An Essay On The Trial By Jury, Lysander Spooner [chrysanthemum read aloud .TXT] 📗
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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. [2]
Furthemore, 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 Civilsuits, 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; * * Serio, 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."
8 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
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