An Essay On The Trial By Jury by Lysander Spooner (free ebook reader for android TXT) π
1215 There Has Been No Clearer Principle Of English Or American
Constitutional Law, Than That, In criminal Cases, It Is Not Only The
Right And Duty Of Juries To Judge What Are The Facts, What Is The Law,
And What Was The Moral Intent Of The Accused; But That It Is Also
Their Right, And Their Primary And Paramount Duty, To Judge Of The
Justice Of The Law, And To Hold All Laws Invalid, That Are, In their
Opinion, Unjust Or Oppressive, And All Persons Guiltless In violating,
Or Resisting the Execution Of, Such Laws.
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Free In just So Far As That Conscience Is Enlightened.
Chapter 3 (Additional Proofs Of The Rights And Duties Of Jurors) Section 2 (The Ancient Common Law Juries Were Mere Courts Of Conscience) Pg 59
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, 80.) 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. [11] 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
Bailiff'S, 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. [12] 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.
Chapter 3 (Additional Proofs Of The Rights And Duties Of Jurors) Section 2 (The Ancient Common Law Juries Were Mere Courts Of Conscience) Pg 60
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. [13] Of
Those That Werewritten, Few Copies Only Were Made, (Printing
Being then Unknown,) And Not Enough To Supply A11, 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 Thattime, 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. [14]. 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 Beingeven
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. [15]
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 Sheriff'S 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,
Chapter 3 (Additional Proofs Of The Rights And Duties Of Jurors) Section 2 (The Ancient Common Law Juries Were Mere Courts Of Conscience) Pg 61P. 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 832.
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 Nem-Bas; 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.[16]
"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. T.,
Chief Baron Gilbert Says:
"Besides The Tenants Of The King, Which Held Per Baroniam, (By
Chapter 3 (Additional Proofs Of The Rights And Duties Of Jurors) Section 2 (The Ancient Common Law Juries Were Mere Courts Of Conscience) Pg 62The 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 Aud 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
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