A Concise History of the Common Law. Theodore F. T. Plucknett

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Norman Juries and Assizes

       Inquisitions in England

       Assizes in England

       4. The jury for royal criminal inquiry

       Criminal Law: The Grand Jury

       5. Ancient modes of trial

       The Ordeals

       Wager of Law

       Trial by Battle

       Abolition of the Ordeal

       6. The jury as a new mode of trial

       Evolution of the Petty Jury

       An Example of the New Criminal Procedure

       Trials on Indictment

       The Inscrutable Jury

       Jury Trial becomes Compulsory

       Rationalisation of Jury Trial

       The Jury as Representatives

       Early Opinion about the Jury

       The Early History Summarised

       7. Post-mediaeval problems

       The Review of Verdicts

       The Punishment of Obstinate Jurors

       Bushel’s Case

       New Trials

       Constitutional Position of the Jury

      It is in this complicated interplay of royal and local institutions that the origins of the jury are to be sought; so we can now appropriately turn from the study of the vill and the hundred to the growth of the system of presentment which was so prominent a part of their constitution, and to the later transformation of that system into a method of trial as well as accusation. At the same time, the county’s loss of effective jurisdiction over pleas of land was intimately connected with the rise of the royal writ, and this will be almost synonymous with the use of an assize or a jury of twelve. The criminal jury, therefore, can be treated here because it grew out of the natural expression of the vill and the hundred; but the civil jury in the old real actions was based (as we shall see) upon a somewhat different, though related, idea, which only came to an end with the abolition of real actions. The modern civil jury, it must be remembered, is descended from the old criminal jury through the action of trespass, which was at first partly criminal and later entirely civil in its character.

      The discussion may well open with Maitland’s definition of the jury: a jury is a body of neighbours summoned by a public officer to answer questions upon oath.1 It will be seen that there is nothing in this definition which restricts the jury to judicial proceedings; on the contrary, the definition deliberately makes room for the fact that the jury, like so many institutions, was an administrative device which only later became confined to courts of law.

      The story is complicated because several different lines of development were being pursued simultaneously, and so it is particularly necessary to have the outlines clearly in mind while the details of this chapter are being studied. The subject will be dealt with in the following order:

      1 Early prototypes of the jury;

      2 The jury for royal administrative inquiry;

      3 The jury for the trial of property cases;

      4 The jury for royal criminal inquiry;

      5 Ancient modes of trial;

      6 The jury as a new mode of trial;

      7 Post-mediaeval problems.

       Early prototypes of the jury

      SUPPOSED ANGLO-SAXON ORIGINS

      A third and more plausible suggestion would see

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