Questions tagged [legal-history]

For questions related to how and why law has evolved over time.

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-2 votes
1 answer
122 views

How did international/colonial jurisdictions deal with the combination of law and equity?

It seems to me based on preliminary consideration that as the majority of the British empire gained independence from colonial rule after WWII, the U.S. is perhaps at least somewhat unique in gaining ...
-1 votes
2 answers
81 views

Are writs rooted in equity?

Another answer I came across recently mentioned that orders for specific performance ie mandatory injunctions formerly called mandamus were writs. Conversely so were other writs such as certiorari. ...
2 votes
1 answer
59 views

What were practitioners of/at (?) Equity called when the courts were separate?

Back when Equity was separate from Law, were practitioners of Equity qualified to address the courts of chancery called “lawyers”? Or were they called “equiters” or some other different term? Given ...
22 votes
1 answer
2k views

When did criminal discovery rules substantially form?

The apparent non-existence of any criminal discovery/disclosure in Anatomy of a murder (1959) has struck me as odd and wildly disturbing. The trial is just a series of surprises to both sides. For ...
0 votes
1 answer
144 views

What is the origin of the notion of the King’s “peace”?

There are magistrates (or justices) of the peace, which evokes memory of the justices of the peace act 1285, a statute. Then there is a breach of the peace and the various police powers and ...
2 votes
1 answer
111 views

Why wasn’t trial by combat invalid by way of desuetude in Ashford v Thornton?

The whole significance of the trial for which it is so widely studied is apparently the insight that desuetude basically doesn’t exist and laws are effective until they’re repealed. But then what is ...
6 votes
1 answer
319 views

What did it mean to be “declared infamous”?

According to Wikipedia, in Ashford v. Thornton, If the plaintiff said the word craven ("I am vanquished") and gave up the fight, he was to be declared infamous, deprived of the privileges ...
0 votes
1 answer
191 views

What was "carnal knowledge against the order of nature"?

S152(2), Palestine Penal Code of 1936, makes reference to carnal knowledge against the order of nature: 152(2) Any person who:— (a) has carnal knowledge of any person against the order of nature; or (...
9 votes
2 answers
1k views

What are "equity" and "equitable remedies"?

What is equity and/or an equitable remedy? How does it relate to the common law?
-4 votes
1 answer
38 views

Was Ashford v Thornton heard at the Royal courts of Justice in Chancery Lane, London or elsewhere?

What physical venue was this 19th century Murder appeal heard in?
1 vote
1 answer
95 views

Why, more specifically, were women not permitted to view the trial of Ashford v Thornton?

According to Wikipedia which in turn cites p 63, “Schoenfield, Mark (1997), "Waging battle: Ashford v Thornton, Ivanhoe and legal violence", in Simmons, Clare (ed.), Medievalism and the ...
-3 votes
1 answer
51 views

Was affray a common law offence before it was codified in statute?

Section 3 POA 1986 describes affray as a criminal offence. What was the status of it before this?
-3 votes
1 answer
88 views

Does the convention of “F. Last” have any legal significance?

I’ve noticed that legal correspondence sometimes addresses folks in the format of F. Last where F. Is the addressee’s first initial, and Last is their complete last name. What is the origin of this ...
0 votes
2 answers
334 views

Has there ever been a common-law-only jurisdiction?

Is there, or has there ever been, any jurisdiction governed only under common law, with no statutory law?
0 votes
2 answers
177 views

When and how did the adversarial aspect of the criminal justice system originate, and to what extent is/was it actually adversarial?

As I understand, originally all judicial courts derived their authority from the crown. So too, was the prosecutor in criminal matters referred to as “the crown.” So the crown is both the judge and ...
1 vote
1 answer
163 views

In the 1810 French penal code, were "stocks" a more heavy punishment than imprisonment?

In the 1810 French penal code, the prescribed sentence for some crimes is "carcan" (stocks), which is described as being put in stocks at a public place with information about one's name, ...
0 votes
1 answer
49 views

What was the closest parallel to common assault prior to CJA 1988?

Common assault appears to have been defined by statute in the criminal Justice act 1988. How were comparable incidents prosecuted before this?
3 votes
1 answer
133 views

Multiple *jus soli*

Until a few years ago, birth in Northern Ireland conferred citizenship in two states: the UK and Ireland. Was this unique in modern history, or are there other similar examples?
2 votes
2 answers
155 views

Where when and how did the idea of “reasonableness” originate?

What period did it come into regular legal usage? Did it originate as a judicial device first or did it begin as something that would be explicitly coded into statutes?
9 votes
1 answer
226 views

When did indictments stop saying people were "moved and seduced by the instigation of the Devil"?

Criminal indictments used to use much more detailed and flowery language than they do now. I was surprised to learn, while looking at some early U.S. documents, that they had retained a feature of ...
-2 votes
2 answers
129 views

Where does the idea of entitlement to make submissions to a court originate?

The court originally derived its authority solely from the supreme sovereignty of the crown. But if the royal power is so supreme, then why are subjects allowed as a matter of apparently solemn ...
3 votes
1 answer
467 views

What is the origin of the term “court” as a reference to the judicial institution?

Does the legal usage of the word court as in a court of law derive from the idea of a royal court, as an expression of the idea that the original courts of law were ultimately simple vehicles for the ...
3 votes
2 answers
150 views

Why are some sections of the US Code formatted so weirdly?

There are actually two questions here. First, why are sections not in order? You have 28 USC §1 through §6, which talk about the Supreme Court, then you have §41 to §49 (appeals courts), then §81 to §...
33 votes
3 answers
2k views

What is jury nullification?

What is jury nullification and what are its origins and history? What actions by a juror would be considered nullification?
1 vote
1 answer
58 views

Full text of Act of Settlement, 1781 - during the early company rule in India

Can someone please tell me where I can find the full text of the Act of Settlement, 1781 passed by the British Raj in India? I tried finding it on the internet but couldn't find it. Thank you!
-2 votes
1 answer
69 views

Why was 36 Edward III c. 1 in French while 25 Edward I c. 1 was in Latin? [closed]

These laws were only passed about 65 years apart. Was there a shift from Latin into French during this period?
-3 votes
2 answers
129 views

What are (respectively) “Lords temporal and spiritual”? [closed]

In the opening clause of every parliamentary act seems to appear this phrase. What does each type of Lord refer to?
12 votes
2 answers
3k views

What is the legal case for someone getting arrested publicizing information about nuclear weapons deduced from public knowledge

I have a vague memory of a court case involving a man being prosecuted for publicizing information about nuclear weapons. He obtained that information by logic deduction and probably calculations from ...
1 vote
2 answers
258 views

Why is the Crown Court called the Crown Court?

The Crown Court in England handles the graver charges known as indictments. Less severe criminal proceedings are heard in magistrates' court. Why is the Crown Court named Crown Court? Does it have ...
0 votes
2 answers
142 views

Why are formal accusations of crimes called “charges”?

How and when did it come to be called this? What are the origins of the term “criminal charges”?
2 votes
2 answers
174 views

Could any British statutes have remained in force as U.S. federal law after the American Revolution?

The question Are any British or English Acts of Parliament still in force in the United States? asked Are there any Acts of the British (or English Parliament) in force before American independence ...
7 votes
1 answer
260 views

How did the “American rule” as to legal costs originate?

At some point the US diverged from its common law ancestor, the English system, and the respective divergences came to be known as the American and English rules. The American rule is that parties ...
6 votes
1 answer
172 views

California non-compete laws: where do they come from?

I once read that California non-compete laws come from the gold rush era, and yet I was not able to find any more information about the subject. It would be interesting to understand what ...
5 votes
1 answer
448 views

What was the basis/reasoning for Pennsylvania's Supreme Court decision to declare the state old-age assistance program unconstitutional in the 1920s?

I read that From 1918 to 1927 [Abe] Epstein served as research director of the Pennyslvania Commission on Old Age Pensions. In that capacity, he was instrumental in having the State adopt an old-age ...
2 votes
1 answer
65 views

Equal protection, discrimination, and real estate

I am curious about the apparent success of ethnically restrictive laws on residence or property ownership after the fourteenth amendment was ratified. Hansberry v. Lee, 311 U.S. 32 (1940) ruled that a ...
21 votes
3 answers
5k views

What is the purpose of pardoning powers?

Various countries have pardoning powers given to either the president or the governor, this is secured as a constitutional right of the president and governor. What is the purpose of such powers? Is ...
0 votes
4 answers
218 views

What are some new examples of judge made law?

What are some recent examples of judge made law? (On both the criminal and civil side.) I am not looking for interpretations in long standing common law. I am looking for development of a new ...
12 votes
5 answers
12k views

Why 12 Jurors, why not 11, 10, 9, 1?

The question might seem basic, but why do juries in the United States consist of 12 members? Was there an experimental determination of this number? Would the addition or removal of a juror ...
3 votes
1 answer
148 views

Did anti Miscegenation laws concern themselves either more with pairings of black men and white women, vice versa, or neither in particular? [closed]

I wonder which was more common in the era of those laws, and that in itself might be off topic, but as the laws of coverture treated men and women fundamentally differently, I am wondering if these ...
0 votes
1 answer
412 views

Why don't Nordic countries have codes of private law?

I'm aware that there are some major differences between Scandinavian law systems and other European systems, e.g., the fact that Roman Law had very little influence in Scandinavian countries. But why ...
0 votes
3 answers
172 views

Why is it called Civil Law? What's "civil" about it?

Why is a civil legal system referred to as a system of “civil” law? In what sense is it “civil”? Does the name derive from origins in or association with the civil code or code civil? In this case, ...
3 votes
1 answer
96 views

Why does the high court of chivalry follow “civil law,” and what does this mean?

The English so called high court of chivalry, archaic and now rarely used, is said by Wikipedia to follow civil law (ie not common law). How does this work, and how did it come to be? https://en.m....
2 votes
1 answer
106 views

What sorts of “necessities” could married women enter contracts for?

A recent answer by @Ohwilleke on the historical status of married women lists the limited types of contracts they could enter into. One of these of those for necessities. What is referred to by this?
95 votes
6 answers
16k views

ASKED: Why do many "No Trespassing" signs say "POSTED"?

Many "no trespassing" signs say "POSTED" in large letters at the top. Why? Obviously, the sign is posted; that's the whole purpose of a sign. To me, it makes as much sense as ...
2 votes
0 answers
63 views

What were the main factors prompting the abolition of heart balm torts?

What were the driving forces that led to it, what were the mechanisms that enacted it, and what were the stated rationales for it? Adultery is still recognised as a fault factor in divorce that ...
9 votes
1 answer
655 views

How was the court in Abingdon RDC v O'Gorman (1968 EWCA Civ) aware of Thornton v Cruther & ors (1769)?

At s23, the court cites Chief Justice Wilmot's decision in the 1769 case Thornton v Cruther & others, which it mentions is "unreported." So how did the court become familiar with the ...
4 votes
2 answers
446 views

Why are barristers in England and Wales not officers of the court?

In Assaubayev v Michael Wilson & Partners Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 1491, in a discussion about the court's supervisory jurisdiction over solicitors, Christopher Clarke LJ said [32]: Those who appear ...
0 votes
0 answers
28 views

What were the primary instigatory forces behind the 2016 improvements to the Housing Act 2004’s rent repayment order regime?

It is often cited what the reasons are behind the changes brought in 2016 to the regime. But which forces had brought the shortcomings that the regime was proving to have statistically and in practice ...
28 votes
1 answer
6k views

What was the original idea behind the practice of courtroom wigs?

English judges and barristers have for a long time had to wear wigs. What was the intended implied message by the object aesthetic? What was the look of a judge or advocate wearing that type of ...
4 votes
1 answer
1k views

What is "distress," as in "distress for rent"?

There have been several distress for rent acts in the 17th and 18th centuries, which provide a right for distress. What is the nature of this right and the origin of its name?

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