An Essay On The Trial By Jury, Lysander Spooner [ebook reader browser .txt] 📗
- Author: Lysander Spooner
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"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 Fo 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 Terrae, 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 Terraehad 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 Woold Have Been Sheer Nonsense,
Inasmuch As The Whole Purpot 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 Againist Him With Force And Arms, Unless By
The Judgment Of His Peers, Or Uness 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
Chapter 2 (The Trial By Jury, As Defined by Magna Carta) Section 2 (The Language Of Magna Carta) Pg 30Slightest Protection To The Liberties Of The People, If The Laws Of The
King had Been Embraced in theterm Legem Terrae. But If Legem
Terrae 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 Terrae, 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 Terrae 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 Terrae 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 Knownin 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 Terrae," 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. [23]
For All Practical Puposes 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 Terrae, 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 Terrae, 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 Terrae, 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
Chapter 2 (The Trial By Jury, As Defined by Magna Carta) Section 2 (The Language Of Magna Carta) Pg 31Not Think It Can Be Shown That The Common Law, The Lex Terrae,
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 on 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 "Earl 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 Rial, 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 Shout 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. [25]
Under The Saxon Laws, Fines, Payable To The Injured party, Seem To
Chapter 2 (The Trial By Jury, As Defined by Magna Carta) Section 2 (The Language Of Magna Carta) Pg 32Have 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 One, 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. [26]
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. [27]
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 Terrae."
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
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