors. All acts committed against persons _inferior_ in number to the
|
|
aggressors, become but the exercise of rightful authority. And
|
|
consistency with their own principles requires that all governments,
|
|
founded on the will of the majority, should recognize this plea as a
|
|
sufficient justification for all crimes whatsoever.
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|
If it be said that the majority should be allowed to rule, not because
|
|
they are stronger than the minority, but because their superior numbers
|
|
furnish a _probability_ that they are in the right; one answer is, that
|
|
the lives, liberties, and properties of men are too valuable to them,
|
|
and the natural presumptions are too strong in their favor, to justify
|
|
the destruction of them by their fellow-men on a mere balancing of
|
|
probabilities, _or on any ground whatever short of certainty beyond a
|
|
reasonable doubt_. This last is the moral rule universally recognized to
|
|
be binding upon single individuals. And in the forum of conscience the
|
|
same rule is equally binding upon governments, for governments are mere
|
|
associations of individuals. This is the rule on which the trial by jury
|
|
is based. And it is plainly the only rule that ought to induce a man to
|
|
submit his rights to the adjudication of his fellow-men, or dissuade him
|
|
from a forcible defence of them.
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|
Another answer is, that if two opposing parties could be supposed to
|
|
have no personal interests or passions involved, to warp their
|
|
judgments, or corrupt their motives, the fact that one of the parties
|
|
was more numerous than the other, (a fact that leaves the comparative
|
|
intellectual competency of the two parties entirely out of
|
|
consideration,) might, perhaps, furnish a slight, but at best only a
|
|
very slight, probability that such party was on the side of justice. But
|
|
when it is considered that the parties are liable to differ in their
|
|
intellectual capacities, and that one, or the other, or both, are
|
|
undoubtedly under the influence of such passions as rivalry, hatred,
|
|
avarice, and ambition,--passions that are nearly certain to pervert
|
|
their judgments, and very likely to corrupt their motives,--all
|
|
probabilities founded upon a mere numerical majority, in one party, or
|
|
the other, vanish at once; and the decision of the majority becomes, to
|
|
all practical purposes, a mere decision of chance. And to dispose of
|
|
men's properties, liberties, and lives, by the mere process of
|
|
enumerating such parties, is not only as palpable gambling as was ever
|
|
practised, but it is also the most atrocious that was ever practised,
|
|
except in matters of government. And where government is instituted on
|
|
this principle, (as in the United States, for example,) the nation is at
|
|
once converted into one great gambling establishment; where all the
|
|
rights of men are the stakes; a few bold bad men throw the dice--(dice
|
|
loaded with all the hopes, fears, interests, and passions which rage in
|
|
the breasts of ambitious and desperate men,)--and all the people, from
|
|
the interests they have depending, become enlisted, excited, agitated,
|
|
and generally corrupted, by the hazards of the game.
|
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|
|
The trial by jury disavows the majority principle altogether; and
|
|
proceeds upon the ground that every man should be presumed to be
|
|
entitled to life, liberty, and such property as he has in his
|
|
possession; and that the government should lay its hand upon none of
|
|
them, (except for the purpose of bringing them before a tribunal for
|
|
adjudication,) unless it be first ascertained, _beyond a reasonable
|
|
doubt_, in every individual case, that justice requires it.
|
|
|
|
To ascertain whether there be such reasonable doubt, it takes twelve men
|
|
_by lot_ from the whole body of mature men. If any of these twelve are
|
|
proved to be under the influence of any _special_ interest or passion,
|
|
that may either pervert their judgments, or corrupt their motives, they
|
|
are set aside as unsuitable for the performance of a duty requiring such
|
|
absolute impartiality and integrity; and others substituted in their
|
|
stead. When the utmost practicable impartiality is attained on the part
|
|
of the whole twelve, they are sworn to the observance of justice; and
|
|
their unanimous concurrence is then held to be necessary to remove that
|
|
reasonable doubt, which, unremoved, would forbid the government to lay
|
|
its hand on its victim.
|
|
|
|
Such is the caution which the trial by jury both practises and
|
|
inculcates, against the violation of justice, on the part of the
|
|
government, towards the humblest individual, in the smallest matter
|
|
affecting his civil rights, his property, liberty, or life. And such is
|
|
the contrast, which the trial by jury presents, to that gambler's and
|
|
robber's rule, that the majority have a right, by virtue of their
|
|
superior numbers, and without regard to justice, to dispose at pleasure
|
|
of the property and persons of all bodies of men less numerous than
|
|
themselves.
|
|
|
|
The difference, in short, between the two systems, is this. The trial by
|
|
jury protects person and property, inviolate to their possessors, from
|
|
the hand of the law, unless _justice, beyond a reasonable doubt_,
|
|
require them to be taken. The majority principle takes person and
|
|
property from their possessors, at the mere arbitrary will of a
|
|
majority, who are liable and likely to be influenced, in taking them, by
|
|
motives of oppression, avarice, and ambition.
|
|
|
|
If the relative numbers of opposing parties afforded sufficient evidence
|
|
of the comparative justice of their claims, the government should carry
|
|
the principle into its courts of justice; and instead of referring
|
|
controversies to impartial and disinterested men,--to judges and jurors,
|
|
sworn to do justice, and bound patiently to hear and weigh all the
|
|
evidence and arguments that can be offered on either side,--it should
|
|
simply _count_ the plaintiffs and defendants in each case, (where there
|
|
were more than one of either,) and then give the case to the majority;
|
|
after ample opportunity had been given to the plaintiffs and defendants
|
|
to reason with, flatter, cheat, threaten, and bribe each other, by way
|
|
of inducing them to change sides. Such a process would be just as
|
|
rational in courts of justice, as in halls of legislation; for it is of
|
|
no importance to a man, who has his rights taken from him, whether it be
|
|
done by a legislative enactment, or a judicial decision.
|
|
|
|
In legislation, the people are all arranged as plaintiffs and defendants
|
|
in their own causes; (those who are in favor of a particular law,
|
|
standing as plaintiffs, and those who are opposed to the same law,
|
|
standing as defendants); and to allow these causes to be decided by
|
|
majorities, is plainly as absurd as it would be to allow judicial
|
|
decisions to be determined by the relative number of plaintiffs and
|
|
defendants.
|
|
|
|
If this mode of decision were introduced into courts of justice, we
|
|
should see a parallel, and only a parallel, to that system of
|
|
legislation which we witness daily. We should see large bodies of men
|
|
conspiring to bring perfectly groundless suits, against other bodies of
|
|
men, for large sums of money, and to carry them by sheer force of
|
|
numbers; just as we now continually see large bodies of men conspiring
|
|
to carry, by mere force of numbers, some scheme of legislation that
|
|
will, directly or indirectly, take money out of other men's pockets, and
|
|
put it into their own. And we should also see distinct bodies of men,
|
|
parties in separate suits, combining and agreeing all to appear and be
|
|
counted as plaintiffs or defendants in each other's suits, for the
|
|
purpose of ekeing out the necessary majority; just as we now see
|
|
distinct bodies of men, interested in separate schemes of ambition or
|
|
plunder, conspiring to carry through a batch of legislative enactments,
|
|
that shall accomplish their several purposes.
|
|
|
|
This system of combination and conspiracy would go on, until at length
|
|
whole states and a whole nation would become divided into two great
|
|
litigating parties, each party composed of several smaller bodies,
|
|
having their separate suits, but all confederating for the purpose of
|
|
making up the necessary majority in each case. The individuals composing
|
|
each of these two great parties, would at length become so accustomed to
|
|
acting together, and so well acquainted with each others' schemes, and
|
|
so mutually dependent upon each others' fidelity for success, that they
|
|
would become organized as permanent associations; bound together by that
|
|
kind of honor that prevails among thieves; and pledged by all their
|
|
interests, sympathies, and animosities, to mutual fidelity, and to
|
|
unceasing hostility to their opponents; and exerting all their arts and
|
|
all their resources of threats, injuries, promises, and bribes, to drive
|
|
or seduce from the other party enough to enable their own to retain or
|
|
acquire such a majority as would be necessary to gain their own suits,
|
|
and defeat the suits of their opponents. All the wealth and talent of
|
|
the country would become enlisted in the service of these rival
|
|
associations; and both would at length become so compact, so well
|
|
organized, so powerful, and yet always so much in need of recruits,
|
|
that a private person would be nearly or quite unable to obtain justice
|
|
in the most paltry suit with his neighbor, except on the condition of
|
|
joining one of these great litigating associations, who would agree to
|
|
carry through his cause, on condition of his assisting them to carry
|
|
through all the others, good and bad, which they had already undertaken.
|
|
If he refused this, they would threaten to make a similar offer to his
|
|
antagonist, and suffer their whole numbers to be counted against him.
|
|
|
|
Now this picture is no caricature, but a true and honest likeness. And
|
|
such a system of administering justice, would be no more false, absurd,
|
|
or atrocious, than that system of working by majorities, which seeks to
|
|
accomplish, by legislation, the same ends which, in the case supposed,
|
|
would be accomplished by judicial decisions.
|
|
|
|
Again, the doctrine that the minority ought to submit to the will of the
|
|
majority, proceeds, not upon the principle that government is formed by
|
|
voluntary association, and for an _agreed purpose_, on the part of all
|
|
who contribute to its support, but upon the presumption that all
|
|
government must be practically a state of war and plunder between
|
|
opposing parties; and that, in order to save blood, and prevent mutual
|
|
extermination, the parties come to an agreement that they will count
|
|
their respective numbers periodically, and the one party shall then be
|
|
permitted quietly to rule and plunder, (restrained only by their own
|
|
discretion,) and the other submit quietly to be ruled and plundered,
|
|
until the time of the next enumeration.
|
|
|
|
Such an agreement may possibly be wiser than unceasing and deadly
|
|
conflict; it nevertheless partakes too much of the ludicrous to deserve
|
|
to be seriously considered as an expedient for the maintenance of civil
|
|
society. It would certainly seem that mankind might agree upon a
|
|
cessation of hostilities, upon more rational and equitable terms than
|
|
that of unconditional submission on the part of the less numerous body.
|
|
Unconditional submission is usually the last act of one who confesses
|
|
himself subdued and enslaved. How any one ever came to imagine that
|
|
condition to be one of freedom, has never been explained. And as for the
|
|
system being adapted to the maintenance of justice among men, it is a
|
|
mystery that any human mind could ever have been visited with an
|
|
insanity wild enough to originate the idea.
|
|
|
|
If it be said that other corporations, than governments, surrender their
|
|
affairs into the hands of the majority, the answer is, that they allow
|
|
majorities to determine only trifling matters, that are in their nature
|
|
mere questions of discretion, and where there is no natural presumption
|
|
of justice or right on one side rather than the other. They _never_
|
|
surrender to the majority the power to dispose of, or, what is
|
|
practically the same thing, to _determine_, the _rights_ of any
|
|
individual member. The _rights_ of every member are determined by the
|
|
written compact, to which all the members have voluntarily agreed.
|
|
|
|
For example. A banking corporation allows a majority to determine such
|
|
questions of discretion as whether the note of A or of B shall be
|
|
discounted; whether notes shall be discounted on one, two, or six days
|
|
in the week; how many hours in a day their banking-house shall be kept
|
|
open; how many clerks shall be employed; what salaries they shall
|
|
receive, and such like matters, which are in their nature mere subjects
|
|
of discretion, and where there are no natural presumptions of justice or
|
|
right in favor of one course over the other. But no banking corporation
|
|
allows a majority, or any other number of its members less than the
|
|
whole, to divert the funds of the corporation to any other purpose than
|
|
the one to which _every member_ of the corporation has legally agreed
|
|
that they may be devoted; nor to take the stock of one member and give
|
|
it to another; nor to distribute the dividends among the stockholders
|
|
otherwise than to each one the proportion which he has agreed to accept,
|
|
and all the others have agreed that he shall receive. Nor does any
|
|
banking corporation allow a majority to impose taxes upon the members
|
|
for the payment of the corporate expenses, except in such proportions as
|
|
_every member_ has consented that they may be imposed. All these
|
|
questions, involving the _rights_ of the members as against each other,
|
|
are fixed by the articles of the association,--that is, by the agreement
|
|
to which _every member_ has personally assented.
|
|
|
|
What is also specially to be noticed, and what constitutes a vital
|
|
difference between the banking corporation and the political
|
|
corporation, or government, is, that in case of controversy among the
|
|
members of the banking corporation, as to the _rights_ of any member,
|
|
the question is determined, not by any number, either majority, or
|
|
minority, of the corporation itself, _but by persons out of the
|
|
corporation_; by twelve men acting as jurors, or by other tribunals of
|
|
justice, of which no member of the corporation is allowed to be a part.
|
|
But in the case of the political corporation, controversies among the
|
|
parties to it, as to the rights of individual members, must of necessity
|
|
be settled by members of the corporation itself, because there are no
|
|
persons out of the corporation to whom the question can be referred.
|
|
|
|
Since, then, all questions as to the _rights_ of the members of the
|
|
political corporation, must be determined by members of the corporation
|
|
itself, the trial by jury says that no man's _rights_,--neither his
|
|
right to his life, his liberty, nor his property,--shall be determined
|
|
by any such standard as the mere will and pleasure of majorities; but
|
|
only by the unanimous verdict of a tribunal fairly representing the
|
|
whole people,--that is, a tribunal of twelve men, taken, at random from
|
|
the whole body, and ascertained to be as impartial as the nature of the
|
|
case will admit, _and sworn to the observance of justice_. Such is the
|
|
difference in the two kinds of corporations; and the custom of managing
|
|
by majorities the mere discretionary matters of business corporations,
|
|
(the majority having no power to determine the _rights_ of any member,)
|
|
furnishes no analogy to the practice, adopted by political corporations,
|
|
of disposing of all the _rights_ of their members by the arbitrary will
|
|
of majorities.
|
|
|
|
But further. The doctrine that the majority have a _right_ to rule,
|
|
proceeds upon the principle that minorities have no _rights_ in the
|
|
government; for certainly the minority cannot be said to have any
|
|
_rights_ in a government, so long as the majority alone determine what
|
|
their rights shall be. They hold everything, or nothing, as the case may
|
|
be, at the mere will of the majority.
|
|
|
|
It is indispensable to a "_free_ government," (in the political sense of
|
|
that term,) that the minority, the weaker party, have a veto upon the
|
|
acts of the majority. Political liberty is liberty for the _weaker
|
|
party_ in a nation. It is only the weaker party that lose their
|
|
liberties, when a government becomes oppressive. The stronger party, in
|
|
all governments, are free by virtue of their superior strength. They
|
|
never oppress themselves.
|
|
|
|
Legislation is the work of this stronger party; and if, in addition to
|
|
the sole power of legislating, they have the sole power of determining
|
|
what legislation shall be enforced, they have all power in their hands,
|
|
and the weaker party are the subjects of an absolute government.
|
|
|
|
Unless the weaker party have a veto, either upon the making, or the
|
|
enforcement of laws, they have no power whatever in the government, and
|
|
can of course have no liberties except such as the stronger party, in
|
|
their arbitrary discretion, see fit to permit them to enjoy.
|
|
|
|
In England and the United States, the trial by jury is the only
|
|
institution that gives the weaker party any veto upon the power of the
|
|
stronger. Consequently it is the only institution, that gives them any
|
|
effective voice in the government, or any guaranty against oppression.
|
|
|
|
Suffrage, however free, is of no avail for this purpose; because the
|
|
suffrage of the minority is overborne by the suffrage of the majority,
|
|
and is thus rendered powerless for purposes of legislation. The
|
|
responsibility of officers can be made of no avail, because they are
|
|
responsible only to the majority. The minority, therefore, are wholly
|
|
without rights in the government, wholly at the mercy of the majority,
|
|
unless, through the trial by jury, they have a veto upon such
|
|
legislation as they think unjust.
|
|
|
|
Government is established for the protection of the weak against the
|
|
strong. This is the principal, if not the sole, motive for the
|
|
establishment of all legitimate government. Laws, that are sufficient
|
|
for the protection of the weaker party, are of course sufficient for the
|
|
protection of the stronger party; because the strong can certainly need
|
|
no more protection than the weak. It is, therefore, right that the
|
|
weaker party should be represented in the tribunal which is finally to
|
|
determine what legislation may be enforced; and that no legislation
|
|
shall be enforced against their consent. They being presumed to be
|
|
competent judges of what kind of legislation makes for their safety, and
|
|
what for their injury, it must be presumed that any legislation, which
|
|
_they_ object to enforcing, tends to their oppression, and not to their
|
|
security.
|
|
|
|
There is still another reason why the weaker party, or the minority,
|
|
should have a veto upon all legislation which they disapprove. _That
|
|
reason is, that that is the only means by which the government can be
|
|
kept within the limits of the contract, compact, or constitution, by
|
|
which the whole people agree to establish government._ If the majority
|
|
were allowed to interpret the compact for themselves, and enforce it
|
|
according to their own interpretation, they would, of course, make it
|
|
authorize them to do whatever they wish to do.
|
|
|
|
The theory of free government is that it is formed by the voluntary
|
|
contract of the people individually with each other. This is the theory,
|
|
(although it is not, as it ought to be, the fact,) in all the
|
|
governments in the United States, as also in the government of England.
|
|
The theory assumes that each man, who is a party to the government, and
|
|
contributes to its support, has individually and freely consented to it.
|
|
Otherwise the government would have no right to tax him for its
|
|
support,--for taxation without consent is robbery. This theory, then,
|
|
necessarily supposes that this government, which is formed by the free
|
|
consent of all, has no powers except such as _all_ the parties to it
|
|
have individually agreed that it shall have; and especially that it has
|
|
no power to pass any _laws_, except such as _all_ the parties have
|
|
agreed that it may pass.
|
|
|
|
This theory supposes that there may be certain laws that will be
|
|
beneficial to _all_,--so beneficial that _all_ consent to be taxed for
|
|
their maintenance. For the maintenance of these specific laws, in which
|
|
all are interested, all associate. And they associate for the
|
|
maintenance of those laws _only_, in which _all_ are interested. It
|
|
would be absurd to suppose that all would associate, and consent to be
|
|
taxed, for purposes which were beneficial only to a part; and especially
|
|
for purposes that were injurious to any. A government of the whole,
|
|
therefore, can have no powers except such as _all_ the parties consent
|
|
that it may have. It can do nothing except what _all_ have consented
|
|
that it may do. And if any portion of the people,--no matter how large
|
|
their number, if it be less than the whole,--desire a government for any
|
|
purposes other than those that are common to all, and desired by all,
|
|
they must form a separate association for those purposes. They have no
|
|
right,--by perverting this government of the whole, to the
|
|
accomplishment of purposes desired only by a part,--to compel any one to
|
|
contribute to purposes that are either useless or injurious to himself.
|
|
|
|
Such being the principles on which the government is formed, the
|
|
question arises, how shall this government, when formed, be kept within
|
|
the limits of the contract by which it was established? How shall this
|
|
government, instituted by the whole people, agreed to by the whole
|
|
people, supported by the contributions of the whole people, be confined
|
|
to the accomplishment of those purposes alone, which the whole people
|
|
desire? How shall it be preserved from degenerating into a mere
|
|
government for the benefit of a part only of those who established, and
|
|
who support it? How shall it be prevented from even injuring a part of
|
|
its own members, for the aggrandizement of the rest? Its laws must be,
|
|
(or at least now are,) passed, and most of its other acts performed, by
|
|
mere agents,--agents chosen by a part of the people, and not by the
|
|
whole. How can these agents be restrained from seeking their own
|
|
interests, and the interests of those who elected them, at the expense
|
|
of the rights of the remainder of the people, by the passage and
|
|
enforcement of laws that shall be partial, unequal, and unjust in their
|
|
operation? That is the great question. And the trial by jury answers it.
|
|
And how does the trial by jury answer it? It answers it, as has already
|
|
been shown throughout this volume, by saying that these mere agents and
|
|
attorneys, who are chosen by a part only of the people, and are liable
|
|
to be influenced by partial and unequal purposes, shall not have
|
|
unlimited authority in the enactment and enforcement of laws; that they
|
|
shall not exercise _all_ the functions of government. It says that they
|
|
shall never exercise that ultimate power of compelling obedience to the
|
|
laws by punishing for disobedience, or of executing the laws against the
|
|
person or property of any man, without first getting the consent of the
|
|
people, through a tribunal that may fairly be presumed to represent the
|
|
whole, or substantially the whole, people. It says that if the power to
|
|
make laws, and the power also to enforce them, were committed to these
|
|
agents, they would have all power,--would be absolute masters of the
|
|
people, and could deprive them of their rights at pleasure. It says,
|
|
therefore, that the people themselves will hold a veto upon the
|
|
enforcement of any and every law, which these agents may enact, and that
|
|
whenever the occasion arises for them to give or withhold their
|
|
consent,--inasmuch as the whole people cannot assemble, or devote the
|
|
time and attention necessary to the investigation of each case,--twelve
|
|
of their number shall be taken by lot, or otherwise at random, from the
|
|
whole body; that they shall not be chosen by majorities, (the same
|
|
majorities that elected the agents who enacted the laws to be put in
|
|
issue,) nor by any interested or suspected party; that they shall not be
|
|
appointed by, or be in any way dependent upon, those who enacted the
|
|
law; that their opinions, whether for or against the law that is in
|
|
issue, shall not be inquired of beforehand; and that if these twelve men
|
|
give their consent to the enforcement of the law, their consent shall
|
|
stand for the consent of the whole.
|
|
|
|
This is the mode, which the trial by jury provides, for keeping the
|
|
government within the limits designed by the whole people, who have
|
|
associated for its establishment. And it is the only mode, provided
|
|
either by the English or American constitutions, for the accomplishment
|
|
of that object.
|
|
|
|
But it will, perhaps, be said that if the minority can defeat the will
|
|
of the majority, then the minority _rule_ the majority. But this is not
|
|
true in any unjust sense. The minority enact no laws of their own. They
|
|
simply refuse their assent to such laws of the majority as they do not
|
|
approve. The minority assume no authority over the majority; they simply
|
|
defend themselves. They do not interfere with the right of the majority
|
|
to seek their own happiness in their own way, so long as they (the
|
|
majority) do not interfere with the minority. They claim simply not to
|
|
be oppressed, and not to be compelled to assist in doing anything which
|
|
they do not approve. They say to the majority, "We will unite with you,
|
|
if you desire it, for the accomplishment of all those purposes, in
|
|
which we have a common interest with you. You can certainly expect us to
|
|
do nothing more. If you do not choose to associate with us on those
|
|
terms, there must be two separate associations. You must associate for
|
|
the accomplishment of your purposes; we for the accomplishment of ours."
|
|
|
|
In this case, the minority assume no authority over the majority; they
|
|
simply refuse to surrender their own liberties into the hands of the
|
|
majority. They propose a union; but decline submission. The majority are
|
|
still at liberty to refuse the connection, and to seek their own
|
|
happiness in their own way, except that they cannot be gratified in
|
|
their desire to become absolute masters of the minority.
|
|
|
|
But, it may be asked, how can the minority be trusted to enforce even
|
|
such legislation as is equal and just? The answer is, that they are as
|
|
reliable for that purpose as are the majority; they are as much presumed
|
|
to have associated, and are as likely to have associated, for that
|
|
object, as are the majority; and they have as much interest in such
|
|
legislation as have the majority. They have even more interest in it;
|
|
for, being the weaker party, they must rely on it for their
|
|
security,--having no other security on which they can rely. Hence their
|
|
consent to the establishment of government, and to the _taxation_
|
|
required for its support, is _presumed_, (although it ought not to be
|
|
presumed,) without any express consent being given. This presumption of
|
|
their consent to be taxed for the maintenance of laws, would be absurd,
|
|
if they could not themselves be trusted to act in good faith in
|
|
enforcing those laws. And hence they cannot be presumed to have
|
|
consented to be taxed for the maintenance of any laws, except such as
|
|
they are themselves ready to aid in enforcing. It is therefore unjust to
|
|
tax them, unless they are eligible to seats in a jury, with power to
|
|
judge of the justice of the laws. Taxing them for the support of the
|
|
laws, on the assumption that they are in favor of the laws, and at the
|
|
same time refusing them the right, as jurors, to judge of the justice of
|
|
the laws, on the assumption that they are opposed to the laws, are flat
|
|
contradictions.
|
|
|
|
But, it will be asked, what motive have the majority, when they have
|
|
all power in their own hands, to submit their will to the veto of the
|
|
minority?
|
|
|
|
One answer is, that they have the motive of justice. It would be
|
|
_unjust_ to compel the minority to contribute, by taxation, to the
|
|
support of any laws which they did not approve.
|
|
|
|
Another answer is, that if the stronger party wish to use their power
|
|
only for purposes of justice, they have no occasion to fear the veto of
|
|
the weaker party; for the latter have as strong motives for the
|
|
maintenance of _just_ government, as have the former.
|
|
|
|
Another answer is, that if the stronger party use their power
|
|
_unjustly_, they will hold it by an uncertain tenure, especially in a
|
|
community where knowledge is diffused; for knowledge will enable the
|
|
weaker party to make itself in time the stronger party. It also enables
|
|
the weaker party, even while it remains the weaker party, perpetually to
|
|
annoy, alarm, and injure their oppressors. Unjust power,--or rather
|
|
power that is _grossly_ unjust, and that is known to be so by the
|
|
minority,--can be sustained only at the expense of standing armies, and
|
|
all the other machinery of force; for the oppressed party are always
|
|
ready to risk their lives for purposes of vengeance, and the acquisition
|
|
of their rights, whenever there is any tolerable chance of success.
|
|
Peace, safety, and quiet for all, can be enjoyed only under laws that
|
|
obtain the consent of all. Hence tyrants frequently yield to the demands
|
|
of justice from those weaker than themselves, as a means of buying peace
|
|
and safety.
|
|
|
|
Still another answer is, that those who are in the majority on one law,
|
|
will be in the minority on another. All, therefore, need the benefit of
|
|
the veto, at some time or other, to protect themselves from injustice.
|
|
|
|
That the limits, within which legislation would, by this process, be
|
|
confined, would be exceedingly narrow, in comparison with those it at
|
|
present occupies, there can be no doubt. All monopolies, all special
|
|
privileges, all sumptuary laws, all restraints upon any traffic,
|
|
bargain, or contract, that was naturally lawful,[117] all restraints
|
|
upon men's natural rights, the whole catalogue of _mala prohibita_, and
|
|
all taxation to which the taxed parties had not individually, severally,
|
|
and freely consented, would be at an end; because all such legislation
|
|
implies a violation of the rights of a greater or less minority. This
|
|
minority would disregard, trample upon, or resist, the execution of such
|
|
legislation, and then throw themselves upon a jury of the whole people
|
|
for justification and protection. In this way all legislation would be
|
|
nullified, except the legislation of that general nature which
|
|
impartially protected the rights, and subserved the interests, of all.
|
|
The only legislation that could be sustained, would probably be such as
|
|
tended directly to the maintenance of justice and liberty; such, for
|
|
example, as should contribute to the enforcement of contracts, the
|
|
protection of property, and the prevention and punishment of acts
|
|
intrinsically criminal. In short, government in practice would be
|
|
brought to the necessity of a strict adherence to natural law, and
|
|
natural justice, instead of being, as it now is, a great battle, in
|
|
which avarice and ambition are constantly fighting for and obtaining
|
|
advantages over the natural rights of mankind.
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 117: Such as restraints upon banking, upon the rates of
|
|
interest, upon traffic with foreigners, &c., &c.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
APPENDIX.
|
|
|
|
TAXATION.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It was a principle of the Common Law, as it is of the law of nature, and
|
|
of common sense, that no man can be taxed without his personal consent.
|
|
The Common Law knew nothing of that system, which now prevails in
|
|
England, of _assuming_ a man's own consent to be taxed, because some
|
|
pretended representative, whom he never authorized to act for him, has
|
|
taken it upon himself to consent that he may be taxed. That is one of
|
|
the many frauds on the Common Law, and the English constitution, which
|
|
have been introduced since Magna Carta. Having finally established
|
|
itself in England, it has been stupidly and servilely copied and
|
|
submitted to in the United States.
|
|
|
|
If the trial by jury were reëstablished, the Common Law principle of
|
|
taxation would be reëstablished with it; for it is not to be supposed
|
|
that juries would enforce a tax upon an individual which he had never
|
|
agreed to pay. Taxation without consent is as plainly robbery, when
|
|
enforced against one man, as when enforced against millions; and it is
|
|
not to be imagined that juries could be blind to so self-evident a
|
|
principle. Taking a man's money without his consent, is also as much
|
|
robbery, when it is done by millions of men, acting in concert, and
|
|
calling themselves a government, as when it is done by a single
|
|
individual, acting on his own responsibility, and calling himself a
|
|
highwayman. Neither the numbers engaged in the act, nor the different
|
|
characters they assume as a cover for the act, alter the nature of the
|
|
act itself.
|
|
|
|
If the government can take a man's money without his consent, there is
|
|
no limit to the additional tyranny it may practise upon him; for, with
|
|
his money, it can hire soldiers to stand over him, keep him in
|
|
subjection, plunder him at discretion, and kill him if he resists. And
|
|
governments always will do this, as they everywhere and always have done
|
|
it, except where the Common Law principle has been established. It is
|
|
therefore a first principle, a very _sine qua non_ of political freedom,
|
|
that a man can be taxed only by his personal consent. And the
|
|
establishment of this principle, with _trial by jury_, insures freedom
|
|
of course; because: 1. No man would pay his money unless he had first
|
|
contracted for such a government as he was willing to support; and, 2.
|
|
Unless the government then kept itself within the terms of its contract,
|
|
juries would not enforce the payment of the tax. Besides, the agreement
|
|
to be taxed would probably be entered into but for a year at a time. If,
|
|
in that year, the government proved itself either inefficient or
|
|
tyrannical, to any serious degree, the contract would not be renewed.
|
|
The dissatisfied parties, if sufficiently numerous for a new
|
|
organization, would form themselves into a separate association for
|
|
mutual protection. If not sufficiently numerous for that purpose, those
|
|
who were conscientious would forego all governmental protection, rather
|
|
than contribute to the support of a government which they deemed unjust.
|
|
|
|
All legitimate government is a mutual insurance company, voluntarily
|
|
agreed upon by the parties to it, for the protection of their rights
|
|
against wrong-doers. In its voluntary character it is precisely similar
|
|
to an association for mutual protection against fire or shipwreck.
|
|
Before a man will join an association for these latter purposes, and pay
|
|
the premium for being insured, he will, if he be a man of sense, look at
|
|
the articles of the association; see what the company promises to do;
|
|
what it is likely to do; and what are the rates of insurance. If he be
|
|
satisfied on all these points, he will become a member, pay his premium
|
|
for a year, and then hold the company to its contract. If the conduct of
|
|
the company prove unsatisfactory, he will let his policy expire at the
|
|
end of the year for which he has paid; will decline to pay any further
|
|
premiums, and either seek insurance elsewhere, or take his own risk
|
|
without any insurance. And as men act in the insurance of their ships
|
|
and dwellings, they would act in the insurance of their properties,
|
|
liberties and lives, in the political association, or government.
|
|
|
|
The political insurance company, or government, have no more right, in
|
|
nature or reason, to _assume_ a man's consent to be protected by them,
|
|
and to be taxed for that protection, when he has given no actual
|
|
consent, than a fire or marine insurance company have to assume a man's
|
|
consent to be protected by them, and to pay the premium, when his actual
|
|
consent has never been given. To take a man's property without his
|
|
consent is robbery; and to assume his consent, where no actual consent
|
|
is given, makes the taking none the less robbery. If it did, the
|
|
highwayman has the same right to assume a man's consent to part with his
|
|
purse, that any other man, or body of men, can have. And his assumption
|
|
would afford as much moral justification for his robbery as does a like
|
|
assumption, on the part of the government, for taking a man's property
|
|
without his consent. The government's pretence of protecting him, as an
|
|
equivalent for the taxation, affords no justification. It is for himself
|
|
to decide whether he desires such protection as the government offers
|
|
him. If he do not desire it, or do not bargain for it, the government
|
|
has no more right than any other insurance company to impose it upon
|
|
him, or make him pay for it.
|
|
|
|
Trial by the country, and no taxation without consent, were the two
|
|
pillars of English liberty, (when England had any liberty,) and the
|
|
first principles of the Common Law. They mutually sustain each other;
|
|
and neither can stand without the other. Without both, no people have
|
|
any guaranty for their freedom; with both, no people can be otherwise
|
|
than free.[118]
|
|
|
|
By what force, fraud, and conspiracy, on the part of kings, nobles, and
|
|
"a few wealthy freeholders," these pillars have been prostrated in
|
|
England, it is designed to show more fully in the next volume, if it
|
|
should be necessary.
|
|
|
|
[Footnote 118: Trial by the country, and no taxation without consent,
|
|
mutually sustain each other, and can be sustained only by each other,
|
|
for these reasons: 1. Juries would refuse to enforce a tax against a man
|
|
who had never agreed to pay it. They would also protect men in forcibly
|
|
resisting the collection of taxes to which they had never consented.
|
|
Otherwise the jurors would authorize the government to tax themselves
|
|
without their consent,--a thing which no jury would be likely to do. In
|
|
these two ways, then, trial by the country would sustain the principle
|
|
of no taxation without consent. 2. On the other hand, the principle of
|
|
no taxation without consent would sustain the trial by the country,
|
|
because men in general would not consent to be taxed for the support of
|
|
a government under which trial by the country was not secured. Thus
|
|
these two principles mutually sustain each other.
|
|
|
|
But, if either of these principles were broken down, the other would
|
|
fall with it, and for these reasons: 1. If trial by the country were
|
|
broken down, the principle of no taxation without consent would fall
|
|
with it, because the government would then be _able_ to tax the people
|
|
without their consent, inasmuch as the legal tribunals would be mere
|
|
tools of the government, and would enforce such taxation, and punish men
|
|
for resisting such taxation, as the government ordered. 2. On the other
|
|
hand, if the principle of no taxation without consent were broken down,
|
|
trial by the country would fall with it, because the government, if it
|
|
could tax people without their consent, would, of course, take enough of
|
|
their money to enable it to employ all the force necessary for
|
|
sustaining its own tribunals, (in the place of juries,) and carrying
|
|
their decrees into execution.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
End of Project Gutenberg's An Essay on the Trial by Jury, by Lysander Spooner
|
|
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