dlormii Slam Bcl^aal ^£ibtnt^ CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY 3 1924 071 264 869 Cornell University Library The original of tiiis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924071264869 Essays IN Anglo-Saxon Law. o>Ko BOSTON: LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY. 1905. G Sntered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1876, by LITTLE, BKOWN, AHD COMPANY, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. The tTHiTXBsnT Fbess, Cambbidse, Uass., IT. B. A. TO CHARLES WILLIAM ELIOT, PRESIDENT OF HARVAKD COLLEGE, THIS VOLUME, FRUIT OF HIS ADMINISTRATION, 18 RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED. TABLE OF C0NTE:N^TS. Titles of Wokks Cited vii The Anglo-Saxon Couuts or Law. By Henky Adams . . 1 The Anglo-Saxon Land-Law. By H. Cabot Lodge ... 55 The Anglo-Saxon Family Law. By Ernest Young . . . 121 The Anglo-Saxon Legal Procedure. Br J. Laurence Laughlin • . 183 APPENDIX. Select Gases in Anglo-Saxon Law 307 Index • 385 TITLES OF WORKS CITED. JEthelweardi Cheonicon. In the Monumenta Historica Britannica. Allen John. Inquii-y into the Rise and Growth of the Royal Preroga- tive in England. A new Edition. London, 1849. Anglo Saxon Chronicle. Edited, with a translation, by B. Thorpe. 2 vol. Published under the direction of the Master of the Rolls. London, 1861. AssER. Annales Rerum Gestarum .Sllfredi Magni. In the Monumenta Histoiica Britannica. Baluzius, Capitularia regum Franoorum. Curante Petro Chiniac. 2 vols. Paris, 1780. Fol. V. Bar, L. Beweisurtheil des germanischen Processes. Hannover, 1866. Baumstark, Anton. Ausfiihrliche Erlaiiterung des aUgemeinen Theiles der Germania des Tacitus. Leipzig, 1875. Bedae Opera. In the Publications of the English Historical Society. Behrend, J. F. Zum Process der Lex Salica. Festgaben von August Wilhelm HefEter. Berlin, 1873. Behrend. Lex Salica. 1875. Beowulf. Edited by Benjamin Thorpe. London, 1875. Y. Bethmann-Hollweg, Der Civilprocess des gemeinen Rechts in geschichtlicher Entwickelung. Bonn, 1868. Bltjntschli, J. G. Neuere Untersuchungen iiber das deutsche Sachen- recht. In the Kritische Ueberschau, VI. Bracton, Henry de. De Legibus et Consuetudinibus Angliae. Lon- don, 1569. Brunner, Heineich. Zeugen und Inquisitionsbeweis der karolingischen Zeit. "Wien, 1866. Brunner, Heinrich. Die Entstehung der Schwurgerichte. Berlin, 1872. Brunner, Heinrich. Das anglonormannische Erbfolgesystem. Leip- zig, 1869. Bruns, C. G. Das Recht des Besitzes im Mittelalter und der Gegenwart. Tubingen, 1848. Vita S. Guthberti. In the Publications of the English Historical So- ciety. Vlll TITLES OF WORKS CITED. DiGBY, Kenelm Edwakd. An Introduction to the History of the Law of Real Property, with Original Authorities. Oxford, 1875. Du Cange, C. D. Glossarium ad Scriptores mediae et inflmae Latini- tatis. Paris, 1733. 6 vols. DuGDALE, Sir William. Monastieon Anglicanum: A History of the Abbies and other Monasteries, Hospitals, Frieries, and Cathedral and Collegiate Churches, with their dependencies in England and Wales ; originally published in Latin by Sir WiUiam Dugdale, Kt. A new Edition, by John Caley, Esq., F.S.A., Henry Ellis, LL.B. F.K.S., Sec. S. A., and the Kev. Bulkeley Bandinel, M.A. London, 1817- 1830. 8 Tols. Eadmeei, Monachi Cantuariensis Historiae Novorum sive sui Saecnli Libri VI. . . . Emisit Joannes Seldenus. Londini, MDCXXII. Ellis, Sir Henry. A General Introduction to Domesday Book. In two volumes. 1833. Fleta, seu Commentarius Juris Anglican!. Londini, 1685. Freeman, Edward A. The History of the Norman Conquest of Eng- land, its Causes and its Results. Oxford, 1873. 4 vols. Gale. Historiae Britanuicae, Saxonicae, Anglo-Danicae, Scriptores XV. . . . Editi Thomae Gale, Oxoniae, MDCXCI. Ganz, E. Das Erbrecht in weltgeschichtlicher Entwickelung. Stuttgart and Tubingen, 1835. 4 vols. Gbmeinee, a. Ueber Eideshiilfe und Eideshelfer des alteren deutschen Rechtes. Miinchen, 1848. Glanville, Ranulph de. De Legibus et Consuetudinibus regni Angliae. London, 1604. Grimm, J. Deutsche Rechtsalterthiimer. Gottingen, 1854. Hanel, A. Das Beweissystem des Sachsenspiegels. Leipzig, 1858. Hanssen, G. History of the Field Systems of Germany, in the Zeit- schrift fur die gesammte Staatswissenschaft. Vol. XXI. Hasted, Edward. The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent. Second Edition. 12 vols. Canterbui-y, 1797-1801. Hemingi. Chartularium Ecclesiae Wigorniensis. . . . Edidit Tho. Hearnius. Oxonii, MDCCXXIII. Heuslbk, Andreas. Der Ursprung der deutschen Stadtverfassung. Weimar, Hermann Bohlau, 1872. Heusler, Andreas. Die Gewere. Weimar, Hermann Bohlau, 1872. HiCKEs. Georgii Hickesii. . . . Dissertatio Epistolaris ad Bartholomeum Showere. . . . Oxoniae, MDCCIH. HisTORiA Ecclesiae Eliensis. See Gale. HisTORiA Ramesiensis. See Gale. HoMEYER,C. G. DassaohsischeLehnrechtundderRichtsteigLehnrechts, 1842. 2 Theile. Berlin, 1861. Kemble, John M. Codex Diplomaticus .Slvi Sasonici, Opera Johannis M. Kemble. Londini, MDCCCXXXIX. 6 vols. TITLES OF "WORKS CITED. IX Kemble, John M. The Saxons in England. London, 1849. 2 vols. KoENiGSWARTER, L. J. Histoire de 1' Organization de la Famille en France. Paris, 1851. KosTLiN, C. R. Geschichte des deutschen Strafrechts in Umriss. Tubingen, 1859. Kraut, W. T. - Die Vormundschaft nach den GrundsEltzen des deutschen Rechts. Gottingen, 1835. Kritische Ueberschau der deutschen Gesetzgebung und Rechtswissen- schaft. Herausgegeben von Arndts, Bluntschli und Pozl. Miinchen, 1853-1859. Kritische Vierteljahrsschrift fiir Gesetzgebung und Rechtswissenschaft. Herausgegeben von Pozl. 17 vol. Miinchen, 1859-1875. Labanx), Paul. Die Vermbgensrechtlichen Klagen nach den sachsischen Rechtsquellen des Mittelalters. Berlin, 1869. Lambarde, W. a Perambulation of Kent. London, 1826. Lewis, W. Die Succession des Erben in die Obligationen des Erblassers nach deutschem Recht. Berlin, 1864. Lewis, W. Zur Lehre von der Successionsordnung des deutschen Rechtes. In the Kritische Vierteljahrssehrift fiir Gesetzgebung tmd Rechts wis- senschaft, IX. Miinchen, 1867. Lex Salica herausg. v. J. Merkel. Berlin, 1850. LoNiNG, R. Der Vertragsbruch und seine Rechtsfolgen. Strassburg, 1875. Maine, Sir Henry Sumner. Ancient Law. JSTew York, 1875. Maine, Sir Henry Sumner. Early History of Institutions. New York, 1875. Maine, Sir Henry Sumner. Village Communities in the East and West. Six Lectures delivered at Oxford. London, 1871. V. Maurer, G. L. Einleitung zur Geschichte der Mark-, Hof-, Dorf- und Stadtverfassung und der offentlichen Gewalt. Miinchen, 1854. v. Maurer, G. L. Geschichte der Eronhofe, der Bauernhofe und der Hofverfassung in Deutschland. 4 Bande. Erlangen, 1862. Maurer, Konrad. Ueber angelsaehsisohe Rechtsverhaltnisse. In the Kritische Ueberschau der deutschen Gesetzgebung. I., II., III. Miinchen. Maurer, Konrad. Island von seiner ersten Entdeckung bis zum Un- tergange des Freistaats. Miinchen, 1874. Maurer, Konrad. Das Beweisverfahren nach deutschen Rechten. Kritische Ueberschau, V. Meiohelbeok. Historia Frisingensis. Augustae Vind. 1724. Merkel. Lex Salica. Berlin, 1850. Michelet, J. Origines du Droit frangais. Paris, 1837. MoNUMENTA HiSTOKiCA Britannica, ot Materials for the History of Britain from the earliest Period. Petrie and Sharpe. Published by command of Her Majesty. MDCCCXLVHI. X TITLES OF WOKKS CITED. MoNUMENXA HisTOEiAE PATRIAE. Ed. jussu Regis Caroli Alberti. Char- larum tomus I. et II. Aug. Taur, 1836. Fol. Morgan, Lewis H. " Montezunla's Dinner" -and "Houses of the Mound-Builders." Articles in the North American Review for April and July, 1876. MuRATORi, Antiquitates Italioae medii aevi. 6 vols. Mediolani, 1738- •1742. Nasse, E. On the Agricultural Community of the Middle Ages and Enclosures of the Sixteenth Century in England. Translated from the German, by CoL H. A. Ouvry. (Cobden Club Publication.) Lon- don, 1871. Nasse, E. Review of Maine's Village Communities in the Contemporary Review, May, 1872. Nbnnius. Historia Britonum. In the Monumenta Historica Britannica. Njalsaga. The Story of Burnt Njal. Dasent. 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1861. Phillips, G. Versuch einer DarsteUung der Geschichte des angelsach- sisohen Reohts. Gottingen, 1825. Planck, J. W. Das Recht der Beweisfiihrung. In the Zeitschrift fiir deutsohes Recht, X. V. RiCHTHOFEN. Friesische Rechtsquellen. Berlin, 1840. Robertson, E. W. Historical Essays. Edinburgh, 1852. Robinson, T. The Common Law of Kent, or the Customs of Gavelkind. London, 1741. RoGGE, K. A. Uebpr das Gerichtswesen der Germanen. Halle, 1820. Roth, Paul. Geschichte des Beneficialwesens. Erlangen, 1850. Roth, Paul. Feudalitat und Unterthanverband. Weimar, 1863. RoziisRB, Eugene de. RecueU General des Formules usitees dans I'Empire des Francs du V« au X» Siecle. Paris, 1859-1871. Sachsenspiegel Oder sachsisches Landrecht, mit Uebersetzung, etc. von C. R. Sachsse. Heidelberg, 1848. ScHMiD, Reinhold. Die Gesetze der Angelsachsen. Leipzig, 1858. ScHROEDER, R. Geschichte des ehelichen Guterrechts in Deutschland. Stettin, Danzig, und Elbing, 1863. SiEGEL, H. Das deutsche Erbreoht nach den Rechtsquellen des Mittel- alters. Heidelberg, 1853. SiEGEL, H. Geschichte des deutschen Gerichtsverfahrens. Erster Band. Giessen, 1857. SoHM, Rudolf. Die frankische Reichs- und Gerichtsverfassung. Wei- mar, Hermann Bbhlau, 1872. SoHM, Rudolf. La Procedure de la Lex Salica. Traduit et annote' par Marcel Thfevenin. Bibliothfeque de I'Ecole des hautes Etudes. Paris, 1873. So»iM, Rudolf. Das Recht der Eheschliessung aus dem deutschen und canonischen Recht geschichtlich entwiokelt. Weimar, 1875. TITLES OP WORKS CITED. XI SoHM, Rudolf. Ueber die Entstehung des Lex Ribuaria. In the Zeits- chi-ift fiir RecMsgeschichte, V. Weimar, 1866. SoHM, Rudolf. Die geistliche Gerichtsbarkeit im frankischen Reich. In the Zeitsclirift fiir Kirchenrecht, IX. SoMNEK, W. A Treatise of Gavelkind. London, 1726. Spelman, Henry. Glossarium Archaiologicum. Londini, 1687. Stephen, H. J. Pleading. Ed. by Sam. Tayler, LL.D. Washington, 1872. Stobbe, O. Die Aufhebung der vaterlichen Gewalt nach dem Recht des Mittelalters. In his Beitrage zur Geschichte des deutschen Rechts. Braunschweig, 1865. ^TUBBS, William. The Constitutional History of England in its Origin and Development. Vol. I. Oxford, 1874. Stubbs, William. Select Charters and other Illustrations of English Constitutional History from the earliest Times to the Reign of Edward the First. Second edition. Oxford, 1874. V. Sydow, R. Darstellung des Erbrechts nach den Grundsatzen des Sachsenspiegels, &o. Berlin, 1828. Thorpe, B. Ancient Laws and Institutes of England. 2 vols. 1840. Thudicum, Eriedrich. Der altdeutsche Staat. Giessen, 1862. Thudicum, Friedrich. Die Gau- und Markverfassung in Deutschland. Giessen, 1860. Troya, Carlo. Codies diplomatico longobardo. 5 vols. Napoli, 185.3 Turner, Sharon. The History of the Anglo-Saxons. London, 1852. Vaissette, et de Vic. Histoire generale de Languedoc. 5 vols. Paris, 1730-1745. Wach, Adolph. Der Arrestprocess in seiner geschichtlichen Entwicke- lung. Erster Theil. Leipzig, 1868. Waitz, Georg. Deutsche Verfassungsgesohichte. 2 Auf . Kiel, 1865-66. Waitz, Georg. Ueber die Anfange der Vasallitat. Gottingen, 1856. Walter, Ferd. Corpus Juris Germanici Antiqui. 3 vol. Bernlini, MDCCCXXIV. Walter, Ferd. Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte. Bonn, 1857. 2 vols. Wasserschleben, H. Die germanische Verwandtschaftsberechnung und das Prinzip der Erbenfolge nach deutschem insbesondere sach- sischem Rechte. Giessen, 1864. Wasserschleben, H. Das Prinzip der Successionsordnung nach deutschem insbesondere sachsischem Rechte. Gotha, 1866. Wiarda, T. D. Willkiiren der Brockmanner. Berlin, 1820. Wiarda, T. D. Asega Buch. Berlin und Stettin, 1805. WiLDA, W. E. Das Strafrecht der Gennanen. Halle. 1842. Vita S. Wilfridi. In the publications of the English Historical Society. WiLKiNS, David. Concilia magnae Britanniae et Hiberniae, a Synodo Verolamiensi, A.D. CCCCXLVI ad Londinensem, A.D. MDCCXVII. 4 vol. Londini, MDCCXXXVII. Xll TITLES OF WORKS CITED. Zeitschrift fur Kirchbnrecht. Herausgegeben von Dove. Berlin, 1861. Zeitschrift fur Kechtsgeschichte. Herausgegeben von RudoriE, Bruns, Roth, Merkel, Bohlau. Weimar, 1861. Zeitschrift fur deutsches Recht. Herausgegeben von Beseler, Reyscher und Wilda. Leipzig, 1839. 20 Bande. ZoEPFL, H. Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte. Braunschweig, 1872. 3 vols. ZoRN, P. Das Beweisverfahren nach langobardischem Rechte. Mlinchen, 1872. THE ANGLO-SAXON COUETS OF LAW. The long and patient labors of German scholars seem to have now established beyond dispute the fundamental his- torical principle, that the entire Germanic family, in its earliest known stage of development, placed the adminis- tration of law, as it placed the political administration, in the hands of popular assemblies composed of the free, able- bodied members of the commonwealth. This great principle is, perhaps, from a political point of view, the most important which historical investigation has of late years established. It gives to the history of Germanic, and especially of English, institutions a roundness and philosophic continuity, which add greatly to their interest, and even to their practical value. The student of history who now attempts to trace, through two thousand years of vicissitudes and dangers, the slender thread of political and legal thought, no longer loses it from sight in the confusion of feudalism, or the wild law- lessness of the Heptarchy, but follows it safely and firmly back until it leads him out upon the wide plains of northern Germany, and attaches itself at last to the primitive popular assembly, parliament, law-court, and army in one ; which embraced every free man, rich or poor, and in theory at least allowed equal rights to all. Beyond this point it seems unnecessary to go. The State and the Law may well have originated here. There is no occasion for introducing theo- ries in regard to the development of families into tribes, of family heads into patriarchal and tribal chiefs, of the tribe 2 THE ANGLO-SAXOK COURTS OF LAW. mto the state, of the tribal chief into the king, of the family council into the state assembly, or of family custom into public law. We know, as yet, absolutely nothing of the society from which the Indo-European family immediately sprung, or from which it voluntarily or involuntarily separated it- self. But there is no sufficient reason for supposing that," within the Germanic society itself, the family was ever exclu- sively powerful. There is strong internal evidence in the Germanic laws to indicate that, whatever may have been the previous social condition of the race, its earliest political and legal creation was in the form of an association of small families, with or without actual or theoretical relationship, but without a patriarchal chief ; an association whose able-bodied male members, uniting, not as families, but as individuals equally entitled to a voice, formed one council, which decided all questions of war and peace ; elected all officers, civil or military, that circumstances required ; provided for the security of property; arbitrated all disputes that were regularly brought before them ; and left to the families them- selves the exclusive control of all their private affairs, as belonging to the domain of family custom. So far as con- cerned the purposes for which this association existed, the state was already supreme. Within its own sphere, the family was uncontrolled. This popular assembly was the primitive law-court of the Germanic race.^ What may have been its composition when the Germans were a nomadic race, if, indeed, they ever were a really nomadic race, is a subject of little importance. For all ordinary purposes of historical reasoning, the present division of Europe has existed from indefinite ages. The Germans have occupied the centre of Europe, so far as any thing is known to the contrary, as long as the Greeks and Romans have occupied their peninsulas. The Saxons, from whom the English sprung, have been from all historical time the inhabitants of the territory which their descendants still occupy. Their habitations have been fixed ; their dwellings have been permanent ; their boundaries have been estab- 1 Compare, however, Sohm, Reiohs-und Gericlitsverfassung, pp. 1-8. THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OF LAW. 3 lished. At the time when German law and society were first brought within the view of history, the German popular assembly consisted, and to all appearance had always con- sisted, of the free inhabitants of a fixed geographical district. The army, indeed, when assembled for war, was a court of law, because it was the people that were assembled ; and the people, wherever assembled, were the state. But at home the free men of each geographical district met at a fixed spot within that district, at fixed times, and formed the court of law. The idea of the State was not merely a personal but a geographical idea, if not in theory, at least in fact. Various names were used, and are still in use, to designate this political and territorial unit. English writers have usu- ally called it the tribe. They have also called it territorially a pagus, a canton, a shire, a ffau. There are objections to all these terms. The territorial meaning of pagus, gau, canton, and shire, is that of a division or section of a country, whereas the idea to be expressed is that of an entire country, a ter- ritorial unit. The tribe is equally unsatisfactory, as expressing the political unit, for the reason that the scientific meaning attached to the word tribe by historians is precisely the mean- ing which is not meant to be here conveyed. The German organization is important only because, and only so far as, it is not a tribal but a political organization ; not a tribe, but* a state. In this difSculty there seems to be no resource better than that of adopting American usage. The idea to be conveyed is entirely expressed, both in its political and territorial meaning, by the American use of the word state, as in the term United States, signifying, as it does, not merely definite territorial boundaries, but confederated political or- ganizations. Instead, therefore, of the words tribe and gau or canton, the word state will be here used to designate the primitive political and territorial unit of Germanic society, the civitas of Csesar and Tacitus. If any correct inference can be drawn from the facts known in regard to the earlier and ruder stages of German society, it would seem that the entire race was divided into an almost innumerable variety of such petty states, varying greatly in 4 THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OF LAW. size and customs, but each enjoying its own independence of action through its own popular assembly, and each consider- ing itself at liberty to join or to abandon a confederation with other states, as suited its ideas of its own interests. Even when conquered in war, and held in political subjec- tion, each state would ordinarily preserve its own powers of self-government to a degree that would render a resumption of its independence easy, and, in time, almost inevitable. Yet it is obvious that if military conquest, under the influ- ence of foreign example, ever took the shape of consolidation, so that two or more states were united in one, and their popular assemblies ceased to exist independently, and became merged in one great assembly of the entire nation, such a change might easily give birth to a military monarchy, a territorial aristocracy, a feudal anarchy, or almost any other form of transition. Such seems, indeed, to have been the case with the most powerful of all the German confederations, the Franks, when they first appear in history. The small states of which the Frankish kingdom was composed had not confederated together, but had been consolidated. Pos- sibly it was this policy of centralization which gave them supremacy in Europe. But in return it hastened the decay of their democratic institutions, which could only be safe in states so small that the popular assembly could actually in- clude the body of free men in healthy and active co-operation. From the moment the small state became merged in a great nation, the personal activity of the mass of free men in politics became impossible, if for no other reason than for the mere difficulties of distance. Nevertheless, even in this case, the functions of a supreme court of law would remain vested in the great national assembly, until, with all other public rights, they fell ultimatelj^ into the hands of the king. It seems most probable that some of these petty states were very small ; so small as to need no subdivision for administrative purposes. In this case, their popular assembly must have provided, by frequent meetings, for the ordinary business of the law. But, in the rule, the state appears to have been large enough to require subdivision into adminis- THE ANGLO-SAXON COUKTS OF LAW. 5 trative districts. These districts, at least in historical times, had no fixed rule of size. They varied greatly in extent of territory, and in numbers of population. Indeed, the mere effect of time and accident must soon have brought confusion into any arrangement that could have been invented. The object seems merely to have been to group together in one district such hamlets, or village communities, as lay in con- venient proximity to each other. The name by which this district was known also varied greatly among the different German states. Sometimes it was called a gau, or scir, and was translated into Latin as pagus, or pagellus, or simply as regio ; sometimes huntari, hundred, or zent. In Latin it is also known as eentena, vicaria, condita} In later times, the word hundred has come into general use. But, although these and various other terms show that there was no uniformity in the names of Germanic institutions, they prove even more decisively that the thing itself existed almost, if not quite, universally ; and that the district, whatever it may have been called, was the foundation of the German administrative system. For the present, it will be convenient to adopt none of these names, and to use merely the word district to indicate the ordinary subdivision of the state, subsequently known as the hundred. The organization of the district was modelled on that of the state. Its essential characteristic was the regular assem- bly of all free men resident within the district. This assembly was the ordinary court of law, and provided for all the immediate legal wants of the public. It met frequently, perhaps once a month, in most cases, while the state assembly met twice a year. The district court, however, appears to have had no independent political functions. It was simply a court of justice, and an instrument for administrative purposes. The name of the popular assembly varied nearly as much as the names of the territorial divisions. Three of these 1 Sohm. Reichs-und Gerichtsverfassung, I. 181 ff. Thudichum, Gau-und Markverfassung, erstes Buch. Maurer, Einleitung, pp. 59-64 ; Waitz, Verfas- sungsgeschichte, I. 150 ff. ; II. 317 fE. 6 THE ANGLO-SAXON COUKTS OF LAW. names, however, are alone of importance here. The Franks used the word maU, translated mallum in Latin ; while else- where the word thing was commonly employed. The Eng- lish gradually adopted the word gemot. The general court, or assembly of the state, and the local assembly of the district, were, therefore, the law coui'ts of higher and lower jurisdiction throughout the north of Eu- rope. No doubt, the pressure of circumstances did, in many cases, produce variations from this arrangement ; but, amid all changes and convulsions, the state assembly still remained the one supreme court ; the district assembly stiU remained the one district court, of what may be called the common or customary law. This is the typical form of judicial consti- tution among the Germans. Its variations make the judicial history of modern Europe. The Germans who emigrated from the Danish peninsula and settled upon the south-eastern coast of England during the latter half of the fifth century belonged to the purest Germanic stock. Among all German races, none have clung with sturdier independence or more tenacious conservatism to their ancient customs and liberties, than the great Saxon confederation, which stamped its character so often and so deeply upon the history of northern Europe. Of all productions of the German mind within the domain of law, the Sachsenspiegel was the purest and the greatest. So far as the conquerors of Britain were Saxons, they could have had no notion of law that was not German ; while, so far as they were influenced by their Scandinavian neighbors, they brought with them, if possible, a more archaic type of Ger- manic custom than the Saxon type itself. Nevertheless, it so happens that almost absolutely nothing is known with certainty in regard to the history of England between the conquest and the introduction of Christianity, a period of more than a century. In the absence of all exact information, there has been a wide divergence of opinion among historians. One school has seen in the Roman insti- tutions of the conquered Britons the influence which reacted upon the conquerors, and gave character to Anglo-Saxoij THE ALGLO-SAXON COURTS OF LAW. i law. The other has maintained that the conquerors swept away in one mass every thing which was British or Roman, and introduced pure German law in its place. This dispute is only interesting here, so far as it may involve the question of identity between the Anglo-Saxon law court of the later period, and the German law court already described. The mere absence of information between the years 450 and 600 would in itself create no special difficulty, in establishing this identity, if the sources after 600 gave any precise picture of Anglo-Saxon society. But this is not the case. And the question is further complicated by the fact that the Anglo-Saxon district, known as the hundred, appears to be a creation of the ninth century at the earliest. But if the district did not exist from the first, the district court could hardly have existed, and the historical connection with German institutions is lost. It is hardly enough to assert, with Dr. K. Maurer,^ that such a connection must, on general principles, have existed. It is far too little to assume, with Professor Stubbs,^ that the early arrange- ment of the Anglo-Saxons may have been a personal divi- sion into hundreds of warriors, and was, probably, not a territorial division into equal districts. The essence of the German district system, at least so far as it is known to history, is that it was territorial, as well as personal. It was territorial in the time of the Lex Salica, in the time of Tacitus, in the time of Caesar.^ The essence of the village community and the customary law is in this territorial district system. The historian cannot possibly concede that the tie which united German settlers under the law was a merely personal one, without cutting loose from all the known facts of German society. If the Anglo-Saxon system was not from its origin identical with the German system, it was something else, and owes its character to unknown influ- ences, whether Roman, British, or merely circumstantial. At the outset, therefore, it is necessary to prove, if possible, that the Anglo-Saxons brought with them from Germany 1 Krit. TJeberschau, I. 78. 2 Hist. I. 97, 98. 8 Thudichum, Der altdeutsche Staat, p. 91, fl. 8 THE ANGLO-SAXON COUETS OP LAW. and established in England, not merely German law, but German courts of law, and the German territorial district which was the theatre of activity of the German district court. In the utter absence of information regarding the pagan period of Anglo-Saxon England, it will hardly be required to produce contemporary testimony to its organiza- tion. The requisites for demonstration will be satisfied by proving, if such proof is possible, that all the evidence which exists is conclusive in favor of the identity, in the seventh and eighth centuries, between Anglo-Saxon law courts and judicial districts and those of Germany. The first and easiest part of the argument is to show the identity of the law court. No sooner did Kent accept Chris- tianity from St. Augustine, than the process of committing the customary law to writing appears to have begun. The first collection of customary law, known as the Laws of -Sthelberht, and dating, perhaps, from about the year 600, contains ninety short paragraphs, most of which merely state the amount of the money atonement which the courts were to allow in the enumerated cases of simple personal injury. These differ in no way from the similar enumerations which are to be found in other contemporary German codes. So far as these laws go, they indicate the existence of a legal system identical with that of the continent, but they nowhere allude directly to the method of judicial administration. The next collection is also Kentish, and appears to have been made towards the year 675, during the reigns of two kings, Hlothar and Eadric, who are supposed to have reigned either together, or successively, over Kent or portions of it, between 673 and 680. The eighth paragraph of this collec- tion runs as follows : — " If any man make plaint against another and meet him at [cite him to : Price] the methel, or the thing, let the defendant always give surety to the other and do him such right as the Kentish judges prescribe to him." ^ ' Gif man o^erne sace tihte and he ISane mannan mote an medle o^e an Singe symble se man 'Sam oSrum byrigean geselle and ^am riht awyrce Se to hiom Cantwara deraan gescrifen. THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OP LAW. 9 This passage merely describes the ordinary procedure of German law. It is, however, peculiarly interesting here, because it gives the name by which the popular assembly was known. Grimm ^ gives a list of the terms used to designate the German court of law. The Anglo-Saxon methel, the Frankish mahal, and the Norwegian thing, are all synonymes. The only question that can arise in regard to the Kentish law above quoted is caused by the use of two words, neither of them commonly found in the later legal literature of the south of England, but both found among other and distant races. One is left in doubt whether to suppose that one court is meant, and that there was no settled usage in Kent, as between the two well-known words which described it ; or that two Gourts were meant, in which case one would be the district, the other the state assembly. In either case, how- ever, the fact of the existence of the law court, its identity, even in name, with the German law court, as well as its identity in procedure, is as firmly established for the kingdom of Kent by this passage, as it is by any contemporary record for any continental state. So far as the procedure is con- cerned, the same fact is supported by other passages in the same laws, which relate to a class of legal business peculiar to the district court. These, however, will find their proper place hereafter, in dealing with the subject of procedure.^ The next Kentish laws are those of Wihtrsed, which date from the close of the same century. There is a preamble to these which declares that they were adopted by an assembly of great men, including the king, the archbishop, the bishop of Rochester, and the rest of the priesthood, acting in unison with the people. The fifth paragraph of these laws appears to give the name of gemot to this assembly. So far as the legal character of the laws is concerned, they throw little new light on the nature of the judicial tribunal, except that certain paragraphs point to the conclusion that the king's sheriff was already the presiding officer in the district court. There would seem, therefore, to be no room for doubting that Kent, at least, had brought from the continent the 1 Eechtsalterthumer, pp. 746-749. ^ gee pp. 189 ff. 10 THE ANGLO-SAXON COTJBTS OF LAW. judicial system of the Germans in all its parts, and had even followed with exactitude the judicial development of the Merovingian kingdom. The evidence in regard to Wessex is not so complete, since the earliest collection of Wessex laws is little older than the latest of the Kentish series. The laws of Ine of Wessex fall, perhaps, not far from the year 690. They include no fewer than seventy-six paragraphs, rich in details of social life, and illustrations of legal principles, but, as usual, offering no special description of the courts of law. The eighth paragraph, however, seems to confirm the inference drawn from Wihtrsed, § 22, that the king's sheriff was already the presiding officer in the district court : " If any man bring suit before a shireman, or other judge . . . and the defendant will give him no surety," &c. The case is unmistakably in the district court, and the king's reeve is, probably, the presiding officer. Dr. Schmid also cites as proof of the same point, the subsequent paragraph, § 73 : "... Let them make composition for the offence as they may be able to agree with the king and his reeve." But it is possible that the sheriff may be acting in this case, merely as the exactor, or collector of the king's fines. The next collection of Wessex law is that of Alfred the Great, and was published towards the end of the ninth cen- tury. Here, again, is the clearest evidence of the existence, in all its most characteristic features, of the German district court, presided over by the king's reeve, and administering law in the minutest details. In § 34 is an example of busi- ness peculiarly characteristic of the district court : " Mer- chants are required to produce the men who accompany them, before the king's reeve in the folk-gemot . . . and if they need to have more men with them on their journey, they may do so, if necessary, by notifying the king's reeve with the witness of the gemot." Another instance of legal proce- dure in the same court is contained in § 22: "If anyone bring a charge [of theft] against another, in the folk-gemot before the king's reeve," &c. The distinction between, the two courts is clearly observed in Alfred's law. When the district court is meant, it is mentioned as the folk- THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OP LAW. 11 gemot of the sheriff, as above, while the old assembly of the state has now become the gemot of the ealdorman ; as in § 38 : " If any one break the peace in the gemot before the king's ealdormati," &c. The same distinction is preserved in the well-known passage in Asser's Life of Alfred, where it is said that the eorls and ceorls (nobiles et ignobiles) in the courts of the ealdormen and sheriffs (in concionibus comitum et prsepositorum) would never allow that what had been determined by the ealdormen and sheriffs was true. Finally, to carry the evidence down to the period beyond which the subject no longer admits of dispute, the laws oi Alfred's son and successor, Edward, direct (§ 8) that " every reeve shall hold gemot every four weeks." The state assem- bly, or what was now the ealdorman's court, was in the habit of meeting only twice a year. The evidence seems, therefore, as conclusive in regard to the identity of the judicial tribunal, as the nature of the case admits. The procedure, the nature of the business performed, the very names of the courts, are mere repetitions of what is found in the barbarian codes of the continent. And as in all continental societies the great mass of ordinary business was necessarily done in the district court, so in England the same district court is seen, from the earliest recorded times, performing identically the same duties. It is little likely, however, that this point will be disputed. The difBculty appears to be, that the existence of the court does not necessarily imply the existence of the territorial dis- trict, known as the hundred; that there is no evidence of the existence of such a territorial district before the ninth century ; and that, if the district really existed, such silence in regard to it would have been impossible. On the other hand, an opinion is advocated by Mr. Kemble and Mr. Freeman which carries precisely the opposite view to an extreme. " We must remember," says Mr. Freeman,^ " that the kingdom, like all our ancient divisions, from the shire, perhaps from the hundred, was formed by the aggrega- tion of smaller divisions. The unit is the mark, roughly repre- 1 Hist. Norman Con. L 96. 12 THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OF LAW. sented by the modern parish or manor. The shire must not be looked on as a division of the kingdom, or the mark as a division of the shire. The shire is, in truth, formed by an aggregation of marks, and the kingdom is formed by an aggre- gation of shires. . . . The first followers of Cerdic, no doubt, settled themselves in marks forming self-governed com- munities." To both these views it is necessary, if the theory of iden- tity with German institutions be followed, to oppose the most decided negative. Politically and judicially, there was but one unit in primitive German society, and that was the state itself. There was but one political or judicial subdivision of the state, and that was the district, known commonly as the hundred. The kingdom (state) was not formed by an aggre- gation of marks, or of districts of any kind, but was from the first a constitutionally complete whole. As it conquered new land, it created new districts ; but, even if it were so small as to require but one popular assembly, and to require no judicial districts, it was still a state, not a hundred nor a mark. As a state it had fixed boundaries, and its sub- divisions had fixed boundaries. It was territorially and polit- ically complete. The great obstacle to all historians in dealing with this subject has been the absence of proof that the district subse- quently known as the hundred existed at all before the ninth or tenth centuries. There is po higher authority on the subject of Anglo-Saxon law than Dr. Reinhold Schmid ; and Dr. Schmid in connection with this point says : ^ " Many things argue against the assumption that the hundred became a territorial division immediately on the first occupation of the land ; first of all, the fact that in all the older sources, especially in Beda, although he often reckons different parts of England according to their superficial contents, the hun- dred is never the ground-work of the calculation, but always the hide. Also the fact that in the Chronicle, shires are mentioned, but not hundreds ; and that, so far as I am aware, not one of the numerous charters of the earlier centuries 1 Gesetze der Angelsachsen, p. 614. Gloss, s. v. hundred. THE AKGLO-SAXON COUKTS OP LAW. 13 contains the smallest hint of their existence." These are, indeed, most serious objections ; and none of the historians have succeeded in removing them. Yet, until they are re- moved, there must always be grave doubts in regard to the historical continuity between German and Anglo-Saxon in- stitutions. That the court of the district subsequently known as the hundred existed in England from the earliest Saxon times has already been proved by evidence precisely the same as that which proves its existence in the Lex Salica or in Saxony itself. This, however, is not enough. In order to leave no doubt upon the subject, it is necessary to prove the existence of the territorial district as well as of the court. The objections raised by Dr. Schmid can only be met by showing that, whatever may be the case with the mere name of the district, the district itself existed in England from the earliest recorded times. Dr. Schmid's first statement is, that, in all the older sources, especially in Beda, the hide is always, the hundred never, mentioned as the measure of land. This statement is so broad as to weaken its force. Not onl}' in the earlier but in the later sources, down to Norman times, the statement is equally true. The hide was always the ordinary measure of territory. But it would be quite untrue to suppose that no other division of land except the hide is to be found in Beda and the early sources. On the contrary, Beda's History swarms with references to places and districts which may have been hamlets or may have been hundreds, but which were certainly divisions of territory between the hide and the kingdom. For example : Beda speaks of a " provincia in Undalum," a province of Oundle ; of a " regio in Fep- pingum," a district of Fepping ; of a " regio in Cunen- ingum," a district of Cunning[ham?] ; and of a "regio familiarum circiter sexcentarum in provincia Orientalium Anglorum," which he calls Elge, — that is to say, a district of six hundred hides, called Ely, in the province of East Anglia. In the ancient list of districts according to hidage, given under the word Hida in Spelman's Glossary, and re- 14 THE ANGLO-SAXON COTJKTS OP LAW. printed by Kemble (I. 81, 82), there are five which contain only three hundred hides, and eleven which contain only six hundred. The Vita S. Cuthberti speaks of a " regio Henitis " and a " regio Alise," on the road from Hexham to the " civi- tas Vel." The Vita S. Wilfridi speaks of a " regio juxta Rippel," a " regio in Gaedyne," a " regio Dunitinga," a " re- gio Caetlevum," a "regio Hagustaldese." Nennius contains a long list of regiones, which, it is believed, have, in a num- ber of cases, not yet been identified. Under these circum- stances, it is obviously quite out of the question to rely on Beda and the early sources in order to disprove the existence, in the seventh and eighth centuries, of the district, which subsequently appears as the hundred. The argument drawn from the silence of the Chronicle is still more easily met. If Dr. Schmid had said that the Chronicle never mentioned the hundred before the reign of Alfred, but frequently used the term afterwards, the infer- ence would have been inevitable. But neither before nor after Alfred's reign does the Chronicle mention the hundred. Even when describing the Domesday census of William the Conqueror, it speaks only of hides and shires. The word itself occurs, so far as I am aware, only once in the Chroni- cle, and then it is in a forged and interpolated charter of Peterborough, bearing date in 972. Unless, therefore, it is argued that the hundred never existed at all, the silence of the Chronicle leaves its existence before 900 as probable as its existence afterwards. Dr. Schmid finally asserts that, so far as he knows, not one of the numerous charters of the earlier centuries contains the remotest hint of the hundred. This is a sweeping statement, and can only be met by a thorough inquiry into the contents of the Codex Diplomaticus, in the eighth and ninth centuries. Genuine charters of the seventh century are rare. It must, however, be confessed at the outset, that the Anglo-Saxons had very little conception of accuracy in state- ment. Their legal documents are, almost without exception, atrociously drawn up. To this day, antiquarians are specu- lating as to the situation of Clovesho, a place more frequently THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OP LAW. 15 mentioned than almost any other in Anglo-Saxon literature. The list of places mentioned in the charters, but which Mr. Kemble was unable to identify, is appalling. Even in the later charters, no place is ever mentioned as lying in such a parish, in such a hundred, in such a county ; while it is only as the Norman period is approached that the hundred is men- tioned with any frequency at all. The Formulas of the Frankish kingdom, which were used on the Continent for all ordinary legal documents, caught something of the accuracy of Roman law. They describe land as situated " in loco nuncupante illo, in pago illo, in centena ilia." The usual form of the Anglo-Saxon charter was to name a place, probably the parish, and no more ; as, for instance, " XL. hyde aet Alresford." If the charter was ■written in Latin, the words used were commonly, " in loco qui dicitur Alresford," or, in more ornate phrase, " in illo loco ubi ruricolae appellative usu ludibundisque vocabulis nomen indiderunt aet Alresford." The chancery formula in Oda and Dunstan's time, about the middle of the tenth cen- tury, was, " in illo loco ubi solicolae illius regionis nomen imposuerunt aet Alresford." Here regio may mean merely neighborhood, although in Charter CCCCXXVII. (ii., 297) regio and pagus seem to be used as synonymes : " XVIII. mansas dedi in Ulo loco ubi jamdudum solicolae illius regionis nomen imposuerunt aet Waeligforda, pro commutatione alte- rius terrae quae sita est in Cornubio ubi ruricolae illius pagi barbarico nomine appellant Pendyfig." But, whether the two words are here used as synonymes or in contradistinc- tion, there can be no doubt that both of them, as well as the word provincia, are common Latin translations of the Anglo-Saxon word shire. Asser translates shire as paga ; Ethelwerd, as provincia : " Dominabatur rex OfPa in XXIII. provinciis quas Angli Shyras appellant " (Vita Offae, Wil- kins. Sac. Con. I. 156) ; " Regiones vel pagos " (Cod. Dip, III. 42); "Regio Suthseaxna" (Asser); "In regione Suth- regie " (Cod. Dip. CCXL., I. 318, MXLIV., V. 91) ; " Regio Cantia" (Cod. Dip. MXIX., V. 58); "Regio Oxanaford " (Cod. Dip. DCXCVII., III. 299). Beda also speaks of Sur- 16 THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OF LA"W. rey as a regio. These citations might be indefinitely multi- plied ; but they are quite sufficient to show the loose legal and geographical phraseology of the Anglo-Saxons, and to explain the confusion that exists in regard to their territorial divisions. It is, however, evident, from these instances, that provineia, pagus, and regio are all used as equivalents for shire ; nor do they ever seem to be used for any smaller ter- ritorial district, such as vill or hamlet. An examination of the early charters brings to light a number of cases in which the word regio occm's. The first that raises a doubt is the " regio Stoppingas," with its " locus Widutun," in a charter of ^thelbald of Mercia, 723-737 (I. 100). This may pass, however, for what has been here- tofore called a State, if antiquarians so decide. In 847, the " senators " of JEthelwulf of Wessex grant to their king twenty hides of land in the "regio Homme " (II. 28). This also may pass as a doubtful case, although it must raise curi- osity. Another charter of ^thelbald of Mercia, without date, but of course belonging to the first half of the eighth century (I. 122), grants seven hides "in provineia Middel- sexorum, in regione quae dicitur Geddinges." There is still a manor or hamlet of Yeading in Middlesex ; but Mr. Kem- ble, rightly enough, has not thought it possible that a place designated as regio, and ending in ingas, could have been a hamlet, and has therefore classed it with Stoppingas as a mark, whatever a mark may have been. There seems to be nothing unreasonable in supposing that Yeddings, or Yead- ing, was once a Middlesex hundred. If, however, these three cases are thrown aside as unconvincing, there remain others, which can hardly be dealt with in the same manner. 1. Cenwulf, 812 (Cod. Dip. CXCIX., I. 249), grants half a ioclet "in partibus australi in regione on Liminum, et in loco ubi ab indigenis ab occidente Kasingburnan appella- tur." This would seem to be the manor of Caseborne, near Hythe. The Limen was, in that day, a port of great conse- quence. The Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports was for- merly called the Limenarch ; and the " regio on Liminum " possibly means the ancient Liberty of the Cinque Ports, with its own jurisdiction. THE ANGLO-SAXON" COUBTS 01' LAW. 17 2. Offa, 774 CCod. Dip. CXXII., I. 149), grants three hides "in occidentali parte regionis quae dicitur Mersware ubi nominatur ad Liden." Here is another Kentish Liberty, enjoying its own jurisdiction time out of mind, — that of Romney Marsh. 3. Ecgberht of Kent, 778 (Cod. Dip. CXXXII., I. 160), and 779 (CXXXV., I. 163), grants half a hide "ubi nomi- natur Bromgeheg " and " in regione vocabulo Bromgeheg." The estate known as the manor of Bromhei was, with certain other lands, an appendage, in later times, to the parish of Frindsbury, in Shamel Hundred, in Kent. Apparently in the eighth century, it gave its name to the hundred. 4. Cenwulf, 814 (Cod. Dip. CCL, I. 253), grants one hide of land " in provincia Cantiae, in loco et in regione quae dicitur Westanwidde, ubi nominatur Cynincges cwa lond." In these early times, the influence of the Frankish chancery seems to show itself in this unusual accuracj^ of statement. Westan- widde is obviously Westwood, a manor in the parish of Pres- ton, and hundred of Fevresham, in Kent. Hasted, in his admirable county history, speaks of it as an eminent manor ; its court-baron enjoying a jurisdiction curiously coterminous with that of the hundred, to which it seems once to have given its name. 5. iEthelberht, 762 (Cod. Dip. CVIII., I. 132), exchanges half of a mill situated in a " possessio quaedam terrae in re- gione quae vocatur Cert." The hundred of Cert, in the county of Kent, is repeatedly mentioned in Domesday. 6. Eadberht, 738 (Cod. Dip. LXXXV., 1. 102), grants land " in regione quae vocatur Hohg, in loco qui dicitur Andsco- hesham." The regio Hohg is still the Hundred of Hoo. The Textus Roffensis further supplies even the identification of Andscohesham. Among the manors reclaimed by Lanfranc from Odo of Baieux, in the famous suit on Penenden Heath,^ was one called Stoke, the ancient name of which was Andsco- hesham. One of the parishes of Hoo Hundred is still this same Stoke, or Andscohesham ; and Penenden Heath itself must be within sight of it. ' See Appendix, No. 3L 2 18 THE ANOLO-SAXON COUBTS OF LAW. 7. Offa, 788 (Cod. Dip. CLIII., I. 184), grants one hide " in provincia Cantiae, in regione Eastrgena, ubi nominatur Duningcland." Archbishop Wulfred, in 811 (Cod. Dip. CXCV., I. 238), grants three hides " in regione Easterege quae inibi ab incolis Folkwining lond vocatur, atque iterum in eadem regione Eosterge ruriculum unius aratri." The reg'io Eosterge is still the Hundred of Eastry. Possibly Dun- ingland might also be identified. And, to augment still further this mass of cumulative evidence, there remains a charter of Cuthred of Kent, dating before 805 (Cod. Dip. CXCI., I. 233), which grants to "^thelnotho praefecto meo " three hides at Hegythethorne. This charter, curiously enough, is indorsed by " ^SelnoS »e gerefa to Uastorege." Hegythethorne is to-day the parish of Eythorne, in Eastry Hundred. Demonstration can go no further. There is ample mate- rial for argument in the same sense stiU in reserve, in the Codex Diplomaticus ; but it would merely encumber these pages with unnecessary matter. Not only have we here the actual hundreds themselves, unchanged in name or boundary by more than a thousand years of vicissitude, but the very hamlets and parishes into which they were then, as now, di- vided. Not only in the ninth and eighth, but also, at least by natural inference, in the seventh century, the actual hun- dred, as it still exists, is here seen in full activity, -^ith its parishes, its reeve, and its court of law ; for, if the district was under a royal reeve, and, as seen in the laws, the court of the district was synonymous with the court of the king's reeve, the inference is inevitable that the character essential to all was that of jurisdiction. Nevertheless, it must be conceded that, even here. Dr. Schmid is, at least technically, correct. The district de- scribed in these charters is not a hundred. Had it been so, it would have been called so, as it was on the Continent, by some name that expressed the relation, — centena, vicaria, or condita. Eastry, Hoo, and Cert were not hundreds in the seventh and eighth centuries : they were regiones, — shires. JEthelnoth was by no means a mere hundred-reeve : he was THE ANGLO-SAXON COTJETS OF LAW. 19 shire-reeve. So, in a charter of Uhtred, " regulus Huiccio- rum," in 767 (Cod. Dip. CXVII., I. 144), the grant is made to "^thelmundo videlicet filio Ingeldi qui fuit dux et prae- /ec^MS ^thilbaldi regis." In charters CXXI., CXXXVII., and CXLV. (774-781), two Brordans sign each document, — one always as princeps ; the other, as praefectus twice, and once as dux. So. in CXXVII. (757-775), Eadbald signs as " praefectus et princeps Offae regis." The oifice was one of the highest dignity during the Heptarchy ; and in Kent; at least, it might be supposed equivalent to that of ealdorman in the larger kingdoms. This conclusion in regard to the name of the district in the early centuries does not stand alone. Professor Stubbs says : " In Cornwall, in the twelfth century, the subdivisions were not called hundreds, but shires, one of which, Triconscire, now the hundred of Trigg, is mentioned in Alfred's will. ... Of the Yorkshire subdivisions, two, Borgheshire and Craveshire, — the latter of which is never called a wapen- take, — retain the name of shire ; and it is given in later doc- uments to Richmondshire, Riponshire, Hallamshire, Island- shire, Norhamshire, and probably other similar districts. . . . It may seem not impossible that the original name of the subdivision immediately above the township was scir or shire, — a term of various application." ^ The facts above cited authorize the assumption, as a gen- eral law, of the principle that the State of the seventh century heoame the Shire of the tenth, while the Shire of the seventh century became the Hundred of the tenth. This degradation of the early shire in dignity and impor- tance probably accounts for another fact, which otherwise seems inexplicable. As has been above shown, aU the allu- sions to these districts which are to be found in the charters date from the period of the Heptarchy. From the moment that the consolidation of England begins, — that is, from the reign of Ecgbert, — these allusions cease. It was natural that the shire should be mentioned in defining the situation of an estate. It was equally natural that, after the shire had 1 Const. Hist., I. 100. 20 THE ANGLO-SAXON COUKTS OP LAW. been degraded to the lower position of a hundred, it should be overlooked. The use of the word " shire," in its modern and larger signification, appears to have been introduced either during, or not long after, the reign of Ecgbert. The origin of the modern shire in what has here been called the primitive State, will hardly be disputed. The Sumorsets, the Wilsets, the Thornsets, the South Saxons, the East Saxons, the Middle Saxons, the North Folk, the South Folk, have left traces enough on the early annals of England to show how the county system originated. The only diffi- culties in the history of this development are two : One of these is the origin of the hundred, which has just been ex- plained; the other is the continued existence of the shire court in England while it was completely obsolete in the Frankish empire. That the hundred should have been found indispensable is natural enough. The hundred and its court were, of all Germanic institutions, the most long-lived and useful, from Iceland to the Adriatic. " The hundred, and the principle that the hundred community is a judicial body, outlived the storms of the folk wanderings, the political creations of Clovis, the reforms of Charlemagne, the dissolution of the Frankish empire, the dissolution of the county system, the dissolution of public authority by feudalism, the complete beginning of a wholly new development in the isolated terri- tories. The hundred constitution gave way at last only to a more powerful enemy, — the awakening legal science of the sixteenth century." ^ The district court was no less necessary to consolidated England than it had been to con- solidated Germany, or to the petty primitive state. It is, therefore, not merely probable — it is almost certain — that the story which attributes to Alfred the origin of the hun- dred must be, in one sense, true. He did not create the dis- trict, or its court (both of these were, to all intents and purposes, as ancient then as they are now ; they are among the first, if not the first, political creations of man) ; but he, or some member of his 'family, in reorganizing the enlarged 1 Sohm. AJtd. R.-u. G. Verf. I. 54L THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OF LAW. 21 kingdom, must have introduced, in imitation of Frankish usage, the name of hundred. That they did not, at the same time, introduce the hun- dred constitution of Charlemagne, cannot but create surprise. There seems to have been no reason why the ancient state should have been allowed to preserve its state assembly when the national assembly had made it superfluous. This is, indeed, the distinctive peculiarity of England as compared with Germany ; and it is a distinction rich in philosophic in- terest. The development of Germany was in the path of political consolidation ; that of England was in the path of political confederation. England has always moved slowly, and has been reluctant to abandon established institutions. The ancient states, though degraded to the rank of shires, preserved their autonomy to the utmost practicable extent. They retained their state assembly ; and it was, in fact, their supreme court of law : the king himself sat in it, as in the national assembly. It dealt with folkland, the highest act of sovereignty. In the king's absence, the ealdorman presided in it, — an officer whose dignity conforms to the dignity of the assembly. " True, the ealdorman, like the sheriff, re- ceives his office from the king's hand. But the office of the Anglo-Saxon ealdorman is not one of service, but one of command. The ducal power among the Anglo-Saxons was not a creature of the kingdom, but was older than the king- dom. What the kingdom had won, it had won from the ealdorman. Even in historical times, there is yet living rec- ollection of the kingless period. We see the Anglo-Saxon ealdormen return to an interregnum from the kingdom they had already introduced, and restore the old independence of the ealdormen during a series of years, with a vacant throne. The maintenance of the ealdorman's power under the royal government is a sign that the crown is not yet in full posses- sion of the public authority. The ealdorman is a vice-king, with an independent power as opposed to the king. Not the king's pleasure, but a principle of the public constitution, determines the completeness of the ealdorman's authority. Not the king's pleasure, but only a lawful judgment, can 22 THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OF LAW. strip the ealdorman of his office. The ealdorman excludes the king from the immediate government of the shire. The shire government is not royal, but ducal. The king, in truth, in appointing the ealdorman, appoints, not a servant of his will, but a ' prince ' and ' lord ' of the shire. . . . The Anglo- Saxon shire constitution, in spite of the establishment of the empire, is an expression of still undeveloped royalty." ^ Under the new constitution of Alfred, therefore, the old district court was retained intact, with a mere change of name. The old state assembly was retained intact, with only a steady decline in its political powers. And a national assembly, commonly known as the Witan, arose to the high- est authority in the United Kingdom. The Witan was in theory an assembly of the whole people, although in practice it was a highly aristocratic body. The function of acting as a judicial tribunal seems to have been inherent in the German conception of a popular assembly. The Witan, therefore, exercised judicial powers, becoming thus the highest court of law in the kingdom. But all these courts — the hundred, the shire, and the Witan — were mere adaptations of the primitive organic type of the popular assembly. Nor did the Anglo-Saxons ever entirely lose sight of this, their origi- nal democratic starting-point. It is unnecessary to enter here upon the discussion of other varieties, real or imagined, of the same institution. The law- courts of the Anglo-Saxon cities — the burg gemot, the hust- ings, &c. — were but the shire and hundred courts in a slightly different form. Their origin was the same, and their procedure the same. The mark-gemot was either the hun- dred court under a different name, or a mere corporation meeting, whose acts were of a private nature. The various guilds were also without authority as courts of the common law. Nor is it to be supposed that there was any court of the township. Not only would such an institution be quite at variance with all that we know of German law, but there 1 Sohm. Altd. E.-u. G. Verf. I. 25, 26. The appearance of the second vol- ume of this most brilliant work will be expected with the greater interest as it is to contain an account of the Anglo-Saxon constitution. THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OF LAW. 23 is no evidence that the township ever enjoyed any judicial powers other than such as were essential to the smallest matters of police. The legal position of the township with reference to the hundred is clearly laid down in the two following extracts : — "And whosoever goes forth after cattle [to purchase], let him make known to his neighbors the object of his journey ; and, when he returns, let him also make known with whose witness he bought the cattle. But if, on a journey, he make a purchase without previous intention, let him make it known on his return ; . . . and, if it is live-stock, let him bring it upon the common pasture, with the witness of his township. If he fail to do this within five days, the townsmen shall notify the hundreds-ealdor, and they and their herdsmen shall be exempt from punishment ; and he who brought the cattle shall forfeit it, because he would not make it known to his neighbors ; and the landlord shall receive half, and the hundred half." (Edgar, iv. 7, 8.) " If any one should lead an animal or bring property to a vill, and should say he had found it, before he takes it to his own or another person's house, let him go to the church, and, before the priest of the church and the head-man of the vill, and as many as he can get, by the summons of the head-man, of the best men of the vill, and, when they are assembled, let him show them what has been found. And let the head-man of the vUl send to three or four neighboring vills for the priests and head-men of the vills, who are to bring with them four of the best men of each vill ; and, when they are assembled, they are to view all that was found. And, after they have taken view of it, the head-man of the domain to which the finder belongs shall take charge of the property till the next day ; and on the next day, with some of their neighbors who have seen the thing that was found, let them go to the head-man of the hundred in which their vill is, and show him every thing. And, if the lord on whose land it shall have been found have not his customs, — namely, sac and soc, — let him deliver every thing over to the head-man of the hundred, if he wish to have it, with good witnesses. But, if the lord have his customs, let it be held to right in the lord's court." (Edw. Conf., § 24.) The township, as is obvious from these extracts, had no jurisdiction whatever. For judicial purposes, it was but a police district of the hundred. Such it was in the Lex Sal- ica, and in all Germanic systems ; and such it always re- mained. Its court of law was the hundred court. 24 THE ANGLO-SAXON COTJETS OP LAW. How consistently the Anglo-Saxons adhered to their legal and constitutional principles is shown by the fact that the king, like the ealdorman and sheriff, had no judicial powers separate from those of the court in which he sat. He was simply the presiding officer of that court, with executive powers to carry out its decrees. A legal opinion or decision of the king, as such, was not one which any court of law or any suitor was bound to respect, unless it were made as the result of a special agreement or arbitration, accepted by both parties in advance. A curious example of this nullity in law of the king's decision is given in the suit described in Charter DCXCIII. (Appendix, No. 22). Further, it would be a mistake to suppose that any appeal, in the modern legal sense, lay from one of these courts to another. There is nothing in the laws or the charters to show that such right of appeal existed, or that it was ever claimed. The decision of the court was final. It was only when the court failed to decide within the time prescribed, that the case could be carried before a higher court. Against a decision incorrect in law, the suitor had no such remedy. He could then only accuse the presiding officer before the king or ealdorman, and procure his removal as incompetent or venal. To attribute a system of appeals to the Anglo- Saxon judicial constitution is to transfer the conception of a civilized age to the rude practice of a barbarous one. More than this, and still more remarkably illustrating the conservatism of Anglo-Saxon law, it is clear that, down to the very close of the Anglo-Saxon period, the conception of equity as a _part of the legal system had never taken shape even as an experiment. This is the more remarkable because the Franks, at a very early period, appear to have invested their king with equitable powers, while Charlemagne gave a remarkable development to the Frankish law in this direc- tion. The Frankish equitable procedure, too, survived in Normandy, England's nearest neighbor, to be carried from there by the Norman and Angevin kings to England, where it made the foundation of the later development of English law. But neither equity as a system, nor equitable powers THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OP LAW. 25 in the cro-wn, were ever known to Anglo-Saxon England. Both king and people, indeed, seem steadily to have re- sisted every disposition to widen the royal jurisdiction. In- stead of enlarging their own powers by encouraging suitors to seek justice directly from the crown, the king and the Witan frowned upon every symptom of popular discontent with the clumsy justice of popular tribunals, and forced suit- ors back upon the local courts. Instead of applying them- selves to the study of practical remedies for the flagrant absurdities of their legal system, as Charlemagne had done, and as their Angevin successors were to do, the Anglo-Saxon kings adopted a series of measures which steadily tended to aggravate these absurdities, and to render them intolerable. It has been said, by some historians, that Alfred the Great showed a disposition towards the reform of legal procedure. Alfred had, indeed, the inestimable advantage of Charle- magne's example. So, also, had Edward, ^thelstan, and Edgar, his successors. But, whether it was that these mon- archs, unlike Charlemagne, were constitutional kings, and were controlled in their policy by the Witan, or whether they failed to understand the necessity of reform, neither their legislation nor the records of legal administration dur- ing or after their time show any trace of a disposition to im- prove the law. Their whole energy was devoted to police, or at best to mere legal administration. The well-known passage in Asser's Life of Alfred is an example of the limited range of English legal ideas. Asser represents Alfred as inquiring into the correctness of his sheriffs' and ealdormen's legal decisions, and threatening them with removal for their ignorance of the law. But, as Mr. Kemble has pointed out, it is nowhere intimated that Alfred assumed the power to reverse those decisions, or that he attempted to create any judicial system more satisfactory than the one which, by common consent, even in his time, was utterly unequal to the public wants.^ One collection of laws after another, almost in a set formula, harshly forbade the people to bring their suits before the king, unless they had previously ex- ^ Kcmble, Saxons in England, ii. 44, 46. 26 THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OF LAW. hausted all the tedious formalities of the local courts. Even then, if the king consented to hear a complaint of denial of justice, his power of redress seems to have gone no further than to send the case back to the ealdorman or sheriff, with the threat of punishment if justice were still denied ; or, what was probably more usual, to negotiate an extra-judicial compromise between the parties. Neither at the beginning nor at the end of the Anglo-Saxon time, was the king con- sidered in law as the fountain of justice. The law was ad- ministered in the popular courts, theoretically as the act of the freemen. It was strict law ; the decision, when reached, was final in the eye of the law; and not even the Witan itself wielded any process by which the letter of the common law could be escaped. One result followed from this absence of equitable powers, which was, perhaps, not without an ultimate influence on the fate of the whole judicial system. A very slight examination of the law cases printed in the Appendix will show how rarely the parties were allowed to push their differences to a final judgment. A compromise was always effected where compromise was possible. Arbitration was, perhaps, the habitual mode of settling disputes among the Anglo-Saxons. This arbitration might take the actual forms of legal proced- ure, without offering any anomaly to the Anglo-Saxon mind. In regard to more than one of the cases given in the Appen- dix, it is evident that the judges are mere arbiters acting in judicial form. The king seems to have habitually performed this function of quasi judge. The curious case before Alfred, narrated in Appendix, No. 17, seems to be an instance. If a decision were given without the previous assent of both par- ties to the jurisdiction, it might be rejected, and a legal trial required, as in charters MCCLVIII., DCXCIII.,^ even though the king himself were judge. This loose habit of judicial ad- ministration, stimulated doubtless by popular distrust of the knowledge or honesty of the king's sheriffs, grew into a sys- tem, and not improbably was the germ of subsequent manorial jurisdictions. In a society which had no confidence either in 1 Appendix, No. 19 and No. 22. THE ANGLO-SAXON COUBTS OP LAW. 27 its judges, its judicial processes, or its very law itself, — which could devise no system of reform in the practice, nor of equitable protection against the evils, of that law, — it was certainly not surprising that men should seek a remedy outside the public tribunals, even though the result should ultimately be more fatal to their own interests than all the immediate inconvenience or injustice they were suffering. The three law courts thus described, with powers indis- tinctly defined and apparently overlapping each other, mark the whole period of Anglo-Saxon history. As they appear in the earliest times, so they appear in the latest, unchanged during six centuries, so far as their essential character is con- cerned, and unchanged in fact, except by the steadily in- creasing tendency towards aristocracy and feudalism. This tendency, though less marked and less mischievous than on the Continent, yet produced the only considerable changes that can be detected in the long history of the Anglo-Saxon judicial constitution. It only remains, therefore, to discuss the degree of influence which feudalism exerted on the judi- cial system of England down to the accession of William the Norman. The origin of the English manor as a form of landed prop- erty belongs to the domain of real-property law, and will be treated hereafter in that connection. The origin of English manorial jurisdiction is a separate subject. The land and the jurisdiction, do not necessarily go together. Originally, as has been seen, all jurisdiction belonged to the State. Only at a comparatively late period did the State allow its power to slip from its hands, and to become attached to the proprie- torship of the land. There is much contradiction, among the writers who have treated this subject, in regard to the stages of its develop- ment. Mr. Kemble sometimes inclines to believe that the manorial jurisdiction, as a jurisdiction in law, was of very early origin ; ^ at other times, he asserts that " there ia no clear proof that the immunity" of sacu and socn "did 1 Cod. Dip. I., Introd. xliv.-xlvii. ; Saxons in England, I. 177, n. 28 THE Al^GLO-SAXON COUBTS OF LAW. exist before the time of Cnut."^ Professor Stubbs, without entering into any discussion of the subject, seems to favor the idea of an earlj'^ origin.^ Dr. Konrad Maurer, whose thor- ough investigation of the point leaves his successors little more to do than to paraphrase his pages, leans also towards the theory that the manorial jurisdiction existed in law from a much earlier period than that to which it can be traced back in the laws, charters, and historical literature.^ Only with the utmost diffidence can any new inquirer vent- ure to differ from authority so high as this. Yet there seems to be something forced in the assumption that an institution so revolutionary as a private common-law court could have existed unknown to the written law ; and the ordinary rules of historical criticism hardly justify the historian in arriving at such a conclusion, unless under the pressure of absolute necessity. It is, therefore, a matter of some consequence to ascertain whether such a necessity exists. If not, ib will certainly be safer to keep within the letter of the law. Dr. Maurer has . admirably explained and illustrated the nature of the early immunities granted to the great landed proprietors, and the private authority exercised by them over the occupants of their land, and the inmates of their house- hold. As head of the household, the land-owner was bound to responsibility before the law for the good behavior of its inmates. He might dismiss from his service as infamous the man whom he could not hold to right, — a punishment which must have been almost equivalent to outlawry. As landlord, he might resume his grant of land, or he might simply eject the occupant on sufferance or at will. The state supported this power of the land-owner to the utmost, as one of its most necessary guaranties for the preservation of social order. On the other hand, the tenant or peasant cultivator would be inclined to accept, or even to invite, the decision of his lord, rather than incur the risks of a public suit without his lord's support, or the possibility of drawing upon himself the ex- tremity of his lord's disfavor. It was therefore natural that 1 Saxons, II 397. 2 Const. Hist., I. 184. ■• Konrad Maurer, Krit. Ueberschau. II. 58. THE A17GL0-SAX0N COUETS OF LAW. 29 the lord should have developed, for his own use, a certain system of law, in mediating between his own people in their disagreements with each other, or with the public. It was natural, too, that this system should be based upon the ordi- nary hundred law, — the only code known to England. Yet all this did not create a jurisdiction in the eye of the law. The great proprietor might discourage his dependants from suing in the hundred court ; he might assume upon himself the responsibility for the acts of his dependants, and place himself between them and the law, paying their fines, and using his wealth and power to force all parties rather to ac- cept his arbitration than appeal to legal process. But aU this did not remove his people from the jurisdiction of the hundred court. It did not create a new jurisdiction in law. It merely established an association analogous to the famUy, which chose to settle its legal questions without bringing them before the courts.^ In the tendency to establish such a private court of arbi- tration, the great landed proprietors appear to have been actively supported by the crown. It is, indeed, not improb- able that the large proprietors could essentially lighten the task of the law courts, and facilitate the objects of royal pol- icy, by looking sharply to the behavior of their dependants. It is not improbable, too, that the lord of the manor did, on the whole, offer more effective means for obtaining justice and preserving order than could be possibly offered by the hundred, with its clumsy organization and procedure. If to these natural reasons for favoring the landlords there be added the great pressure of the church and of the warriors to obtain favors from the crown, it is not a matter of surprise that the crown should have yielded to a tendency the ulti- mate effect of which it probably could not foresee. The royal grants, so far as they affected the ordinary course of justice, seem to have been double in their nature. They were, in the first place, grants of the fines and pecuni- ary profits of jurisdiction, which, by the old system, fell to 1 See the elaborate discussion of this subject, from the continental point of view, in Roth's "Feudalitat und Unterthanverband," Abschnitt 4, Das Seniorat 30 THE ANGLO-SAXON COUETS OF LA"W. the crown. This is entirely a fiscal arrangement, which only indirectly concerns the subject of jurisdiction. It was not intended to convey, and in fact it did not convey, the capac- ity of acting as a court of law. Some examples of these grants may be given here : — CXVL, Pilheard, 799-802. "Ego Pilheardus misellus comis . . . Cenwulfl . . . accipi eas [terras] in synodal! concUiabulo . . . et per pecuniam . . . consecutus sum . . . ut ab omnium fiscalium re- dituum operum onerumque sen etiam popularium conciliorum vindictis nisi tantum praetium pro praetio liberae sunt in perpetuum." CCXXVII., U Uiglaf of Mercia, 831. "... a pastu regum vel principum seu praefectum, ab omnique saeculari servitute notis et ignotis intus et foras liberabo nisi . . . singulars praetium contra alium." . . . CCXXXVI., Ecgberht, 835. "Ego Ecgbert . . . dedi . . . Mercham ... ad Abbendune . . . et sic mandamus . . . ut nullus superveniat hominum ibi superbia inflatus nee rex suum pastum re- quirat vel habentes homines quos nos dicimus festigmen nee eos qui accipitres portant vel falcones vel caballos ducunt sive canes. Nee poenam mittere super eos quoquomodo audeat nee princeps nee gra- phio banc lenitatem praefatam in alicujus oneris molestiam mutare audeat ... Si pro aliquo delicto accusatur homo dei, aecclesiae illae custos solus cum suo juramento si audeat ilium castiget. Sin autem ut recipiat alienam justiciam hujus vicissitudinis conditionem praefa- tum delictum cum simple praetio componat. . . . De Ula autem tribu- latione quae witereden nominatur sit libera nisi tamen singuli praetium solverit ut talia aecipiant. Fures quoque quos appellant weregeld theofas si foris rapiantur, praetium ejus dimidium illi ecclesiae et dimi- dium regi detur ; et si intus rapitur totum reddatur ad aecclesiam. . . . Praetium quoque sanguinis peregrinorum, id est wergeld, dimidiam partem rex teneat, dimidiam aecclesiae antedictae reddant." CCL., Berhtwulf, 841. "... liberabo ab omnibus saecularibus ser- vitutibus magnis vel modicis notis et ignotis regis et principis vel juni- orum eorum, nisi in confinio rationem reddant adversus alium." CCCXIIL, ^thelred, 883. "... And nu Saet ilce land aet Stoce . . . ic sella Cynulfe Ceoluhtes suna in Sreora manna daeg for syxtigum mancesa claenes goldes aeghwelces (Singes to freon ge wi8 cyning ge wi?5 ealdorman ge wiS gerefan aeghwelces Seodomes lytles and micles butan . . . angylde witS oSrum and noht ut to wite." THE ANGLO-SAXON COUETS OP LA"W. 31 MLXXXIV., Edward, 904 ; » DXCVIII., Edgar, 978 : — "... concessi ut episcopi ho- " Eadweard cyning . . . geuSe mines tam nobiles quam ignobiles 8aet aegSer ge twelfhynde men in praefato rure degentes, hoc ge twyhynde weron on Sam Godes idem jus in omni haberent digni- hame Sara ylcan gerihta wyrSe tate quo regis homines perfruua- 8e his agene men sindon on his tur regalibus fiscis commorantes, agenum cynehamum ; and man et omnium saeculariumrerumjudi- ealle spaeca and gerihtu on Saet cia ad usus praesulum exerceantur ilce gemet gefe to Godes handa eodemmodoquoregalium negotio- Se man to his agenre drifh, and rum discutiuntur judicia. Prae- Ses tunes cyping and seo innung dictae etiam villae meroimonium Sara portgerihta gange into Sere quod Anglice Saes tunes cyping halgan stowe." . . . appellatur, censusque omnis civi- lis . . . aecclesiae . . . deserviat." . . . These charters, unintelligible as their terms may appear to be, illustrate sufficiently well the fiscal side of the royal grants. They show the landlord exempted from all obli- gation to pay to the royal fisc, or to the ealdormen, any of those dues which the law gave them. They do not remove the occupants of these lands from the jurisdiction of the hundred court. They even expressly affirm the contrary. If such persons were convicted of a crime in the hundred or boundary court, they must, as usual, pay the praetium pro praetio, the singulare praetium, the angyld, — that is to say, all that atonement which the law exacted to redress the wrongs of the injured party. The exemption extended only to that portion of the money penalty which, by law, accrued to the fisc, or to the ealdorman. Nor is it to be supposed that the law here meant to benefit the criminal. It left the offender in the same position as before, except that his land- lord stood, so far as the fine was concerned, in the place of the king. This process is fully described- in No. C^XXXVI. There the abbot was authorized to appear for his man in the hundred court ; to testify his innocence, if he could, with 1 Mr. Kemble (Saxons in England, I. 177, n.) cites this charter as an ad- mirable example of the grant of Saeu and Soon. The grant, however, is silent as to jurisdiction : it conreys only the profits of jurisdiction. See Krit. Uebers. II. 57, n. 32 THE ANGLO-SAXON COTJETS Or LAW. merely his owa oath ; or, if he could not take the oath, to compound with the simple angyld. What the abbot might choose to do with the offender afterwards, did not concern the court, unless it gave rise to new proceedings at law. In regard to thieves caught with the stolen property within the exempted lands, it is by no means intimated that the abbot had the right to exercise jurisdiction over them, except so far as to admit them to ransom. By law, the thief so taken in the act necessarily forfeited his life.^ It seems, however, to have been customary to enforce this law only against the very poor. Indeed, the amount of the wergeld of even the poorest freeman was enough to be an object of desire even to the fisc. Accordingly, the thief who could raise enough money to redeem himself was little likely to suffer death; and it became a question only as to the recipient of the fine. By this grant, the abbot was to receive it aU, if the thief were taken in the act, before escaping from the privi- leged land ; while, if he were caught beyond the boundary, the abbot received only half, the king maintaining his claim to the rest. This -privilege of appropriating the wer of thieves taken in the act is expressed in a different form in another class of charters, and has given rise to a theory which affirms the existence of a private criminal tribunal from very early times. Some eight or ten charters^ contain passages like the follow- ing:— "... siut libera ab omni regali servitio, a pastu regum et princi- pum, ducum et praefectum exactorumque, ab equorum et falconum accipitrumque et canum acceptione, et Ulorum hominum refectione quod nos festingmenn nominamus, a parafrithis, et ab omnibus diffi- cultatibus regalis vel saecularis servitutis, notis et ignotis, cum furis comprehensione intus et foris, majoris minorisve." . . . 1 See pp. 275 and n. 3, 276, 285, 286. 2 CCXXIII., Ecgberht of Wessex, 828, L 287; CCXLVI., ^thelwulf of Wessex, 840, II. 9 ; CCLIII., -Ethelwulf, 842, H. 16 ; CCLXXXI., ^thUberht of Kent, 858, II. 64 ; CCC, ^thelred of Wessex, 869, II. 95 ; CCCXII., JEthel- wulf, 880, II. 109; CCCOLXXXIII., Edgar, II. 363 ; MXLIX., iEthelwulf, 850, V. 95 -. DLV., Edgar, 969, III. 39; DCLXXXVI., ^thelred, 994, III. 275. See also DCCCLXXXVIII., Edward, IV. 228. THE ANGLO-SAXON COTTRTS OF LAW. 33 That a private criminal jurisdiction should be suddenly in- serted in a long list of exemptions from the burdens of refec- tion, of maintaining horses, hawks, and hounds, as well as men, of post-horses, and all other royal servitudes, great and small, would certainly be surprising. In point of fact, how- ever, the thief caught in the act was considered here only in the light of property. His life was already forfeit. The king had the right to allow him to redeem his life,i and granted this right to the church, or other landed proprietors, not as a jurisdiction, but as a source of income. The idea is strongly expressed in the following charter, which, though a forgery, is good evidence for the present purpose : — DLV., Edgar, 969. "... cuncta illius monasterii possessio nullis sit unquam gravata oneribus, nee expeditionis nee pontis et arcis edi- ficamine, tec juris regalis fragmine, nee furis apprehensione, et ut omnia simul comprehendam nil debet exsolvi, nee regi nee regis prae- posito, vel episcopo, vel duci, vel uUi homini, sed omnia debita exsol- vant jugiter quae in ipsa dominations fuerint ad supradictum sanctum locum." . . . In the second place, apart from th» fiscal character of these grants, it would appear that they were in some cases intended to exclude the royal officials entirely from the exempted ter- ritory, and to substitute the steward of the church or manor in the place of the sheriff, in all manner of legal acts. This side of the subject is, however, not altogether so clear as were to be wished ; and its obscurity is all the more remark- able because of the distinctness with which the principle is 1 The exemption finds its origin in the powers conferred by the customary law. The following paragraphs seem to explain the nature of these powers : — • Wihtraed, 26. " If any one seizes a freeman in the act of theft, let the king have power to do one of three things : either let him [the thief] be put to death, or sold over sea, or redeemed with his wer. Whoever seizes and secures him, let him have half ; if he is put to death, let him [the captor] have seventy shil- lings " Ine, 12. " If a thief be taken, let him suffer death, or let his life be redeemed with his wer. 28. Whoever captures a thief, let him receive X shill., and the king the thief." Edgar, III. 7. "... And the open thief may seek whom he will : ... he shall find no security for his life, unless the king grants him his protection." 3 34 THE ANGLO-SAXON COUKTS OF LAW. avowed as the foundation of immunities in the contemporary continental charters. The formula observed by the Frankish kings is precise on this point : — " - . . Nullus judex publicus ad causas aiidiendo aut freda undique exigendum nuUo imquam tempore non praesumat ingredere . . . neque vos neque juniores neque successores vestri nee nulla publica judiciaria potestas quoquo tempore in villas ubicunque in regno nostro ipsius ecclesiae . . . aut ad audiendum altercationes ingredere aut freda de quaslibet causas exigere, nee mansiones aut paratas vel fide- jussores tollere non praesumatis ; sed quicquid exinde aut de ingenuis aut de servientibus caeterisque nationibus quae sunt infra agros vel fines seu supra terras praedictae ecclaesiae commanentes fiscus aut de freda aut undecunque potuerat sperare, ex nostra indulgentia pro fu- tura salute in luminaribus ipsius ecclaesiae per manum agentum eorum proficiat in etemum." This was a true immunity, clearly and fully defined in the grant. As will be seen, even this charter, wide as it was, did not create a jurisdiction. It did, however, on the one side, convey to the church all those sources of revenue which the fisc by law possessed within the church lands ; while, on the other, it closed these lands to the royal officers, and gave the agents of the church the powers which the royal officers exercised. Naturally, a privilege of this sort could not fail to require continual modifications. One such is especially noteworthy. The Capitularies of Charlemagne (anno 803) define the extent of the immunity in the case of a thief or other criminal who has fled within the immunity. The sheriff is to demand his delivery, and each refusal entails on the church a heavy penalty. On the third refusal, the sheriff is authorized to enter the immunity by force ; and, if resistance is offered, the offender incurs the heaviest penalty known to the early law. If immunities like these existed in England, it would seem inevitable that they should have left indelible traces on the law. The terms of the English grants become, therefore, a subject of interest. The following are specimens of the full- est genuine powers conceded in extant charters : — " LXIX., ^thilbald, 718. "... in omnibus rebus notis et igno- las, regis sive principis, libera permaneat." . . . THE ANGLO-SAXON COUETS OF LAW. 35 LXXVII., ^thilbert, 732. "... jus regium in ea deinceps nul- lum reperiatur omnino excepto dumtaxat tale quale generals est in universis ecclesiasticis terris ... in hac Cantia." . . . CLXVI., OfEa, 791-796. ". . . ut sit libera tarn in terrarum do- natione seu in omnibus causis parvis vel magnis . . . ut nulla secula- ris dignitas de nostra haereditate plus his in magno vel modico per vim aut petitionem aliquid exigat." . . . CCLXXXI., ^thilberht, 858. " . . . ut omnium regalium trib- utum et vi exactorum operum et penalium rerum principal! domi- natione furisque comprehensione et cuncta seculari gravidine . . . immunis permaneat." DCCVII., -ffithelred, 1002. "... omni alieno permanent extra- nea dominie et cunctis poenalibus causis." . . . Whether grants like these are to be understood as exclud- ing the action of the royal officials to the same extent as is expressed in the continental grants of immunity, may be a question. The doubt is somewhat strengthened by the fact that there are charters which follow the continental formula, but which are in every instance, so far as I am aware, forger- ies of a late period.^ So far as the charters are concerned, the evidence that pri- vate jurisdictions were known to the law of England, before the year 1000, is limited to the inferences that may be drawn from these grants. The best authorities seem now to be agreed that the argument, as based on these grants, fails to prove the existence of such private courts of law. There is another argument, not yet so familiar, which may throw some further light upon the subject. The legal his- tory of England, in its earlier stages, stands in curiously inti- mate connection with that of the Continent. English law was always more conservative than that of the Pranks. It was more slowly affected by Roman jurisprudence. It ad- hered more persistently to the popular principles of its archaic constitution. It offered an equal resistance to the good and the bad of Frankish example, — to the equity as to the despotism of Charlemagne. But, although English law was affected slowly by that of the Continent, it was 1 See, for example, Cod. Dip. DLV. (III. 43); DLXXV. (III. 93). 36 THE AJSTGLO-SAXON COURTS OF LAW. affected surely. Both in consolidation and in disintegration, England was centuries behind the Continent ; but, neverthe- less, both consolidation and disintegration came at last, only in forms somewhat less mischievous in their immediate ef- fects, and much more beneficial in their ultimate results, than was the case in the Empire and in France. Yet, even on the Continent, where feudalism established itself far earlier than in England, the creation of private jurisdictions was a comparatively late event. ^ The first re- corded attempt made to set up the authority of a private court against that of the State tribunals was that of Bishop Hincmar, of Laon, about the year 868. Down to this time, there is no reason to suppose that either the spiritual or the temporal lords had ever attempted to wrest jurisdiction from the public courts. They had been content with the private authority exercised by them and supported by the State, as regarded their own families and dependants. Such author- ity, verging though it did upon the character of a legal tri- bunal, was not, as yet, recognized by the law in any other character than that of a private association, which in no way excluded the ultimate jurisdiction of the public courts. But the utter dissolution of all political ties, which characterized the condition of Northern France during the latter years of the ninth and all the tenth century, created an absolute an- archy in the administration of justice. The public jurisdic- tion, in the absence of a central authority, fell into private hands, and became an object of inheritance. The private court of the landed proprietor acquired the character of a court of law. The old courts of the grafs and the new courts of the private lords became intermixed in a confusion that was and still remains inextricable, and unintelligible to the ordinary understanding. But it so happened that the precise period which was so fatal to the structure of European society was exceptionally 1 Roth, Feudalitat und Unterthanverband, Abschnitt IV., Das Seniorat; Sohm, Altdeutsche Reichs-und Gerichtsverfassung, I. 351 fE. ; Zeitsehrift fiir Kirchenrecht, IX. 193-271, Die geistliche Gerichtsbarkeit im frankischen Reich; Heusler, Stadtverfassung, 17. THE A2^GL0-SAX0N COTJETS OF LAW. 37 favorable to the quiet development of England. The strug- gle with the Danes, which marked the lowest point of Eng- land's power, was closed by Alfred and Guthrum's peace, about 880. Just as Northern Europe saw the last flickering ray of hope expire with the deposition of the Emperor in 887, England began to develop a degree of unity and politi- cal power which she had never before known. The partition of Mercia between Alfred and the Danes established the supremacy of Wessex beyond all future question. The abili- ties of Alfred, of his son Edward, and of his grandson ^thel- stan, fortified this supremacy, and maintained the steady progress of national development during a period of half a century. The death of jEthelstan was followed by a mo- ment of confusion ; but the administrative skill of Oda and Dunstan soon restored order, which continued undisturbed till after the close of Edgar's reign in 975. Thus England passed in safety and content through all the darkest period of modern history, when every hope of happiness seemed extinguished in Northern France. During all this period, there was no time when the crown was in a position to make a sacrifice of its rights necessary or probable. That private jurisdictions should have originated in Eng- land, before they existed on the Continent, is in the highest degree improbable. Not only did England take no such lead in the movement of the time, but there is not the slightest evidence of the existence of any such institution, and there is strong evidence to the contrary. That they should have originated during the vigorous reigns of the great Wessex monarchs, before 975, is also highly improbable in itself. Moreover, there is no period in all early English history when the course of law seems to have been so regular as during this century of comparative repose. The charters granted by these monarchs are dull, moderate, and uniform to the last degree. The laws are energetic, and the royal power efficient. In the absence of all evidence pointing to any collapse of the judicial constitution, and in the face of all the facts which testify to the extent and vigor of royal authority, it is mere unsupported assumption to infer that 88 THE ANGLO-SAXON COUETS OF LAW. there was any weakening in the bands of society, or any con- cession to private aggressions upon the rights of the crown, before the death of Edgar, and the overthrow of Dunstan's policy. But, during the next half-century, the condition of England was widely different. The reign of ^thelred the Unready was marked by a series of disasters, each more destructive than the last, and culminating in the absolute collapse of the royal authority in 1013, and the deposition, or at least abdication, of ^thelred, who retired to the Continent. Absolute politi- cal disorganization prevailed. The situation of England dur- ing these years was, in all essentials, identical with that of the Continent one hundred years before. It is true that neither the French nor the Germans had ever been reduced to such humiliation as not only to depose their own king, but to choose a Dane and a pagan to wear his crown, as was done by the English in their submission to Swegen. It is also true that the dissolution of all conceptions of political union was hardly forced on the Continent to such an extremity as that to which it was systematically carried in England by the pol- icy of ^Ifric and Eadric Streona. But, in all essentials, the situation of England from 990 to 1017 was identical with that of the Empire one hundred years before. It was a situation of social and political anarchy. It would seem natural to suppose that the effect upon the judicial system of England must have been the same as on that of the Continent. During these long years of disorder, what was to prevent the great landed proprietors, with the church at their head, from assuming powers which did not legally belong to them ? They protected their tenants and dependants as well as they could in the absence of a protect- ing government. Their courts might naturally, in practice, become courts of justice. Nothing is known of the extent to which this movement may have been carried before the restoration of order. When a new government was established, the great house of Wes- sex no longer wore the crown. A foreigner sat on the throne. Cnut was welcomed by the English people, who THE ANGLO-SAXON COUETS OF LAW. 39 never attempted to disturb his reign. On the other hand, he seems to have made no attempt to disturb their customs. He was not a great law-giver, like William and Henry II. He accepted the laws as he found them ; and the administra- tion of justice remained where it was left by the wars. Yet, notwithstanding the inherent probability of the thing ; notwithstanding the contemporaneous existence of private courts of law on the Continent, with their natural influence on English society; notwithstanding the concurrent agree- ment of all modern writers that private jurisdictions did exist in the law of England at least from the time of ^thelred, — a careful exa,mination of the evidence warrants the assertion that no contemporaneous evidence exists which will bear out any such theory. If such jurisdictions existed, they existed outside the law ; they existed not as a part of the constitu- tional system; they received no countenance from the crown; they have left no trace on the contemporaneous records of the period. Even a slight examination of the grounds on which the highest recent authorities have conceded the existence of private jurisdictions in the law of England, before the time of Edward the Confessor, — that is, the year 1042, — tends to raise a doubt as to their solidity. Mr. Kemble, while agreeing that there is no conclusive evidence that these tri- bunals existed before the time of Cnut, concludes " that they were so inherent in the land as not to require particulariza- tion " in legal documents, — a view which can hardly be considered as convincing even in regard to so defective a system of law as the Anglo-Saxon. Professor Stubbs has not expressed any very clear opinion upon the subject, but may perhaps be considered as accepting generally the views of K. Maurer and Dr. Schmid. Professor Maurer rests his argument on the following passage from the laws : ^ — ^thelred, III. 6. "... And let every vouching to warranty and every ordeal, be in the king's burg.". . . Even from this, however, he draws only a cautious conclw t 1 Krit. Ueb. II. 68. 40 THE ANGLO-SAXON C0T7ETS OF LAW. sion, that at the utmost it can only be thought to imply that, in other respects than warranty and ordeal, some courts which were not the king's courts may have had competence. Even this cautious suggestion, however, can hardly be admitted. The meaning of the passage is obscure. Team and ordeal would seem to have been essential elements in every legal tribunal. They appear to have been always conveyed or implied in the subsequent grants of sac and soe. On the whole, the most reasonable interpretation of the clause would seem to be that the informal exercise of these legal processes before the manorial lords was becoming usual ; and that this law of ^thelred prohibited the abuse, and enjoined upon the suitors a strict observance of the old law, which recognized no tribunal competent to administer its forms, except the courts of the hundred and the shire. Thus this passage would rather tend to prove that private jurisdictions, though beginning to exist in custom and for convenience, by consent of the parties, were not legal, and were even prohibited by law. Dr. Schmid, however, quotes another passage from ^thel- red's laws, which, at first sight, seems conclusive : — .ffithelred, III. 11. "And let no man have socn over a king's thane except the king himself." Dr. Schmid translates " socn " here as " jurisdiction." So, also, does Professor Stubbs, and so do all other authori- ties. It becomes necessary, therefore, to turn aside for a moment, in order to make some inquiry into the history of this word. The invaluable Glossary, which Dr. Schmid has appended to his edition of the Anglo-Saxon Laws, tells us that s6cn is a derivative of sScan, which is identical with our modern verb seek. It is frequently used in all branches of Anglo- Saxon literature, and in a number of combinations ; as, for example : — 1. Land-socn, visitatio terrae, land-seeking. Caedmon. 2. Hlaford-socn, lord-seeking, the search for a lord, in order to place one's self under his protection, or in his ser- vice, ^thelstan, III. 4 ; IV. 5 ; V. 1, § 1. Alfred, 37. THE ANGLO-SAXON COTJETS OP LA"W. 41 3. Ham-socn, ham-fare, invasio domus, the seeking of a house for hostile purposes. Hen, 80, § 11. 4. Fyrd-socn, fyrd-faru, expeditio, army-seeking, — one branch of the trinoda necessitas. Cod. Dip. CCOXIII. 883; DCLXXV. 990; DCLXXVI. 991. 5. Cixic-socn, churcli-seeking, the privilege of sanctuary, sought by persons in danger of life or liberty. Ine, 5 ; Al- fred, 5. 6. Frith-socn, peace-seeking, the general peace enjoyed by the king, the church, &c., in behalf of suppliants who sought it. ^thelred, VIII. 1 ; Cnut, I. 2, § 3. It is not pretended that, in any of these cases, jurisdiction is to be understood. In fact, the terms of the law, in men- tioning the ciric-socn and frith-socn, exclude the possibility of such an idea. The following passages from the laws of .ffithelstan define the nature of the frith-socn for the various ranks of society who enjoyed it : — iEthelstan, IV. 6. " Et sic fur . . . nuUo modo vita dignus ha- beatur, non per socnam non per pecuniam. . . . § 1. "Si regem vel archiepiscopum requirat vel sanctam dei eccle- siam, habeat novem noctes de termino. . . . § 3. "Si comitem vel abbatem vel aldermannum vel thaynum re- quirat, habeat terminum tres noctes." . . . In a subsequent council, further provisions are added : — ^thelstan, V. 4, § 2. " And, if any one slay the thief within this term, then let him pay the mund-byrd of the person whom the thief sought, or take an oath of twelve that he did not know of the seen." § 3. " And the thief may seek whatever soon he will ; yet shall he not have a right to his life, except for so many days as is above ordained." . . . Again, in the laws of Edmund, the same use of the word is to be found : — Edmund, II. 4. " I also give notice that I will give no socn to any one of my household who has shed man's blood, before he has done penance to the church, and has agreed with the kin for the amends." . . . This kind of socn contains no pretence of jurisdiction. It merely invests individuals or places with the privilege of af- 42 THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OF LAW. fording a limited asylum to fugitives from justice or violence, after the expiration of which the law shall take its course. There was, however, another and wider sense in which the word sden was used. In this sense, it indicates the sum of the fiscal privileges enjoyed by lands which the king and witan had freed from fiscal burdens, and to which they had granted the proceeds of fines, &c., as heretofore described. In this use, the word is merely synonymous with the Anglo- Saxon formula, " Mid eallan Sam gerihtum and Sam witan 8e Saerof arisaS ; " as, for example : — Cod. Dip. MCCXCVIIL, 1002 ; DCCX., 1004. "... Mortun and eal seo socna Se Saerto hereS." . . . A curious illustration of this meaning of the word is af- forded by a diversity in the text of Cnut's law. The ordi- nary reading of Cnut, II. 73, § 1, is as follows : — " And sy lie his weres scyldig wit! Sone cyning oSSe wiS Sone 8e hit geunnen haebbe." " And let him forfeit his wer to the king, or to bim to whom the king may have granted it.'' Codex G. substitutes the words " his sdcne " as equivalent for the word " hit" so that socn can here only mean the right to receive the wer, — the same right which has already been described as expressly specified in the charters. Other cases of the same nature occur, all pointing to the same conclusion : — Cnut, II. 63. " Gif hwa reaf-lac gewyrce, agife and forgylde and beo his wares scyldig wiS Sone cyningc [oSSe wiS (Jone Se his socne age. Codex G.]." " If any one take by force another's property, let him return it, and its value, and forfeit his wer to the king [or to whoever has his socn. Cod. G.]." Cnut, 11. 37. "... Gylde Sam cyninge oSSe landrican be heals- fange.'' Codex G. "... Gylde Sam cyninge oSSe landrican Se his socne ah, be healsfange.'' " Let him forfeit his halsfang (ten shilhngs) to the kmg [or to the manorial lord who has his socn. Codex G.l." THE AJJTGLO-SAXON COHETS Or LAW. 43 In all these cases, there is no reason for supposing that jurisdiction is implied in the word sScn. The idea ex- pressed is always that of the charters. It is the profits of justice, and not the justice itself. To add to the plain state- ments of the charters an implied grant of jurisdiction, is mere gratuitous assumption, unsupported by a particle of evidence. The same rule of interpretation applies also to the clause cited by Dr. Schmid, as given above, — " Let no man have socn over a king's thane except the king himself." That is, let no man claim to exact a forfeiture or fine from a king's thane except the king himself. This was merely another and more concise way of expressing the same idea that is set forth in the earlier legislation of the same king : — ^thelred, I. 1, § 14. " And let the king be entitled to all the for- feitures of such as hold book-land ; and let no man make composition on any accusation, unless with the witness of the king's reeve." So the Latin version of the Confessor's charter to Abbot Ordric of Abingdon (Cod. Dip. DCCCXL., IV. 200) ren- ders " swa Saet nan scyrgerefe o33e motgerefe Sar habban aeni socne oSSe gemot " by "sic ut nullus vicecomes vel praepositus ibi habeant aliquam appropriationem seu placi- tum." 1 And, finally, the same meaning is perfectly appropriate to the mention in C^iut, 71, 3, of " a king's thane among the Danes, who has his socn," his freedom from fiscal burdens, and his rights to the profits of justice. Dr. Schmid cites one more example, also from Codex G., to illustrate his view : — Cnut, II. 62. " Gif hwa ham-socne gewyrce, gebete Saet mid fif pundan Sam cyningce on Engla-lage [and on Cent aet Sam socne V. Sam cinge and threo Sam arcebisceope]." Dr. Schmid considers " aet Sam socne " to mean here, again, jurisdiction. But this is obviously a very forced in- terpretation. A reference to the before-mentioned law of iEthelstan, V. 4, § 2, sufficiently illustrates the meaning of the later law. In point of fact, no instance can be found, before Norman 1 See also DCCCLXXXVIII., IV. 228. 44 THE AiTGLO-SAXON OOCTETS OF LAW. times, in which sden means jurisdiction. Sdcn had a technical meaning of its own, which is always rigorously observed. The idea of jurisdiction, on the other hand, was expressed by an equally technical word, the meaning of which is also rigorously observed. This is sacu, a word which has strangely vanished from our legal vocabulary, but is still pre- served, even in its technical sense, by the German sache. Another expression is also found, spraec or spaeo, meaning placitum, or lawsuit ; but sacu, saca, or abbreviated sae, is the legal term most commonly adopted. It is found in the early laws of Kent, and in the late laws of the Norman kings ; it is used throughout the charters, and never in any doubtful sense. Sacu in all the early literature, meant a suit at law. When joined with s6cn in a royal grant, the intention is to convey to the grantee plaeita et forisfacturas, — pleas and forfeitures, justice and the profits of justice. Dr. K. Maurer, while conceding that the evidence is far from convincing in regard to the existence of private law- courts before Cnut's accession, goes on to say : " But all the more certain is it that, from the reign of Cnut, the manorial jurisdiction appears in its most complete development ; innu- merable charters, from his and his successors' hands, grant or confirm the same ; so that the expressions, sac and socn, toU and team, aSas and ordalas, &c., occur on almost every page of the Codex Diplomaticus." ^ Here, again, careful criticism can only express dissent. So far as Dr. Maurer's statement concerns the charters of Cnut, investigation will show that it is in error. He has himseK given no instances of such charters. The Codex Diplomati- cus contains only two such, which offer even an appearance of authenticity. One of these (MCCCXIX., VI. 183) is an evident forgery, which hardly needs notice. The other (MCCCXXVIL, VI. 190) does not even purport to be an original document ; and the paraphrase is so carelessly made that, if Mr. Kemble's version is trustworthy, the name of the king himself is omitted among the signatures ; and that of Earl Harold is made to appear in a charter which must have » Krit. Ueber. II. 58. THE AS-GLO-SAXOU" COTXRTS OF LAW. 45 been executed about the year he was born, — apparently, a copyist's mistake for Earl Hacun. Neither of these docu- ments can be allowed to carry any weight whatever in oppo- sition to the uniformly and rigorously conservative character of all the authentic laws, letters, and charters of Cnut's reign. So far, then, as contemporary evidence is concerned, there is no more reason for attributing to Cnut the first legal recog- nition of private jurisdictions than there is for attributing it to Alfred or Ine. The subsequent reign of Edward the Con- fessor must be invoked, in order to supply even the shadow of a direct proof that these private law-courts were recog- nized by Cnut. Here, indeed, something which seems a positive assertion of the fact may be found, as, for example, in the grant of jurisdiction to St. Austin's (Cod. Dip. DCCCXXXI., DCCCCII.): "... Habeo has consuetudi- nes deo datas et sancto Augustino . . . ita pleniter et libere sicut melius habuerunt tempore praedecessoris mei Knuti regis." And again, in the corresponding grant to St. Paul's (Cod. Dip. DCCCLXXXVII., Cf. MCCCXIX.) : "... Let them have their saca and their socne, within burg and with- out, and as good laws, so full and so far as they were best in any king's day or in any bishop's, in all things." But the force of such an expression is weakened by the looseness of its application, as, for example, in DCCCLVIII. :"...! have given to . . . Westminster the land at Shepperton, with all that belongs thereto, and with saca and with socne, scotfree and gafelfree, from hundred and shire, as full and as far as Saint Dunstan bought it, and granted it to the min- ster." ^ Either legal memories were very short in Edward's reign, or these expressions are to be understood as mere chancery formulas, which record the freedom of the land without pretending to record the past stages in the develop- ment of this freedom. But, from the moment that Edward the Confessor as- cended the throne, a new theory of constitutional law makes itself apparent in the form as well as in the matter of the 1 See also Cod. Dip. DCCCXVI., IV. 190; DCCCXXVU., IV. 190. 46 THE ANGLO-SAXON COTJETS OF LAW. royal charters. And, if it be remembered that the Confes- sor was half Norman by birth, and wholly Norman by education and sympathies ; that he filled the offices in his chancery, so far as was in his power, by Normans ; and that he appears, at least at times, to have attempted to make the Duke of Normandy his successor on the English throne, — it is little surprising that his constitutional practice should have been Norman also. But, apart from these Norman ten- dencies of the king, there were other causes in operation to alter the English constitution. A single great English family overshadowed the whole of England with its wealth and power, and absorbed and embodied the political influence of the Witan. That Godwine and his sons were little in- clined to look with favor on the foreign tastes of the king, is probably true. But their situation compelled them to yield, wherever concession was compatible with their own security ; and there is nothing in the recorded character of ajay one of them which makes it probable that they took any wider views of public policy than such as were selfish and super- ficial. In the whole history of the Anglo-Saxon period, there is not one example of an original and progressive law-giver. Godwine and his sons appear to have had the virtues and the faults of their race. They were not men of that stamp of mind which would hazard power for the sake of a constitu- tional theory that in itself Avas indifferent to their own im- mediate interests. A few examples of Edward's charters will show the nature of the changes in constitutional practice : — The first of the citations to be made is interesting upon many accounts, but, among others, for the reason that, as has been already noticed, Cnut's nam& appears in it. Its date is between 1042 and 1050, — early, therefore, in the Confessor's reign. DCCCXXXI. DCCCCII. Eadward king gi'et Ealsige Ego Eadwardus del gratia rex archebisceop and Godwine eorl Anglorum Eadsio archiepiscopo and ealle mine Segncs on Kent et Godwino comiti et omnibua THE ANGLO-SAXON COUETS OF LA"W. 47 freondlice, and ic kySe eow Saet ic habbe geunnen Sancte Augus- tine and Sam gebroSram Se Serto hyreS Saet haebbe on heora saca wurSe and heora socna and griS- brices and hamsocne and forsteal- les and infangeneSeofes and fly- menesfyrmSe ofer heora agene menne binnan burh and butan, tolles and teames, on strande and on streame, and ofer swa fele Segna swa ic heom habbe toge- laeten ; and ic nelle Saet aeni man aeni Sing Saron teo buton heom and heore Sienesse Se hie hit betaeche willan, forSan ic habbe forgefen Sancte Augustine Sas gerihta minre sawle to alesid- nesse swa full and swa forS swa hi hit formeste hefden on Cnutes dagum kinges, and ic nelle geSa- fian Saet aeni man Sis abreca bi mine freondscipe. God eow ge- heolde. suis baronibus Cantiae, salutem. Sciatis me dedisse deo ac Sancto Augustino et fratribus ut habeant eorum saca et socna et pacis frac- turam et pugnam in domo factam et viae assultus et latrones in terra sua captos latronumque sus- ceptionem vel pastionem super illorum proprios homines infra civitatem et extra, theloneumque suum in terra et in aqua, at- que consuetudinem quae dicitur teames, et super omnes allodia- rios quos eis habeo datos. Nee volo consentire ut aliquis in ali- qua re de hiis se intromittat nisi eorum praepositi quibus ipsi haec commendaverint, quia habeo has consuetudines deo datas et Sancto Augustino pro redemptione ani- mae meae ita pleniter et libera sicut melius habuerunt tempore praedecessoris mei Knuti regis ; et nolo consentire ut aliquis haec in- f ringat sicuti meam amicitiam vult habere. This document purports to be simply a confirmation of the jurisdiction which the church of St. Austin's had enjoyed in the reign of Cnut. It does not purport to be done by the advice or consent of the Witan. It is totally different in its form, in its import, and in its effect, from any grant ever made before this time. It is Norman, not Anglo-Saxon. The writ itself was not a novelty : its use in this manner was one. But, even where the old form is retained, as for exam- ple in the royal charter to Harold's great religious foundation at Waltham, the grant is essentially different, and far more comprehensive than the old grants. Not content with con- ferring, in the body of this instrument, the usual jurisdiction, known as " sacha et soche, tol et team," &c., the king added 48 THE ANGLO-SAXON COTTETS Or LAW. a special paragraph, apparently to extend the privileges still further : — DCCCXIII., 1062. "... Ego Eadwardus, nutu divino rex, om- nia praedia quae Haroldus comes monasterio apud Waltham subjecit, vel quae adhuc se daturum decernit, sublevans statuo, ut ab omni ser- vitutis jugo sint semper libera, et a shiris et hundredis, et extra curiam sanctae crucis omnibus placitis et omnibus geldis." * As the grant previously quoted purported to be a mere writ confirmatory of prescriptive privileges, so this formal charter may be intended only to raise the new monastery to the same dignity as was enjoyed by the older foundations. It is, therefore, interesting to ascertain whether the Confessor habitually granted by simple writ, without mention of the Witan, rights of jurisdiction avowedly new, and belonging, as he conceived, not to the state, but to himself. The following writ, which must have been issued about 1045, in the earliest years of the Confessor's reign, seems sufficient evidence on this point. It begins by confirming a gift of land made by his housecarl, Thurstan, to the king's favorite foundation of Westminster : — DCCCXLIII. Eadweard kyng gret Rodberd Ego Eadwardus rex Eodberdo biscop and Osgod Clapa and episcopo et Osgod Clapae, et Ulf sciregerevan and ealle mine Ulfo vicecomiti et omnibus meis SJeignes and mine holdan freond thanis et fidelibus amicis in Mid- on Middelsexan freondlice. ic delsexia benevole salutem dico. ky?5e eow tJaet ic wille and Saet Vobis notum facio me velle et ic ann Saet Sancte Peter and Sa consentire ut S. Petrus et fratres gebroSra on Westmynstre [hab- Westmon. in eorum convictum ha- ben] to heora bileoven Saet land beant praedium istud quod est in aet Cealchylle . . . swa Durstan Cealchylle . . . tam plene et li- min huskarll hit furmest of me bere quam praefectus mens pala- heold and into Saere halgan tinus Thurstanus ea primo ex me stowwe geaf. And ic Saes ful- tenuit et sacro dein loco donavit. lice geuSe and ic an heom eoft Quod quidem donum ego plane ealswa Saet by habben Saerofer corroboro, iis iterum etiam con- » See also DCCCXVII. (IV. 165), grant of freedom " de schiris et hundre diB." DCCCLVm. (IV. 213) ; DCCCXXVIII. (IV. 191). THE AiTGLO-SAXON COTJETS OP LAW. 49 saca and socna, toll and team, in- fangeneSeof and flemenefyrmtSe, and ealle oSre gerihtu on eallum tjingum Se t!ar uppaspringaS. . . . And ic wille and faestlice be- beode be fulre wite Saet tJeos mundbyrdnesse beo Strang and staSelfaest into Saere stowe a on ece erfe. Amen, halgan cedens ut insuper habeant privi- legium tenendi curiam ad causas cognoscendas et dirimendas lites inter vassallos et colonos suos ortas, cum potestate transgresso- res et calumniae reos mulctis afflciendi easque levandi, porro etiam ut ibi habeant in vendendis et emendis mercibus a tolneto immunitatem, cum privUegio ha- bendi totam suorum servorum propaginem ; potestatem etiam fures in terra sua cum re furtiva deprebensos in jus vocandi et pu- niendi, cum privilegio fugitives suscipiendi et omnia alia jura quae omnimodo exinde oritura sunt. . . . Volo igitur et firmiter mando sub poena gravissima ut haec confirmatio nostra in loco illo sancto aeternae haereditatis vim et firmitatem semper obti- neat. Amen. Another expression, in a charter already quoted, is of peculiarly Norman origin (DCCCXXXI., DCCCCII.) : — " Sciatis me dedisse S. Augus- tino . . . ut habeant eorum saca et socna . . . super omnes allo- diarios quos eis habeo datos." " . . . ic habbe geunnen sancte Augustine . . . Saet haebbe on heora saca wurSe and heora socna . . . ofer swa fele Segna swa ic heom habbe togelaeten.'' . . . Another similar charter, of a date probably not later than 1046,^ confirms a similar gift, likewise with a special royal supplementary grant of jurisdiction : " And ice an Sat sainte Petre habbe ofer Sam, saca and socne, toll and team, infan- geneSef and alle oSere richte Sa to me belimpaS."^ 1 DCCCXXVIII., IV. 191. 2 See also Cod. Dip. DCCCLXL, IV. 214; DCCCLXIL, IV. 215; DCCCLXIV., IV. 217; DCCCLXIX, IV. 219; DCCCLXXXIX, IV. 228. i 50 THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OF LAW. It is needless to offer further evidence on this point. The Confessor's charters frequently, not to say habitually, convey the most important rights of j urisdiction into private hands : they do so by simple writ, without suggesting the concur- rence of the Witan ; and they do so on the ground that the jurisdiction is the property of the King in his private capac- ity, and may be alienated at his pleasure. In the same way, Edward conferred the highest offices in the church, granting investiture to the bishop by simple writ, which contained no reference to the concurrence of the Witan. Whether the Witan, in point of fact, were consulted or not, is another question. So far, at least, as the Confessor's theory of gov- ernment was concerned, it seems to have been little, if at all, different from that of William the Conqueror. Nor is it to be supposed that these grants went no further than to confer here and there, on favored religious communi- ties, the privilege of a private court of justice. Towards the close of his reign, Edward appears to have adopted the set- tled policy of granting to all religious bodies the jurisdiction which had previously belonged to the state tribunals. The form of this grant was a writ, of which the following may serve as a specimen, as it happens to be given in both lan- guages, although the omitted portions contain details more elaborate than were customary at a later day, and although this writ happens exceptionally to be witnessed, but only by the queen, her father Godwine, and her brother Harold. The presence of Godwine and the name of Archbishop Sti- gand show that this document belongs to the year 1052- 1053. Another curious point in it is the mention of Gyrth as eorl in East Anglia, over Norfolk and Suffolk, four years before the date commonly assigned to his appointment.^ This fact may well throw a doubt over the genuineness of the names given as witnesses to the writ, but not necessarily on the writ itself. DCCCLIII. Eadward cyng gret Stigand Eadwardus rex Anglorum Sti- ercebiscop and Aegelmaer biscop gando archiepiscopo, Ailmaro epis- 1 Freeman, Hist. Norman Conquest, 11. 566. THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OP LAW. 51 and GyrS eorl and Toli scirreve copo, GirS comiti, Toll vicecomiti, and ealle his Seines inue NorS- et omnibus^ministris suis de NorS- folce and inne Suffolce and ealle folke and SuSfolke et universis his oSra witen ofer eall iEnglande aliis fidelibus suis per totam An- hadede and leawede freondlice ; gliam constitutis tam clericis quam . . . And in aelcer scire Saer laicis, salutem. ... In omni co- sanctus Benedictus hafS land inne mitatu ubi sanctus Benedictus his saca and his socne, tol and habet terram concedo eis sacam team, and infaugenSeof, wiSinne et socam suam, tol et team et in- burhe and wiSuten and on aelce fangeneSef, infra burgum vel civi- styde be lande and be strande, be tatem et extra, ubiqiie in terra et wude and be felde, swa huilc man aqua, in bosco et piano, cujuscun- swa 3a socne ahe, sanctus Bene- que fuerit soca, habeat sanctus dictus habbe his freedom on eal- Benedictus libertatem suam in len tSingen swa wel and swa fre- omnibus ita bene et plena sicut olice swa ic hit meseolf betst ahe ego ipse alicubi habeo in tota ahwaer in Engelande. . . . Anglia. . . . Similar grants are still extant, conferring similar im- munities on the Archbishop of Canterbury and Christ's Church, Canterbury (DCCCCIX.) ; the Archbishop of York (DCCCXCIII.) ; the Abbot of Malmesbury (DCCCXVII.) ; the Abbey of Westminster (DCCCLXXXIX.) ; St. ^thil- bert's Minster, in Hereford (DCCCLXVII.) ; St. Paul's Minster, in London (DCCCLXXXVII.) ; St. Mary's, in Abingdon (DCCCLXXXVIII.) ; and St. Edmondsbury (DCCCXCIV.), besides those heretofore quoted. Nor was this all. So absolute was the Confessor's property in the justice of his kingdom, that he granted entire hundreds out- right into the hands of the church, as in the case of Godde- lie hundred, which was given to the Abbot of St. Peter's, in Chertsey (DCCCXLIX.). How far these grants were merely confirmations of powers already existing, in fact if not in law, and how far they were new and revolutionary, is not a point capable of exact settlement ; yet the language of the charters already quoted is enough to show that the intention of the grantor was to convey new privileges, and, in a number of these writs, he gives his reasons for doing so . " forSam ice nelle gecJafian 8at aenig man undo 8a gife 8e ica 62 THE ANGLO-SAXON COURTS OP LAW. Sider inn geunnen habbe, oSSe Saet 8aer aenig man aenigne onsting habbe on aenigum Singum otSSe on aenigne timan buton se abbod and Sa gebrocSra to Ses mynstres nytSarflicre neode." This purpose of rendering the churches more secure from external encroachment, whether of the royal officials or of private persons, is mentioned in two charters which be- long to the earliest years of Edward's reign (DCCCLXX., DCCCLXXIL), and frequently afterwards. The adoption of such a principle could not be limited in application. There can be no doubt that the Confessor's love for the church and his Norman education combined to make this application nat- ural and easy. To what extent Edward's sweeping grants of jurisdiction to the church followed or preceded the silent assumption of judicial powers by private hands, is a question in regard to which only surmise is possible. From the evidence furnished above, it is clear that the peculiarity of the constitutional changes effected by Edward was, that they were not partial, but general ; that they mark an entire revolution in men's conceptions of fundarhental law, not in their mere habits ; and that they affected not one, but all classes of the commu- nity. From the moment that the state jurisdiction began to be looked upon as property, the change was inevitable. Down to that time, it was impossible. The Confessor was the first English" king to whom such a conception of law would have seemed natural. His acts, not merely in refer- ence to jurisdiction, but throughout his career, show that he was not an Anglo-Saxon, but a Norman, king. It was he who introduced the worst maxims of government into Eng- land ; and, whatever abuses may have existed before his time in the practice of judicial administration, it was he and his advisers who revolutionized the law. There can be little doubt, however, that the actual change produced by Edward's new principles, on the mere habits of the people, was not a violent one. If the views above sug- gested are at all correct, the most potent agent in undermin- ing the authority of the old judicial system was the loose popular practice of administering the law. In a legal system THE ANGLO-SAXON COTJETS OF LAW. 53 SO crude that it was almost an invariable habit not to press suits to a conclusion, but to compromise them, in order to escape the consequences, the delays, or the uncertainties of strict law, arbitration was a more attractive resort, in nine cases out of ten, than the ordinary judgment of a regular tribunal. The collection of cases given in the Appendix shows how habitually suitors accepted the informal decision of their friends. But, apart from arbitration, they were in every way tempted to ignore the public tribunals. It re- quired only their consent to invest the neighboring manorial lord with all the powers of a hundred court. There was no reason why the oath, the ordeal, the vouching to warranty, and all the other common foi'ms of hundred procedure, should not take place before the lord as well as before tho sheriff, if the parties so agreed ; and there was every reason why the parties, when occupants of land under the same lord, should so agree. The profits of justice already be- longed to him by grant. It was perfectly natural that the mere forms of justice customary in the public courts should be adopted by him in the settlement of cases voluntarily brought to him for decision. The mere practice of these forms before him was in itself no more a violation of the law than the use of any other forms would have been. It did not exclude the authority of the public tribunal. It rested on the consent of the parties. It was probably a convenience to suitors. The settlement, when reached, was only binding in law so far as it was the result of a formal contract. In all probability, the weight of the lord's private authority was alone sufficient to enforce his decision, without the necessity of an appeal for the performance of such a contract in the public courts. Thus, to the ordinary Englishman, Edward's reckless grants of jurisdiction to the church may probably have seemed innocent. It is very possible that they produced little immediate effect on the habits of suitors. At all events, not a whisper of complaint has come down to us against Edward on this account. Yet the revolution, how- ever easy, was not the less fatal to the old Anglo-Saxon con- 54 THE ANGLO-SAXON COXJBTS OP LAW. stitution. After Edward's reign, as before, the freemen met in their courts of law, heard pleas and decided them, as they had done from time immemorial. It mattered not so much to them whether the king's, the abbot's, or the lord's reeve presided over their court, as it did that whoever presided should not abuse his power. But the theory of the constitu- tion was irretrievably lost. Justice no longer was a public trust, but a private property. The recognition of the legal- ity of private tribunals for the church was a recognition of the legality of private tribunals in general. England was soon covered with new courts of law, endowed, by royal favor or by prescriptive use, with judicial functions of the most diverse nature over territories inextricably interwoven and confused. Some of these territories were complete states in themselves, like the counties palatine of Durham and of Chester. Some were completely organized as counties. Far the larger number, however, had only the jurisdiction of a hundred court. The entire judicial sj'stem of England was torn in pieces ; and a new theory of society, known as feu- dalism, took its place. With the hopeless confusion of jurisdictions which followed the collapse caused by the Confessor in the Anglo-Saxon sys- tem, this is not the place to deal. From the moment that private courts of law become a recognized part of the Eng- lish judicature, the Anglo-Saxon constitution falls to pieces, and feudalism takes its place. Yet whatever historical in- terest the manorial system possesses, as a part of the English judicial constitution, is due to the fact that its origin was not feudal, but Anglo-Saxon. The manor was a private hun- dred, so far as its judicial powers were concerned. The law administered in the manorial court was hundred law ; the procedure was hundred procedure ; the jurisdiction, like that of the hundred, was controlled by the shire. The manor was but a proprietary hundred, and, as such, has served, during many centuries, to perpetuate the memory of the most archaic and least fertile elements of both the Saxon and the feudal systems. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. Haedlt any branch of early Teutonic law is more obscure than that which forms the subject of this essay. Modern investigation has been comparatively slight, and, on the whole, unsatisfactory. This does not arise entirely from a lack of material. The codes, it is true, are but meagre in all that relates to the ownership of land ; but the charters of the Anglo-Saxon period are numerous, and rich in detail. It is this very abundance of detail which has proved the chief stumbling-block to scholars of the present day. The intri- cacy and confusion in the grants, wills, settlements, and the like, are, in a measure, to blame for the faulty methods of treatment, which thus far have only brought out a few of the most prominent features of the subject. The land law of the Anglo-Saxons, like all their other law, is based on a few simple and fundamental conceptions. The extreme clumsi- ness of the Anglo-Saxon mind is apparent to any one who has closely studied their early legal history ; and this mental awkwardness led them to cling to their primitive ideas, with a tenacity unequalled, except among the Scandinavian races, by the kindred continental tribes. Another effect of these intellectual qualities was not so happy. As society pro- gressed, the old principles, which had been all-sufficient in the German forests, proved inadequate to the new re- quirements. Instead of making such additions as altered circumstances demanded, they twisted their old methods, invented numberless details, added here and diminished there, as the momentary stress impelled them, and suffered the inevitable changes and the new conceptions to work their way, without assistance, into general acceptance. The 56 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. result, as might easily be foreseen, was, that the law slowly developed, more and more encumbered in each succeeding generation with a mass of contradictory and well-nigh im- possible details, which at this day are absolutely appalling. The law of real property, too, was really nothing but a collection of customs. It may be fairly said that there is hardly any law, in the exact definition of the term, existing on the subject. To enhance all this, their legal thought and expression were loose, ill-defined, and clumsy to the last degree. Many eminent writers haye endeavored to extract, from the authorities, evidences of a system, rounded, defined, and of arithmetical proportions. But, if contemporaneous Anglo-Saxon histories and charters show any thing, they prove that such a system did not exist, — that it was something inconceivable to the Anglo-Saxon mind. Unfavorable as many circumstances were, the purity of the race, the isolated condition of the country, and the very slow- ness and tenacity of intellect already referred to, gave a scien- tific development to the pure Germanic law hardly to be found elsewhere. Free from the injurious influences of the Roman and Celtic peoples, the laws and institutions of the ancient German tribes flourished and waxed strong on the soil of England. If the Anglo-Saxon laws are not as absolutely untainted as those of their kindred in Sweden, Denmark, Norway, and Iceland, they developed to more purpose. Strong enough to resist the power of the church in infancy, stronger still to resist the shock of Norman invasion, crushed then, but not destroyed, by foreign influences, the great prin- ciples of Anglo-Saxon law, ever changing and assimilating, have survived in the noblest work of the race, — the English common law. The early law of real property is not so rich in marked and imperishable principles as many other branches ; but it was based on certain strong conceptions, some of which have endured, while others, long since van- ished, possess now only' historical importance. It is the purpose of this essay to attempt a classification of these con- ceptions or principles, — to prove their existence, and trace THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 67 the outlines, as the case may be, of their growth or their decay. Starting with the belief that the mass of intricate details in which the subject is involved are objects only of antiquarian curiosity, every thing not directly tending to the illustration or elucidation of the main and leading ideas will be rigidly excluded. The first difficulty which meets the inquirer is to ascertain how many kinds of land resting on fundamentally different conceptions were known to the Anglo-Saxons. If difference of origin be taken as the only standard of distinction, there were two, — estates originating in a written instrument, and estates originating in custom ; or, in briefer form, estates that were created by book (boc-land), and estates that were not so created. The latter class falls into three subdivisions, — estates of the family or individual (family land) ; estates of a corporation, like the mark, thorpe, or hundred (the com- mon land) ; finally, estates of the nation or state (the folc- land). These three subdivisions are severally so important, and so distinct from each other, that, for a complete answer to our first question, it is necessary to admit four sorts of land, — boc-land and the three subdivisions of the opposite class. An examination of these four great classes ought to result in a thorough understanding of Anglo-Saxon land law. The only portion not necessarily covered by them is the law of dower in lands, which requires separate treatment. Before proceeding with this investigation, it becomes neces- sary to consider briefly two preliminary points, — the distri- bution of the various kinds of land with reference to each other, and taxation. Nothing has proved a more fruitful cause of unnecessary misconception and difficulty than a failure to appreciate the relative distribution of lands. Much labor and ingenuity have been vainly expended in evolving theories as to the mode of division of the territory of Britain adopted by Ger- man invaders. Analogy with the methods in vogue among the Continental tribes is misleading, because the circum- stances were different. Two theories are discussed by Dr. Konrad Maurer, — either the conquerors divided the land in 53 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. accordance with fixed rule as they advanced ; or, after the first period of war and confusion, a rearrangement took place according to established forms. Dr. Maurer i gives his adhesion to the first of these views. Whether the first theory be accepted and the second rejected, or vice versa, or whether, as seems most probable, the distribution was regulated by a system which was a mixture of both, the ultimate question, and the only really important one, is as to the relative dis- tribution of lands at the period when contemporaneous au- thorities begin. In order to simplify the matter as far as possible, let all England be regarded as a political unit. The whole territory may then be taken to represent a vast area of folc-land ; the lands of individuals or families, of communi- ties and of the book, being scattered throughout its length and breadth, like oases in a desert. Roughly speaking, this represents not unfairly the geographical distribution of lands. The same person could, and often did, hold estates of all the kinds thus intermingled. One well-known example suffices to prove this statement. Duke Alfred bequeathed family land, boc-land, folc-land, or certain definite parcels of the same,^ and appendant rights in common land, and these estates, as appears by the same document, lay in various parts of the country. It is further evident, from this instance, that the same person might be a member of several communities, all widely separated. To better illustrate this last point, a charter of ^thelwulf of Wessex, A.D. 839, may be cited. The grant is of a vill lying within the walls of Dover, and twenty-three acres pertaining thereto in various parts of the civitas.^ Here the king — holding, as is shown by other char- ters, in all parts of England — appears as the owner of lands in various parts of Dover. Still more prolific in confusion was the growth of dependent communities.* There were in England many owners of large estates. The most prominent 1 Kritische Ueberschau, L 100. ^ Cod. Dip. CCCXVII. ' Cod. Dip. CCXLI. See also, for grants of common land, Cod. Dip. MCCLXXVIII. and Dili. * See, on this point, Robertson, " Historical Essays," Introduction, p. liii. I should have been glad to have made such use of these Essays as the patience, THE AiffGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 59 were the state, the crown, and the church ; but there were also many large individual proprietors, including the king. On these great estates, or on the folc-land, groups forming communities, exactly similar to the pure, independent com- munity, — except that the title to the lands they occupied was not vested in themselves, — were seated. A commu- nity on the folc-land affords the best illustration of the result. A large proprietor, like Duke Alfred already re- ferred to, held extensive estates of folc-land,^ which he let out 2 to poor freemen, his tenants. A communal group was thus formed, with all the usual intricate relations and cus- toms. In the case cited, the title to the land is in the state, the lands are laens as to the individual tenant, and communal as to the aggregate of tenants, and Duke Alfred, the lord of the land, is in turn but the tenant on sufferance of the state. There are instances in plenty, in the later grants, of the gift of lands and communities together. These were probably cases where the title had never been in the commoners, or had been lost by the growth of some great estate within their limits.^ To take another example, this time a descrip- tion of church property : " Saeculares igitur episcoporum ditione subjecti intra ambitum hujus spatiosae telluris diver- sis in villis* degentes." ® Again, in the case of a royal grant, to take a very common instance, Ceoluulf, A.D. 875, grants a vill with two small vills pertaining to it.* Still another case is a grant of Offa's, A.D. 780, in which the estate, pre- indiistry, and thoroughness exhibited in them well deserves ; but the ideas and any comprehensive theories that there may be are so obscured by a confused mass of detail, and an utter absence of regard for chronological development and change, that the student is exasperated, and not instructed. See also Stubbs's " Constitutional History," Vol. I. p. 89. 1 Cod. Dip. CCCXVII. 2 Vide infra, pp. 84, 85. 3 Cod. Dip., E. G., Nos. DCCCXL., DCCCXLIX., DCCCL. * In this case, villis appears to represent a communal group. In other cases, as in ..(Ethel wulf's Dover grant mentioned above, it clearly means a single house. This double signification probably arose from the fact that the villa of the great proprietor was the centre around which the communal group gathered. Cases occur in which its original meaning of a single house has not been lost in its later and finally exclusive one, of a collection of houses, — a tan, ot Tillage. f Cod. Dip., No. CCCXLII. « Cod. Dip. CCCVIII. 60 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LA"W. sumably one of folc-land, is described as " rus ... in nn. villulis separatum." ^ The further description makes it clear that four small village communities had grown up on this one estate. These extracts sufficiently show the super-imposition of one estate upon another, no one of them being entirely destroyed. Judged by its title, the land was of one kind ; by its occupiers, of another ; and by the manner of dividing and using, of a third. The same person could hold lands of all the four principal classes, could be a member of several communities, and the practical proprietor of several more, and could create and hold laens. This description may pos- sibly serve to demonstrate the relative distribution of lands, and the great entanglement of estates. It must not be imagined, however, that the various kinds of land were con- fused as to their fundamental characteristics. On the con- trary, land changed its original legal position only by certain well-defined methods. The external confusion is of impor- tance only in so far as it serves to explain many apparent contradictions. Nothing exercised greater influence on the development of real-property law than the growth of the principle of taxa- tion.^ Treating it here as the second of the preliminary points mentioned, it is only necessary to show what taxation was in the Anglo-Saxon period, and the general direction of its development. Adam Smith divides the expenses of the sovereign or commonwealth into four classes, — the expense of defence, of justice, of public works, and of the dignity of the sovereign. In the forests of Germany, but one of these forms of expense existed. Military service was made incumbent on every freeman, and thus, in the rudest way, defence was efficiently provided for. This was the very essence of the army constitution, one of the fundamental principles of the 1 Cod. Dip. CXL. ; also Ibid. CXXIX. 2 That one marked feature in the German invasion everywhere was that the conquerors brought with them no system of taxation has never been suffi- ciently insisted on. On the continent, they destroyed the elaborate system of the Bomans, and introduced nothing. The same was true of England, except that there they found nothing to destroy. Mr. Nasse makes a slight allusion to this in an essay in the Contemporary Review for May, 1872. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 61 Germanic system. The expenses of justice were met in an entirely similar -way. The duty of military service and of attendance on the courts was based solely on personal free- dom, and was universal in its application. i The occupancy of a country, previously inhabited by civilized people, at once produced the new expense of public works. This, too, was met in the old way. Labor on the public works, the roads, and fortifications, was added to the army service, and made compulsory on every one. This common burden was the trinoda neoessitas, in its origin required of all people, not resting on land,^ and therefore not the subject of immunity. But one occasion for expense remained, — the dignity of the sovereign. One of the consequences of invasion and con- quest was the rise of the royal or centralizing principle. Before the " folk-wandering " the king in the monarchical tribes probably supported himself in much the same way as any other freeman. But in England, at an early period, it became necessary to provide for the expense of supportiug the dignity of the sovereign, or, according to the ideas of the time, for the simple expenses of the king. On the continent, all unoccupied lands went to the king. In England, on the contrary, only certain definite quantities of land were allot- ted to him. The lands thus given were of two kinds, — private and crown lands. The revenues arising from these estates must have proved inadequate at a very early day, and other means were soon devised to meet the ever-growing want. In so early a stage of civilization, the readiest way to supply the royal needs was by payments in kind or services. In the proem to Wihtraed's laws, and also in the first chapter of the same code, occurs a reference to the contributions 1 The researches of Sohm and Roth have settled this question beyond any doubt. Cf. Eeichs und Gerichtsverfassung, R. Sohm, Vol. I. p. 333, ff., and Beneflcialwesens, P. Roth, p. 42 ; also Roth, Feudalitat und Unterthanverband, p. 822, ff. 2 This assertion is abundantly proved by the fact that no genuine charter contains an exemption from the trinoda necessitas. Moreover, in all the early charters it is described as the " burden common to all people," and in some similar fashion, but never as a, burden common to all lands. But also vide infra, pp. 02, 93. 62 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LA"W. which were made to princes and leaders in the time of Taci- tus.i The precise meaning of these contributions, which afterwards became the cyninges-gafol, is very obscure. Tur- ner is entirely adrift on the snbject, Kemble considers it a tax levied by the king and Witan,^ Professor Stubbs offers no explanation, Dr. Maurer does not dispose of the difficul- ties, and Mr. Robertson ^ apparently regards it as a tax, but offeis no suggestion as to its origin. The only definite opinion is Kemble's ; and, though his account of the origin of the " cyninges-gafol " is imdoubtedly correct, he is clearly wrong in considering it as a tax levied by the king and Witan. A tax so levied would have been universal in its application. This is a fair inference from the taxing which is admitted to have been done by the king and representative body of the nation. It can hardly be supposed that the practice of tax- ing particular articles or particular persons had then obtained. There is certainly no proof that this was the case ; and the uni- versality of any imposition on land or the reverse offers, there- fore, one test as to the nature of such imposition . The language of Wihtrsed's law is obscure, but can leave no doubt that the gafol still retained its ancient voluntary character. Kemble re- lies on a passage in Ine's laws as an example of this tax as he deems it. " One must pay for the harvest-gafol for one wyrhta six pounds weight."* Schmid^ takes wyrhta to mean a laborer, and in this instance conjectures that the intent of the law is to regulate the commutation for rent service. Another passage in Ine ^ is of the amount to be paid by ten hides " to foster." This Schmid^ concludes is a regulation of the landlord's /eorwi. In short, both these laws are enacted for the protection of the holders of unbooked laens. But one other passage in Ine's laws bears on this point : " If he then fight in the house of a gafol-gildan (rent-payer) or of a gehur (peasant) 1 Germania, XV. As to the purely voluntary nature of these contributiona, cf. Peucker, Kriegswesen, I. 72, and Germania des Tacitus, Baumstark, p. 643. * Kemble, Saxons in England, Vol. II. pp. 30 and 223, 224. * Historical Essays, pp. 102-112 inclusive. < Ine, 0. 59, § 1. 6 Schmid, Gesetze, p. 49 note, and p. 680. » Ine, c. 70, § 1. ' Schmid, Gesetze, p. 68 note. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 63 let him pay a fine of thirty shillings, and six to the peasant." ^ This shows that a distinction existed between the rent-paying estates and others. Therefore, if this be taken to refer to the cyninges-gafol, it is clear that it was not universal as a legal requisition. The reference to gafol-land in Alfred and Guthrum's peace ^ either refers solely to unbooked laens, or, if this be not admitted, then it would seem to follow that the gafol could not at this time have been universal. In the " North people's laws," referred by Schmid to the beginning of the tenth century, the " wer" of a tax-paying Welshman or foreigner is fixed according to the amount of land he pays for, but this does not aid us.^ If Mr. Kemble * is right in consider- ing the feorm-fultum, from which Cnut relieves his subjects, as identical with the cyninges-gafol, then his argument that the latter is a general tax levied by the Witan falls to the ground, as the king's farm was a well-recognized service arising from the folc-land, and of a different origin and signi- ficance from that claimed for the cyninges-gafol, as will be shown further on. It will thus be seen how insufficient the laws are to support Mr. Kemble's theory, or indeed any theory. Their fragmentary evidence, pieced out by the lan- guage of the charters, may, however, assist in drawing some conclusions. In a grant of Offa's,^ A.D. 791-796, with the Witan, the usual immunity is given, with the reservation of certain revenues corresponding with the gafol of Ine's laws.^ In A.D. 883, a monastery is freed from all which the monks are bound to pay as cyning-feorm, " bright ale, "^ &c." Instances of this sort might be multiplied ; but they all point to the conclusion, suggested by Cnut's law already men- 1 Ine, c. 6, § 3 ; c. 23, § 3, of the same law, is too doubtful and general In its expressions to admit of any deduction. 2 A. & G. fri«, c. 1, § 2. * This law and that of Ine, c. 23, § 3, fall in with Bede's description of ./Ethelfrith, Hist. Aeccl., Lib. I., c. 34. He says that -Slthelfrith was remarkable for his conquests, and turning the Britons into tributaries, — in the Saxon ver- sion, " to gafolgyldum gesette.'' These three instances, taken together, suggest one of the sources of the compulsory gafol, and also show its non-universality. * Saxons in England, II. p. 31 note. 5 Cod. Dip. CLXVI. 6 Ine, c. 70, § 1. 1 Cod. Dip. CCCXIII. 64 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. tioned, that the old voluntary oontribution of Tacitus became, in the process of time, assimilated with the cyninges-feorm. The latter was one of the services mentioned in the charters from which immunity was given. These services were dealt with by the Witan, and assumed the form of taxation because their starting-point was the folc-land,i ^ot because they were services rendered to the king. The king's revenues, considered merely as such, were purely personal, and not of necessity sub- ject to the consent of the Witan. This is shown by the way in which the king, in certain instances, granted the revenues arising from merchant-ships, a purely royal prerogative.^ The cyninges-gafol, in its origin voluntary, became compulsory first on the holders of folc-land, and in its extension followed the course of the other services, becoming finally, as in Cnut's law, thoroughly amalgamated with them, and indeed undis- tinguishable from one kind of service. The gafol was in its nature a rent, and did not differ from the rents exacted by private lessors. The other services steadily increased in number, until, under Edward the Confessor, the list had be- come a very long one,^ and the old voluntary contribution, as may be learned from Domesday, had become compulsory upon every landholder in the kingdom. But one more source of royal revenue remains to be noticed, the proceeds of justice. It does not lie within the scope of this essay to examine any but those which took the form of confiscations of land, but the charters fortunately contain a number of instances which fully illustrate this point : — The first case is in a charter* of the year 737 A.D., marked 1 Vide infra, pp. 68, 94. 2 Cod. Dip., E. G., LXXVIII., CVI., CXH. * A description of these services, and the immunities and privileges of a later time, would only burden the subject unnecessarily. Specimen lists occur in the following charters : Cod. Dip. CXLII., CXLV., CLXI., CLXVI., CLXXVI., CXCI., CCXVI., CCXXIII., CCXXXVL, CCXLVI., CCLXI., CCLXU., OCLXXVII., CCLXXXVIII., CCCX., CCCLVIII., CCCLIX.,CCCC., CCCCXX. CCCCLIX., CCCCLXXXVIII., DXL., DLXVII., DCCLVI., DCCLXXI., DCCLXXXV., DCCCXLIII., MLXXXIV., MCCCXLV., DCCXIX., DCCLXXI., DCCCCII. See also Kemble, Saxons, Vol. IL, Chap. 2. * The charters marked with an asterisk in the following enumeration are those considered forgeries by Mr. Kemble. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 65 by Mr. Kemble a forgery : it is said the land came to the king : — * Cod. Dip. Mil. " Furti crimine a possidentibus uno eodemque tempore justo dampnatis judicio ablata est." * Cod. Dip. CLXI., A.D. 792. " Quam videlicet terrain Ahlmun- dus abbas, expeditionem subterfugiens mihi reconciliationis gratia dabat." Cod. Dip. MXX., A.D. 799. " Sed harum post modum posses- siones Off a immutavit . . . dicens injustum esse quod minister ejus praesumpserit terram sibi a domino distributam absque ejus testimo- nio in alterius potestatem dare." Cod. Dip. MLXXVIII., A.D. 901. " Ista vero praenominata tellus primitus fuit praepeditus a quodam duce nomine Wulfhere et ejus uxore quando ille utrumque et suum dominum regem ^Ifredum et patriam ultra jusjurandum quam regi et suis optimatibus juraverat sine licentia dereliquit ; tunc etiam, cum omnium judicio sapientium Geuisorum et Mercensium, potestatem et haereditatem dereliquit agrorum." Cod. Dip. MXC, A.D. 909. " Praefatum equidem rus pro stupro cujusdam militis cui accomodatum fuerat ut censum singulis annis persolverat indictum, a praefata aecclesia injuste abstractum nuper fuerat." This charter was a case of restoration. The confiscated land was redeemed from the king's hands, "licet non juste," by Bishop Denewulf, who claimed it as church property. The final restoration was in the presence of the Witan. Cod. Dip. CCCLXXIV., A.D. 938. " Istarum autem vii. man- sarum quantitas justo valde judicio totius populi et seniorum et pri- matum ablata fuit ab eis qui eorum possessores fuerunt quia aperto crimine furti usque ad mortem obnoxii inventi sunt." Cod. Dip, CCCCXCIX. and MCCXXXVIL, A.D. 961. On serious charges, Goda was adjudged at the king's suit to forfeit char- ters and lands.^ Cod. Dip. MCCLVIII., A.D. 966. Widow of ^Ifric on judgment of gemot forfeits land for stealing the charter.^ * Cod. Dip. DLXXIX., A.D. 973. " Unam autem mansam quam fur quidam ante possederat, (Leofstan), a rege cum triginta mancusis auri emit." Cod. Dip. DXCL, A.D. 963-975. A woman and her son were 1 Appendix, No. 18. *. Appendix, No. 19. 66 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. found guilty of witchcraft, and the former drowned at London Bridge, " but the son escaped and became outlaw, and the land went into the king's hand." ^ Cod. Dip. DCI. (about 977 A.D.) " Quo reatu {adultery) omni substantia peculiali recte privatus es-t, et praefatum rus ab eo abstrac- tum rex hujus patriae suae ditioni avidus devenire injuste optavit." This is another case of forfeited lands claimed and redeemed by the church. Cod. Dip. DCXCII., A.D. 995. iEthelsie was found guilty of theft, and his lands adjudged to the king.^ Cod. Dip. DCCIV., (about 1000 A.D.) Land forfeited to king by judgment of Witan for failure in army duty, rebellion, trea- son, &c.' Cod. Dip. MCCLXXXIX., A. D. 995. Land of three brothers forfeited because they defended one of their men who was a thief. This land was then granted by the king to his reeve, Winsig, with consent and witness of Witan. Cod. Dip. MCCXCV., A.D. 995. " Quae portio terrae cujusdam foeminae fornicaria praevaricatione mihimet vulgari subacta est traditione." Cod. Dip. MCCCV., A.D. 1008. Dower lands forfeited. " Qui ambo crimine pessimo juste ab omni incusati sunt populo." Church subsequently claims, and, in accordance with the composition made, buys in the lands. Cod. Dip. MCCCVII., A.D. 1012. Leofric forfeits hereditary land for rebellion, adultery, and other crimes. " Semetipsum con- dempnavit simul et possessiones." Cod. Dip. DCCXIX., A.D. 1012. Murder the cause of forfeiture. " Peracto itaque scelere ab eo, inii consilium cum sapientibus regni mei petens," &c. Cod. Dip. MCCCXII. JSlfric, the boy, despoiled a certain widow of lands, and was rebel. He was condemned by Witan. Cod. Dip. DCCLVII. Lands granted simply described, in setting forth title, as forfeited to the king's hand. Cod. Dip. DCCCI., A.D. 1055. " Quae mihi per judicium no- bilium et principum meorum evenit ab Erusio . . . pro suo com- misso." It appears plainly by these examples that confiscated lands went into the king's hands. The criminal procedure afforded 1 Appendix, No. 20. ^ Appendix, No. 23. ' Appendix, No. 26. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 67 an ample barrier against usurpation in this direction ; in almost every instance, moreover, the judgment of the Witan is ex- pressly mentioned, and in none is there any thing to show- that their consent had not been obtained. This safeguard was undoubtedly due to the anxiety to protect life and liberty, but it also served to protect property.^ Such, then, were the roAal revenues. Confiscations and escheats are distinct from the other sources of revenue, and, in a question of taxation, may be rejected. The result is, that certain royal services, including ultimately in one form or another the ancient gratuity of the time of Tacitus, remain as the only possible form of taxation. That they are to be considered in this light at all, arises solely from the fact that they are dealt with by the sovereign power, the King and Witan. Why the disposition of these services was an attri- bute of the king and Witan is susceptible of very easy 1 Entirely akin to this it may be supposed was the procedure in cases re- sembling escheat. There is, however, no authority, with the exception of one passage in the charters, which throws any light on the subject. This single in- stance is a case of escheat of boc-land to the king, the grantor (Cod. Dip. MXXXV.). There is no reasonable doubt that boc-land always escheated or more properly reverted to the donor; and the appearance of the Witan is, there- fore, the only important fact. In cases of private persons, escheat of boc-land to the donor required no judgment of the Witan (Cod. Dip. MCCLXXXVIII., and infra, p. Ill ) ; and the fact that tliere was such judgment in Burghard's case must be owing to the character of one of the parties. The grantee had been guilty of no crime, and required no protection. The appearance of the Witan was therefore probably due to the character of the grantor, whose only mark of distinction, so far as concerned land, was his royalty. The fact that a king required the action of the Witan, in cases of escheat, suggests the important inference that much boc-land having formerly been folc-land, in case of escheat the right of the Witan to make an award depended on the original character of the land. The unusual absence of all authority on this question was probably due to the excessive rarity of cases resembling escheat, and this in turn was due to the Anglo-Saxon land law. AH estates lying in a community reverted to such community (G. L. v. Maurer, Einleitung, p. 110) ; boc-land re- verted to the donor, folc-land to the state, leaving only family estates, which were neither communal in their origin, nor an old estate of boc-land, Uable to escheat to the crown, in the modern sense. If the size and completeness of the family organization be considered, it will not seem surprising that even in the cases where escheat was possible, arguing from the authorities, it almost never happened. It is at best a purely theoretical point. It is doubtful if any such thing as escheat was known to the Anglo-Saxon law. This solution of Burghard'i case is offered as a conjecture, from unwillingness to pass it ovfr entirely. 68 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. explanation. Before the time of ^thelred, there is no in- stance of a general tax levied by the Witan.^ The Banegeld, at the close of the tenth century, was a great extension of the power of the National Assembly. It has been shown that the only revenues of the state were those used to support the dignity of the sovereign. The Witan, it may be supposed, had few or no expenses, and the king therefore obtained the lion's share of these revenues. With very few and unim- portant exceptions, these services were connected with land ; and immunity from them, if the great majority of the char- ters be believed, required the presence and consent of the Witan. This could not arise from the nature of the services, for they were almost purely personal; and it is to their origin, therefore, that one must look for explanation. The services were, of their very nature, connected with land. Certain lands known as folc-land, and no others, were under the peculiar protection of the Witan : ^ to grant immunity from these services was an especial attribute of the Witan ; ^ there- fore the services must have originated in the folc-land. The nature of taxation and its origin have now been sketched, and a sure test provided by which its future course can be followed. The history of the immunities in the grants is the history of taxation ; and its spread from the folc-land to all the lands of the kingdom may therein be traced. The development of taxation with reference to each will be re- served for examination in the history of the several classes of landed property. Having disposed of the two preliminary questions, we are now in a position to take up the first of the four classes mentioned at the outset, — the family land. The designa- tion, " family," is not altogether satisfactory, but is, on the whole, open to fewer objections than any other. Such high authorities as Professor Stubbs* and Dr. Konrad Maurer" have used the name ethel to indicate land of this kind, and 1 Professor Stubbs admits this, though in the main following Kemble on this point (Constitutional History, Vol. I. p. 133). 2 Vide infra, p. 93. ' Cod. Dip. CCCXVn., CCLX., and CCLXXI. * Constit. Hist., Vol. I. p. 75. » Kritische Ueberschau, Vol. I. p. 97. THE AKGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 69 alod is also used by the same writers. Kemble treats it as the ethel, hide, or alod. But all these terms seem to be only productive of confusion. In the family alone can be found the characteristics which define and separate it from all other estates ; and, though not including every feature, it has, for the reason just stated, been here adopted. There is no need of misconception, if it be borne in mind that the land of the family, Avhen it comes within the range of history, was generally held by individuals, was the origin of individual property in land, and in its growth took the form of the development of individual property. Private property in land had already made its appearance in the time of Tacitus.^ '• Suam quisque domum spatio cir- cumdat " is the expression of the Roman historian ; and in this may be detected the first slight invasion of the commu- nal principle. Sir Henry Maine divides the lands of a village community into " the mark of the township or village, the common mark or waste, and the arable mark or cultivated area." ^ Adopting this division, but rejecting the nomencla- ture for reasons to be given hereafter,^ the lands of the com- munal groups fall under three heads, — the house, the arable, and the waste or wild land. The first of these — the house- land — is that to which the language of Tacitus applies. Certain portions of the land actually enclosed by the village wall or hedge always retained their communal character, as, for exanjple, the streets, squares,* &c. ; but " the house-land " means the ground actually covered by the house, together with the yards, stables, gardens, &c., — in short, the cur- tilage.^ This was the foundation of indivic^ual property, the 1 This opinion has already been established by G. L. v. Maurer, " Einleituug," p. 10 ; Konrad Maurer, " Kritische Ueberschau," Vol. I. p. 99. More recently, it has been adopted by Mr. Digby, in his most admirable " Introduction to tho Law of Real Property," p. 3. It seems hardly necessary to enter into an argu- ment to disprove Mr. Robertson's theory that private property originated in boc-land (" Historical Essays," Introduction, p. Ivii.). It may be conveniently said here that the expression, " private property," is used as covering lands of the family as well as of the individual. 2 Village Com., p. 78. » Vide infra, p. 82. * Von Maurer, Einleitung, pp. 36-39. * ibid., pp. 30-35. 70 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. land peculiarly sacred to the family, and to the communal prin- ciple the centre of opposition towards which all other lands were rapidly gravitating. This conception was transplanted^ intact to England. In one of Ine's laws it is provided : " If a ceorl and his wife have a child together, and the ceorl dies, let the mother have her child and feed it ; let them give her six shillings for support, — a cow in summer, an ox in winter. Let the kin hold the homestead until it (the child) be grown up."^ The 'English, frum-stol, depicted in this law as the especial care of the family, is clearly identical with the " domus " of Tacitus, the house-land of the early Germanic tribes. The existence of the central point once clearly proved, the existence of all other kinds of family land, known to us by the kindred systems, follows as a matter of neces- sity. Differences, if they exist, are only in matters of detail. Family land is distinguished by four very marked character- istics from other kinds of land. It was the creation of cus- tomary^ law, — a quality possessed also by folc-land and common land ; but it was also an estate essentially of inheri- tance ; was based upon the family ; was subject to certain rights on the part of the family ; and, finally, was, in origin and theory, liable to no public burdens, except the trinoda necessitas. It is not necessary to enter into detailed proof of its crea- tion by custom. Family laud had existed as a fundamental Germanic institution long before the Teutonic tribes ever conceived of any law more positive in its nature than custom. At a subsequent period, an attempt — apparently successful — was made to convert estates of boc-land into estates of the family, then rapidly changing into individual property. This new source of family estates alone requires a more elaborate investigation before admitting the force of the first proposition. The well-known provision in Alfred's Laws recites that, " If a man have boc-land, and his kin left it him, then we declare that he must not sell it out of his kindred, if there 1 Ine, c. 38 ; cf . Konrad Maurer, Kritische XJeberschau, p 99. ^ Mr. Austin's distinctions have not been forgotten. " Customary " is used merely to denote the origin and source of tlie law. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 71 be writing or witness that the man forbade who first acquired it, and those who granted it to him, that he might not." ^ A charter^ of 804 A.D. is an example of the grants which subse- quently were embodied in this law. iEthelric comes before the synodal council " cum libris et ruris . . . quod propinqui mei tradiderunt mihi et donaverunt." He then, in presence of the Witan, devises them ; and of certain lands left to his mother, he provides that she can give them up " cum recto consilio propinquorum meorum qui mihi haereditatem dona- bant." A charter 3 of Offa's, of still earlier date (A.D. 779), contains a limitation to the family in terms, " post se suae propinquitatis homini cui ipse voluerit." In a suit* of Alfred's time, the litigation concerns land granted the family on cer- tain conditions. The reversion reserved to the church was confirmed in his will by the second holder of the lands. The family neither performed the condition nor yielded the lands ; and the consequent suit of Bishop Werfrith was for the re- covery of the lands against Eadnoth, who appeared as defend- ant in behalf of the family. This suit may be considered to fairly represent archaic tendencies of which Alfred's law was the exponent. The law and the charters prove nothing on their face but that the conditions of books were to be held inviolable ; and the limitation cited from Oifa's charter is merely an example of one kind of those limitations of which the books are full, and does not differ essentially from lim- itations in tail,^ to certain individuals named, &c. Indeed, Mr. Kemble ^ classes with the one we have cited, as of similar import, another charter of Offa's, in which the lands are granted in special tail ; and he considers Alfred's law a rep- 1 Alfred, § 41 ; Stubbs's Documents, p. 62. 2 Cod. Dip. CLXXXVI. 3 Cod. Dip. CXXXVII. 4 Cod. Dip. CCCXXVII. ; also see Appendix, No. 16. 6 The modern legal phraseology is used throughout this Essay, wherever it has been possible, to express the Anglo-Saxon estates. In almost all such cases, the modern estate does not differ, in its broad and substantial meaning, from the Saxon one. The refinements of the later principles did not, of course, exist at such early periods as those treated in this Essay ; but this did not seem to me a good ground for rejecting a convenient classification, at once clear, defined, and generally understood. 6 Cod. Dip., Introduction, p. xxxii. ; and Charter CLIII. 72 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. etition of one of Offa's now lost. But the general inviolability of the terms of a book was a well-established principle, and a law to protect terms of a certain kind would have been needless. The fact that this law was confined to limitations to the family, and the passages in the charters, especially Werfrith's case, seem to indicate the struggle, introduced by the church, which, it cannot be doubted, was in progress between the Saxon principles and those of the boc-land. E i^ery thing points, in this, as in other branches of the law, to a revival, under Alfred, of what may be called the pure Saxon elements in law. The law as to boc-land was probably one result of this revival. The effort was made by this law to establish the principle that estates of boc-land, which had passed from one generation by testament or otherwise to an- other, were then to be family land. How far the principle became established is difficult to determine. In the laws^ of Henry I., Alfred's law as to boc-land is substantially re- peated in regard to a feud. This and the other laws of the same period show that the struggle of the family to hold its own was still in progress. After the time of Alfred, no assistance on this point is given by the charters ; and the absence of such limitations may not unreasonably be considered to show that the principle of family rights con- tended for, partially triumphed ; that is, as the family princi- ple gave way to that of individualism in land, the boc-land was converted from an estate purely of grant to an estate of custom, and the tenure by virtue of and according to the terms of a book changed to a feudal and customary tenure. The estates of boc-land and the estates of the family merged, therefore, in the estate of the individual. Under the Nor- mans, it still retained marks of its double origin, and it was for the protection of the family in estates of this sort that Henry's laws were enacted. Estates created by book were hostile to the rights of the familj', in so far as they fostered the spirit of individualism ; » Leges Hen. Prim. 88, § U, also 70, § 21 ; and Glanville vii. 11, 1. f. In the law of Cnut on the same point (Cnut, II. 70), the family claim is recognized, the propinqui being classed among the other legal heirs. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 73 and, whatever temporary success the old Germanic principles may have obtained, the ultimate result is indubitable. Fam- ily influence waned and disappeared. With this explanation, one is justified in accepting the first proposition, — that fam- ily estates were the pure creation of customary law. The attempts to extend the domain of family land in the time of Offa and Alfred were due to the encroachments of boc-land ; and their object was simply to convert estates held by vir- tue of a written instrument into the old estate originating in custom. In a word, the principle contended for was the identity of all heritable estates with family land. The result would seem, by the laws of Henry, to have been that the two kinds of land merged, and became boc-land in name and family land in principle. Any deductions from author- ities of so late a period must, however, be made with great care ; for the principle of individual property must have then been so much in the ascendant as to have reduced the family rights to a very low point. The second proposition — that the family land was essen- tially an estate of inheritance — may be readily admitted ; it is merely necessary to show that it was the only one essentially so. Von Maurer has proved it to be the opposite of an estate acquired by purchase.^ It was equally opposed to estates created by book. Boc-land might be an estate for life or lives, limited in tail general, or tail male, and subject to an indefinite right of alienation. The estate of the family, on the other hand, could descend only according to certain fixed principles ; it was not alienable, and could not be, in theory, granted by book. In the time of Tacitus,^ the law of intestate succession was fixed, but there were no wills. With the introduction of written instruments by the church infiuence, 6ame, too, the introduction of wills, which were also an invasion of the family domain, not only keeping from its power estates of purchase or grant, but tending to in- fringe upon the family land itself. There are several cases ^ 1 Von Maurer, Einleitung, p. 14, and authorities cited in note 59 ; K. Matt- rer, Kritische Ueberschau, I. pp. 97, 98. 2 Germania, c. 20, 21. '■> Appendix, Nob. 4-8,-10-14,-16-30. 74 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. in which the heirs are parties to suits for having broken their ancestors' will. The very name by which boc-land ia usually translated shows this most vital difference. It was the terra testamentalis, — the land capable of devise ; while family land Avas purely an estate of inheritance, in theory incapable of devise.^ The arable lands, like the house-land, were, in their nature, lands of allotment, made on the theory that each member of the community was entitled to an equal share, in quantity sufficient for the support of his family.^ The rights in the waste of wood, water, fishing, hunting, pasture, &c., were in a similar way allotted in proportion to each commoner's share in the arable, and rested, therefore, on the same basis as the house-land. Thus, the family estate, in the old English com- munity, consisted of the house and arable lands, and the rights in the common land running with them, based origi- nally on the theory of family support. It is not necessary to develop more fully this third proposition, — that the family estate rested primarily upon the needs of family. The labors of German scholars have made this allusion all- sufficient. The estate based on the family was naturally subject to many rights and limitations in its favor. It must be borne in mind that, long before the period when laws and char- ters first begin, the family, as such, had ceased to hold land.^ It was probably universally held and administered by individuals in that capacity alone, or as the heads of households. The influence of the family in historic times had been reduced to the exercise of certain rights. These 1 The question of the course of descent and the methods of division is entirely omitted here, since it falls more appropriately within the province of another essay in this volume. 2 Von Maurer, Einleitung, p. 71, et seq., and p, 88. ^ It is of course purely matter of conjecture that the family as such ever held land. It is, however, a fair inference that in pre-historic times the Ger- manic family was regarded more as a legal entity than as an aggregation of individuals. The course of historical development took the form of the disin- tegration of the family, and the further back we go the closer the bond of family becomes, and the stronger the probability that it held land in its collec- tive capacity. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 75 rights pertained to the whole maegth, including of course the household, as against any stranger or individual membei of the family. These are the rights referred to in the fourth proposition, and of them alone is it necessary to speak. The most important doctrine, in this regard, was the inalienability of the family lands. The law of inheritance has already been alluded to as given by Tacitus. Intestate suc- cession was fixed ; and all such lands, in default of heirs, reverted to the community from which they had been derived. Without referring to that extremely indistinct cause, — the strength of the family bond, — the inalienability of the lands is sufficiently accounted for by the necessities of the communal system. Lands of a community were inalienable,^ and all family lands were originally communal. The working of this principle in England may be traced in the efforts to break through it. In a charter made between the years 757 and 775 A.D., Abbot Ceolfrith grants land "jure paterno haeredi- tario dono terram meam et haereditatem patris mei Cyne- berhti." The royal confirmation of the grant is expressed, and then in the si quis clause the parentela are espe- cially warned not to infringe the grant.^ In a charter of Bishop Wulfred's, A.D. 811, it is said: "Rex Offa prae- dictam terram a nostra familia abstulit, videlicet quasi non liceret Ecgberhto agros haereditario jure scribere." ^ The land in question had been originally granted by Ecgberht to Aldhun, and by him to the church, from whom it had been taken by Offa on the ground stated in the text ; that is, it was an infringement of the law to book family or hereditary lands. In another case, the family join for the purpose of protecting the church, the grantee, against future claims.* In stiU another instance, Aki, the son of Toki, breaks the will of his father, by which certain lands were devised to the church ; and the latter is able to establish its claim only by paying Aki a proper compensation." This last case is but one instance of the many efforts of the family to break books 1 Von Maurer, Einleitung, p. 106. ^ Cod. Dip. CXXVIL 8 Cod. Dip. CXCV. See also Cod. Dip. MXX. < Cod. Dip. MXVII. » Cod. Dip. DCCCV. See Appendix, No. 30. 76 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. and wills,^ and the law of Alfred, already cited,^ sustains the same interpretation. The principle contended for was the inalienability of all hereditary land ; and from the language used it is clear, as in the principle cited by Offa, that it was not the introduction of a new principle, but the extension of an old one to new forms of hereditary land. The doc- trine of inalienability would seem to have succeeded ^ as to in- testate estates, so that they were protected from the invasion of a superior, but probably broke down when the alienation was made by the possessor. The first innovation which led to this result was the establishment of the principle that lands were alienable within the limits and by the consent of the family. The non-existence of wills among the Ger- manic tribes in the very earliest times left no means to the individual to direct the distribution of his possessions even among his own kin. The mere fact of the introduction of wills by the church, giving opportunity for post mortem dis- tribution, was, as already said, of itself an invasion of the family domain. The firm establishment of the principle of alienation among members of the same kin, the first breach in the family system, is abundantly proved. The most con- vincing evidence is to be found in the will of Duke Alfred,* the object of which is to define " which of my kin and friends are the men to whom I will my yrfe-land and my hoc- land.'" The evident distinction between land of inheritance and boc-land is very significant. It shows that there were other estates of inheritance than those held by book : and as neither folc-land nor common land, as such, could be a heritable estate, and as laen-land is invariably so described, it follows that the pure estate of inheritance must have been family land ; and, this being proved, it also follows that family lands could be legally the subject of devise. To the will of Beorhtric and JElfswyth, members of the family exclusively give witness and consent, the same persons also taking under the will.* The necessity of family consent is shown by the 1 See Appendix, Nos. 4, 8, 10, 14, 16, 30. 2 Alfred, 41. Vide supra, p. 70 » Alfred, 41; Henry, § 88, § 14; Cnut, II. 70; Will. I. 34. 4 Cod. Dip. CCCXVII. « Cod. Dip. CCCCXCII., MCCXLH. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 77 provision in iEthelric's will, that the land could be alienated " cum recto consilio propinquorum." ^ In a purely family arrangement between Cynethrith, the widow of Alderman JEthelmod, and Eadwald, one of his kin, the contract, as to lands left to Cynethrith by her husband, is made entirely with a regard to the family rights.^ The land in this case, the disposition of which involved so closely the rights of the family, had already been made the subject of devise. One of two conclusions must therefore be adopted, — either family land had been made the subject of devise, or boc-land had been successfully converted into family land. In a contract of the year 1046, the vendors agreed " that they would see that all the brothers went out of the land, except one, that is called Ulf, to whom it was bequeathed, and he should have it for life."^ This is another instance of the family dealing with land already devised, in connection with family rights. Ten years later, in A.D. 1056, Leofwine buys land of his kins- man Eadric, the son of Usic, " Ever in his kin to hold and sell to whom best pleases him." ^ This again was a family arrangement, and the limitation exhibits the vigor of the family principle even at so late a date. In proportion, how- ever, as the family gathered strength against the principle of boc-land, they lost it by the force of individualism working from within. This is shown by attempts like those of Ceol- frith, already cited, to bar the parentela. In this and similar cases, the confirmation of the king and Witan is substituted for that of the family, in order to give force and strength to the instrument. There are also other cases in which family lands are alienated, and neither the consent of the family nor the confirmation of king and Witan is given.^ These ex- amples represent, in its fullest extent, the principle con- tended for by the church, — of barring, by the simple writ- ing, all future claims from the family or others. Among the family rights was also included the guardianship of the estate of a minor. This appears from the law already cited 1 Cod. Dip. CLXXXVI. ; ,and vide supra, p. 71. 2 Cod. Dip. CCXXVIII. ' Cod. Dip. MCCCXXXIV. * Cod. Dip. DCCCII. « Cod. Dip. CCXXV. 78 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. from Ine as to the frum-stol passing into the hands of the kin until the child was grown up.^ The last proposition offered in regard to family land was that in theory and primarily it was an untaxed estate. This view has already been advanced by Dr. Konrad Maurer, who argues from the analogous Scandinavian codes, and bases on the Northern laws and history the opinion that the family land was " a full, free, and unburdened estate." ^ Mr. Kemble considered the gafol, already discussed, as a general tax incumbent on all estates. Professor Stubbs says : " All local requirements were met by the allodial obligations discharged by personal services." ^ If this be taken to refer to the com- munal duties, no exception can be taken, but such a construc- tion seems to be scarcely borne out by the context. The passage cited occurs in a paragraph treating of the power of the Witan to levy taxes. Professor Stubbs follows Kemble, and, at the same time, is evidently troubled by the incon- sistencies of that view, and adds, in explanation, what has just been cited. This explanation is so worded that it throws no light on the important question, as to whether family estates were primarily taxed or free. The analogy from the Northern law, relied on by Dr. Maurer, is not of itself suffi- cient to establish the existence of the same principle in Eng- land. Taken cumulatively, however, with sirch evidence as can be obtained from native sources, Dr. Maui-er's theory may be safely adopted. The laws offer no assistance, and the proof to be drawn from the charters would be far from conclusive if unsupported by the Scandinavian practice. Taxation has already been defined as consisting of services which owed their origin to folc-land, and the test of the ex- istence of taxation is the appearance in the charters of immu- nities which exempted the grantee from it. A first glance would lead one to believe that immunity was granted in all cases, and that taxation was therefore universal from 1 Only two rights of the family as peculiarly pertaining to land have been discussed. Their powers in other directions are more appropriately treated in another portion of this volume. 2 Kritisohe Ueberschau, Vol. I. p. 98. 3 Const. Hist., I. p. 133. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 78 the time of the earliest contemporaneous authority. A close examination alone will reveal the fact that taxation started with the folc-land, was not at first compulsory on the holders of family lands, and only after several centuries spread to all the lands in the kingdom. Before the year 1000 A.D., there are eight ^ royal grants of what niay fairly be considered family land. The first three contain no reference to immunity from taxation. The fourth, a charter of Ecgbert's, grants family land which had been previously given away by the king, and, on the death of the grantee without heirs, had reverted again to him ; while in the hands of the king's grantee, it is impossible to say what services were laid upon the land under the terms of the book. The fifth and sixth are likewise Wessex grants, and contain the immunity, while the seventh and eighth cases do not. About the beginning of the ninth century, the king's family estates were taxed, or, more precisely, fixed services in the nature of a tax were drawn from them ; and nothing is more striking than the steady advance of the principle of taxation under the Wes- sex supremacy. Immunity becomes universal in the char- ters of Alfred and his successors. It appears, therefore, that, before the year 826, no case can be found of royal family lands freed from taxation ; and it is also true that, before 798,^ no grant of private family land occurs with any mention of taxation. Yet there are twenty-seven ex- amples of private grants ^ before that date. Some of these are family lands ; it is possible that most of them are so. In many cases they are made with the confirmation of the king and Witan, and the grantors were presumably therefore in a position to secure immunity ; yet the case of Headda, in 798, is the first case in which this exemption occurs. The only inference appears to be that during the first three centuries of the Anglo-Saxon rule taxation was by no means universal. Although immunity is given in almost every case 1 Cod. Dip. XXX., CLVIII., DLXXVIII., DCCCCXCV., MXXXV., MLVni., MXLIV., MXLVIII. 2 Cod. Dip. CLXIX. 8 Those marked by Mr. Kemble forgeries, and those passed by him ai genuine, are both included. 80 THE Ai^GLO-SAXON LAND LAW. where folc-land may fairly be considered to have been in- volved, it occurs in none of the private grants for the same period. Whatever the conditions of original settlement may have been in Wessex, that province, when it began to assume prominence, was far more advanced than its neighbors in the development of the centralizing principle and from the time of Ecgberht, the spread of taxation, as shown by the charters, was rapid, and at an early day complete. The result of this examination, which alone serves to throw any light on this most obscure and difficult point, bears out Dr. Maurer's theory derived from the Scandinavian codes. With the analogy so supported by internal evidence, it may be fairly concluded that among the Anglo-Saxon, as among their Northern brethren, the family land was primarily a " full, free, unburdened estate." Having attempted to trace the most prominent features of family land, it only remains to sketch the course of its de- velopment and change during the six centuries which elapsed between the landing of Hengst and of William. In discussing the question of family rights, this has already been partiallj'^ sketched, and it is only needful to complete the outUne then drawn. The land of the family developed a great force in the direction of individualism, — a force which worked in two ways; urging men to redeem waste lands, and convert them from common land and folc-land into estates of inheritance, and at the same time to limit and destroy, in every way, the rights of their kindred. The first process was tolerably rapid. The second, running as it did directly counter to a cherished and ancient system, moved more slowly but not less surely. The importance of the struggle already referred to, as revealed to us in the charters, cannot be over- estimated. In their origin, the terms hereditary and family, as applied to land, were synonymous. Conquest and centralization promoted in certain cases a great increase of hereditary lands, and the effort of the pure Saxon element was to maintain in its entirety the absolute identity of inheritors and family. The examples already cited are witness to this effort. The most striking evidence of the working of this principle is in THE AITGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 81 Alfred's will, the period of the Saxon revival. Alfred says : " And I will that the men to whom I have bequeathed my boc-land grant it not out of my kin after their life ; "^ then follow elaborate provisions as to the precise course of its descent. All these provisions in regard to the family are about boc-land ; there are lands willed to his sons and others which are not so described ; but no mention is made of the latter while limiting the boc-land to the family. The only conclusion left open is, that it was not requisite to hedge in other estates of inheritance with such precautions. In entire accordance with the principles of his legislation, Alfred wished to convert all his land acquired by book into strictly family land. The principle of individualism eventually triumphed. The last effort to protect the family waa Henry's law cited above ; and during the Norman and An- gevin period the decadence of the family power was probably rapid. While the estate based upon the family flourished and expanded until it absorbed almost all forms of property, the family considered as a legal entity, to which that estate owed its existence, perished ; and a few ancient customs in Kent have alone survived to bear witness to the persistence and tenacity of pure Germanic principles, the last vestiges of what once was a complete system of rights and duties. The hostile element of individualism worked on the family with both interior and exterior forces. With the former it destroyed, with the latter it created and strengthened. A double process of development and transformation was there- fore constantly in progress. The extension of the family principle in the direction of boc-land has been already de- scribed. Its expansion in another direction is so closely con- nected with the next branch of our subject that they are most conveniently treated together. The growth of the one was the extinction of the other. "Family" was not a perfectly satisfactory name for the first class, but the description of the second class, resting on customary law, as "common" land is open to no such objec- tion. Better than any- thing else perhaps, this name illus- 1 Cod. Dip. CCCXIV. 6 82 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. trates the advantage of clinging to general principles, and adopting comprehensive classifications in all questions of Anglo-Saxon law. The effort of most writers on the subject has been to support some one special form of organization as the typical Anglo-Saxon community, — the unit of a compli- cated system. The authority of Kemble is given for the mark, which is, in a measure, supported by Dr. Konrad Maurer. Dr. Gneist, followed by Professor Stubbs,^ rejects the mark as the basis of the English polity, while the latter adopts the township as the constitutional unit. It is not within the province of this Essay to discuss the title of the township to the place of constitutional unit, but the authori- ties certainly do not justify its acceptance in preference to the mark or any other community as the unit of the land system. The mark, the township, the vicus, in certain cases the vill, the hundred, the thorpe or dorf, were all what are now termed village communities. Throughout all these organiza- tions runs the one abiding principle of community of land ; in all of them existed, primarily at least, the kinds of land mentioned by Sir Henry Maine, — house, arable, and wild land ; and in all cases the land was held by the community in a corporate capacity. The community in its purest form had the title vested in itself ; but many communities unques- tionably grew up on the folc-land, the title being then vested in the state ; on the crown lands, the title being in the crown ; and on the private lands of the king or other large proprietor, the title being in the king or in such proprietor. In the last case, the commoners were presumably tenants of the land- owner. This was one efficient cause in hastening the downfall of the independent community. The organization of the dependent communities was nevertheless, in all their complicated internal relations, the same as that of the old independent community. For the present, it is sufficient to take only the latter for consideration. Before proceeding with this investigation, it is a necessary preliminary step to distinguish the lands of the community from the folc-land. The analogy between them is obvious and misleading. An 1 Const. Hist. I. p. 83, note. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 83 example from modern times best shows the difference. Here in America exist, side by side, the lands of the United States, the lands of the States, and the lands of the municipalities and townships. The land of the State, the municipality, and the township, are private, as compared with the land of the United States. As the land of the State is to that of the United States, as the land of a corporation or township is to that of the single State, so was the land of the Anglo-Saxon community to the folc-land. Another characteristic which makes plain the distinction between the common and the folc- land is the different method of treatment employed in the two cases. The lands of the folc, or people, were treated as reve- nue-bearing lands, as the national fund to which no individual had an inalienable right of separate enjoyment. The lands of the community were enjoyed by all in the same way, bore no revenue except the rights of user, and every commoner had an inalienable right to the enjoyment of a definite amount in severalty for a given time. The existence of so-called village communities in England has been proved by the researches of Maine, Nasse, Kemble, Maurer, and others, and is now accepted by all leading authori- ties. Their organization and internal construction and relations have all been a subject of the most thorough investigation, and any further discussion on this point would be superfluous. The way in which the communal lands were absorbed by families and individuals has been traced in detail in Dr. G. L. von Maurer's admirable " Einleitung." That work treats almost exclusively of Continental development, but it cannot be doubted that the process was nearly identical in England. When Tacitus wrote, the house-land was already, in great measure, private property; the arable next became so, and last, the waste. In strict accordance with this order, the ordinary example of the communal system which has survived is in waste or wild lands. A few cases, comparatively speak- ing, have also remained to us of the community of the arable land. It is perfectly clear that the hereditary right to an allotment for a term of years was easily converted into an hereditary right to a certain parcel of land. The difficult 84 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. point is to explain the formation of large estates, the most potent destroyers of the Germanic communal system.^ This was chiefly brought about bj"- the right of redemption ^ from the waste. There is no time within the historic period at which difference in rank and wealth did not exist to some degree. The rich member of the community, the owner of many slaves, in the exercise of his rights, redeemed land from the waste much faster than his poorer fellow-commoners. Conquest, too, was an important factor in the problem ; for the leaders, the kings, and the crown obtained much larger estates in the conquered territory than the average freeman. Books, introduced by the church, and occasional sales, all contributed to sweU the current. The large estates, once started, grew rapidly. Their development was the development of the estates of individuals, of family estates ; and it was owing to the growth of the large estates, by additions from conquest, sale, &c., consisting sometimes wholly, sometimes in part, of lands not communal, and free from communal burdens, which raised one free man above another, and thus developed the lord of the middle ages and destroyed the old Germanic community, based on the system of small freeholds and equality before the law. Here, therefore, the growth of the old family estate, now the estate of the individual, and the destruction of the communal system by the large land owners become coextensive. Men found themselves the possessors of estates which they were unable to cultivate by slave labor. Sometimes these estates consisted of outlying lands ^ in the same community, and very often must have been lands scattered among many communi- ties. In either case the utland of the proprietor needed cul- tivators. As estates grew, population increased, and the ancient communal system afforded no relief to the poor free- man, whose inherited share of a share no longer sufficing for ' See on this V. Maurer, Einleitung, pp. 203-214. Roth, Beneficialwesen, pp. 103-105. 2 V. Maurer, Einleitung, pp. 158-186. 8 The lands cultivated by the lords' slaves, and the outlying lands, are re- spectively the lands known as inland and utland. They are referred to fre- quently in the charters. See Cod. Dip., E. G., DCGCXXI. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 85 his needs, naturally turned to the great proprietor to obtain the land which neither the community nor the family could give him. The large land-owner was thus enabled to work all his land with profit. Lauds were rented to freemen at the close of the seventh century, as appears by the laws of Ine.^ " If a man agree for a virgate of land or more, at a fixed rent, and shall plough it, if the lord wish to yield him the land for rent and service, it is not necessary for him to take it if he will give him no house, nor shall he lose the land." The system of leasing land for fixed rent and' services had, in Ine's time, become sufficiently general to demand special legislation. The personal relation between princeps and comites was fundamental in military affairs. With the intro- duction of services in lieu of rent, the step was a short one to extend this principle of personal relatiop to tenures of land. In fact, in the same code, it appears that a freeman was liable to a fine for working on Sunday without his lord's permis- sion,^ and that if a man left his lord without permission and went into another county he should pay a fine.^ The re- sponsibility of the lord, instead of the personal responsibility of the freeman, is apparent in the law against Sabbath break- ing. In Alfred's time the powers of the lord had made such progress that legislation had become necessary to preserve to every freeman the right to seek a new lord.* In ^thel- stan's time still further progress had been made. Alfred's law as to the right to seek a new lord is reiterated,^ and it is made incumbent on the family to provide lordless members of the kin with a lord.^ This course of legislation represents fairly the decay of the communal and free spirit, and the establishment of the principle that every man must have a lord. The substitution of the lord for the community in judicial affairs is more appropriately treated in another por- tion of this volume, but a similar substitution in the land system preceded it. It is only necessary here to discuss tw3 points, — the nature of the estates thus held of a lord by 1 Ine, c. 67. 2 Ine, c. 3, § 2. ■> Ine, c. 39. * Alfred, c. 37. » ^thelstan. III. 4 ; and IV. 5. ^ ^thelstan, II. 2. 86 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. freemen, and the manner of substitution of the lord for the community in the proprietorship of the common land. The estates of utland held by freemen may be most con- cisely and exactly described as unbooked laens. That is, they were estates of which the title was vested in the lord, while the actual possession was conferred on the tenant by some oral form of investiture. These estates were probably held at first, as Ine's law suggests, at a fixed rent in money or kind ; but in a semi-barbarous community rents could be. much more easily paid and collected in the form of services than in any other way, and the latter method no doubt pre- vailed. In another law of Ine's, the rent to be demanded from a certain amount of land is fixed.^ In the " Rectitudines Singularum Personarum," ^ it is said that the services of the gehur were heavy, light, and moderate in different places, and the elaborate laws of William in this direction show that the needs sought to be remedied by such legislation were as crying as ever.^ The general similarity of the services required, and the innumerable local variations, may be gathered from an ex- amination of the services of the tenants of Hysseburn twice given in the charters,* as well as from the "Rectitudines"* already cited. The inference to be drawn is, that rent in the form of services was practically arbitrary, and dependent solely on the will of the lessor. The only protection possible at so early a stage of civilization would be that afforded by custom. The phrase " unbooked " is of importance. It has been usual to mix all laens together, as if no distinction existed among them. The ordinary laen from lord to man has just been described as dependent on the will of the lord, and pro- tected only by custom ; while a laen by book, on the other hand, was held in exact accordance with the terms of the instrument, and protected by the sanctity of the charter. " Then is three hides of the land which Oswald, arch- bishop, booketh to Wynsige, his monk, so as Wulfstan, his 1 Ine, c. 70> § 1. ^ Eect. S. P., c. 4. 3 Will. I. c. 29, and III. 5. * Cod. Dip., MLXXVII., DCCCCLXXVU. » Schmid, Gesetze, p. 371, ff. THE AilGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 87 father liad it with the witness of the chapter at Worcester." ^ Again : " Then is three hides of the land which Oswald, archbishop, booketh to Eadric, his thane, both nearer tun and farther, as he before had it for laen-land." '^ In another grant of Oswald's to his client JElfsige : " Also we write to him the croft within the hedge, which is by the East of Wulfsige's croft, that he may have it as freely for boc-land, as he before had it for laen-land." ^ These extracts prove the existence of unbooked laens, and of an important distinction between them and booked laens. The object of converting laen-land, pure and simple, into booked laen-land, was evidently the fixity of tenure caused by the reduction of the terms to writing. This is clear from the fact that the laens were taken on the same terms as under the purely customary tenure ; and a book was simply futile if it did not alter the old relation in some waj'. The terms of the lease were not altered ; therefore the only object of the book was to make the maintenance of the for- mer terms more secure. In the laws already cited, the re- sponsibility of the lord for the man, the reservation of the right of changing from one lord to another, and finally the absolute necessity of having some lord, all indicate the im- mense control exercised by the lords over their tenants, the quondam freemen who held their laens. The same view is borne out by passages in the charters. Towards the end of the ninth century (A.D. 880), Duke ^thelred* grants cer- tain lands to the church, and, in augmentation of the gift, six men and their families ; " ut sine contradictione alicujus no- bilis vel ignobilis, semper ad terram aecclesiae supradictae pertineant." This is the first instance, in the charters, of the grant of men and their families, and of the principle that men could be " adscripti glebae." It does not appear here to what class the homines granted belonged ; nor is this of consequence. There is nothing to show that they were slaves ; indeed, it may be fairly concluded they were not, for when slaves were intended, it was usual to say so. It is therefore evident that, in A.D. 880, freemen of some . class were granted by book, and were made " adscripti 1 Cod. Dip. DCXVI. 2 Cod. Dip. DCXVII. 8 Cod. Dip. DCLXXIX. * Cod. Dip. CCCXI. 88 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. glebae " at the will of the grantor. About the same period, the expression fasallus''- or vasallus appears in the charters, — a hint of the changing relations in the commu- nity. In a grant of A.D. 889, men are given with the land, and again in A.D. 902.^ There is also a grant* in A.D. 975 — marked a forgery by Mr. Kemble — which speaks of lands granted " cum octodecim servis, et sexdecim villanis et decem bordis." In another grant of A.D. 987, also marked a forgerj% the right to seek a secular patron is specially given by the grantor.* In still another forgery,® of a much later date (A.D. 1051), there is a grant of lands to Croyland, with the reeve, the smith, the carpenter, the fisherman, and a variety of others, presumably farmers. In a small way, this is a good example of the substitution of the lord's tenants for the old Germanic freeman, with his hereditary status in the community. In late charters, written in Saxon, the expression, " mid mete and mannum," is of constant recur- rence, showing the ultimate establishment of the " adscript! glebae " principle. The history of the large estate, the his- tory of the lord and tenant principle, is the history of the decline and degradation of the body of freemen which had primarily formed the state. In relation to land, the stages of the downward course may be briefly indicated as the period when one freeman rented an estate to another ; when one freeman assumed a legal responsibility, and a correspond- ing control over other freemen ; and when one freeman bought and sold other freemen with his land, and bound them to it. These were the powers gradually assumed by the great land-owners ; and the unbooked laen dependent on their will gradually became the estate of the once free tenant. This brings us to the second point, the substitution of 1 Cod. Dip. MLXXX., CCCCLXII., DXXXIV. 2 Cod. Dip. CCOXV. and MLXXIX. 8 Cod. Dip. DLXXXVII. 4 Cod. Dip. DCLVI. s Cod. Dip. DCCXCV. It is usual to find the occurrence of phrases and customs in forged charters a few years anterior to the time when they came into actual existence. As the earliest charter cited on this point is clearly genuine, the subsequent forgeries probably do not unfairly represent a veritable legal custom. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 89 the lord for tlie community. In a general way, it may be said that this substitution was due solely to the rise of large estates, which owed their existence to unequal powers of re- demption, to conquest, sales, grants, and possibly, in the tenth and eleventh centuries, to commendation with land. In a com- munity such as has been already mentioned, where the title was vested in the crown, the state, the king, or some other individual, and not in the community itself, the process of substitution was never necessary. The title was always in the crown or lord, as the case might be ; and the community, which had grown up on the land, had merely acquired cer- tain prescriptive rights, exactly similar to the communal rights in independent communities. The title was in the lord ; the rights ran with the estates held by his tenants, or, as in later times, his serfs. The same legal situation was also brought about in so great a majority of the cases of indepen- dent communities that it may be called universal. In order to understand how this was done, it is necessary first to get an idea of a freeman's estate at as early a period as may be. In A.D. 819,^ there is a grant to Croyland, by one Fregisl, a soldier. The charter is marked by Mr. Kemble as a forg- ery, but the description of the estate granted is repeated in the same words in three or four Croyland charters ; and, whether this is a forgery or not, an estate probably existed corresponding to the description, which is as follows : "... totum manerium meum et villam de Langtoft, et in campis ejusdem villae sex carucatas terrae arabilis habentes in longitudine XV. quarentenas, et IX. quarentenas in lati- tudine, et centum acras prati, et sylvam et mariscum duarum leucarum in longitudine, et aecclesiam ejusdem villae, et XL. acras prati de eodem feodo in campo de Deping." Another example is of a similar gift to Croyland. jElfgar grants,^ in A.D. 825, " manerium meum de Baston cum quatuor caru- catis terrae arabilis . . . ; et XLV. acras prati ; et mariscum . . . Et aecclesiam vUlse, et unum molendinum, et dimidium alterius molendini, et totam piscariam meam in aqua a prae- dicto molendino versus occidentem." The first of these grants appears to be the case of a dependent community 1 Cod. Dip. CCXm. 3 Cod. Dip. CCXXI. 90 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. the second, of lands lying in an independent community. The central and most important part is the croft or toft — the frum-stdl of Ina's law — lying within the hedge, as described in Oswald's grant to Wynsig, quoted above. ^ Then comes the arable land, the meadow for pasture, the marsh and woodland, the fishing and the hunting. A large estate was, in the main, simply the unlimited extension of such estates as these. The principal proprietor, having obtained all the arable and house land in the various ways already pointed out, had thereby secured the rights belonging to all this land in the wild and waste. In early times, these were rights allotted, as has been said, in proportion to the amount of arable, and they obtained generally on all the common, lands. By the descriptions above cited, it will be seen that a revolution, similar to that which had taken place in the rights to arable lands, had likewise taken place in the rights over the waste and wild lands. Instead of rights pertaining generally to all the land held in common, the owners of arable had acquired certain parcels of the wild lands, definite in amount, and distinguished from the mass of communal property. The lord who had acquired all or most of the arable had likewise acquired all or most of the wild and waste land. The title in such land having passed from the community, and the community having changed from freemen to tenants, nothing remained to the holders of the lord's utland — that is, of the tenant estates — but the privi- lege of exercising, on the land of the lord, the rights running with their land, and which they had formerly exercised over their own communal property. In a dependent community, the title had always been in the lord, and the rights were purely prescriptive. In an independent community, on the other hand, the title to the wild and waste lands had shifted from the community to the lord ; and nothing was left to the commoner but the exercise of certain rights, to all intents and purposes, of no more force or of no better title than the prescrip- tive rights of the dependent communities. In this way were the lands of the manor substituted for those of the community. In this way, the waste and common of the community became 1 Vide supra, p. 87. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 91 the lord's waste, and gave birth to the long controversy of enclosure on the one hand, and the maintenance of the full rights on the other. This was the history of common land in the great majoritj'- of cases. Instances were doubtless not wanting in which the lord or chief proprietor never obtained control of the arable lands. To cases of this last description the examples of community in arable land, which have sur- vived to the present day, may be attributed. Still oftener, to judge by the modern examples, the wild and waste lands never lost their communal character, in the broadest sense of the term ; and the title remained vested in the community. The last class of lands not held by books — the folc-land — has now been reached. The researches of Allen and Kemble first determined the true meaning of the expression " folc-land." The obvious meaning of the word was also the right one, — the " people's land," which belonged to the people in their collective capacity, forming an organized whole known as the State. This, the only correct view, has been best expressed by the first of German writers on these subjects. In the " Ver- fassungsgeschichte," ^ Dr. Sohm says: "The folc-land rests on the principle in the constitution that rajj-al and public are not the same thing ; that the king, not alone, but only at the head of the whole body of the people, represents the public power ; that, therefore, the public objects are the objects of all, and the public property the property of all." What was the origin of this public property ? Mr. Freeman ^ concludes from a passage in Csesar ^ that folc-land even then existed. The passage referred to can hardly be strained to support this meaning ; but it will bear the interpretation that all lands at that time were common lands, — the lands of various com- munities, — and dealt with as such. This distinction is not 1 Vol. I. p. 34. Dr. Sohm omits an interesting case, which shows the powers of the Witan In all grants of folc-land by the king. Cod. Dip. CCXL. Lands were claimed as unjustly booked, " Quia cum recta libertate facta non esset, quia in fligatu ejus (Baldredi regis) conscripta et concessa fuisset." * Norman Conquest, I. p. 67, note 4. Cf. also Von Maurer, Einleitung p. 84, ff. 8 Csesar, De Bello Gallico, VI. 22. 92 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. a merely verbal one. The conception of a great territory like the folc-land, forming a species of national fund, and representing the national property, could hardly at that early time, as it did later, have existed as a distinct conception. Something V7as needed to give to the people, collectively, a sense of ownership in the large tracts of land then unoccupied. The proximate causes of this sense of ownership which led to the conception known as folc-land were migration and con- quest. England was won by hard fighting; and, after every man and every community had obtained all they desired, much still remained. This was as truly the land of the people, and as much the fruit of their labor, as the shares they had already received. On the continent, the unoccupied lands fell to the crown. ^ In England, the king had a large share of the con- quered territory as an individual, and still more annexed to the crown ; but the larger portion of the conquests remained unshared and national property. The primary use of folc- land, according to Bede's celebrated epistle to Ecgberht,^ was to reward soldiers. This was obviously a national use and benefit. With the growth of population, more and more folc- land was probably taken, not only by individuals, but by en- tire communities ; and thus was the national property occupied by people who had no title to the land, and with no resulting benefit to the State. The obvious way to utilize the land thus occupied was by drawing rent, which, in this case, was but another name for taxation. Taxation, it has been already said, outside of the trinoda necessitas consisted in services to the king, and to this all the folc-land was liable. Folc-land thus became the ager veotigalis of England.^ The title was in the State, the usufruct, on certain conditions, in the occu- pier, and the only power capable of dealing with this land was the people in their collective capacity, or through their representatives. A well-established function of the king or other leader was to distribute the conquered lands; and in • Roth, Beneficialwesen, p. 203, ff. ; V. Maurer, Einleitung, p. 84, ff. 2 Bedae, Opera Minora ; Ad Ecgberhtum Antiatitem, §§ 11, 12. 8 K. Maurer, Kritische Ueberschau, p. 102. That services were the especial characteristics of folc-land, see Cod. Dip. CCLXXXI. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 93 tWs capacity, therefore, with the witness and consent of the Witan, in theory certainly the representatives of the people, he dealt with the folc-land. This was equally true in freeing lands from services, and in restoring them. In both cases, the consent of the Witan was requisite.^ Folc-land taken as a whole is easy to understand ; it is in discussing the nature of estates of folc-land that the difficulties begin. The authorities which throw any light on this point are unusually few, and the information they contain is scanty. By the will of Duke Alfred,^ it is determined that estates of folc-land existed ; that they were held by private individuals, and were not heritable nor the subject of devise. The im- portant passage from which these facts are derived runs as foUows : " and I grant to Aethelweard, my son, iii hides of boc-land . . . and if the king will give him the folc-land in addition to the boc-land, let him have and enjoy it. If not, then let her [his wife or daughter] give him whichever she pleases, either the land at Horsalege or Langafield." Not only the four points already mentioned are here at once apparent, but it is evident that neither the provision in the wUl nor the fact that the legatee was the testator's son was of any legal value in giving a title to the folc-land. By a fun- damental principle of law the folc-land reverted to the state, while boc-land followed the provisions of the book. This conclusion suggests an interesting comparison between the English estates of folc-land and boc-land on the one side, and the Frankish land-grants of the same period on the other. The Merovingian gifts of crown lands were private and heri- table estates ; when once created, confirmation was not neces- sary to prolong their existence, and was sought merely as evidence of the rightfulness of that existence.^ The Carolin- gian benefice, the successor of the Merovingian gift, was on the other hand an estate which lapsed on the death of either the grantor or the grantee, and confirmation was sought 1 Cod. Dip. CCLXXXI ; Sohm, Verfassungsgeschiehte, Vol. I. p. 34. 2 Cod. Dip. CCCXVII. 3 Rotli, Beneficialwesen, pp. 210-216. Also, in general, Roth, Feudalitat und Unterthanverband ; and contra, Waitz, Ueber die Anf Snge der Vassalitat ; and Verfassungsgescliichte, Vols. II. and III. 94 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. because a new grant was necessary in order to create a new title in the holder or his heirs.^ The land conveyed by the Merovingian gift was conveyed in full and free property to the grantee. The Carolingian benefice remained the property of the grantor. In English law the boc-land is essentially the same estate as the Merovingian, while the English estate of folc-land, as shown in Duke Alfred's will, would seem to be the analogue of the contemporary Carolingian benefice. There is, however, hardly evidence enough to establish a demonstra- tion of this theory, and the estate of folc-land must therefore remain a problem more or less undecided, but apparently fur- nishing another illustration of the Anglo-Saxon tendency to follow the rapid development of Frankish law only with tardy and unwilling steps. The estate of folc-land never became a favorite estate of Anglo-Saxon law. Estates of folc-land, moreover, were not ill-defined masses of land scattered here and there in the national territory ; on the contrary, they were as carefully bounded as any other es- tates, and appear to have existed in the midst of other estates. In other words, the character of folc-land and its legal posi- tion remained for long periods unchanged. To demonstrate this, it is suificient to examine those grants in which folc-land is expressly involved. In ^thelwulf 's^ celebrated grant to himself, the twenty manentes of folc-land there booked are as carefully bounded and described as any species of private es- tate could possibly be. Again, in the exchange ^ of folc-land for boc-land, made by ^thelbert of Kent, the boundaries are exactly given. The essential feature of the estate of folc-land was the tax- ation of which it was the origin, and with which it was in- separably connected. It is not necessary to recapitulate here the argument already used to prove this ; it is sufficient simply to mention it as, above all, the characteristic of folc- land. But one other form of folc-land remains to be con- sidered. This is the laen, to which reference has already been 1 Roth, Beneficialwesen, p. 416. ^ Cod. Dip. CCLX. 3 Cod. Dip. CCLXXXI. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 95 made.i Professor Stubbs says : " These estates of folc-land may have been for a life or lives, or subject to testamentary disposition, according to the terms of the grant." ^ Another passage ^ leads one to suppose that Professor Stubbs considers folc-land to have been converted into book-land only when the estate created was an alodial and heritable estate for ever. This opinion of the most eminent English authority has been selected as containing, in the most concrete form, the opinions in vogue. In this, as in many other cases, confusion has arisen from a misconception and misuse of the term laen. The Anglo-Saxon laen was not a leasehold estate in any sense of the word. The one distinguishing feature of a lease- hold is that it must be for a term of years, — for a definite and limited period of time. The time certain is of the very essence of any estate less than a freehold. There is but one, and that a very late, example in all the Anglo-Saxon authori- ties of any leasehold properly so called. The inference is unavoidable that the Anglo-Saxons conceived of no estate less than an estate for life. Such an estate, it must not be forgotten, might be of the most precarious kind as an un- booked laen, or an estate of folc-land, so that the tenant, in exact language, held only on sufferance ; yet, notwithstanding this, if a man had possession, it was prima facie a possession for life. In some cases the tenant was liable to ejectment at any moment, in others he was protected by the strength of a book; but, in the Anglo-Saxon theory, the estate was for life. The Anglo-Saxon laen meant simply an estate where the title and the possession were not vested in the same person ; that is, it was a loan of land for a greater or less period, — rent sometimes being received, and as often not. Such being the definition of laens there are two classes of them, — those which are held by book and those which are not. To the latter class belong the unbooked laens of a lord's utland, already discussed, and all estates of folc-land. In discussing them, it has seemed better to treat those estates held directly of the State as estates of folc-land, and portions of such 1 Vide supra, pp. 86, 87. ^ Constit. Hist I. p 77. s Constit. Hist. I. p. 130. 96 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LA"W. estates underlet by the tenants of the State as laens. A position has now been reached by this explanation in which an issue can be fairly made up with Professor Stubbs. He speaks of an estate of folc-land held " according to the terms of the grant." This is a self-contradiction : if the estate were one of folc-land, then there could be no grant ; and, if there were a grant in writing, then the estate was, ipso facto, book-land and not folc-land. In the scattered instances where folc-land is expressly mentioned, it is always in an- tithesis to book-land. It occurs but once in the laws, but there in opposition to book-land.^ Duke Alfred, in his will, marks the opposition between estates of hoc-land and of folc-land by his lack of power to devise the latter.^ The instances of conversion^ are all familiar, and aU contain the same marked opposition between the two classes of land.* Book- land, in the ordinary acceptation of the term, unquestionably meant " terra haereditaria," or " terra testamentalis ; " but no less did it mean a laen created by book. Indeed, where does Professor Stubbs intend to draw the line ? An estate for two lives was, in most cases, " terra testamentalis," and always an estate of inheritance in Anglo-Saxon law. Is it therefore to be said that an estate for one life was an estate of folc-land, and an estate for two lives an estate of book-land, both being created in the same way, — very possibly by the same instrument.^ An estate created by book, whether a fee- simple or a laen for one life, was book-land, and remained so as long as it was held by virtue and under the terms of the grant. This theory runs directly counter to Mr. Kemble's views,^ a comparatively unimportant matter ; for, great as were Mr. Kemble's services to Anglo-Saxon law, — greater than those rendered by any other Englishman, — great also as was his knowledge, the results in the shape of scientific theory were meagre to the last degree. Every thing was misty and confused. It is a much more serious matter to oppose such a writer as Dr. Konrad Maurer ; but here again 1 Edw. I. 2. 2 Cod. Dip. CCCXVn. 8 Cod. Dip. CCLXXXI. * Schmid supports this distinction, Gesetze, p. 575, ff. « Cf. Cod. Dip. CLXXXI. « Saxons, Vol. I. chap. xi. and xii. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 97 the opposition is to confusion of ideas ^ rather than to any definite theory. The distinction contended for goes to the root of the whole system. By applying modern legal prin- ciples in the discrimination of the various Anglo-Saxon es- tates, it has been attempted to prove that under all the apparent confusion a really logical system existed, elastic enough to embrace all the varied and apparently contra- dictory forms of Anglo-Saxon estates. The estates of folc-land were obtained in the beginning by general and indiscriminate appropriation.^ This was nat- urally a method employed chiefly by the more powerful members of the community. As Dr. Schmid has pointed out,^ in all the cases where folc-land is expressly men- tioned, it is owned by large proprietors, — the crown, the church, the king, or some duke or sheriff. Nevertheless, as time went on, small proprietors undoubtedly took estates of folc-land, and the numberless instances in the charters of grants differing from each other in no important par- ticular, represent, as Mr. Kemble rightly concludes,* the steady process of conversion of folc-land into boc-land. Dr. Schmid differs from this view,^ affirming that the most probable course was conversion from laen land to boc-land, — another instance of the confusion arising from a non-appre- ciation of the true nature of a laen. Dr. Schmid and Mr. Kemble in reality agree perfectly on this point. All estates of folc-land were unbooked laens, and no book laens were folc-land. If the phrase "unbooked" be added to Dr. Schmid's "laens," a general term results perfectly synony- mous with Mr. Kemble's " folc-land," even if not so exact. These estates of folc-land were sublet, as appears by the expression in ^thelbert's charter: " cyninges folc-land quod abet wighelm and wulflaf."^ Wighelm and Wulflaf were therefore lessees of the king ; and estates of this description > See Kritische Ueberschau, Vol. I. pp. 102-127. 2 Beda, Op. Min. ; Ad Ecgberhtum Antistitem, § 11, ff. Ibid., Hist. AeccL pp. 305-316. 8 Gesetze, pp. 575-578 < Saxons, I. pp. 306, 307. s Gesetze, p. 577. « Cod. Dip. CCLXXXL 7 98 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. were laens of folc-land in the narrower sense, as opposed to the general and comprehensive expression of estates of folc- land. To recapitulate ; the folc-land, as a unit, was the national fund, — the common stock administered by the king and Witan conjointly as representatives of the whole State. The folc-land, as divided and held by individuals, was in its nature an unbooked laen ; not heritable ; not devisable ; alienable, in that the holder could grant all the right and title possessed by him; capable of under-letting; and, finally, the special and primary tax-paying estate of the community.^ It only remains to discuss, as briefly as possible, the rights of the king and people over the folc-land. To enter upon a detailed proof to demonstrate that to the king pertained certain general rights in the wild land all over the kingdom is not necessary. The existence of such rights on the Con- tinent has been abundantly proved by G. L. von Maurer, Roth, Waitz, Sohm, and others ; and Dr. Schmid,^ Dr. Konrad Maurer,^ and Professor Stubbs have affirmed the same fact as equally true in England. Instances occur in the charters of grants of these rights which entirely bear out this theory.* One of the suits ^ in the Appendix concerns these rights, which the king had granted to a bishop. The bishop brought suit to restrain the ealderman from asserting certain public rights of pasture which conflicted with the bishop's grant. To the people therefore belonged also certain general rights on the wild or waste folc-lands, as is apparent by this suit. These rights of wood, pasture, water, &c., were in strict analogy with the communal rights, as were the royal rights with those of the king or lords on the Continent. They have endured in England until a late period.^ 1 This last statement is at Tariance with the views of Dr. Schmid (Gesetze, p. 578). The able argument of Dr. Konrad Maurer on this point, already re- ferred to in support of Mr. Kemble, sustains the theory here advanced. Dr. Sohm's adherence to the same doctrine is sufBcient to make the settlement final. 2 Schmid, Gesetze, pp. 576-578. » Kritisohe Ueberschau, pp. 102-107 * Cod. Dip. LXXXVI., CCCVI., DCCXXVII. « Cod. Dip. CCXIX. See Appendix, No. 11. s Digby, Hist, of the Law of Real Property, p. 9. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 99 Such being the characteristics of folc-land, as far as can be known, its history and ultimate fate may be readily and briefly sketched. Bede's complaint in the early part of the eighth century is, that the folc-land had even then been so far absorbed by religious corporations and others, that noth- ing was left with which to reward the defenders of the country. At this comparatively early period the church was the great enemy of the national property, but laymen were not slow to follow the example of the priests. A large pro- portion of the first grants are made " jure aecclesiastico," or " ad jus aecclesiasticum." A grant ^ of lands in A.D. 736 is made "ad construendum coenubium," and in the indorsement it appears that this was a grant " ad jus aecclesiasticum ; " so that estates of boc-land "jure aecclesiastico " were estates conditioned to found a religious establishment or perform some similar religious duty. It is the neglect of this condi- tion which especially calls forth the invective of Bede. Ap- parently, about the same time, an effort was made to enforce this condition by retaking the estate on non-fulfilment ; ^ and in one of the cases given in the Appendix,^ a grant of the king, without the authority of the Witan, is annulled, with the same general object of protecting the folc-land. That grants of folc-land made in the regular way to either the church or the courtiers diminished in number or extent, how- ever, cannot be gathered from the charters ; on the contrary, such grants become more and more numerous with each suc- ceeding reign. As the royal power grew, and the government became more centralized, the natural tendency was to throw the control of the folc-land more and more into the hands of the king. The establishment of the Danish rule under Cnut exhibits, in a few instances, a very significant change in the form of the grants for which the centralization under the Wessex kings had undoubtedly prepared the way. This change is in the mode of acknowledging the advice and consent of the Witan, and began apparently by directing grants of folc-land simply by a writ in the ordinary form addressed to the shire* 1 Cod. Dip. LXXX. 2 Cod. Dip. XLVL, DCXCIX. » See Appendix, No. 13, or Cod. Dip. MXIX., CCXLV. 100 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. moot.i There are several instances of these grants by simple writ, and without the concurrence of the shiremoot, but there is only one genuine case of a writ directed to the whole Witan of the Nation.^ The exception in Cnut's reign became the rule under the strong Norman influences of Edward the Confessor's. The course of legislation in regard to fines, confiscation, and escheats, has already been examined. It has been seen that in this respect the power of the Witan was recognized even in the days of the Confessor ; but the conquering power of William broke down this defence against illegal and unjust confisca- tions of property. William, however, always paid at least an outward deference to the native laws and customs ; and, if he found it so easy and safe a matter to disregard the pop- ular rights in a question so vital as that of forfeiture, it may readily be supposed that the principle of the popular or State ownership in such folc-land as still remained offered no re- sistance. In fact, it had practically ceased to be of any force under the Confessor, as appears by the introduction of the system of authorizing and legalizing grants by means of a simple writ. What had happened to the Continental tribes six hundred years before, now happened in England. The still unoccupied land passed from the people to the crown. The monarchical and centralizing forces of the age proved too strong for the old Germanic principles in this as in other cases. The people's land, in William's time, is no longer heard of. The folc-land had become the terra regis. The second of the two principal classes, and one utterly different in its origin from those already described, alone remains to be considered. As the others were the off- spring and the pure growth of popular customs, boc-land is the offspring of the church and the enemy of customs. The estates thus created rested upon written instruments called by the Saxons " books," and it will be necessary to a clear discussion to first examine briefly the book itself. ' Cod. Dip. DCCXXXI., DCCLVII., MCCCXIX., MCCCXXIII., MCCC- XXV. 2 Cod. Dip. DCCLVI., MCCCXXVI. This latter charter is by no means free from suspicion. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAN! Proof of its introduction by church infiu^^c^^^^otfTd be superfluous. Mr. Kemble accepted the fact long since, and it has not been disputed. Indeed, the evidence lies on the surface. The most careless inspection of the charters is suf- ficient to discover the religious forms persisting to the latest times, and to show that the exclusive object of all the early grants was the enrichment or endowment of the church. Nor are the causes far to seek. The church was civilizing and Ro- manizing in an eminent degree, and there was beside a power- ful motive which impelled them to push zealously the arts of civilization in all matters relating to the conveyance of land. Under the old Germanic system, brought by the heathen Angles, Saxons, and Jutes, from their forests, no way had been devised for clerical acquisitions. What with the claims of the family, the community, and of the nation, and the non- existence of wills, there was no room for the church under the existing methods. Books were in their essence a mode of transfer, and their introduction was rendered less difficult than it would otherwise have been, by the fact that transfer was not a new idea among the Germans. The adfathamire of the Salic law is an example of one Teutonic mode of con- veyance ; the de Chrene-cruda, of another ; and the indications in the Anglo-Saxon charters point to a similar procedure. Before the introduction of documents, parties went to the land, accompanied by chosen witnesses, and the transfer was completed by the actual taking possession of the grantee or vendee.^ There was no judicial proceeding, such as came in subsequently with the introduction of documents. The local- ity of the traditio was first lost by gifts to the church ; and the traditio at the altar gradually absorbed even the name of investiture. Scattered provisions in the laws^ in regard to witnesses, and the language of the books ^ in one or two in- stances, prove that in England, as on the Continent, the old procedure by personal investiture in the presence of witnesses 1 In this brief sketch of the ancient mode of conveyance, I have followed chiefly Heusler's able work on the Gewere. See Die Gewere, pp. 7, 9, 10, 11, 13, 16, 20 ; also Solim, V. G., Vol. I. 525, ff. ; Von Bethiuann-Hollweg, CivS Process, 493. 2 E. G.,.iEthelred III., 3. » Cod. Dip. LII. and CLVU. 102 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. once existed ; but the books had so far superseded the old method as a means of transfer that, in historical times, traces of even the later stage of development — the placing the book, a turf, or some other symbol on the altar — occur only in a few early cases.^ The main object of the new system of books was to secure better and more enduring evidence, by the superior nature of which, and by the solemnity and sanc- tity of a written instrument, signed by numerous witnesses, the claims of the community, the nation, and, above all, of the family, were to be most effectually barred. Mr. Kemble divides a book,^ as distinguished from a will, contract, or synodal decree, into six parts, — I. The Invoca- tion ; II. The Proem ; III. The Grant ; IV. The Sanction ; V. The Date ; VI. The Teste. The first, second, and fourth of these divisions are purely religious, and require no detailed examination.^ Five and six are merely formal, useful only in questions of chronology and genuineness, or as proof of the presence of a Witan. The third division is the grant, which contains all the important legal matter of the charter. Be- fore discussing the grant, it will be well to sketch briefly the general history of the book as a documentary whole, and its various changes in the period from ^thelbert to Edward the Confessor. Down to the time of the Wessex supremacy, the books present great diversity both in the manner and kind of grant ; and the religious portions of the books are short and simple. From the time of Alfred, the character of the books changes very noticeably, great sameness taking the place of the former variety. One charter in arrange- ment and language so closely resembles another that, in the case of Bishop Oswald's grants, and even of all Edmund's, it seems probable, as Mr. Kemble suggests, that blank forms were used, to be filled up simply with the name of the grantee. The religious portions of the grant increase im- mensely both in obscurity and verbiage, until, during Dun- 1 Cod. Dip. XII., XXXVII., CIV., CXIV., CLXXVII., MXIX. The latest instance of placing a turf on the altar is in a forged charter, A.D. 799. 2 Cod. Dip., Introduction, p. ix. 3 One or two cases of a temporal sanction occur, but only in forged charters, and for the benefit of the church. THE AXGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 103 Stan's period, they become little more than magnificent non- sense, written in very bad Latin. The facts of interest in legal history to be drawn from the books at this time are very few. With the advent of Cnut, and in the subsequent reigns, the charters again become simple ; and there is a very healthy di- minution of bad paraphrases and doubtful extracts from the Vulgate. The private grants increase in number ; and, were it not for the general air of Norman influence and monkish fraud which surrounds every thing connected with Edward the Confessor, the charters of his reign would be almost as in- teresting as the earliest ones. It is very striking that, in all these centuries, there were no fundamental legal changes in the books, and scarcely any new clauses. It was sometimes deemed necessary to insert a clause ^ barring other charters, and declaring such other charters null and void ; and this was almost the only innovation on the earliest form. The grant usually begins by naming, either in the first or third person, the grantor and grantee. Any free man or free woman ^ could be either a grantor or a grantee,^ and was enti- tled to appear in either capacity ; so, too, was any religious corporation, and any dignitary, noble or royal, spiritual or temporal. Grants also could be made by which land was conveyed between members of the same family.* As every one who was free was capable of making a book, so was the law equally liberal in the subjects of grant. Not only lands, and all the rights, privileges, or immunities connected with them, were made, individually and collectively, the subject of written grant, but also every description of personal property, and revenues arising from ships ^ and the like, were conveyed in this way. There was always a consideration expressed, in most cases of a purely religious kind : " pro remedio animae meae," "pro redemptione criminum meorum," and similar 1 Cod. Dip., E. G., MCCXVII. 2 For the status of women as exliibited in tlie books, vide infra, p. 113 ff. 3 There is no evidence to contradict this general statement. I have found no case of a grant to a slave. " Cliens," which sometimes occurs, appears tt be used in the same sense as " minister." 4 Cod. Dip., E. G., CCXXIX. 5 Cod. Dip. LXXVIII., MCCXXXIX. 104 THE AJSTGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. phrases, are the most usual forms. In some cases, the con- sideration was, in modern language, a purely valuable consid- eration ; and, except for the formal religious invocation and proem, books of this sort differ in no essential respect from a modern conveyance. In many cases, the valuable considera- tion is united with a religious one ; but this does not practi- cally change the legal significance of the instrument. The estate conveyed is always carefully expressed ; and the nu- merous limitations, of which examples are found, served to create a great variety of estates, which correspond very nearly with some of those familiar to the law to-day. The estate most commonly conveyed was the largest possible, and corresponds almost exactly to our estate in fee-simple : " quam is semper possideat et post se cui voluerit heredum relinquat " ^ is one of the simplest forms. A more elaborate example is as follows : " Liberam per omnia habeat potesta- tem ad habendum, possidendum, perfruendumque seu ven- dendum aut commutandum, vel cuicumque ei herede placuerit derelinqueudum perpetualiter habeat potestatem." ^ One form of limitation created estates in special tail. The grant ^ was to a man and wife, " et si contigerit ut vobis filius aut filia nati fuerint," then to the children. Estates in tail male were not uncommon : — Cod. Dip. CXLVII., A.D. 784. " Rus etiam hoc modo donatum est ut suum masculum possideat et non femininum." Cod. Dip. CLXIX., A.D. 781-798. "Donabo meam propriam haereditatem ; tali conditione adfirmo quod mei haeredes in mea genea- logia in aecclesiastico gradu de virili sexu percipiant." A much commoner estate than any yet mentioned, except the largest, was an estate for life or lives. The collection of charters abound in cases of this sort. These grants are usually for one life or three lives, but instances of grants for two, four, and even five lives are not wanting ; and it was 1 Cod. Dip. CXVII. 2 Cod. Dip. CCXXVII. Numerous examples of this, the largest, and of the other more limited, estates are collected by Mr. Kemble, in his Introduction to the Codex. Selections are given here for the sake merely of convenience and clearness. ^ Cod. Dip. CLIII. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 105 not unusual, at the expiration of the lives as provided in the grant, to obtain a renewal for a certain number more. It has already been stated that, in all the documents and codes of the Anglo-Saxon period, there is but one example of a true leasehold estate : — Cod. Dip. DCCCCXXIV. (after 1058). "Here is it declared about the contract which was wrought between the chapter at Wor- cester and Fulder. That is, that he have the land at Ludinton three years, for which he pays three pounds, and let him enjoy the land for three years, and within three years give the land to the chapter.'' This example is given as more appropriately coming under the description of the various estates conveyed by book. As a factor in the argument on laens, it has already been suffi- ciently noticed. Other kinds of limitation and condition were not uncom- mon. An estate limited to the family has been the subject of discussion. Another hereditary estate was granted " eadem libertate qua illi concessum est;"^ " this is the land booked to Wynsige as his father held it." ^ " This is the land booked to Eadric as his father held it."^ Besides these, there were the numberless instances of lands conditioned to pay rent. In the case of every estate thus far mentioned, except the first and largest, it will be seen that there must have been a remainder, and all the remainders thus left by the estates created are duly provided for. This fact, omitted to avoid confusion in the general argument on laens, is finally destruc- tive of the statement of Professor Stubbs. The provision for remainders, which completes the alienation of the estates, and renders them as entirely alienated from the folc-land, or any other kind of land, as the allodial and hereditary grants which Professor Stubbs considers distinctively book-land, is univer- sal. Many grants are apparently made simply for the purpose of providing for the remainder. Another use of the books was the confirmation of estates where any cloud rested on the title, or where the protection of the king was necessary to the I Cod. Dip. CXLVIII. ' Cod. Dip. DCXYI. 3 Cod. Dip. DCXYH. 106 THE AI>fGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. holder of the estate confirmed. One very striking instance of this latter use is the case of three sisters who inherited certain lands. The lands were confirmed to them by the king and Witan ; one sister withdrew any claim on her part to a share, and the lands were then reconfirmed, and partition ordered by king and Witan.^ One form of confirmation very common during the tenth century, and subsequently, was the restor- ation of charters which had been either lost or destroyed, and it curiously shows the strong respect for customs, that in the new charters it is often simply said that the lands are to be held as they were under the old charter.^ Thus far only grants, or confirmations of grants, have been dealt with ; and, though these form a large majority of the charters, there are also found books which contain marriage settlements, mortgages, and wills. The first of these may be conveniently left to the last division of this Essay, which treats of the rights of women in land. Mortgages ^ occur in at least two charters, and are sufficiently well defined to put their existence beyond doubt, but not well enough defined to determine with any exactness the state of the law in regard to them. The most important example occurs in one of the cases given in the Appendix (No. 18), from which it is clear that the land mortgaged was in the actual possession of the mortgagee ; that on payment of the money loaned, the mort- gagee, having found his profit or interest on his loan in the use of the lands, was to render back the property at once to the mortgagor, and that the failure so to do was good ground of action. The other charter referring to a mortgage is a deed by JEscwine, bishop of Dorchester, granting certain lands to the church (A.D. 995), "quam videlicet terram Sigericus archiepiscopus ejusdem aecclesiae Ghristi, praedecessor prae- fati archiepiscopi JEIfrici, dedit mihi in vadimonium pro pecunia quam a me mutuo accepit." * Here the mortgagee 1 Cod. Dip. CCXXXII. 2 Cod. Dip. MLXXX., MLXXXI., CCCXXXVni., CCCXL. are instances of restorations. •• I hare used this modern term here simply as meaning land pledged for the payment of money, and not as involving any of the refinements of a later tima 4 Cod. Dip. DCXC. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 107 deeds away the mortgaged land, showing that at some time, or in some way, the title could vest in the mort- gagee unconditionally. The facts brought out in these two charters are the sum and substance of our knowledge as to the Anglo-Saxon mortgage. Slight as the result is, it becomes of interest as showing a pledge of lands for money borrowed to have been a conception quite distinct from the taking pledges ^ of other kinds for debt ; the latter required legal formalities, no trace of which is found in our cases of mortgage. In proportion as the sources of information are meagre as to mortgages, they are voluminous on the subject of wills. One of the few perfectly undisputed passages in Tacitus is that in which he declares that there are no testaments among the German tribes. Wills, however, were introduced at an early period by church influence. No simpler or more profitable way to temporal possessions was open to the church than through the superstitious fears of dying men and women ; and if the extent to which this practice was carried on the Continent, in the very infancy of the church, be con- sidered, it is wonderful, relying on the examples which have survived,^ that so little was effected in England. Fresh proof of the strength of the pure Germanic principle in England, and of its resistance to the hostile system, is afforded by the fact that, despite the creation of a class of estates especially distinguished as " terra testamentalis," comparatively so little devise by will seems to have taken place. Out of thirty-six examples, no less than twenty-six are after the beginning of ^thelred's reign, when the Anglo-Saxon power rapidly began to break up ; and, of these twenty-six, sixteen are of the reign of Edward the Confessor. Down to the middle of the tenth century, there are but four examples of wills in existence, and in these there is no reference to royal permission, or to those gifts to a superior, afterwards known as a heriot. After that time, the permission of the king or lord occurs in almost every 1 Cnut, II. 19. But see Schmid's note, p. 642, where all the law on the subject of pledges is collected. ^ As the wills were mostly in favor of the church, probably a fair proportion hare been preserved. 108 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. case, and there is mention of being declared testament-worthy. This fact is susceptible of very simple explanation. It merely indicates the extension of the system of unbooked laens with the accompanying growth of the lord's power, until, in Cnut's time, the gift to the lord and the permission to devise property had changed to the heriot, the relief of the next conqueror. Every form of property was made the subject of devise. Already it has been shown, from the descriptive phrase in Duke Alfred's^ will, " my yrfe-laud " and "my boc- land," that all lands of inheritance were not boc-land, but, in many instances, family land, and, as such, matter of be- quest. The probable necessity of family consent has also been shown, both from the appearance of kinsmen as devisees and witnesses, from the attempts of members of the family to break wills, and from the analogy with the grants. These wills were made with all possible solemnity and publicity, as in Duke Alfred's case, before king and Witan. The principal devisee, in all the later examples and in many of the early ones, was the church. The chief peculiarity of the earlier wills is, that they make provision in the iirst place, and most fully, for the wife and children, with remainders to the family ; while, in the later cases, the church and the king or lord get a large share, and the remainders generally are to the church, and not to the family. Originally, every free man and free woman could make a will, and could take under a will. Not only could witnesses take under the will, but the principal devisees sometimes acted in that capacity.^ That it was ever an undisputed principle of law, that family lands could be alienated from the family by will, seems improbable. On the other hand, it is almost certain that an individual possessor could direct the course of descent of family lands within the limits of the family. That the church should also have encouraged nuncupative wills would have been natural ; but there are only two in- stances in the charters, both of which are mentioned and described in cases given in the Appendix.^ The first will 1 Cod. Dip. CCCXVII. 3 Cod. Dip. CCCCSCII., MCCXLIL • See Appendix, Nos. 14, 28. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 109 was made in the presence of churchmen only, and was appar- ently the chief support of the widow in the litigation which ensued. The second is two hundred years later, and, like the first, seems to have been supported by the judgment and au- thority of the Witan ; but in this instance the witnesses of the declaration were not churchmen. It can hardly, then, be doubted that nuncupative wills, properly witnessed, had perfect validity, but, as they were less secure, held a very inferior position to that occupied by written wills. This concludes the list of uses to which books were gener- ally put by the Anglo-Saxons ; and it only remains to point out the distinguishing characteristics of book-land, and briefly to trace its history down to the period of the Norman and Angevin kings. The first marked feature in an estate of book-land, its origin in a written instrument as opposed to the estates originating in custom, has been suflBciently dwelt upon. The second important quality is, that an estate created by book was only held in exact accordance with the terms of the written instrument to which it owed its existence ; and, theoretically if not always practically, any departure from the terms worked forfeiture. Passages can be cited in which it is especially provided that any infraction of the terms or conditions of the grant should, ipso facto, forfeit the estate ; ^ but the proof rests much more strongly on the evidence af- forded by the general tone adopted in all the charters, and especially in those where rent was reserved. In all grants, the most terrific spiritual penalties are invoked against the presumptuous man who dares infringe the terms of the book ; and, in cases where rent is reserved, this is applied to non- payment, and the more practical remedy of forfeiture by default in the stipulated rent is often expressly added.^ This shows clearly the prevailing usage, and the sanctity attached to the terms of the book. It has been already said that the book, as a mode of transfer, presents none of the peculiarities which belonged to the archaic method, or to the one which arose from a combination of the old method with document- 1 Cod. Dip. XL VI,, CCCCVI., DCXLI. 2 Cod. Dip., E. G., DCLXI., MXLIII. See also the cases of conflscation cited supra, pp. 65, 66, Cod. Dip. MXC. and DCI. 110 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. ary evidence, and which were preserved in numerous charters, laws, and formularies on the Continent. Except in the few early examples of placing a turf on the altar, there is no trace of either the traditio or the investitura.^ Both the right of possession and the actual possession seem to have been conveyed by the simple modern process of passing the books, or mutual exchange of deeds ; e.g. : — " Libros quos ante non habebat in eodem concilio illi reddebat." ^ " Duasque scripturas per omnia consimiles hujus reconciliationis conscribere statuimus, alteram habeat episcopus cum telligraphis aec- clesiae, alteram Egberht et ^thelwulf reges cuim haereditatis eorum scripturis." ^ In two cases in the Appendix, the right of possession and the title passed by the simple delivery of the books ; and in others the same effect is apparent from the manner in which possession of the books is treated.* The manner in which a grant was declared is described in a late example, reciting the agreement between Oswulf and his wife ^thelitha and Abbot Leofstan. After stating the subject and terms of the agreement, "Ad quorum uocem, imposito silehtio, coram omni populo episcopus Wulfwius alta uoce respondens dixit, Quicunque hoc dono sanctum pri- uauerit Albanum sciat se," . . . then the spiritual sanction, " Cui cuncti qui aderant Amen responderunt." ® This or some similar formal recitation before the Witan, the witnesses, or the chapter, as the case might be, probably gave to the book its binding force, and was equivalent to putting it upon record.^ 1 Heusler's work on the Gewere, already referred to, ia an able and exhaust- ire treatise on these points in continental procedure. In one case (see Appendix, No. 27), a reference occurs to taking possession in the presence of witnesses ; but this has been rejected on the ground that the land in question was the sub- ject of litigation, and the witnesses were probably official, in order to see the decision of the court carried out. 2 Cod. Dip. CCXX. 8 Cod. Dip. MXLIV. < Appendix, Nos. 5, 6, 9, 13, 15, 17, 18, 23, 25, 27. All these cases show very clearly the position and legal force of the book ; particularly No. 18. See, especially. Cod. Dip. CCCXXVIII., CCCCXCIX. 5 Cod. Dip. DCCCCXLV. ' In many cases, reference is made to putting the books in churches and other safe places. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. Ill But one point remains to be noticed, — the escheat of boc- land, already partially discussed in the note on the subject of escheat in general. Cod. Dip. MXXXV., A.D. 825. " Hanc quippe tellurem fidel- issimus quidam praefectorum meorum vocabulo Burhghardus olim me donante possedit, sed ille postmodum sine liberis defunctus eandem terrain sine haereditaria sententia nemine sibi superstite existente de- reliquit, sicque tellus ipsa cum omnibus finibus ejus, optimatum meo- rum decreto adjudicante, michi, qui eam antea possedi restituta est." Cases of escheat, as already said, if such a thing existed at all, were certainly rare, owing probably to the family organ- ization ; but it may be inferred, from this and the example about to be discussed, that estates of book-land always reverted to the donor. The theory that all land, of book or otherwise, escheated to the king, is disproved by the case of ^Ifeh.^ If this had been a simple case of intes- tacy in ordinary lands, the family generally would have come in ; but, on the contrary, all the land given by^lfeh reverted to him on the death of the donee, Eadric, intestate and without children. This points to the conclusion that the prevailing principle was the reversion of all book-land, on the death of the holder childless and intestate, to the grantor and his heirs ; and therefore estates of book-land could not escheat to the king, except in the rather improbable case of the ex- tinction of the families both of grantor and grantee. Another important fact as to books, bearing on the sanctity attached to them, is their influence in litigation. In a case under Offa,^ the holders of the books prevailed against the parties in possession. In another case,^ four years later, the grantees made no attempt to recover the land of which they had been disseised, until the books, which had been stolen from them, were recovered ; and, when they had obtained the charters, they, as possessors of the documentary evidence, were sustained by the Witan against the party in possession, although the latter was the king's grantee. In another I See Appendix, No. 21. « Appendix, No. 5, Cod. Dip. CLXIV. 8 Appendix, No. 6, Cod. Dip. MXIX. 112 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. case^ (A.D. 840), the claim of the holders of the books was again sustained against the king and his grantees. In still another instance,^ which illustrates also the rigid adher- ence to the terms, the suit went against the holder of the land for a slight infringement of the conditions of the grant. In a case ^ about the year 1000, a claim founded on the pos- session of books was sustained against the person in actual possession of the land. The retention of charters also, in two cases,* carried with it the right of possession. These citations* show, better than any thing else, the legal force of a book. A few words suffice to tell the history of book-land. The system of making grants by written instruments went on unchecked until, with the advent of the Normans and the system of feudal tenures, the old significance of the Anglo- Saxon book, as well as the name, almost disappeared. The importance of the book primarily lay in its opposition to the old Germanic customs and principles, and in the protection it afforded against the claims recognized by that system. When each and every estate formed but one link in the great feudal chain, there was no longer any use in the book as the Anglo- Saxons conceived it. The only characteristic it retained was as an evidence of title. Charters and title-deeds went on accumulating in great abundance, but the old Saxon book perished with the Conquest. In all Domesday, there is but one estate of boc-land mentioned. The cause of this sudden disappearance is obvious. The book had been introduced and used to supply certain needs and bar certain claims. When those needs and claims no longer existed, the vital force of the principle of boc-land was extinct. There was but one object left for a written instrument, to evidence title ; and the Nor- man charters fulfilled that object. If the Norman charters preserved in Dugdale, the Abingdon Chronicle, &c., be ex- amined, it will be found that the religious portions of the 1 Appendix, No. 13, Cod. Dip. CCXLV. 2 Appendix, No. 15, Cod. Dip. CCCXXIII. ' Appendix, No. 25, Cod. Dip. DCCCXXIX. * Appendix, Nos. 17 and 18, Cod. Dip. CCCXXVIII., CCCCXCIX. ' Already referred to witli others. Vide supra, p. 110, note 1. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 113 book are gone, and that the consent of the Witan very soon disappears. The keen legal spirit of the new con- querors soon reduced the charters to the simplest form in which they could serve as evidence. They differed as essen- tially from the books, as we see them in the Codex Diplo- maticus, as the system of William differed from the system of Alfred. The ultimate position of boc-land as the family land, under the laws of Henry, has already been pointed out. In treating of family land, no attempt was made to deal with the question of inheritance. Under the customary law, males were preferred to females, and nothing more ; and dif- ference of sex did not work absolute, but only conditional,^ exclusion. The theory that, in respect to the legal position of women, the Anglo-Saxon conception did not differ in prin- ciple from that of the pure Germanic codes of the North, is abundantly proved by the books. The charters are full of cases in which women are grantors and grantees,^ ven- dors and vendees,^ plaintiffs and defendants,* devisors and devisees,^ without a variation in the terms of the instrument which could raise a suspicion of difference in sex. In all the law to be drawn from the books, women appear as in every respect equal to men. To women and men are given the same immunities and the same privileges, and on them are laid the same legal and political burdens.^ A woman was as good a witness,^ and as good a helper in the oath ^ as a man. There is no occasion to enter into a detailed proof of all this. The fundamental principle of the equality of women before the law, in every thing relating to land, except the family land, is indisputable, and is apparent on the face of the charters. A much more difficult question to answer is that in 1 Vide supra, p. 74. 2 Cod. Dip., E. G., CCXXIX., DXXXV. 3 Cod. Dip., E. G.. MCXXIII., DCCLXXXIX. 4 Cod. Dip. E. G., DCXCIII., DCCIV. See also Appendix, Nog. 6 Cod. Dip., E. G., CCXXXV., DCLXXXV. 6 From this it would seem that military service must have been commuted at quite an early period. ' Cod. Dip., E. G., DCXCIII., DCCIV. See also Appendix, Nos, 23 and 26. 8 Cod. Dip., E. G., CCCIV., DCXCIII. See also Appendix, No. 22. 114 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. regard to the position of married women, and the law of dower. As to the former, it appears, from a grant A.D. 855, that a man could convey land by book to his wife.^ Examples also occur in which husband and wife join as grantors,^ devisors,^ and vendors ; * and, in other cases still, they are joined as gran- tees,^ vendees,® and devisees,'^ — the law of survivorship sometimes being duly enforced by the terms of the in- strument. This is evidence that in England, as in Ice- land, husband and wife held and administered property in common ; but no light is thrown by these cases on the law of dower. In the charters, there are eight references to dower or morning gifts, and two to marriage settlements : — Cod. Dip. MCCCV., A.D. 1008. Deditque conjugi suae ^Ifgife sub haereditario datalicii dono." On the death of the husband, the widow again marries, and carries to her second husband these lands given in dowry, which are subsequently forfeited for the crimes of the woman and her second husband. Cod. Dip. DCCCCXXVI. (before A.D. 1069). "Ego Gytha comitissa concedo aecclesiae . . . terram meam de Scireford quae est de dote mea." Cod. Dip. CCCXXVIII. (after A.D. 900).^ "Then it was the opinion of all of us that Helmstan might go forth with the charters, and prove his right to the land, that he held it as iEthelthrith gave it to Oswulf, in full property for a fair price ; and she told Oswulf that she was fully entitled to sell it to him, because it was her morning- gift when she first came to Athulf." Cod. Dip. MCCLXXXVIIL, A.D. 965-993. .^Elfeh booked to his nephew, Eadric, certain lands. Eadric died childless and intes- tate ; and all these lands reverted to -ffilfeh, who confirmed one of the estates, Cray, to his nephew's widow, because it had been her morning- gift, and kept the other two estates, Erith and Wouldham. The nephew's widow married again, and, aided by her second husband, 1 Cod. Dip., E. a, CCLXXVL 2 Cod. Dip., E. G., DCCLXVI., MCCCXL. 3 Cod. Dip., E. G., CCCCXCII., DCCCCLXXL * Cod. Dip., E. G., CCXC, CCXCIX. 6 Cod. Dip., E. G., CCCXLV., DCXXXVIL 6 Cod. Dip., E. G., CCLXXIX. ^ Cod. Dip., E. G., CCCXIV. » See Appendix, No. 17. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 115 entered upon and claimed Wouldham, as well as Cray, on JElfeh's death. But ^Ifeh's will was sustained on trial.* Cod. Dip. MCCXC, A.D. 995. Wynflaed denses certain lands to Eadmer, to whom she also devises the remainder in certain other lands " at Faccancumb, her morning-gift." Cod. Dip. DCCIV.'' (after A.D. 1000). "Ther the widow prayed Archbishop -S^lfrie, who was her intercessor, and ^thelmere, that they should pray the king that she might give her morning-gift to Christ's church, for the king and all his people, on condition that " * . . . Cod. Dip. DCCXXXII., A.D. 1016-1020. " Here is declared by this writing the contract which Godwine wrought with Beorhtric when he married his daughter ; that is, first, he gave her one pound's weight of gold for that she received his will ; and he gave her lands at Street, &c." This was before the king and Witan, whose names fol- low, and then the names of those who made the wedding-feast at Brightliug. " And so whichever survives shall hold aU the lands I gave her and every thing.'' Cod. Dip. DCCXXXVIII., A. D. 1023. " Here is it declared by this writing about the contract which Wulfric and the archbishop wrought when he got the archbishop's sister to wife ; that is, that he promised her the land at Alderton and at Ribbesford for her life ; and promised her the land at Knightwick, that he would obtain it for her for three lives from the chapter at Winchcombe ; and granted her the land at Eanulfintum, to give and to sell to whomever she most pleased during her life, and, after her life, as she most liked ; and he gave her fifty mancuses of gold, and thirty men and thirty horses." In the laws, the principal passages on the subject of marriage occur in Appendix VI. of Dr. Schmid's collec- tion, " De sponsalibus contrahendis," — popularly known as " The Kentish Betrothal," and attributed by Dr. Schmid to the reign of ^thelstan. Two paragraphs only in this Ap- pendix throw even a side light on the subject of dower in lands : — C. 3. " Then afterwards let the bridegroom declare what he gives her that she chooses his will, and what he gives her if she survive him. ' Appendix, No. 21. , ' Appendix, No. 26. 3 See also Cod. Dip. DCLXXXV. and DCCCCLXVII. 116 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. C. 4. " If it be so agreed, then is it right that she be worthy half the inheritance, and all, if they have a child, unless that she after- wards choose again." It is shown elsewhere that, if a widow married within a year after her husband's death, she was considered unchaste, and forfeited all rights in his property. From the passages here collected, it may be inferred that it was a common practice to dower with lands, and that dower might be the subject of contract.^ It is not apparent that there was any legal dif- ference between the lands of dower, and those of the morn- ing-gift. In both, the woman's power was absolute, as may be seen from the case where she carried the lands " ex data- licii dono " of her first marriage to her second husband. -^Ifeh's case does not militate against this theory of absolute power on the expiration of the first year. In that instance, the law of reversion of book-land prevailed over the law of dower. The discussion has been confined to those facts which are solely to be drawn from the native sources, but these few facts are sufficient to bear out fully the analogy with the Northern codes. An essay on the Anglo-Saxon land law cannot be fittingly concluded without some reference to the feudal system, and the subject of military tenures. The researches of Thudi- chum and Hanssen have established the fact that personal freedom did not primarily, among the German tribes, rest on the possession of land. The opposite view is that supported by Waitz,^ and has been completely overthrown by the able arguments of Sohm ^ and Roth.* The latter have further shown that the attendance on the court and service in the army were, under the pure Germanic system, incumbent on every freeman, and therefore not on the possession of land. This view is also adopted by Dr. Schmid^ and Professor Stubbs.® It will not at this day be disputed that the same 1 Vide infra, p. 175. 2 Waitz, V. G., Vol. I. § 120. ' Sohm, R. G., VI. p. 133. * Roth, Feudalitat und Unterthanverband, pp. 322-335. Beneficialwesen, pp. 42 and 182-200. 5 Geeetze, p. 587. s Constit. Hist. I. p. 189. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 117 system existed in England. The only question is one of time. When did the Germanic army constitution break down and make room for the purely feudal system? In answering this question, it must not be forgotten that the personal relation of princeps and comes was brought to England ; and the extension of this relation to matters in- volving the holding of land has already been shown. More- over, another prevailing cause of feudalism, large estates, had existed in England from the earliest period, spreading slowly, until, under the Confessor, they must have been almost uni- versal. Beneficial tenures of a modified form also prevailed in later times,^ and, therefore, all the factors necessary to produce feudalism were present, except the all-important one of the army constitution. The old Germanic system of uni- versal military service was but a form of taxation,^ and the feudal system which replaced it was simply another clumsy kind of taxation imposed for the same objects. The germs of feudalism had all existed in England, and had there slowly expanded; but, as has just been said, the degree of develop- ment can be determined only by fixing the introduction of military tenures ; or, more explicitly, the period when land is held on the condition of military services and personal relations is the true feudal period. In the time of Ine, the old Germanic system still prevailed. His laws provide that: " If a gesithcund man forego the fyrd, let him pay one hundred and twenty shillings, and lose his land ; having no land, sixty shillings. A ceorl, thirty shillings for fyrd-wite [army fine]." ^ At the beginning and during the first half, therefore, of the eighth century, it is absolutely certain that the old system prevailed. The theory of Dr. Konrad Maurer has met with general acceptance. He concludes from two passages in fragments of the Northumbrian Codes : " That, at least since the beginning of the tenth century, the higher military service was connected with the possession of five hides of land"* (a rather misleading statement), and that this was a reform introduced by Alfred. This arrange- 1 Vide supra, p. 95. ^ Vide supra, p. 60. ' Ine, c. 51. « Kritische Ueberschau, II. 408, 409. 118 THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. ment of Alfred's introduced no new principle, but merely strengthened a connection which already existed. The tri- noda necessitas is mentioned in the earliest grants ; and in Ine's law, just cited, the office of land in connection with military service is perfectly clear. Confiscation of land was a means of enforcing attendance which a pecuniary fine might have failed to effect. The expression, " five hides to the king's utware, or army summons," relied on by Dr. Maurer, is simply used as a badge of a certain rank liable to certain kinds of military equipment ^ and service. It cannot be inferred that five hides were more liable to confiscation than one. Grants of less than five hides are frequent, and always liable to the trinoda necessitas, and to confiscation for failure in army duty.^ Five hides were simply a qualifica- tion for a degree in the kinds of army services. As the small freeholders gradually sank in the social scale, land became more and more the badge of freedom. The expression of the Northern laws — and this is absolutely the only authority suggesting military tenures to dispose of ^ — does not represent the really vital change at work in the English army. It is not within the scope of this essay to discuss the changes which had actually taken place in the army consti- tution, and had insidiously undermined its strength. At the time of the conquest, the feudal system did not exist except in embryo. The army which fought at Stamfordbridge and Hastings, with the exception of the mercenary household troops, was the " fyrd," the militia of the shires. With this militia, army duty was an individual responsibility in- separably connected with the status of every freeman, did not differ from the early Germanic system, and had no con- 1 Robertson, Hist. Essays, pp. vii.-x. Stubbs, Constit. Hist., 189. - See eases of confiscation given above, pp. 65 and 66. 3 Cod. Dip. CCXIV. In this charter of Coenulf s, the phrase occurs : " Ex- peditlones cum XII. vassallis et cum tantis scutis exerceant." The whole charter seems to me, from internal evidence, a very late and clumsy forgery, although passed by Mr. Kemble as genuine. Admitting, however, that it is genuine, it in no way militates against the statement in the text. The phrase occurs in the usual exception in favor of the trinoda necessitas, — the universal and common duty, and can therefore be most naturally construed as referring to the number of free tenants on the estate liable to fyrd. THE ANGLO-SAXON LAND LAW. 119 nection with land as has just been shown. The great features of the feudal system in its complete development were the military tenures of land ; and without them no perfect system, such as afterwards existed, was possible. If the course of native development had not been changed, feudalism would have followed sooner or later in England, as a natural out-growth, just as surely as night follows day. Whether a purely English feudalism would have been the same as that of the Continent, or whether it would have been more modified or more extreme, no one now can say. This alone is certain, that the slow, strong progress of England was rudely broken, and on the nascent feudalism of the Anglo-Saxons was superimposed the full-grown system of William and Normandy.^ ' The following note was omitted until the plates of the work had been partly cast, and could not, therefore, be inserted in Its proper place on p. 67, where it was said that " the Danepeld, at the close of the tenth century, was a great extension of the power of the National Assembly." The ship-money assessed in 1008 was of the same nature as the Danegeld. It was an extraordinary levy for purposes of defence ; and the first trace we find of it dates from the same period as the Danegeld. Archbishop JElfric's will (Cod. Dip. DCCXVI.) only proves that, at the close of the tenth century, shires were expected to furnish ships. To say that the fleets of Alfred and Edgar were the same thing in prin- ciple as the ship-money of .ffithelred is like saying that the military service of the Germanic freeman was the same thing as the Danegeld. The fleets of Alfred and Edgar were perhaps raised by voluntary contributions, or, more probably, were included in the trinoda necessitas, as a part of the duty of every freeman in providing for defence. Every thing on the point is, however, wholly conjectu- ral. At the close of the tenth century, the shires were apparently responsible for ships ; and this was made the excuse for commuting this provision for de- fence into a tax, like the Danegeld, liable to abuse, and which led to the most unjust extortion. There is no trace that it was any thing but a new and extraordinary extension of power on the part of the Witan, or that, before the period of weakness and disintegration at the close of the tenth century, it was any thing but one of the fundamental duties of every freeman. As to Alfred's fleet, see Asser, A. 877, Sax. Chron. ; and Florence, 897. This view is opposed to that taken by Mr. Freeman, Vol. I. p. 228 and note L. L. ; cf. Dowell's His- tory of Taxation in England, p. 23. THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. The principal difficulty in dealing with Anglo-Saxon Fanuly Law is occasioned by lack of material. The legal sources of the Anglo-Saxon period contain little pure family law, and even the main outlines of the family system of the Anglo-Saxons would be difficult to determine without a knowledge of the kindred systems of the continental Ger- mans. The reason is not far to seek. The earliest collections of written laws among the Germans were not comprehensive codes, designed to cover the whole region of law, but in the main only records of new principles introduced by specific legislation or through the medium of the courts. With the migration of the tribes a rapid development of law began, but at first only particular branches of the law were affected. Family law, belonging entirely to the domain of custom, op- posed the most stubborn resistance to innovation, and re- mained longest outside of this development. Dealing with the intimate relations of private life, and administered with- in and by the family, its rules formed part of the daily habits and of the common sense of the community. Family law, therefore, offered little occasion either for judicial deci- sions or legislative enactments. In certain cases the violation of family rights and obligations entailed legal penalties, but more frequently family custom and public law are found opposed. In two directions, however, the family system was gradually modified. On the one hand, the old independence of the family in private feuds, dangerous to the peace of the state, was gradually limited by the growing power of public law ; and, on the other, the church exerted its influence to 122 THE A2TGL0-SAX0N FAMILY LAW. soften the harsher features of the old system. Most of the provisions in the laws relating specially to the family are innovations in one of these two directions. Few as these are, they are sufficient to prove that the family system of the Anglo-Saxons was essentially the same with that found existing in all other German tribes. The importance of the family in all early societies of the Indo-Germanic race has been so often dwelt upon, that a long discussion of it here would be superfluous. Saxon England formed no exception to the rule. The family was not only the most important institution of private law ; it stood also at the bottom of the whole police and criminal system. In the earliest times it was upon the family that the state chiefly depended for the maintenance of peace and the punishment of crime. It was to the family first of all that every member of the community owed the protection he enjoyed. In child- hood the family watched over and protected him, even from his father. Members of the family were his witnesses and sureties at his marriage. Before the court they swore for him either to support his claim as plaintiff or his denial as defendant ; and, in case of necessity, they were obliged to pay his fines. In the blood-feud they stood beside him to defend him even with their lives. Even after his death, their guar- dianship did not cease. If he were murdered, they avenged his murder or exacted compensation for it. They acted as guardians of his widow and children, and took charge of his estate till his children came of age. All of common blood were bound by these ties of mutual right and obligation. If these ties had been somewhat loosened, if the bond of kin- ship among the subjects of Ine and Wihtraed was no longer what it had been among their ancestors at some remote past, it was far from being the mere nominal connection that it has since become. Though the family no longer owned and administered its property in common, the traces of the older sj'stem were stUl seen in the right of heirs to prevent the alienation of the family estate, a right not limited to descend- ants, but extending to more remote kinsmen. In the Anglo- Saxon period only the first steps had been taken in that THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LA"W. 123 development which has continued to modern times, exalting the individual at the expense of the family as a whole. What, then, was this formidable association ? There were two groups of individuals in the Anglo-Saxon community, to which the word family may be applied, but, for the sake of clearness, it will be better to give them specific names. The first and larger group, including the whole body of the kindred, is called in Anglo-Saxon the maegth or maeglurh. Of course, in speaking of the whole body of the kindred, reference must be made to some one person as the starting point. In the course of this essay, therefore, whenever the maegth is mentioned, it must be understood to mean the maegth of some one person, the propositus. The second and smaller group, including only the husband, his wife, and children, may be called the household. That these two groups were really distinct, and that the smaller was not merely a portion of the larger group, follows from the rela- tive position of husband and wife. Nothing is more evident in the laws than that the wife is not regarded as kin to her husband's kin. The wife, at marriage, did not become one of her husband's maegth, but remained in her own. If she committed a wrong, neither the husband nor his maegth were in any way responsible. Her kindred alone bore the feud or made compensation. ^ If the husband com- mitted a crime without the cognizance of his wife, the wife and her kin were free from any obligation either to bear the feud or to make compensation.^ It follows, as a matter of 1 Schmid, Anh. VI. § 7. " But if a man desire to lead her out of the land into another thane's land, then it is advisable that her friends have there an agreement that no wrong shall be done her, and if she commit a fault, that they may be nearest in the hot if she have not wherewith she may make hot." Hen. I. 70, § 12. " SimiUter, si mulier homicidium facial, in earn vel in pro- geniem vel parentes ejus vindicetur, vel inde componat; non in virum suum, seu clientelam innocentem." 2 Ine, 57. " If a husband steal a chattel and bear it to his dwelling, and it be intertiated therein, then shall he be guilty for his part without his wife, for she must obey her lord. If she dares to declare on oath that she tasted not of the stolen property, then let her take her third part." Cf . Aethelst. VI. 1, § 1 ; Cnut II. 76; Will. I. 27. That the wife and her kin were not responsible for a homicide committed by the husband needs no proof. 124 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. course, that the wergeld of the husband was paid to his maegtk, as the wergeld of the wife to hers.^ Moreover, the wife had no rights of inheritance from the husband or his maegth, and he could not inherit from the wife or her maegth?' The household was formed by the alliance of two persons, who had different maegthe. The maegth of the woman intrusted to her husband the guardianship over her, which they, up to that time, had exercised. He became her active guardian ; but her maegth constantly watched over his administration of his trust, and interfered to protect her if necessary. This guardianship exercised by the husband over the wife and her estate was essential from the nature of the marriage relation, but it did not place the wife in her hus- band's maegth. It did not create between husband and wife the mutual rights and obligations arising from the blood-feud and from inheritance, and it was these rights and obligations which especially characterized the maegth. These existed only between those of common blood. To make the house- hold therefore a portion of the larger group of the maegth is * It was an invariable principle that those who would have to pay the wer- geld, if their kinsman committed homicide, should receive it if he were slain. Hen. I. 75, § 8. " Si quis hujusmodi faciat horaicldium, parentes ejus tantum werae reddant, quantum pro ea reciperent, si occideretur." The healsfang was paid to the father, children, brothers, and paternal uncles. There is never any question in pure Anglo-Saxon law of its payment to wife or to husband. The wergeld belonged to blood relations. Schmid, Anh. VII. c. 1, § 5 ; Hen. I. 76, §§ 4, 7. The passage in William's Laws {I. 9), " De were ergo pro occiso soluto, primo viduae x sol. dentur, etc.,'' cannot be accepted as evidence against the earlier and more reliable passages. It is not without significance that the wife's wer was estimated by the position of her father, not of her husband. Hen. I. 70, § 13. " Si raulier oecidatur, sicut weregildum ejus est reddatur, ex parte patris, sicut observamus in aliis." ' It was a general principle of German law that the widow was not heir of her husband. If she is sometimes spoken of as sharing in the inheritance, it is only that her morning-gift might be considered as in fact forming part of the in- heritance. That she was not legally heir is evident from the fact that if she died before her husband her heirs got through her no right in the inheritance of the husband, which they must have done if she were herself heir. Cf. Schroeder, Geschichte des ehelichen Giiterrechts, I. p. 166. That the husband was not heir follows from the custom of gifts mmiis causa of wife to husband. If he were heir these would be superfluous. The passage in Hen. I. 70, § 23, which speaks of the husband as sharing with the children in the inheritance of the wife, is of too doubtful authority to be relied on. Cf. Schroeder, I. p. 168, n. 6. THE ANGLO-SAXON PAMTLT LAW. 125 to include in the maegth a person who distinctly did not be- long to it, and so to confuse the whole subject. The children, of course, belonged both to the maegth of the father and to that of the mother. Every person had two maegthe : that of his father, the faedren maegth, paterna generatio, or pater- nal kin, and that of his mother, the mSdren maegth, materna generatio, or maternal kin. These groups, entirely distinct before his birth, unite in his person, and become only sub- divisions of his general m,aegth. Both have with him the rights and duties of kindred, but in different degrees, as wUl appear later. Accepting the maegth and the household as distinct groups, the subject of family law in the Anglo-Saxon period naturally divides itself into two branches: the law of the maegth or kindred, and the law of the household ; in other words, the laws regulating the relations between members of the same maegth, and the rules obtaining when an alliance was formed between persons having different maegthe. Of course these two systems of law are closely connected. The relations between husband and wife, father and child, were modified by the fact that each member of the household was subject to the general law of the maegth; the husband to that of his maegth, the wife to that of her maegth, and the children to that of both. And on the other hand both the maegthe forming the alliance had rights and obligations toward the household. The law of the maegth will first be considered, then the law of the household. In treating of the law of the maegth, these questions will demand attention : who were a man's kindred ; how were the degrees of kinship reckoned, and what was the order of succession among the kin ; what was the relative position of the paternal and maternal kin ; within what degree, if within any, was kinship limited ; how was the tie of kinship ended ; finally, what were the rights and obligations of the kindred ? Those are kindred and belong to the same maegth who have common blood with each other or with a third, originat- ing in lawful marriage. This is the only basis of the tie oi 126 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. kinship known to the German law. It is true that adoption was often practised among the continental Germans. An in- stance of this adoption occurs in Beowulf,^ and the occurrence of the phrase " adoptive parenti meo," in an Anglo-Saxon char- ter,^ proves that it existed in Anglo-Saxon law. But the early- German adoption did not even place the one adopted under the parental authority of the adopter. Much less could it create the ties of kinship between the one adopted and the kin of the adopter. Its only effect was to give the adopted son rights of succession from his adopted father. The legiti- mation of natural children was permitted in none of the early- German codes, except the Lombard, and was strongly op- posed to the whole spirit of German family law. That the father, by symbolic forms, could acknowledge his natural child, and give him a place and protection within the house- hold, is proved from German and Scandinavian sources.^ That a similar practice was known to the Anglo-Saxons may- be inferred from lue, § 27 : " If any one beget a child se- cretly, and conceal it, let him not have the wer for his death, but his lord and the king." Clearly by acknowledging the child the father could protect him, and avenge his murder or exact satisfaction for it. If the father did not acknowledge him, the child was in the guardianship of the lord and the king. This passage, however, gives no argument for the existence of any rights of the natural child toward the father or his kin, and it is impossible that any such could have existed. Natural children could not have been reck- oned among the maegtJi. That children born in unlawful marriage had no rights of inheritance is expressly stated in the laws of Alfred,* and it may be inferred that all other rights of kindred were denied them except that of protection. If slain, their wergeld was paid to the paternal kindred and the king.^ Those then only were of kin., and belonged to 1 Thorpe's Beowulf, 1897-1905. 2 Cod. Dip. MCXCVI. ; ib. MCXCVII. 3 Grimm, Alterth. p. 463 ; Duoange s. v. pallio coijperire ; Koenigswarter, De rOrganization de la Famille en France, p. 142 ; Miehelet, Origines du Droit Franfais, p. 11. < Alf. 8, § 2. Cf . Phillips, Gescliichte des Angelsachsischen Rechts, p. 127. 6 Alf. 8, § 3. THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 127 the maegth, who had common blood originating in lawful marriage. The method of reckoning the degrees of kinship must next be considered. In reckoning the degrees of kinship in the direct line, all systems agree in assigning one degree for each generation. The early German method of reckoning the degrees of side relationship is described in the Sachsenspiegel, in the first half of the thirteenth century. Sachsensp. I. 3, § 3 : " Now mark we where the sippe begins and where it ends. In the head it is ordered that man and wife do stand, who have come together in lawful wedlock. In the joint of the neck stand the children born of the same father and mother. Half brothers and sisters may not stand in the neck, but de- scend to the next. . . . Full brothers' and sisters' children stand at the joint where shoulder and arm come together. This is the first grade of the sippe which is reckoned to the magen, — brothers' and sisters' children. In the elbow stands the next. In the wrist the third. In the first joint of the middle finger the fourth. In the next joint the fifth. In the third joint of the finger the sixth. In the seventh stands a nail, therefore ends here the sippe, and this is called the nail- mage." Here the degrees of kinship are reckoned by reference to the joints of the arm and hand. The common ancestors and their children standing in the head and neck are not reckoned among the magen. The first grade of the sippe is formed by cousins, who are, therefore, in the first degree of side rela- tionship to each other. The sippe includes in all seven degrees. The family as a whole, therefore, includes nine generations. In the Anglo-Saxon laws, two passages throw light on the method of reckoning the degrees of collateral kinship. Aethelr. VI., 12 : " And aefre ne geweorSe pact cristen man gewifige in vi. manna sib-faece on his agenum cynne, pact is binnan pam feorSan cneowe." " And let it never happen that a Christian man marry within the relationship of six per- sons of his own kin, that is within the fourth joint." ^ If, in 1 Cf . Schmid, Anh. II. § 61 ; Cnut, I. 7. 128 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. counting six persons, only four degrees of side relationship are reckoned, it is clear that the first two generations, the com- mon ancestors and their children, are omitted in computing the degrees, and that brothers' and sisters' children form the first grade. Schmid, Anh. VII., c. 1, § 5: "Healsfang ge- byreS bearnum, broSrum and faederan; ne gebyreS nanum maege pact feoh, bute fam pe sy binnan cneowe." " Heals- fang belongs to children, brothers, and paternal uncles. This money belongs to no kin except to those who are within the joint." ^ Thorpe's translation of cneowe in this passage by knee is misleading. As applied to relationship, cneow means always joint or degree, as in the first passage quoted above.^ The passage must mean those who are within the first joint : that is, those who are not counted on the joints at all, and who, therefore, are not reckoned among the degrees of col- lateral kin. These would be the descendants, the common ancestor, and his children, or (omitting the common ancestor, who would naturally be already dead) precisely those men- tioned in the passage, — children, brothers, and uncles. These passages prove that the Anglo-Saxons employed the same method of reckoning the degrees of collateral kinship as the continental Saxons. They began with brothers' and sisters' children ; these formed the first grade. The use of cneow to designate grade of relationship, together with the language of the second passage quoted above, makes it almost certain that they computed the degrees by reference to the joints of the arm and hand, and if we accept the prob- able derivation of heaUfang or halsfang, from hals meaning the neck, so called because it was paid to those standing in the neck, this conclusion becomes UTCsistible.^ Of the dis- tinction made in the Sachsenspiegel between the fuU and the half blood, the Anglo-Saxon law shows no trace. The dis- tinction is not found in the earliest German codes, and is probably only a refinement of a later time. 1 Cf. Hen. I. 76, § 4 ; ib. 76, § 7, mentions also the father. 2 So in Conf. Ecgb. § 28 (Thorpe II. 152 and note), where gradas of the Latin version is in the Anglo-Saxon rendered by cneow. Schmid, Gloss, s. T. eneow. 3 Schmid, Gloss, s. v. halsfang. THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 129 By the method just described, it is possible to determine the grade of relationship between two persons descended from a common ancestor : cousins were in the first grade, cou- sins' children in the second grade, and so on. Or the grades might be unequal : if A's grandfather were great-grandfather of B, A would be in the first grade, B in the second grade. But the rule does not suffice to determine the relative posi- tion of two persons to a third, and this must be known before the order of inheritance can be determined. According to the rule, all ancestors of a man deceased stand in the head ; all children of ancestors stand in the neck ; all grand-chil- dren of ancestors stand in the shoulder, that is, in the first grade of side relationship, and so on. Did all in the same grade stand in the same position ; or, if not, what rule deter- mined their relative position ? Did a nearer grade from a more distant ancestor precede a more distant grade from a nearer ancestor, or was the opposite the case ? In short, what was the order of inheritance ? This question has been the subject of a controversy in Ger- many, which in its extent, and in the heat with which in some quarters it has been carried on, has been rarely equalled in the history of German legal science. The theory of the so-called farentelen-ordnung, first established by the writings of John Christian Majer at the end of the last century,^ obtained general recognition, and for half a century was regarded as one of the most firmly established points in the history of German law. Within twenty years, however, the writings of Siegel^ and Wasserschleben ^ have thrown much discredit on this theory, and have deprived it of many of its support- ers. But Siegel and Wasserschleben, united in opposing the ' Brunner, Das Anglonormannische Erbfolgesystem, p. 7. 2 Siegel, das deutsche Erbrecht nach den Rechtsquellen des Mittelalters 1853, and Die germanische Verwandtsohaftsberechnung mit besonderer Beziehung auf die Erbenfolge 1853. ' Wasserschleben, Das Princip der Successionsordnung nach deutschem ins- besondere sachsischem Rechte, 1860. (Reviewed by Siegel in ostr. Vierteljahrs- Bchrift fiir R. u. St. W. VI. 21) ; Die germanische Verwandtschaftsberechnung und das Prinzip der Erbenfolge nach deutschem insbesondere sachsischem Rechte, 1864. 9 130 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. old theory, differ as to the theory that must replace it, each introducing a theory of his own. The result has been a tri- angular contest between the supporters of the three theories, which, until recently, seemed liJjely to be interminable. At last, in the contributions of Lewis and Brunner, the bewil- dered and exhausted student may find some ground for hope that the controversy will have an end.^ It is not the purpose here to take part in this controversy. Indeed, if one asks what ground there is in Anglo-Saxon law to support either of the theories advanced, the answer must be : None whatever. Only a single passage in the laws has any reference to the points in dispute, and this, a passage in the so-called Laws of Henry 1.,^ is only a copy by a Norman writer of a passage in the L. Ripuaria, and is of no value as evidence of Saxon law. More- over, each of the parties finds in the corresponding passage of the L. Ripuaria, evidence to support its theory. Whatever system is finally accepted as the prevailing one in earlj' Ger- man law must be accepted also for Anglo-Saxon law. It will only be useful here to describe the various theories, and to state the present situation of the controversy. According to the theory of the parentelen-ordnung, the kindred are divided into parentelae or classes : the first paren- tela including the deceased and his descendants, the second parentela including the parents of the deceased and their descendants, the third including the grandparents of the deceased and their descendants, and so on. The members of the first parentela are first called to the inheritance ; if none of these are living, then the members of the second paren- tela, and so on. The members of any one parentela are not called till all the members of all the preceding parentelae are dead. Between members -of the same parentela the near- ness of grade decides, except in so far as difference of sex and the right of representation introduce modifications. In general, therefore, the nearest in grade belonging to the nearest parentela will be the nearest heir. Siegel and Wasserschleben both reject the division of the 1 Brunner (p. 7 note) has given a summary of the literature on this subjecti ' Henry I. 70, § 20 ; cf. L. Ripuaria, 56. THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMXLT LAW. 131 kindred into parentelae, and make the nearness of grade alone decisive. According to them, a nearer grade from a more distant ancestor precedes a more distant grade from a nearer ancestor. But they disagree about the mode of counting the degrees where the deceased and the heir are in unequal grades of kinship to each other ; that is, when the generations between the deceased and the common ancestor, and between the heir and the common ancestor, are unequal. Siegel maintains that the degrees are counted always on the longer side ; Wasserschleben, on the other hand, that the degrees are counted only between the heir and the common ancestor, and that no account is taken of the number of de- grees on the side of the deceased. To make their theories consistent with the evidence in the sources, both are forced to introduce modifications which need not here be mentioned.^ In an exhaustive article ^ Lewis sums up the arguments hitherto advanced by each of the parties to this controvers3^ After examining the evidence in Tacitus, in the folk laws, and in the Sachsenspiegel and other legal sources in the middle ages, he concludes that no sufBcient evidence can be found in them to prove the parentelenordnung ; but at the same time he thinks the theories of Siegel and Wasserschle- ben are themselves inconsistent with these sources. At the close of his article he says : " If now, as we have seen, the parentelenordnung cannot be proved from the sources, the question remains whether other grounds speak for its existence in pure German law. And here the consideration seems to me to be very important that, as Homeyer has already suggested, the rules of succession among the higher nobility are based throughout upon the principles of the parentelenordnung. ... . In this circle of society, the old German institutions maintained themselves longest." Lastly, Brunner^ has shown that the parentelenordnung forms the basis of the laws of inheritance in the Anglo-Norman and 1 They are given by Lewis on p. 32 of tVie article cited in note 2. 2 Zur Lehre von dcr Suecessionsordnung des deutseiien Rechtes : Kritisoht Vierteljaiirsschrift fiir Gesetzgebung und Eeohtswissenschaft, IX. p. 23. * Das anglonormannische Erbfolgesystem. 132 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. Norman laws, and in the Customs of Bretagne, " three laws of undoubted German origin." Brunner accordingly throws the great weight of his authority on the side of the old theory. One fact is made evident by this controversy, that no system can ever be found which will be in all respects con- sistent with all the sources. The German laws of inheri- tance were not the results of legislation based on philosophic principles, but rather the slow outgrowth of custom adapting itself to special needs. It is useless to expect that uniformity of system and logical application of fundamental rules which characterize Roman law. The most we can hope for is that some general system may be found which in the main pre- vailed in early German law, but always with different modifi- cations in different tribes. Such a system, lying at the basis of custom, may be discerned in the rules of succession ap- plying to near kindred. The order of succession among these, which has been quite generally agreed upon by German writ- ers, is as follows: 1, sons; 2, daughters; 3, grandchildren, etc. After descendants fail : 1, father ; 2,, mother ; 3, broth- ers ; 4, sisters.* A modification of this system was early in- troduced by the right of representation, grandsons from a deceased son being allowed to succeed to their father's share, in concurrence with the surviving sons ; but this innovation was stoutly resisted. In the time of Otto I. its legality was still disputed in Germany, and it was not till the beginning of the sixteenth century that the rule became firmly estab- lished there.2 In England the right was disputed in Glan- ville's time, but in the time of Bracton was generally recognized.^ It could hardly have existed in Anglo-Saxon law. It cannot be doubted that the order of succession among the nearest kin in Anglo-Saxon law was substantially that given above, although there is evidence only for the first two classes.* That sons were the nearest heirs, and 1 Wasserschleben, however, makes all ascendants precede brothers and sis- ters. 2 Von Sydow, Erbrecht, pp. 77-80. ' Brunner, Anglonorm. Erbfolgesystem, pp. 82, 33. * Rustringer Land-recht, XVI. : " This is the 16th land-recht : whenever a man THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 133 shared equally, appears from Will. I. 34, " Si quis paterfamilias casu aliquo sine testamento obierit, pueri^ inter se heredita- tem paternam equaliter dividant." ^ After the sons came the daughters, who, like the sons, shared equally. In the Kentish Custumal, it is said : " E clament auxi, que si ascun tenant en Gavylekende murt, et seit inherite de terres e de tenemenz de Gavylekende, que touz ses fitz partent eel heritage per ouele porcioun. Et si nul heir madle ne seit, seit la partye feit, entre les females, sicome entres les freres." ^ The evidence of the Kentish Custumal is confirmed here by Glanville and Brac- ton. Glanv. lib. 7, c. 3: "Si vero fuerit liber sokemannus, tunc quidem dividetur haereditas inter omnes filios quotquot sunt per partes aequales, si fuerit socagium et id antiquitus divisum. . . . Sin autem plures filias tunc quidem indistincte or woman dies and leaves their land [ervej and other property, and after them live neither father nor mother, brother nor sister, child nor child's child, nor any of their six next of kin [sibbosta sex honda], then let the equally near relations make claim to the estate, who reckon relationship, taking equally with equally near hands [or : let all the near relations who claim the estate reckon their re- lationship thereto : if they are all related alike, let them share equally] ; unless there come one who is nearest of all to the estate, in which case this hand shall take the inheritance. But if this do not happen, then shall the relations divide amongst themselves according as they are related and can prove their relation- ship." The Frisian law is so closely allied to the English that, for purposes of argument, it is almost as good as pure Saxon. The six next of kin are there- fore the father, mother, brother, sister, child, and child's child. 1 " Enfans," in the French version. For the relation of the diEEerent texts, see Schmid, Einl. p. Ivi. 2 Cnut, II. 70, is often referred to in discussing the laws of inheritance among the Anglo-Saxons. The passage is as follows : " And if any man depart this life intestate, whether because of carelessness or of sudden death, let not the lord take more from his property than his lawful heriot, and by his direction let the property be distributed justly to the wife, the children, and the near kin, to each according to the degree that belongs to him.'' The allusion here to the par- tition of the inheritance is only casual, and, as being evidently in general, not in precise language, cannot be accepted literally. A partition by which the near kin shared with wife and children is, for the period of Cnut at least, incon- ceivable, though it is not impossible that it might have existed in prehistoric times. Th* passages in Henry I.'s laws, relating to inheritance (1, § 7 ; 70, § 20; 70, § 23), are worthless as evidence of Anglo-Saxon law, and no considera- tion is taken of them here. ' Lambarde's Perambulation of Kent, p. 518 ; Robinson's Common Law of Kent, p. 285. 13-4 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMTLT LAW. inter ipsas dividetur hereditas sive fuerit miles sive sokeman- nus pater earum," etc. Bracton follows GlanviUe. Bracton, lib. 2, c. 34 : " Si liber sockmannus moriatur pliiribus relictis haeredibus et participibus, si haereditas partibilis sit et ab antiquo divisa, haeredes quotquot erunt habeant partes suas aequales." The feudal principle of primogeniture had com- pletely changed the rules of succession to lands held by mili- tary tenure ; but lands held by socage tenure, for the most part, still descended according to the ancient custom of par- tition, first among the sons, then among the daughters. It cannot be doubted that this custom goes back to Anglo-Saxon times, and that the Gavelkind lands in Kent, and the soca- gium antiquitus divisum of GlanviUe and Bracton are monu- ments of the endurance of the old system in customary law, where special needs had not forced the adoption of new prin- ciples. The case might be allowed to rest here, were it not that in the Kentish Custumal, as well as in GlanviUe and Bracton, a different order of inheritance is given for movables : — " Ensement seient les chateus de Gavylekendeys parties en treis apres le exequies e les dettes rendues, si il y eit issue mulier en vye, issi que la mort eyt la une partie, e les fitz e les filles muliers lautre partie, et la femme la tierce partie. Et si nul issue mulier en vie ne seit, eit la mort la meite, e la femme en vye lautre meytie." ■^ The chattels were divided into three portions: one-third went to pay the legacies of the deceased, or, if he had made none, were devoted by his executor in pios usus ; one-third went to the wife ; and one-third was distributed among the children, daughters as well as sons. It is necessary to decide whether this is Anglo-Saxon custom, still in force throughout most of the kingdom under the Norman and Angevin kings, or whether it is only a later introduction, which has forced it- self even into Kent. The passage quoted contains three things quite distinct : a limitation of the right to devise by will ; a provision for dower ; and, lastly, a regulation of inheritance. 1 Lambarde, Peramb. of Kent, p. 520; Robinson's Com. Law of Kent, p. 287; cf. Glanv. lib. 7, c. 5. THE AJSTGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 135 The triple division has no necessary historical connection with the equal division among the children, irrespective of sex. The two things must therefore be considered separately. As regards the triple division, it is first of all interesting that the old lawyers could never agree whether the writ corre- sponding to it, de rationahili parte bonorum, lay at common law or by custom.^ In the next place it is certain that the limitation of the right to dispose of personalty by will is not Saxon law. In the Saxon period this right was unlimited. It is not impossible that in some parts of England, even in Saxon times, customs may have arisen by which movables were always willed in certain proportions to certain classes of persons. In this connection Somner quotes an interesting passage from Beda, Ecc. Hist. lib. 5, c. 12 : " Omnem quam possederat substantiam in tres divisit portiones, e quibus unam conjugi, alteram filiis tradidit, tertiam sibi ipse retentans statim pauperibus distribuit." The Saxon version has in place of the words sibi ipse retentans, the words Se him ge- lamp, " which belonged to him." Somner remarks on this passage : " The third part is there said to belong to himself, plainly insinuating that the other two as rightly apperteined to his wife and children, each of them a third. But withall observe that this is the act of an housekeeper in the Province or Region (as there called) of Northumberland, . . . and such a testimony indeed it is as makes much (I confesse) for the antiquity of that custom [of a tripartite division] yet surviving and currant in those northern quarters of the Kingdome." ^ If such customs existed in Saxon times, they might, in the end, have acquired the force of law, and have influenced the laws of intestate succession. But, if so, this must have come after the conquest. In London, at the time of Bracton, the right to dispose of personalty by will was un- limited, but later the custom of a tripartite division was introduced.^ The limitation of the right to dispose of per- sonalty by will may then be rejected as not being Anglo- Saxon law. Of the chattels not granted by will, the wife 1 Somner's Gavelkind, p. 96. 2 lb., p. 92. 8 lb., p. 98. 136 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. receives half, and the children half. The share of the wife corresponds to the half of the realty granted her as dower, and is undoubtedly derived from the legal dower of Anglo- Saxon law, which included half of the husband's property, real and personal. The remaining third of the chattels is the only portion which can properly be said to be inherited, and the children are the only persons who are legally heirs. This third part of the chattels is shared by the children irrespec- tive of sex. This part of the passage suggests the inquiry whether it is not derived from some earlier law, by which the personalty was inherited by all the children, without prece- dence of sons before daughters, and, if it is derived from such a law, whether the law is to be found among the Saxons in England. Is it necessary to modify the previous statement of the order of succession, and to lay down different rules of inheritance for personalty and realty ? In the laws of the continental Saxons, certain classes of personalty were subject to peculiar rules of succession. Things specially adapted to the use of the man, the best weapons, the best war-horse, with his equipments, etc., were set apart from the rest of the inheritance, and were called collectively the hergewate. These fell to the nearest male of the paternal kindred. Things specially adapted to the use of women were called gerade, and were inherited by the nearest female of the maternal kin. No trace of the gerade is found in Anglo-Saxon law. The heriots paid by the heir to the lord may have had, probably did have, their origin in the hergewate^ but of the hergewate in its original form, as inherited by the nearest male of the male stem, there is no trace. Apart from these special rules, applying only to a small number of objects of little value, the law of the conti- nental Saxons made no distinction between realty and per- sonalty. The erve of the Saxon landrecht included both. It was only in the lehnrecht that the two classes of property were distinguished.^ At the period of the folk laws a dis- tinction between movables and immovables in the laws of 1 Schroeder, I. p. 144 ; Kemble, II. p. 98. 2 Von Sydow, Erbrecht ; Zoepfl, Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte, III. p. 241. THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 137 inheritance is found only in the Thuringian and in the Salic law. In the Thuringian law, land is inherited only by males of the male stem, while personalty falls first to the sons, then to the daughters. In the Salic law, sons precede daughters in succession to land ; only women are excluded from succes- sion to the terra Saliea, but daughters share with sons in movables.-^ This custom of the Salian Franks presents the only analogy in continental law to the Kentish custom of an equal division of chattels between the children, without regard to sex; and even here this seems to have been an innovation. It is impossible that it should have passed into Anglo-Saxon England from the Franks, while it might easily have come through Normandy into England, after the conquest. If then the Anglo-Saxon law of inheritance made a distinction between movables and immovables, the distinc- tion must have originated with them, and as an innovation of the first importance would appear prominently in their laws ; but in fact there is not the slightest evidence of such a dis- tinction, and the silence of the laws in this respect is conclu- sive proof that the distinction did not exist.^ The preceding inquiry has been directed only to the estab- lishment of the order of succession among the maegth. What classes of property were heritable, and what not, is a differ- ent question, the investigation of which does not fall within the purpose of this essay. Undoubtedlj'-, all personalty which was not paid to the lord as heriot, or given to the wife as dower, if not disposed of by will, was inherited by the maegth. The relation of land to the laws of inheritance is discussed in another part of this volume. Although kinship was traced equally through females and through males, a marked distinction was made between the paternal and the maternal kin, and the rights and obligations of the former were much more extensive than those of 1 L. Sal. 59; Schroeder, I. p. 113. ^ No importance can be given to tlie use of tlie word yrfe (literally peous, pecunia) to designate inheritance. It is so used because originally only per- sonalty was iieritable at all. In the Anglo-Saxon period, it applies as well to land as to personalty, as in the expressions yrfe-hoc, a charter, yrfe-land, herei itary land, &c. Cf. Grimm, Rechtsalt. p. 467. 138 THE ANGLO-SAXOi?' FAMILY LAW. the latter. Certain rights, as the guardianship of orphans,' and the right to receive the heaUfang,^ belonged only to the paternal kin. In the blood-feud, the rights and obliga- tions of the paternal kin stood to those of the maternal kin in the ratio of two to one. Two-thirds of the wergeld were paid by the faedren maegth, one-third by the mSdren maegth.^ When an oath was to be taken by the kindred, two-thirds of the compurgators were taken from the paternal kin, one-third from the maternal kin.* It follows, as a mat- ter of course, that two-thirds of the wergeld were paid to the paternal kin, one-third to the maternal kin.^ Phillips^ infers from this that the male stem had a proportionate advantage in inheritance, but there is no evidence to support this view, and it is opposed to the whole spirit of the Saxon family law. It does not appear from the sources whether the maegtJi was limited to any fixed number of degrees of kinship. Some limitation of kinship, within a fixed degree, is found in most of the German tribes, and Von Sydow,^ on the authority of a passage in the laws of Henry I. (70, § 20), assumes that the Anglo-Saxon maegth was, in like way, limited to five degrees of kinship. The worthlessness of this passage as evidence of Saxon law has already been alluded to. No ar- gument can be derived from the prohibition of marriage within the fourth degree,^ as this is purely church law, and we have direct evidence that the Saxons, in early times, allowed marriage even between cousins.^ As each grade of side-relationship was assigned a place on some joint of the arm or hand, the means of computation must have failed with 1 Hlot. and Ead. § 6. 2 Schmid, Anh. Vn. c. 1, § 6 ; Hen. I. 76, § 7. 8 Alf. 27 ; Hen. I. 75, §§ 8, 9. 4 Schmid, Anh. VII. c. 1, § 3; Aethelst. II. § 11. Cf. Hen. I. 74, § 2; 76, § 1. 6 Alf. 8, § 3 ; Hen. I. 75, §§ 8, 9. 6 Ges. des Angels. Eechts, p. 146. Cf. Ganz, Erbrecht, IV. p. 308. 1 Erbrecht, p. 127. 8 Schmid, Anh. II. § 61 ; -ffithelr. VI. § 12. 9 Eeda, Ecc. Hist. lib. I. c. XXVII. ; Ecgb. Excerpt. CXXXII. (Thorpe 11 p. 117). THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 139 the seventh degree, and even before this the proof of commor blood must, in most cases, have become practically impossible. The question is important chiefly in its bearing on the laws of inheritance. The estates of those dying without heirs fell to the king, or to the community, as the case 'might be. Was there any limit beyond which common blood ceased to give a title to the inheritance? In the absence of any evi- dence, it may fairly be inferred that the limitation did not exist, and that, in any event, if common blood could have been proved in any degree, it would have given a title to the inheritance, if no nearer heirs existed.' In the Anglo-Saxon, as in all early societies of German origin, the degree of security and of distinction which each member of the community enjoyed depended chiefly upon the number, wealth, and power of his kindred, and there was little temptation to any one to separate from the family. But if the tie of kinship created rights, it involved also obligations which might easily become burdensome. As civilization advanced, and individual members of the maegth became wealthy and powerful, or attained a higher position in so- ciety, a tendency appeared on the part of the rich to discard their poorer kin. Thus a freeman need not pay the wergeld with a slave, or with one who, for any cause, forfeited his freedom.^ In the latter case, the kindred lost the right to share in the wergeld if they did not free their kinsman within a year.^ Moreover, every tendency to weaken the tie of kinship was encouraged by the state, which had much to fear from the independence of powerful families,* and whose peace was endangered by the continuance of the old system of private vengeance. King Edmund tried to break down the old system entirely, by permitting the maegth to abandon their kinsman, guilty of homicide, and to force him * Von Sydow and Von Ludewig are of the opinion that the limitation of the family within a fixed degree of kinship was not archaic German law ; but an innovation from Roman law, through the influence of the church. Vide Van Sydow, Brbrecht, p. 129, and the passage there quoted from Von Ludewig. 2 Ine, 74, § 2; Edw. 11. 6; .Atheist. VI. 12, § 2. « Ine, 24, § 1. < Atheist. III. 6 ; IV. 3; VI. 8, §§ 2, 3. 140 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. to bear the feud alone.^ The subsequent laws of ^thelred and Cnut prove that this measure was ineffectual, and was afterward abandoned by the state itself.^ The influence of the church contributed also to weaken the tie of blood. The rights and duties of kindred were inconsistent with the duties of monastic life, and those who became monks lost all rights of kin. The secular clergy, however, were not separated from their kindred, and retained their rights in the maegth? If accused of homicide, they must clear themselves with the help of their kin.* In one or two instances the loss of family rights occurs as a legal penalty." Thus, in Alf. 42, the man who attacks his foe, after he has yielded, forfeits his rights in the maegth ; and in Alf. I. §§ 4-5, a man who proves false to his lawful pledge, and resists imprisonment, forfeits his prop- erty, and, if slain, lies unavenged. These passages prove, what also is only natural, that outlaws, in general, were de- prived of family as of civil rights. Elsewhere, the man who refuses to aid against an outlaw, who is his kinsman, incurs a heavy fine.^ It is not clear from the laws whether separation from the maegth at will was permitted, or what the effect of the dissolution of the tie of kinship was. A passage from the laws of Henry I. would answer both these questions, if its evidence could be relied on ; but it is only a copy of a passage in the L. Salica, and is worthless, therefore, as evi- dence of Anglo-Saxon law.^ With regard to the first point, 1 Edm. n. 1. 2 ^thelr. II. 6; VIII. 23 ; Cnut, I. 5, § 2. * The same distinction between the regular and the secular clergy is found among the continental Saxons. Sachsensp. I. 25, § 1 : " With the brothers shares the priest, and not the monk.'' The gloss gives the reason : " Warum nimmt denn der Monoh nicht Erbe ? Diess gesehieht darum dass man ihn in der Welt fur todt achtet." Vide Von Sydow, p. 63. * iEethelr. VIII. 23 ; Cnut. I. 5, § 2. 6 Cf. Hen. I. 88, § 15. 6 Edg. III. 7 ; Cnut, II. 25, § 2. ' Hen. I. 88, § 13 (L. Salica, 60, Merkel) : " Si quis propter faidiam vel causam aliquam de parentela se velit toUere et earn forisjuraverit, et de societate, et hereditate et tota illius se rations separet ; si postea aliquis de parentibus suis abjuratis moriatur vel occidatur, nihil ad eum da hereditate Tel compositione pertineat ; si autem ipse moriatur vel occidatur, hereditas vel compositio filiis »uis vel dominis juste proveniat.'' Dr. Schmid thinks there are " inner grounds " THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 141 it is significant that all the laws which speak of a separation from the family are special provisions, where the dissolution of the ties of kinship is either permitted as a privilege, or in- curred as a penalty in special cases. It is only a fair infer- ence that the arbitrary separation from the maegth was not permitted. Of the effects of the dissolution of the tie of kin- ship, the laws mention only the' freedom from obligations in the blood-feud, with the loss of the corresponding rights. The obligations and rights of kindred were, however, so in- dissolubly connected in all Teutonic custom, that it is impos- sible to suppose one right or obligation lost, and the rest retained. A partial separation from the maegth is inconceiv- able. Freedom from the blood-feud must have carried with it the loss of rights of inheritance, of guardianship, and of all that belonged to kin. The various questions of the constitution of the maegth have been considered, and it is now possible to state in brief its general characteristics. In a general sense, the maegth means simply the kindred, — all of common blood through lawful marriage. But, when one person is taken as a start- ing-point in the reckoning, his kin form a definite group, which, as having a certain organic form, is called, in a re- stricted sense of the word, " the maegth." All of common blood with him, in whatever degree, whether on the father's or on the mother's side, have their appointed place in this group, according to the established order of succession. The maegth is subdivided into two groups, — the paternal and the maternal kin. Both are important portions of the gen- eral maegth, the rights of the former being only somewhat more extensive than those of the latter. The tie uniting the members of the maegth cannot be broken arbitrarily ; but in certain cases, by law, a withdrawal from the maegth is per- mitted. The man who thus renounces his family loses every right that belongs to kinship. which speak for the applicability of this passage to Anglo-Saxon law, and so far as concerns the effect of separation from the family on the rights of inheritance, the point he had in mind when he wrote, no one will be disposed to dispute his view. 142 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. Such was the Anglo-Saxon maegth. It remains to con- sider the laws regulating the relations between the members of this group, — to describe, so far as is possible from the sources, the various rights and obligations which together made up the maeg-lagu, the law of the kin. If all the laws which speak of the obligations of kin be compared, it will be found that, however these obligations differ in form, — whether it be to serve as guardian, to fight in the blood-feud, or to assist with oath before the court, — one idea lies at the bottom of all, — the idea of protection. Some forms of this protection, as the guardian- ship of orphans, are common to all stages of society, and to all laws. The peculiarity of early law here is only that, by custom, this protection is always exercised by the kin- dred. Other forms of this protection, as the pledge to mutual assistance in the blood-feud and before the court, are peculiar to primitive societies where a strongly centralized public law has not yet been developed, or where the princi- ples of feudalism have not yet corrupted the earlier law. In those early times, personal safety could only be secured by a system of mutual guaranty ; and the organization of the maegth offered itself naturally for this end. For here, to the advantages of the protection which each enjoyed was added the additional incentive of affection for his own blood. In the earliest laws of the Anglo-Saxons, this system of mu- tual guaranty is seen in its purity ; and it maintained itself throughout the Anglo-Saxon period, though under the later kings it was much weakened, on the one hand, by the in- creasing force and widening range of public law, and, on the other, by the development of the qua^i feudal relation of man to lord. To this difference in the nature of the protection afforded by the kindred corresponds a difference between those who enjoyed this protection. In the Anglo-Saxon community, all free persons — and it is only with free persons that this essay is concerned — were divided into two classes, — the legally independent and the legally dependent ; those who could act for themselves, and those who needed a guardian to act for THE ANGLO-SAXON FAJULY LA"W. 143 them. The obligations of kindred may therefore be divided into obligations between those legally independent, and obli- gations of those legally independent toward those legally dependent. The first have their ground in the peculiar con- stitution of early German society. With regard to the sec- ond class, a distinction must be made. That those legally dependent must be protected by those legally independent is a principle of all laws. But certain persons are legally de- pendent for natural reasons, and in all stages of society ; and others are legally dependent for artificial reasons, peculiar to a particular constitution of society. So women of full age were legally dependent in Anglo-Saxon law, for reasons pecu- liar to the constitution of Anglo-Saxon society. Apart from the right of inheritance, which has already been discussed, the rights of kindred will be considered, in connection with the obligations to which they correspond. The obligations between kindred legally independent may be classed under the two heads of, — 1. Obligations arising from the blood-feud ; and, 2. Obligations to defend a kins- man before the court, and to become responsible for him to the state. A full description and history of the blood-feud does not fall within the scope of this essay. As one form of the right of self-help, its details and its limitations belong more appro- priately to the subject of criminal procedure. Here it is only necessary to state what the rights and duties of the kin- dred in the blood-feud were. In one of iEthelred's laws ^ it is said : " If a breach of the peace be committed within a burh, let the inhabitants of the burh themselves go and get the murderers, living or dead, or their nearest kindred, head for head." If this were changed so as to describe a simple murder, it might read : " If a mur- der be committed, let the kindred of the slain themselves go and get the murderers, living or dead, or their nearest kin- dred, head for head." This would be an exact description of the primitive form of the feud. Unlike some of the con- tinental tribes, the Anglo-Saxons did not permit the exercise 1 ^thelr. II. 6. 144 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. of the right of feud for simply corporal injuries,'but limited it to the single case of guilty homicide. When a man was slain, his kindred must avenge the murder by slaying an enemy or enemies of equal value. ^ The obligation of the slayer's kindred was simply to defend his life. But already, in the time of Tacitus, and in the earliest laws of the Anglo- Saxons, the system of money compensation had been devel- oped, although it is uncertain whether, before the laws of Ine and Alfred,^ the kindred of the slain were obliged to accept the composition, or whether they were still free to choose the feud, if they preferred. Under the system of money com- pensation, the kindred of the slain must demand payment of the wer, or prosecute the feud.^ They had the right to the wer when paid,* and must by oath release the slayer and his kindred from the feud.^ The first instalment of the wer — the heaUfang — was shared equally between the father, the children, brothers, and paternal uncles.^ The rest of the wer was shared by the kindred, but exactly by which of the kin- dred does not appear. Evidently two-thirds were paid to the paternal kin, and one-third to the maternal kin : beyond this, nothing can be proved. The kindred of the man accused of homicide must, first of all, free him from the charge, if he be innocent, by an oath of his paternal and maternal kin.^ If this is not possible, they must negotiate with his foes for a release from the feud by payment of composition, or they become personally re- sponsible for his act, and are liable to be slain in the feud. If he is captured by his foes, the kindred have thirty days in which to release him by payment of composition.* They must become his sureties for payment of the wer, — eight of 1 Schmid, Anh. VIII. c. 1 ; JEthelr. II. 6 ; Cnut, 11. 66. 2 Ine, 74 ; Alf . 42, of. Schmid, Gloss, s. v. Fehderecht. ' Ed. Conf. 12, § 6 : " Emendationem faciat parentibus, aut guerram patia- tur, unde Angli proverbium habebant : Bicge spere of side other here, quod est dicere, lanceam eme de latere aut fer earn." i Schmid, Anh. VII. 3, § 4. 5 Schmid, Anh. VII. 1, § 4; Edm. II. 7. « Schmid, Anh. VII. 1, § 5 (quoted above, p. 128) ; Hen. I. 76, § 7. T iEthelr. VIII. § 23; Hen. I. 64, § 4. 8 Alf. 42, § 1. THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 145 tlie paternal kin, and four of the maternal kin ; ^ and must take an oath that peace shall be preserved.^ He must pay from his own property, if he can.^ If he cannot, the kindred must pay ; the paternal kin paying two-thirds, and the mater- nal kin one-third. If he cannot pay, and his kindred cannot or will not pay for him,* he becomes an outlaw. If he vol- untarily leaves the land, the obligation of the kindred is lim- ited to half the wer, in ^thelbirht's laws ; ^ but apparently, in Alfred's time, they must pay the whole. Only, if there were no paternal kin, the obligation of the maternal kin did not extend beyond the payment of their share. The guild- brethren paid a third, and for a third the slayer fled.^ In the same way, the obligation of the paternal kin was limited to the payment of two-thirds, even when there were no mater- nal kin.' It has been said above that the only lawful ground of the exercise of the right of feud was the guilty murder of one's kinsman. In certain cases, slaying was permitted, and the kindred could not avenge the slain. Thus, a man might fight " orwige," — that is, without incurring the penalty of murder, — if he found another within closed doors with his wife, daughter, sister, or mother.^ So also the thief caught in the act might be slain with impunity, only the slayer must prove on oath that he was a thief. If he did this, the kin- dred of the slain were forced to release the slayer from the feud.^ But, if he concealed the act, the kindred of the slain were permitted to clear their kinsman if they could.^" If they succeeded, the slayer must pay the wer.^^ But, if 1 Edm. n. 7 ; Schmid, Anh. VII. 1, § 3. 2 Edm. II. 7; Schmid, Anh. VII. 1, § 4. 3 ^thelb. 30. * It has been shown above (see p. 139) that, in certain cases, the kindred might abandon their kinsman, if they chose to do so. 5 JEthelb. 23. 6 Alf. 27 ; Hen. L 76, §§ 8, 9. 1 Hen. I. 75, § 8. 8 Alf. 42, § 7. Cf. ib. id. § 5. 9 Wiht. 25; Ine, 12, 16, 85, Pr. 10 Ine, 21, § 1. 11 Ine, 85, Pr. 10 146 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LA"W. they undertook to do so and failed, they incurred a heavy fine, and their kinsman lay unavenged.^ The method of proof was by oath of two of the paternal kin, and one of the maternal kin,^ or by ordeal.^ Besides the obligations arising from the blood-feud, the kindred were, in general, bound to assist their kinsman in an oath before the courts, whether he appeared as plaintiff or defendant. Their share in the oath against a charge of homicide, and in the oath to clear their kinsman slain as a thief, has been mentioned. A case entirely apart from the blood-feud occurs in the Law of the Northumbrian Priests, where it is said that a king's thane must clear himself from a charge of witchcraft or idolatry by an oath of twelve of his kinsmen.* If the organization of the maegth offered itself as a natu- ral means of the mutual guaranty needed in early times, the state found it equally useful as a police organization, enabling it to hold lawless men to right. It was one of the duties of the kindred to see that their landless kinsman had a lord in the folk-gemot, or else themselves to become responsible for him to the state. If they did not do this, he became an outlaw, and might be slain by any one as a thief.^ If any one was imprisoned for theft, witchcraft, &c., his kindred must pay his fine, presumably if his own property did not suflSce, and must become surety for his good conduct on his release.^ A notorious thief found guilty at the ordeal could be slain as an outlaw, unless his kindred paid his fines and became his sureties. If, afterward, he committed theft, they must pay for him, and bring him again into prison.'^ If the kindred found a lord for their kinsman, the lord seems not to have been bound to assume these obligations of the kindred. He might do so if he chose, or might return the man to the 1 Atheist. II. 11 ; Mi'i\e\i. UI. 7. 2 JEthelst. II. 11. 3 .ffithelr. lU. 7. « Schmid, Anh. H. § 51. 6 Atheist. IL 2; IL 8. 6 iEthelst. II. 1, § 3 ; II. 6, § 1 ; II. 7. 1 JEthelst. n. 1, § 4; VI. 1, § 4; VI. 9, cf. ib. VI. 12, § 2. THE AKGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 147 charge of his kindred.^ From the time of Edgar, the maegth, as a police organization, no longer existed. It had been super- seded by a system of police organizations of a purely political nature ; and the police duties hitherto exercised by the kin- dred had passed to the members of these political organi- zations.^ Lastly, it was the duty of the kindred to protect all of their kin who were not legally capable of protecting them- selves, and who were not members of a household where they could be protected by the head of the household. This protection exercised by the kindred is only a substitute for the protection exercised by the head of the household. The law of guardianship is therefore only an artificial extension of the law of the household, and, as such, will be more con- veniently considered when the law of the household is known. The various laws of the kindred, which have formed the subject of the previous pages, gradually — many of them very soon after the close of the Saxon period — fell into dis- use, and were superseded by other rules, more adapted to the changed circumstances and needs of society. The necessities of feudalism forced an entire change in the laws of inherit- ance, though here the older system maintained itself, for some classes of property, to quite a late period. Under the influence of Roman law, the Roman system of computing degrees of kinship, more accurate and precise, and capable of wider application, had already, in Glanville and Bracton, replaced the older system, more clumsy if more picturesque. Already, in Saxon times, the responsibility of the kindred in matters of police had passed to other organizations, founded upon more advanced political conceptions. The right of pri- vate feud, with the rights and duties growing out of it, main- tained itself against every hostile effort of the Saxon kings ; but, with the rapid growth of a strong, centralized state powel under the Norman kings, it could not but early succumb. Even the rights of guardianship the kindred eventually lost| 1 Edw. II. 3, cf. Ine, 74, § 1. 2 Edg. m. 6, IV. 3 ; ^thelr. 1. 1, Pr. ; Cnut, II. 20, Pr. ; Wil. I, 25. 148 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. and the customary guardian gave way to one appointed by the court. The rules of the maeg-lagu have left no lasting trace on English law. But the case is far different with the law of the household. Here we have to do with an institution now as then, and as far back as we know any thing of Aryan society, the basis, the corner-stone, of that society ; and it is not too much to say, that, however outward appearances ha^ve changed, the household is still what it was when the Teutonic race first appears in history. Not that the law of the house- hold has not undergone many and important modifications. Fathers no longer sell their daughters into marriage, or their infant sons into slavery. But the essential characteristics of the modern household already existed in the earliest Teutonic law; and daily occurrences remind us of the most archaic institutions of our heathen ancestors. The bridegroom who places the ring upon the bride's finger, and speaks the words, " With this ring I thee wed," stands very near to the old Saxon who gave to the bride's father the money of which the ring is but the representative,^ with a wed or surety to bind the contract ; and the widow's third, of English common law, is more true to its early original than the words of the mar- riage service, " With all my worldly goods I thee endow." But the old German law of the household is not merely in- teresting and important as showing the origin of modern laws and customs : it is even more important, for the student of comparative history, as furnishing a type — perhaps the most archaic type of which we have any knowledge — of a primi- tive Aryan institution. It has long been the fashion to re- gard the Roman family, with its rigid conception of a single head, to whose absolute will, wife and child, slaves and cattle, were all alike subjected, as the typical form of the primitive Aryan family, and to study the German family from the light of the Roman. Few questions, certainly, offer greater difficulties than this of the relation of the German to 1 The ring was originallj' only one form of the arrha or handgeld, a small sum of money paid to bind the contract. Hence, originally, only the bride- groom gave a ring: there was no exchange of rings. (Sohm, das Recht def Eheschliessmig, p. 55.) ' THE AKGLO-SAXON FAMILT LAW. 149 the Roman family. Were they essentially the same ? If not so, in what did they differ, and which was the earlier and purer type ? These are questions about which students are far from being of one mind ; it would be much beyond the present purpose to attempt to answer them ; but some sug- gestions of the main differences between the German and the Roman family will serve to make clearer the real character of the German household. It has already been remarked that, in early German law, kinship was not, as in Roman law, limited to the agnates, or those tracing their descent from a common ancestor through males. The mother's kin, if in some respects less favored than the father's kin, were still an important part of each man's family, and were united to him by close ties of mutual right and obligation. The wife, after marriage, remained in her owQ maegth; her husband merely became her guardian. Her children were as much kindred of her kin as of their father's kin. This difference between the German and the Roman institution is radical, and most important conse« quences result from it. The wife was not under the absolute power of her husband, but was protected by her kindred from his abuse. Even the children seem to have found, in their mother's kin, a protection against the abuse of the parental power. The members of the German household had rights even against the head of the household, rights made effective by the intervention of the maternal kin, — an arrangement impossible under the Roman system, which regarded the mother's kin as legally not kindred at all. This is something quite different from the Roman fatria potestas, where the children, during the lifetime of the father, were theoretically little better than slaves, except in so far as they had potential rights. Sir Henry Maine, in speaking of the patria potestas, says : " It is obvious that the organization of primitive socie- ties would have been confounded if men had called them- selves relatives of their mother's relatives. The inference would have been that a person might be subject to two dis- tinct patriae potestates; but distinct patriae potestates implied distinct jurisdictions, so that anybody amenable to two of 150 THE AiJ'GLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. them at the same time would have been under two different dispensations. As long as the family was an imperium in imperio, a community within a commonwealth, governed by its own institutions, of which the parent was the source, the limitation of relationship to the agnates was a necessary security against a conflict of laws in the domestic forum." ^ The justice of this remark is obvious at once : the absolute power of the father over wife and children could not exist where the mother's blood-relations were acknowledged as kin. The natural and only inference is, that, where we do find men calling " themselves relatives of their mother's rela- tives," the patria potestas, as known to the Romans, could not have existed. This argument may be extended even farther to show that, if a patriarchal system is ever possible in any stage of society where law can be said to exist, — a point by no means clear, — it can only be where a limitation of the family to the agnates exists. When Sir Henry says (Anc. Law, p. 138), " All the Germanic immigrants seem to have recognized a corporate union of the family under the mund or authority of a patriarchal chief, but his powers are obviously only the relics of a decayed patria potestas," he is as much in error as when he ascribes the Roman agnation to the primitive German system. Nothing rests upon more cer- tain evidence than that, in all German law, the maternal kin were a very important portion of the family. Wherever a preference for the male stem is shown, this either lies in the necessities of the case, as in the succession to the hergewate, or else bears all the marks of an innovation, as in the prefer- ence of the male stem in succession to land in the Salic and Thuringian law. It must be remembered that the inherit- ance of land among the kin was a comparatively modern in- stitution when the German folk-laws were written, — that this was a time of migration and conquest. It would not be strange if a limitation of inheritance to land to the male stem should, under such circumstances, have been introduced, from motives similar to those which afterward, in feudal times, gave rise to primogeniture. There is quite as much evidence 1 Ancient Law, p. 144. THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 151 in early German law to support the theory that the primitive German kinship was limited to those descended from a com- mon ancestor through females as that it was a system of agnation. Witness the statement of Tacitus (Germania, c. 20), " Sororum filiis idem apud avunculum, qui apud patrem honor," and the preference given by the Salic law to the fe- male kinship in the succession to movables.* It is the more important to call attention to these points here, because, in his last published lectures (" Early Historj- of Institutions "), Sir Henry has given the sanction of his great authority to the view that private property in land in England was derived originally from the ownership of the patriarchal chief. It is certainly not meant that a patri- archal organization, or any thing like one, ever existed among the Saxons in England. The Anglo-Saxon maegth was not a distinct group, composed of certain definite persons, all under a single head. The maegthe were inextricably inter- woven. It is only when some one person is taken as a starting-point in the reckoning, that the maegth assumes a defined form, and the several kin can be assigned to their proper place. Cousins were in the same maegth, but the mS dren-maegth of one did not belong to the maegth of the other. Moreover, already, in historic times, the individual predominated over the family. The rights of the kin in Anglo-Saxon law were individual rights. The duties of the kin were individual duties, enjoyed by, or binding upon, the nearest three, or the nearest six, however near or dis- tant these might be. In the earliest system, however, it seems to have been common for the children and grandchil- dren of a man deceased to live together without a division of 1 L. Salica, 59, cf. Schroeder, Geschichte des Ehelichen Guterreohts, I. p. 114. The American Indians seem to hare reached a stage of social development as nearly resembling that immediately preceding the Aryan as any thing we are likely to discover. Among them, both systems of kinship existed, — that through males and that through females ; but the latter seems to have been more common. Vide Mr. Lewis H. Morgan's article ("Montezuma's Dinner") in the North-American Review for April, 1876. Mr. Morgan's contributions to the history of early society are among the most valuable that have yet ap- peared. His forthcoming work on " Ancient Society " will be looked for iritb interest by all students of comparative history. 152 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LA"W. property ; and probably, in prehistoric times, large bodies of kindred did so. But even here there is no patriarch. All of mature age in this group stand legally on the same foot- ing. It is not the subjection of all descendants to the will of one ascendant, but the voluntary association of near kindred ; and the control exercised by the family council in such a group as little resembles the despotic power of a patriarchal chief, who " disposed absolutely of the persons and fortune of his clansmen,"^ as the free democratic constitution of prim- itive Germany resembled the highly aristocratic constitution of early Eome.^ Another important difference between the German and the Roman household was, that in German law sons did not remaiij under the parental authority during the lifetime of the father, but became independent at an early age, — whether at a fixed age, or only upon separation from the father's household, will presently be considered. Here again the German system is utterly opposed to the patriarchal the- ory. It is essential to that theory that the power of the father over his descendants should continue during his life. In short, under every aspect of the case, the German house- hold presents itself as something radically different from the Roman, and the German famUy sj'stem as something entirely different from any thing resembling a patriarchal system. But to return to the subject in hand, — the Anglo-Saxon law of the household. Under this head must be considered the relations of the father to his children, marriage, and the relations of husband and wife. It is, first of all, to be re- marked that the father's power extended only over children born in lawful wedlock.^ The father, by acknowledging his 1 Ancient Law, p. 140. 2 Mr. Morgan, in the article above referred to, tells us that, among the Amer- ican Indians, it was customary for the members of a gens to occupy a house in common, under the leadership of an elected head. The organization of the gens and of the tribe was democratic. Such a system might degenerate into a tribal system like the Celtic, or develop a democratic system like the German. There is no place for a patriarchal system between democratic Germany and a demo- cratic system like the Indian. » Cf. Alf. 42, § 7. . THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 153 natural child, could give him a place and protection in the household, and, by so doing, acquired a right to his wergeld, if he were slain ; but he could not give the child rights of inheritance or of kinship. The power of the father was not of the nature of property, but of guardianship ; it was not gewere, but mund.^ And this mund of the father was not absolute, but limited, inasmuch as the children had rights made effective by the intervention of the kindred. It does not appear that the father ever had the power of life and death, except over children who had not tasted food.^ Even this limited right is found only among the Frisians. The right to sell children into slavery was limited to cases of necessity, and, in Anglo-Saxon law, applied only to children under seven years of age : ^ even when sold, they were to be treated differently from other slaves.* The power to chastise the children is a natural power, inherent in all parental author- ity : in the Anglo-Saxon, as in many of the folk-laws, it is expressly ascribed to the father.^ It was also the natural right of the father to exact obedience from his children. In the earliest Anglo-Saxon period, he could give his daughter of immature age in marriage against her will. Poen. Theod. XIX. § 27 : " Puella vera xvi. vel xvil. annorum sit in potestate parentum ; post banc aetatem, non licet parentes ejus dare eam in matrimonium contra ejus voluntatem." But already, in the tenth century, the father's power in this re- spect was limited to a veto on the marriage.^ A right analo- gous to that of giving the daughter in marriage was the right to send her to a convent,' or to prevent her entering one. It is not clear how far the parental authoritj'' over sons in these respects extended. The father certainly could forbid his 1 Kraut, Vormundschaft, I. p. 287 ff. 2 Vita S. Ludgeri, Lib. 1, c. 2 : " Semel gustantes aliquid infantes apud pa- ganos necari illicitum erat." Vide Kraut, I. 45. 3 Poen. Theod. XIX. § 28 (Thorpe, II. p. 19). * Alf. Ecc. L c. 12. 6 Ecgb. Excerp. c. 96 (Thorpe, II. p. 111). " Schmid, Anh. VI. § 1 : " If a man desire to betroth a maiden or a womaiv and it so be agreeable to her and to her friends," &o. Cnut, II. 74 : "And let nf one compel either woman or maiden to whom she herself dislikes," &c. ' Poen. Theod. XVI. § 24; Kraut, II. p. 604. 154 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. marriage, or his entrance into a convent,^ and probably had, at first, the right to send him to a convent.^ An important right or duty of the father was to represent his children before the courts, to prosecute any injuries done to them, and to make amends for injuries committed by them. These rights and duties were so inherent in the German sys- tem that they are not once mentioned in the laws of the Anglo-Saxons : the absence of such mention is perhaps the strongest argument for their existence. Finally, the father had the right to administer the property of his son. Of course this applies only to such property as the son might acquire from some source other than the father, as, for ex- ample, by inheritance from the mother or her kin. The Anglo-Saxon, in common with all the earlier and purer Ger- man laws, contain nothing that throws any light on the father's power in respect of the property of his son ; and re- course must be had to late continental sources, like the Sach- senspiegel, or to codes more or less influenced by Roman law, like the Westgothic. This much, however, can be safely asserted, — the father had the gewere, the legal possession, of his son's property, and, as a consequence of this, the usu- fruct. His power of alienating such property was restricted to cases of necessity.^ Beyond this, the evidence will not warrant any conclusion. The paternal authority ended necessarily when either the son became a monk, or the father became a monk, or other- wise legally incapable. In the former case, the son passed into the guardianship of the church ; in the latter case, into the guardianship of the next of kin. When and how, apart from these special cases, parental authority was ended, is a question of great difficulty, and various views have been held by German scholars with regard to it. In the time of Taci- tus, there is not room for much divergence of opinion. At that period, sons were freed from the parental power, not at a fixed age, but when they were physically mature, and capa- » Poen. Theod. XIX. § 26 ; Conf. Ecgb. § 27; of. Liut. 129. » Kraut, II. p. 604. » Kraut, II. p. 608 flf. THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 155 ble of bearing arms.^ The emancipation required a formal ceremony, which consisted in conferring arms upon the youth in the assembly .^ This could be done either by the father, or by a third person with the father's consent. In the latter case, it was preceded by a tradition of the son by the father to this third person ; and the emancipation then had the effect of creating, between the emancipator and the one emancipated, a special personal relation, the nature of which depended upon the previous contract of tradition. The ordi- nary purpose of such an emancipation bj'' a third person was to create between him and the one emancipated the relation of lord and personal follower ; but it might also create the paternal relation. In this case, the emancipator would be- come the adopted father, but he would not acquire paren- tal authority. The effect would be merely to give the adopted son rights of succession from his adopted father. In exactly the same way as sons, wards became legally inde- pendent when the guardian conferred arms upon them in the assembly. These three cases are all contained in the much- quoted passage of the Germania (c. 13) : " Sed arma sumere non ante cuiquam moris quam civitas suffecturum probaverit. Tunc in ipso concilio vel principum aliquis vel pater vel pro- pinqui scuto frameaque juvenem ornant." The gift of arms by the prinoeps made the youth a personal follower of the princeps. The gift of arms by the father — the ordinary case — simply freed the son from parental authority, and made 1 It is difficult to see exactly wherein Professor Sohm differs from the ordi- nary view which regards this emancipation as marking the term of majority. He says (Altdeutsche Eeichs- und Gerichtsverfassung, p. 545) : " The gift of arms did not have the object to produce majority." And yet he says that it was " regularly occasioned by majority." What would have happened if" the father had refused to emancipate his son after the son became physically ma- ture 1 The answer must be that custom was so strong as to compel the father to emancipate in such case. Why not, then, say at once that, by custom, — a, custom as rigid as law, and in fact at that time the only law, — sons were regu- larly emancipated by their father when they became physically mature, — i.e., when they attained majority physically, the only majority known at that period ■? 2 For a fall account of this form of emancipation, see Sohm, R.- und 6. V, Beilage I. 156 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LA"W. him legally independent. The gift of arms by the propiri' quus is regarded by Sohm as an adoption, preceded by a tra- dition of the son by the father to the propinquus ; but it seems more natural to consider it as the means of freeing an orphan ward from the guardianship of his next of kin. As, at that time, a fixed age of majority was not established, some method of this kind would be necessary to terminate the guardian's authority. The special act by which the father's power was terminated, has been called an emancipation, but it must not be supposed that it had any thing in common with the Roman emancipatio. The latter removed the emancipated son from his family, and destroyed the tie of kinship and all rights resulting from it. Thus the emancipated son lost all rights of inheritance in his natural family. The German emancipation was nothing more than our majority, or coming of age. A special act was necessary, because, as yet, no legal term of majority was fixed ; but the emancipation had no effect on the tie of kin- ship, or the rights resulting from it. It simply made the son an independent member of the community ; effecting what, in Roman law, was only effected by the death of the father. This is only another result of the radical difference between the Roman and the German family, and, in so far, another proof of that difference. In the law, as it stood in the time of Tacitus, a change would first be demanded for the case of wards. As the guardian had the use and enjoyment of his ward's estate, the temptation would be strong to keep the ward depen- dent as long as possible. This evil would be met by enact- ments fixing the legal age at which the ward should become legally independent; and, in fact, such enactments are found in all the folk-laws. This change could not but have an effect on the relations of father to son. It would become the rule to make the son independent at the same fixed period. The difference between the ward and the son would be only that, while the ward became independent ipso facto on attaining majority, the son still needed to be emancipated THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 157 by a special act, which, however, regularly took place at or about the same period.^ From this point two lines of development are conceivable. Either the father's power would be assimilated to that of the guardian, and so would end ipso facto when the son attained majority, or the two powers would be kept quite distinct, and a special act would continue to be necessary for the emanci- pation of the son. The former is the view of Kraut ; ^ the latter the view of Stobbe.^ Putting aside for the moment all questions of Anglo-Saxon law, and considering only the law of the continent, it is clear that Stobbe has proved his view for several of the continental tribes, — for the Franks, the Alamanuians, and the Westgoths. In these tribes the emancipation of the son, still at the period of the folk-laws, required a special act. Besides the old ceremony of the gift of arms, other forms appear, as, among the Franks, cutting the boys' hair. Marriage also appears as ipso facto making the son independent. Stobbe admits, however, that stUl at the period of the folk-laws the emancipation of the son, by a special act, was regularly occasioned by majority. At the period of the early middle ages, the period of the Sachsenspiegel, the old forms of emancipation by cutting the hair or by gift of arms had fallen into disuse, as must inevitably have occurred before an advancing civilization. Unless, there- fore, parental authority was now assimilated to guardianship, and made to end like it, with the attainment of majority, some new ground of emancipation must be found. Such a ground Stobbe finds in the separation of the son from the household of his father, which took place as a rule at the marriage of the son, and which was regularly accompanied by a division of property between the father and the son. It has already 1 Greg. Tours. Vit. Patr. 9, 1. A Roman father emancipates his son, ten years old, by commendation. Sohm remarks : " This passage . . . contains a new proof that there were Eomans who emancipated in the German form, — at the term of majority fixed by German law." E.- u. G. V., p. 547, n. 7. Of. West. Goth, formula 34, quoted by Stobbe, Beitrage, p. 12. 2 Vormundschaft, II. 590, ff. 3 Die Aufhebung der vaterlichen Gewalt nach dem Recht des Ifittelalters (in his Beitrage'zur Geschichte des deutschen EeohtsJ. 158 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. been remarked that marriage was always regarded as ipso facto terminating the parental authority over sons. In the earlier law, however, marriage does not appear as a prominent form of emancipation, except in laws where a late period was established for majority. In laws where the earlier age of ten, twelve, or fifteen years was still the rule, the son would naturally be emancipated before the ordinary age of marriage. Kraut, of course, maintains that, for the later as for the ear- lier period, the father's power ended when the son attained majority. It would not be useful, for the present purpose, to enter at length upon the merits of the discussion for the period of the law-books. This would require a minute ex- amination of a large number of passages in the various legal sources of that period. A single suggestion only may be permitted. After studying the arguments of Kraut and of Stobbe, one cannot help thinking that, so far as the period of the Sachsenspiegel is concerned, their views are not so much at variance as, at first sight, they seem to be ; and that, after all, the difference may arise from ignoring the fact that paren- tal authority was not among the Germans, any more than it is to-day among us, a distinct, clearly defined right, like the Roman patria potestas, which must necessarily end entirely or not at all. Parental authority was not (to borrow the terms of Roman law) a Jus, as patria potestas, in Roman law, was a " right over persons, analogous to rights of property." The law said, the father shall have certain powers over his son. When the son comes of age, certain of these powers shall cease. When a division of property takes place between father and son, certain other powers of the father shall cease. Kraut, while holding that parental authority ended with the son's attainment of majority, admits that, even after this period, the father continued to administer the common prop- erty, and, as head of the household, to represent his son before the courts. The father could even require such obedience from his son as was necessary' for the well-being of the household. On the other hand, it cannot but be admitted that the father's control of his son's person was reduced to a minimum, after the son attained majority. The THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LA"W. 159 father could no longer chastise his son, nor forbid his becom- ing a monk, nor prevent his marriage. Stobbe even admits that, for the private property of the son, that which he had from sources other than the father, the father was only- guardian, and was subject to the same pledges as other guar- dians.^ In Westgothic law, at least, this included the pledge to restore a portion of such property to the son, when he came of age, whether married or not.^ That even, as regards the father's property, the attainment of majority had an important effect is admitted by Stobbe. Before majority, the son had no right of veto in alienations by the father ; after majority, he acquired this right.^ In some laws also the son, after majority, had the right to demand a division of property.* Finally, the son was always at liberty, after he attained majority, to leave his father's house, and go where or do what he chose. All this points to a possible solution of the difficulty. One is left by Stobbe to infer that emancipation in the time of Tacitus and of the L. Salica had the same effect as the later separation from the father's household. But was this the fact ? Did the son, when his hair was cut, get control of his share of the common property, or, if he remained in the house of his father, is it supposable that the father, as head of the household, should have had no control over his behavior ? The emancipation by special act in the early law was an emancipation of the person. The son became legally inde- pendent, possessed of political rights and subject to political and military duties ; but he continued to hold his property in common with his father untU his marriage. The difference between his position before and after majority is well shown by the fact that, before majority, he had no voice in the ad- ministration of the common property ; after majority his con- sent was necessary to all acts affecting this property. He was then, after he was emancipated, not under the father's power, but he was associated with the father, who, as the elder, had the active administration. Now, as the power of 1 Stobbe, p. 16, n. 13. 2 Stobbe, p. 11. 3 Stobbe, p. 21. * Kraut, II. p. 595. 160 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. the father over the person of his son ceased in the time of Tacitus and of the L. Salica, when the son was emancipated by special act of commendation, &c., so in later law, when these customs had become obsolete, it ceased when the son attained majority. On the other hand, as the common own- ership of father and son, their common life in the same house- hold, and the rights of control necessarily given to the father as the elder of those living in the same house, were not extin- guished, — let us not say by commendation (for this supposes a separation from the household), but by the ceremony of the gift of arms or of cutting the hair, performed by the father himself; so, in later law, they were not extinguished by the attainment of majority, but continued till the son separated from the father's household. In fine, as the powers of the German father did not form any thing at all resembhng the Roman patria potestas, is it not after all futile to seek in Ger- man law for any thing having the same effects as the Roman emancipatio P The very expression " emancipation " is as little suited to express what really took place in primitive Germany as it would be to express what happens to-day. If we turn now to the Anglo-Saxons, it is, first of all, very significant that no mention is made anywhere in their laws or history of any ceremony of emancipation of the son by commendation, by cutting the hair, or by any special act. Only in Norman times does such appear in the foris familia- tio, which is undoubtedly of Norman origin, and is entirely analogous to the separation of households in the later law of the continent. The silence of the Saxon sources in this re- spect gives, at the outset, a strong presumption that already from the first the father's power in Saxon England was assimi- lated to guardianship, and ended like it when the son attained majority ; and evidence is not lacking to make this presump- tion a certainty. The period of majority in Anglo-Saxon law was first fixed at the completion of the tenth year ; ^ but, later, the period of dependence was lengthened to twelve years.^ Even this came in time to be regarded as too early 1 HI. & Ead. 6 ; Ine, 7, § 2. 2 iEthelst. II. 0. 1 i Cnut, II. 20, 21. THE AN6L0-SAX0K FAMILY LAW. 161 I an age to assume the responsibilities of manhood, and the later law shows a tendency to prolong the period to the com- pletion of the fifteenth year,i though there is no suificient evidence that this ever became law in the Saxon age. Throughout Norman times, however, and still in the time of Glanville, this was the age of majority for all except those holding knight's fees.^ For these the Normans had intro- duced the period of twenty-one years. That the father's control over the person of his son ended at the period of majority is clear from the following passages in the sources. Poen. Theod. XIX. § 26 : " Puer usque in xv. annos sit in potestate patris sui ; postea seipsum potest facere monachum si vult." ^ Ecgb. Excerp. c. 96 (Thorpe II. p. Ill) : " Parvulus usque annos xv. pro delicto corporali disciplina castigetur ; post hanc vero aetatem, quicquid deliquerit, vel si furatur, retribuat, seu etiam secundum legem exsolvat." Ine 7, § 2 : "A boy of ten years may be privy to a theft." -Slthelst. II. 1. Pr.: " That one spare no thief taken in the act over twelve winters and over eight shillings." Cnut II. 20 : " And we will that every freeman be brought into a hundred or a tithing, who wishes to be entitled to satisfaction and to wer, if any one slays him after he is twelve winters old." Cnut II. 21 : " And we will that ever}' freeman above twelve years make oath that he will neither be a thief, nor cognizant of a theft." Evidence more conclusive could not be desired. It is impossible to restrict the application of these passages to wards. They are general provisions applying to all free- men, whether orphans or sons of fathers still living. The boy, ten or twelve years old, can become a monk ; can sell himself as a slave ; can no longer be chastised. Henceforth . 1 .aithelst. VI. 12. 2 Hen. I. 70, § 18 (cf. L. Ripuaria, 81) ; 59, § 9 ; Glanv. VII. c. 9. Fifteen is also the age in the Kentish Custumal. Lambarde, p. 522 ; Robinson's Com. Law of Kent, p. 289. ' The number xv. here is without doubt an error of the transcriber. Another MS. has " quatuordecim annorum homini licet se servum facere." See note to Conf. Ecgb. § 27 (Thorpe II. p. 163). In two MSS. it is said : " Puella autem xiii. annorum sui corporis potestatem habet.' See note to Poen. Theod. XIX. § 26 (Thorpe II. p. 19). As the tendency of the law was to lengthen rather than to shorten the period of dependence, it is probable that the smaller of these num bers is the correct one. 11 162 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. he acts for himself, and is himself responsible for ' his acts. He must take oath to observe the laws, and enroll himself in one of the organizations provided for that purpose. What better commentary could be found on the words of Tacitus, " Ante domus, mox reipublicae " ? And this personal and legal independence of the son, which Tacitus tells us was in his time acquired by the gift of arms in the assembly, is now acquired ipso facto by the attainment of majority. There is here no commendation, or cutting of the hair ; no emancipa- tion, seuto frameaque ; no mention of a separation of house- holds. Before the completion of the tenth or twelfth year, the boy is legally dependent. After the completion of the tenth or twelfth year, the boy is legally independent. He is no longer a boy, but a man possessed of all the rights and sub- ject to all the duties that belong to complete manhood. Nothing is said of the property relations between father and son. On this point, the Anglo-Saxon sources leave us entirely in the dark. Any control of the father over property acquired by the son would be inconsistent with the personal independence, which it has been shown the son enjoyed. It is clear from the charters that sons acquired a right of veto in alienations of the family estate. Probably until marriage sons continued as a rule to live with their father ; and it would not be unnatural that the property of the mother, which during her life the father had administered as guardian and which after her death was inherited by the sons, should continue to be administered by the father until the marriage of the son led him to reclaim it. This administration would be in no way a right inherent in parental authority, but only a result of the custom of living in common : it would be dependent entirely upon the will of the son. There is nothing to show that the father had any legal rights over his son's property after the son attained majority. As all women were legally dependent by reason of their sex, the attainment of majority could not have the same im- portance for girls that it had for boys. Daughters remained under their father's power until they married or went into a convent. Still the laws made a distinction between girls and THE AiTGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 163 adult women, 1 and this distinction was not merely nominal, but had a legal effect. The age of majority for girls was probably the same as that for boys. The Penitentials of Theodore and Ecgberht give various ages of majority ; ^ and, if we assume the earlier of these to be the correct one, girls attained their majority at the completion of the twelfth year, — the ordinary majority for boys during the greater part of the Saxon period.^ The effect of majority for women was to free their persons from the arbitrary disposal of the father.* They could enter a convent if they chose, and they could no longer be sent to a convent or given in marriage against their will.5 This last, however, was the effect of majority only in the early law. It has been shown that in the later law even girls under age could not be married against their will. All other powers of the father over his daughter continued until she married or went into a convent. He administered her property as guardian, and had the use and enjoyment of it, and he represented her in court. But by far the most impor- tant power of the father was in the marriage of his daughter. Here the rights of every guardian of an adult woman unmar- ried were the same as those of the father, and what is said of the one will hold of the other. What these rights were wiU appear presently in the course of the discussion of marriage, — a subject which must now engage our attention. In the earliest Anglo-Saxon laws, marriage ^ appears in the form of a sale by the father or other guardian to the bride- groom. Ine, 31 : " If a man buy a wife and do not pay the purchase price . . . ; " ^thelb. 83 : " If she is betrothed for money to another man . . . ; " id. 31 : " If a freeman lie with 1 Alf. 26, imgemntraedne wifmon ; i.e., women under age. 2 Poen. Theod. XIX. §§ 26, 27 ; Conf. Ecgb. § 27 and note. " In the Continental law the age was the same for both sexes. Ej-aut I. p. 124 ff. * Poen. Theod. XLS. § 26 and note ; Conf. Ecgb. § 27. ' Vide supra, p. 153. ' The early German marriage has been so thoroughly treated by Schroeder (Geschichte des ehelichen Guterrechts) and Sohm (das Recht der Eheschliessung) that it is now only necessary to present their conclusions so far as they relate to Anglo-Saxon law. Some peculiarities of the Anglo-Saxon development mus4 however, be considered. 164 THE AKGLO-SAXON FAMILY. LAW. a freeman's wife, let him purchase her with his wergeld and let him provide another wife with his own money and bring her to him." Whether marriage was ever an actual sale of the woman's person, treated as a chattel, may be doubted. The high estimation in which women were held among the Germans, when they first appear in history, proves at least that, if this was ever the case, it must have been in very remote times. The mere fact that marriage took the form of a sale proves nothing. In a primitive society, legal conceptions and legal forms are few and simple. The same word is used to designate things in fact different. Thus, all kinds of protec- tion were included by the Germans under the designation mund, but it does not follow that this protection was in all instances of the same nature. Paternal authority, power of husband over wife, of guardian over ward, may in the begin- ning have been alike, but it is not necessary to assume this from the use of mund to designate them all.^ The use of the form of sale for marriage does not prove that marriage was ever an actual sale, like any ordinary sale of chattels. This one legal form may have served several ends. It may have been used for contract, for conveyance, or for marriage, without its being necessary to assume that these were all of precisely the same nature. In fact, in the earliest Anglo- Saxon laws, marriage has a twofold aspect. In part, it ex- hibits the characteristics of an ordinary sale ; in part, it differs very much from other sales, and appears as a transac- tion not merely of a mercantile, but of an ethical character. In the first place, it is certain that in historic times the thing transferred was not the person of the woman, treated as a chattel, but only the rights of guardianship. For these rights a real price wa,s paid by the bridegroom to the guardian, and so far marriage resembled an ordinary sale. The strict for- malities of a sale were also, throughout, observed.^ On the 1 The mund exercised by the king over ships of war (-Sthelr. VI. 34) is an instance in point. This, certainly, was different from parental or marital au- thority. 2 The contract of betrothal seems also to have included a warranty like any contract of sale. ./Sthelb. 77 : " If a man buy a maiden, let it be paid for in cattle, if it be without guile ; but, if there be guile therein, let him bring hei THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 165 other hand, the price was not the subject of bargain as in ordinarj'- sales, but, like the wer, was fixed by law, according to the rank of the woman.' Again, an ordinary contract of sale gave a right of action against the vendor to compel him to deliver the thing sold.^ The guardian who had contracted to give the giii to the bridegroom could not be compelled to this by an action. He could only be sued for breach of con- tract.^ The ethical nature of marriage was already recognized in the earliest historic times, and the history of marriage in early German law is the history of its gradual enfranchisement from the forms of a sale, and the substitution of other forms more consistent with its ethical character.* The price paid by the bridegroom to the guardian was called the weotuma.^ This word is connected with the Gothic root home again and let his property be restored to him." Cf. Ine, 56 : " If a man buy any kind of cattle, and he then discover any unsoundness in it within thirty days, then let him throw the cattle on his hands, or let him swear that he knew not of any unsoundness in it when he sold it to him." 1 Sohm, p. 23 : " The pretium puellae is the analogue of the composition which, according to German conceptions, is not the penalty for a wrong, but a repara- tion for an injury to rights inestimable in money (body and life, freedom and honor)." The proofs of this view are adduced by Prof. Sohm, in his article, " Ueber die Entstehung des L. Ribuaria," in the Zeitsohrift fiir R. G., V. p. 419, ff. Mt\\e\b. 82, as translated by Schmid, seems to contradict this view. Schmid renders it thus : " If a man carry off a maiden by force, let him pay fifty shil- lings to the owner, and afterward let him buy her according to the will of that one to whom she belongs." It is at least doubtful whether this is the true meaning of the passage. Price (Thorpe, p. 25) translates "let him buy the object of his will of the owner." But, even accepting Schmid's rendering, the passage may be explained on the ground that it is an illegal marriage, and that in such case the guardian could exact what he chose. In the Mosaic law there was no bargaining about the price. Vide Bxod. xxii. 17 : " If her father utterly refuse to give her unto him, he shall pay money according to the dowry of virgins." Alfred, in translating this passage, uses the word " weotuma." Alf. Ecc. Laws, § 29. 2 Laband, Vermogensrechtliche Klagen, p. 149, flE. ' Poen. Theod. XVI. § 29 : " Ilia autem desponsata si non vult habitare cum eo viro cui est desponsata, reddatur ei pecunia quam pro ipsa dedit et tertia pars addatur. Si autem ipse noluerit, perdat pecuniam quam pro ilia dedit." That this is a real contract is proved by the fact that the price is prepaid. The version of Ecgberht belongs to a later period. (See below, p. 171.1 Cf. Loning, Vertragsbruch, I. p. 142 ff. 1 Cf. Sohm, p. 24. ' Alf. Ecc. L. 12, 29. In one passage the word gijl or gyji occurs in the sam« 166 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LA"W. vidan, to bind. The weotuma was the payment which bound the contract ; it was also that which gave the marriage its character of legality. Without payment of the weotuma there could be no legal marriage. All marriages without such pay- ment and all violations of the woman's person were violations of the rights of the guardian, and were punished by a fine called mund-bryoe. Schroeder ^ has shown that this fine had the closest connection with the legal weotuma, and was gen- erally in amount either equal to the weotuma, or some multiple of it. The reason of this connection between the two is ob- vious. As the rights over the woman were something for which a price was regularly paid, to seize upon these rights without the consent of the owner and without paying for them was to steal; and the fine was proportioned to the value of the thing stolen, — the value, in this case, being the amount of the legal weotuma. The amount of the weotuma in ^thel- birht's laws appears from the following passages, — ^thelb. 75 : " For the mund of a widow of the best class of the eorl's degree, let the bot be l shillings ; of the second class xx shil- lings ; of the third xri shillings ; of the fourth vr shillings." ^thelb. 82 : " If a man carry off a maiden by force let him pay L shillings to the owner," &c. The fine of fifty shillings, in the latter passage, must be regarded as a single mund-hryce, equal to the weotuma. For the forcible abduction of a widow the mund-hryce was equal to double the value of the weotuma. ^thelb. 76 : " If a man carry off a widow not belonging to him, let the mund be twofold." In Alfred's time the amount of the weotuma was apparently sixty shillings for a woman of the lowest rank. For if, in Alf. 18, § 1, the woman untrue to her betrothal pays a fine of sixty shillings, while in Poen. Theod. XVI. § 29 (Thorpe, II. p. 11) it is said in like case, " reddatur ei pecunia quam pro ilia dedit," it is probable that the two are identical.^ So in Alf. 11, § 2, the violation of a maiden of the lowest rank is punished by a mund-bryce of sense. Vide Ine, 31, with Schmid's note. Weotuma is kindred to the Burgun- dian, wittemon ; Frisian, wetma ; Alamannian, widem ; Mod. Ger. witthum. Sohm, p. 23 ; Schmid, Gloss, s. v. weotuma. 1 Schroeder, I. Einl. § 2. '^ Schroeder, L p. 16. THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 167 the same amount. For women above the rank of ceorl, the weotuma increased according to the wer.^ Sometimes the mund-lryce, proportioned to the weotuma, was replaced by the wer of the guilty party ,2 and, later, when the weotuma was no longer a price to the guardian, but a gift to the bride of no fixed value, this became the rule.^ For the full completion of marriage in all its effects, two acts were necessary, — the beweddung, or betrothal ; and the gifta (plur. of giff), the delivery of the woman, or nuptials. Sehmid, Anh. II. § 61: "And we prohibit with God's prohi- bition that any one have more wives than one, and let her be lawfully betrothed and given (heweddod and forgifen)^ The betrothal was the promise, on the one hand, to give in marriage, — on the other, to take in marriage, and to pay the purchase price. But the mere promise was not enough. As marriage was a sale, so betrothal was a contract of sale. To understand the nature of the betrothal, it will therefore be necessary to speak of the early German law of contract.* In the earliest German law, there was no consensual, but only a real or a formal, contract. In other words, a mere conven- tion was not binding : it must be accompanied by some for- mal act, or by performance on one side. But when this act had been performed, or payment had been made on one side, the contract was not binding merely as giving a claim for damages against the debtor : it effected an actual transfer of title. It transferred the negative effects of property, — the jus vindicandi and the Jus abutendi of the Romans. The positive effects of property — the power to use and enjoy the JUS utendi fruendi — were transferred when the actual delivery took place. The contract — not the delivery of actual possession — was the ground of the title of the pur- chaser, donee, &c. Hence, in a contract of sale, the purchaser who had paid the price had an action to obtain the thing from the vendor ; and, in a contract for the sale of immovables, he J Alf. 11, § 5. 2 ^thelb. 31. ■> Cnut, II. 52; Will. I. 12; Sehmid, Anh. II. § 63. * In this description of the early German law of contract, Sohm hai beei closely followed throughout. But see Loning for a contrary view. 168 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. could recover even from third parties to whom the vendor had alienated the property. The delivery was only the ac- complishment, in fact, of what was already effected in law by the contract. In the earliest Anglo-Saxon laws, the betrothal appears as a real contract of sale, binding when the weotuma was paid by the bridegroom to the guardian. That the weotuma was regularly prepaid, appears from Poen. Theod. XVI. § 29 (Thorpe, II. p. 11) : " Ilia autem desponsata si non vult habi- tare cum eo viro cui est desponsata, reddatur ei pecunia quam pro ipsa dedit, et tertia pars addatur. Si autem ipse noluerit, perdat pecuniam quam pro iUa dedit." When the weotuma was paid, the contract was binding, and, like other real con- tracts, gave the purchaser the rights of a legal owner, so far as this could be done consistently with the ethical character of marriage. Sohm divides the effects of marriage, like the effects of property, into positive and negative effects. The negative effect of marriage was to establish between husband and wife the pledge of fidelity. The positive effect of mar- riage was to transfer the wife into the actual power of her husband, — to give him control of her person and property. The former was the effect of betrothal ; the latter, the effect of the delivery of the woman, — the gifta or nuptials. The gift of the woman was only the completion, in fact, of what was already accomplished in law by the betrothal. The be- trothal, not the gift of the woman, was the ground of the husband's title. The man and woman were therefore mar- ried when they were betrothed.^ Hence any violation of the betrothal by a third person was a violation of the rights of the bridegroom,^ and was punished by a fine paid to him.^ Thus far, Sohm's view is entirely in accordance with evi- dence, and presents no difficulty. The betrothal was the transaction which gave marriage its effect in law ; and it con- 1 The English " wedding " is derived from the Anglo-Saxon " beweddung," which meant, not the nuptials, but the betrothal. So a " wedded " wife, — i.e., a wife promised or betrothed. Cf. Sohm, p. 56. ^ Poen. Ecgb. II. § 12 : " Si mulier aliqua desponsata sit non est permissum ut aliquis alius vir illam ei auferat." « Mthel. 83. THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 169 ferred the rights of a husband on the bridegroom, so far as third parties were concerned. But was the case the same as between the wife or her guardian and the bridegroom ? It has been shown above that the contract of betrothal, unhke other real contracts of sale, did not give the bridegroom an action to compel the delivery of the bride, as this would be contrary to the ethical character of marriage.^ If the guar- dian refused to deliver the woman, or she refused to be deliv- ered, the bridegroom had only a suit for damages, to recover the weotuma previously paid, and an additional fine of one- third.2 On the other hand, a breach of betrothal by the man was punished by loss of the weotuma. That he also had to pay an additional fine appears from Ine, 31 : " If a man buy a wife, and do not pay the purchase price, let him give the money and pay compensation, and make bot, to the sureties, according to his infraction of his pledge." The bridegroom, like any purchaser, could be sued for the price ; but the guardian, unlike other parties to a contract, could not be compelled to delivery, but could only be sued for damages.^ From the point of view of the legality of the marriage, of the violation of betrothal by third parties, even of its vio- lation by the bridegroom, the contract of betrothal was still, like other real contracts, a ground of acquiring the title. But, from the point of view of the breach of betrothal by the woman or her guardian, the contract created only a rela- tion of obligation, and in no way differed from the Roman contract. It was not conveyance, but contract, in the mod- ern sense.* Sohm has shown that the ethical character of marriage was the means of the first introduction into German law of a contract in favor of a third party.^ If the view here taken be correct, it was also the means of the first introduc- i There are some indications that in the oldest German law the bridegroom had a right to compel delivery. Cf. Loning, I. p. 145, n. 10. 2 Poen. Theod. XVI. § 29. Conf. Ecgb. § 20; Alf. 18, § 1. ' This was the most that was ever allowed in the oldest Latin law. The Roman law did not even allow this, but permitted a suit only where there was an express penal stipulation. Puchta, Inst. II. p. 301. * It is difficult to see, therefore, why Professor Sohm, in common with all the German writers, denies to the early German law the idea o£ a contraci in specie, in the Roman or modern sense. * Sohm, p. 34. 170 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. tion into German law of the idea of a contract in specie, in the Roman sense, as distinguished from a conveyance. Such was the betrothal in the earliest Anglo-Saxon period. The passage above quoted from Ine (§ 31) points to a change which had already taken place in the law of betrothal, corre- sponding to a development in the law of contract. In the earliest form of real contract, the purchaser, forced to pay in advance to make the contract binding, incurred the risk of non-fiilfilment by the other side. This evil was remedied by the introduction of a new principle. The contract was held to be binding, if the purchaser had paid only a small nominal sum as earnest-money. This is the German handgeld, arrha, — the Lombard launieJiild. The handgeld was not, in any sense, payment or partial payment. It was the representa- tive, not of a money value, but of a juridical effect. It only served to preserve the appearance of a real contract, without the necessity of prepayment by one side. Ine, § 31, and Alf. 18, § 1, show that already, in the time of Ine and Alfred, the price was no longer paid at betrothal, but onlj' promised. Immediately another change in the law of betrothal became possible. The price was no longer paid to the guardian, but was given to the woman herself after marriage. Alf. Ecc. Laws, § 12 : " - . . let him see that she have raiment, and that which is the value of her maidenhood, — namely, the weotuma. . . ." The betrothal was no longer a true contract of sale : it was only a fictitious contract of sale. The form of a sale was preserved : the contract remained a real contract, by payment to the guardian of the handgeld ; but the bride- groom contracted to give the price, not to the guardian, but to the worn an. 1 The betrothal once freed from the character of a true con- tract of sale, the next step was easy to take. The betrothal ceased to be a real contract even in form, and became a for- mal contract, — that is, a contract which derived its binding force, not from payment of the price or of the handgeld, but from the performance of some solemn act. • The formal con- 1 The earliest case in German law of a contract in favor of a third party. Sohm, p. 34. THE AITGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 171 tract of German law was the fides facta,^ or wette. It consisted in the giving and taking of the straw, festuca. Wette, like witthum, is kindred with the Gothic vidan, to bind. " It is that which binds, and, as applied to the contract, the contract which binds." ^ The principal cases of the application of the wette were, — 1. In procedure where the party adjudged to make payment, or to give proof, promised to fulfil the judg- ment ; 2. Where one person became surety for another ; 3. In the promise of a penal sum.^ From the beginning of the tenth century, the Anglo-Saxon betrothal appears in the form of contract, made binding by the giving of sureties both by the bridegroom and the guardian. That a penal sum was also promised, appears from Conf. Ecgb. § 20 (Thorpe, II. p. 149, note) : * "Si puella desponsata cum eo esse nolit cui vo- luntate sua desponsata erat, tunc reddat pecuniam quam antea accepisset, cui talem addat accessionem qualis tertiae parti pecuniae aequalis sit et solvant propinqui suum wedd." " Fortunately a full description of the betrothal in this form has come down to us in an Anglo-Saxon formula, commonly called the Kentish Betrothal, belonging probably to the tenth century. This interesting and important document deserves to be quoted entire : — ScHMiD, Anh. VI., § 1 : "If any one wish to betroth a maiden or a woman, and it so be agreeable to her and to her friends, then it is right that the bridegroom, according to the law of God and the cus- toms of the world, first promise and give a wed to those who are her guardians that he will keep her according to God's law, as a man should his wife ; and let his friends be sureties for that. § 2. " After that, let it be known to whom the foster-lean ' belongs. 1 For a different view of the fides facta, see Loning, I. p. 3 £E. Cf . Sohm, p. 86, n. 27. " Sohm, p. 35. 3 Sohm, pp. 36-46. * Sohm, p. 47, n. 47. 5 This passage is only a copy of the passage from Theodore quoted above (p. 168). The Penitential of Theodore belongs to the seventh century; the ori- ginal of that of Ecgberht, to the eighth, but, in the form in which it has come down to us, probably to a somewhat later period. The passage from Theodore (XVI. § 29) shows the betrothal as a real contract, with price paid in advance to the guardian (pecuniam quam pro ilia dedit) : there is no mention of a we.d. The passage from Ecgberht shows the betrothal as a formal contract with wed and the woman, not the guardian, receives tlie weotuma, * What the foster-lean was is doubtful. The word means " money for nour 172 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. Let the bridegroom give wed for that, and let his friends be sureties for it. § 3. " Then let the bridegroom declare what he will grant her if she choose his will, and what he wiU grant her if she live longer than he. § 4. " And if it be so agreed, then it is right that she shall be enti- tled to half of the inheritance, and to all if they have children in common, unless she again choose a husband. § 5. " Let him confirm all that which he has promised with a wed, and let his friends guarantee it. § 6. " If, then, they are agreed in every thing, let her kinsmen take it in hand, and betroth their kinswoman to wife, and to a righteous life, to him who desired her ; and let him undertake the surety who has control of the wed. § 7. " If, then, he desire to lead her out of the land into another thane's land, then it is right that her friends have there an agreement that no wrong shall be done her ; and, if she commit a fault, that they may be nearest in the bot, if she have not wherewith she may make bot. § 8. " At the nuptials, there shall be a mass-priest by law, who shall, with God's blessing, bind their union to all prosperity. § 9. " It is also well to be looked to that it be known that they, through kinship, be not too nearly allied, lest that be afterwards divided which before was wrongly joined." As it appears here, the betrothal is not a sale, real or ficti- tious, but a formal contract, made binding by the wed. All the formalities which concern the legality of marriage are attached to the betrothal. It, and not the gift of the woman, is the legal act of marriage. The unimportance of the gift of the woman, as compared with the betrothal, appears clearly from the small account taken of it in the formula. The nup- tials are now, however, celebrated in the presence of a priest, and hallowed by the blessing of the church, — almost the earliest example of any religious ceremony of marriage in German law, but still a religious ceremony having no effect ishment." Schroeder (I. p. 51, n. 13) regards it as a pledge to maintain the children hy the njarriage. Sohm (p. 317, note) considers it as a handgeld which is not paid, but only promised, at betrothal, — a supposition rendered probable by the fact that the handgeld was ordinarily spent in the purchase of beer or wine for the entertainment of those present, or distributed to the poor. THE ANGLO-SAXOK FAMILY LAW. 173 in law.^ The weotu7na is no longer a purchase price paid at betrothal to the guardian, but a gift to the woman, promised, with sureties, at betrothal. It appears in the formula in the words, " what he will give her if she choose his will." ^ As a gift to the woman, the weotwma is of small importance as compared with the morning-gift. Thus, in one deed of be- trothal, a weotuma appears of one pound of gold by the side of a morning-gift composed of extensive grants of land. Cod. Dip. DCCXXXII. : " Here appeareth in this writing the agreement that Godwin made with Byrhtric when he wooed his daughter ; that is, first, that he gave one pound's weight of gold for that she should choose his will. And he gave to her the land at Street, with all that belonged to it, and at Burwaramesc another half-hundred hides ; and there- with thirty oxen, and twenty cows, and ten horses, and ten theow-men. This was promised at Kingston, before Cnut, in the witness of Archbishop Lyfing, &c. . . . And that they would conduct the maiden to Brightling, all became surety for this. . . . And whichever of those two lives longer shall have all the property, as well that land that I gave to her as every thing," &c. To the close of the Anglo-Saxon period, the weotuma seems to have remained a separate gift, of little intrinsic value, serving only to mark the legality of the marriage.^ In the time of Cnut, the sale of the rights of guardian in the old way was forbidden by law (Cnut, II. 74) : 1 Sohm, p. 162, 317. 2 Schroeder has shown this clearly, I. p. 54. * On the continent, the purchase price became a gift to the bride of consid- erable importance, and often consisting of realty. Schroeder (I. p. 54, n. 22) ascribes the same development to the Anglo-Saxon weotuma, and finds examples of a weotuma, consisting of realty, in Cod. Dip. DCCXXXVIII. (vide supra p. 115), and in Cod. Dip. MCCCV. {supra, p. 114). These two cases are rather to be regarded as morning-gifts. The use of the word dotalicium in the one case, and the fact in the other ease that the gift was made to induce the guar- dian to give his consent, are not sufficient to separate these cases from that in Cod. Dip. DCCCCXXVI. (see below, p. 176 n. 1), which is an undoubted case of moming-gift. Another consideration deserves mention. As the old weotuma was a fixed sum of money, it was only natural that, after it became a gift to the woman, it should remain a gift of money (as in Cod. Dip. DCCXXXII., quoted in the text) ; preserving the remembrance of the older form, and serving only to mark the legality of the marriage. 174 THE ANGLO-SAXON PAMILT LATV. " And let no one compel either woman or maiden to whom she herself dislikes, nor for money sell her, unless he shall be willing to give something voluntarily." The Kentish Betrothal speaks of two gifts to the bride. The bridegroom declares " what he will give her if she choose his will, and what he will give her if she live longer than he." The former gift has been identified as the weotuma ; the lat- ter is the morgen-gifu, or morning-gift.^ The general history of the morning-gift, in German law, is in brief this : ^ Unlike the weotuma, the morning-gift had at first no connection with the legality of the marriage. It was a free gift of the husband to his wife on the morning after the bridal night." At first it consisted of movables probably of no great value. Later, it became a gift for the widow's maintenance ; consisting as a rule of realty, and granted at betrothal, with a written docu- ment to be used as proof after the husband's death. If no morning-gift was granted at betrothal, the law assigned a certain portion of the husband's property to the widow for her maintenance. This was the legal morning-gift, — the Lombard quarta, the Frankish tertia. So the weotuma and the morning-gift came to be promised at the same time, and naturally in the same document, and both were secured by sureties. The two gifts were merged, and became the douaire of the Coutumes, — the dos ad ostium eoclesiae'oi the later law. The douaire, dos, or dower had in common with the old weotuma, the time and manner of its establishment, and the close connection with the legality of the marriage. In common with the old morning-gift, it had the amount and the charac- ter of a widow's maintenance. The dower of English common law is derived in an unbroken historical development through the dos ad ostium eoclesiae of Bracton and Glanville, the Norman douaire and the Frankish tertia, from the purchase price or weotuma and the morgen-gifu of the heathen Ger- mans. ' Schroeder (I. p. 96) has shown this clearly. " Schroeder, pp. 84-112, has here been followed throughout. " Cod. Dip. CCCXXVIII. : " It was her morning-gift when first she came to Athulf ." Cod. Dip. DCCCCLXVII. : " And I announce what I have given my wife as morning-gift. . . . And I gave her these when first we came together." THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMTLT LA"W. 175 111 the Anglo-Saxon period this development did not reach its completion ; the weotuma and the morning-gift were still in the eleventh century separate gifts ; ^ but the various steps of the development appear clearly. ^THELB. 78 : " If she bear a live child, let her have half the prop- erty, if the husband die first." lb. 79 : "If she wish to go away with her children, let the husband have half the property." lb. 80 : " If the husband wish to have them, (let her portion be) as one child." lb. 81 : " If she bear no child, let the paternal kindred have the fioh and the morning-gift." The morning-gift is here spoken of only in connection with a childless marriage. In marriages with children, it has al- ready given way to the " higher principle of community of property " between husband and wife.^ The law of Ine shows the progress of this principle, since the time of -^thel- birht. Community of goods between husband and wife exists in all marriages, childless or not. Ine, 57 : " If a ceorl steal a chattel and bear it to his dwelling, and it be intertiated therein, then shall he be guilty for his part without his wife ; for she must obey her lord. If she dare to declare by oath that she tasted not of the stolen property, let her take her third part." JEthelst. VI. 1, § 1 : . . . " and first take the ceap-gild from the property, and after that let the surplus be divided into two parts, one to the wife, if she be innocent, and not privy to the crime, etc." ^ The exact proportion assigned to the widow seems to have varied, but was gener- ally a half.* In the later period it was ordinarily fixed by agreement at betrothal.^ But this conversion of the morning- gift into half the property of the husband did not take place when a morning-gift was granted, consisting of realty and 1 See above, p. 173 and n. 3. 2 Schroeder, p. 97. The Anglo-Saxon law is here entirely in accord with that of the Westfalian Saxons. Vide Schroeder, I. pp. 98-103. » Cf. Will. I. 27 ; Ed. Conf. 19; Cnut, II. 76. * So in the Kentish Custumal : Et si il eit femme, meintenant seit dowe per le heir, sil seit dage, de la meytie, de touz les terres e tenemenz que son baroun tient de Gavylekend en fee." Lambarde, p. 516 ; Robinson's Com. Law of Kent, p. 283. See above, p. 186. 6 Kentish Betrothal, § 4. Vide supra, p. 172. 176 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. secured by a written document. For the richer classes, this was ordinarily the case in the later law, and numerous ex- amples of such grants appear in the charters.^ In some of the continental laws it was customary for the father or guardian to make a gift to the bride on her marriage. This gift appears most clearly in the Lombard law, under the name faderfio. No evidence of such a custom appears in the Anglo-Saxon sources,^ and one passage saj's expressly that daughters were given in marriage without a dot. Hist. Rames. 4 : " Factum est ut exteri reges et principes sorores ejus (King ^thelstan) quas pater indotatas reliquerat, etc."^ From the time of the conquest such a gift was customary under the name maritatio or maritagium,^ — the frank-mar- riage of the later law. During marriage,^ the wife was under the guardianship of her husband. She must obey him in general;® but, in her own sphere as housekeeper, she was independent. Cnut, II. 76 : " And, if a man bring stolen things home to his cot, it is right that he [the owner] have what he went after. And, if it was not brought under the wife's custody, she shall be in- nocent. But she shall guard the keys, that is, of her store- room, and her chest, and her press. If it is brought into 1 Cod. Dip. CCCXXVni. (App. No. 17) ; i6. MCCLXXXYIII. (App. No. 21) ; ib. DCCIV. (App. No. 26) ; ih. MCCXC. (supra, p. 115) ; ib. DCCXXXVIIL (supra, p. 115) ; i6. DCCXXXII. (supra, p. 173) ; t6. DCCCCLXVII. (above, p. 174, n. 3) ; ib. DCLXXXV. ; ib. DCCCCXXVI. ; " Ego Gytha comitissa con- cedo aecclesiae . . . terrain meam de Scireford quae est de dote mea." Dos, in the Latin sources of the Anglo-Saxon period, means always morning-gift. Thus Cnut II. 73, " let her lose her morning-gift," is translated in the Latin (Cod. Colb.) "careat dote." 2 Schroeder (I. p. 119) has shown that the fioh in .ffithelb. 81 is not the faderfio as many have assumed. The word means simply property, and can apply as well to inherited property as to property given at marriage. S Cf. Albert Krantz (Wandalia, 1, 13) : " Valet hodie (15th century) ea ut ferunt consuetudo in Thietmarsis, gente palustri ad exitum Albis fluminis, ut nuptui tradant Alias indotatas, etc.," quoted by Schroeder, I. p. 49. The Dieth- marsen belonged to the Saxon stem. « Hen. I. 1, §§ 3-4 ; ib. 70, § 22 ; Ed. Conf . 19. See Charter of Mathilda de St. Liz. (A. D. 1100) in Dugdale's Monasticon, III. p. 473 : " quod est liberum maritagium meum.'' ' Cf. Schroeder, p. 126 ff. * Ine, 57 (quoted above, p. 176). THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 177 one of these places, then is she guilty. And no wife can for- bid her husband to lay in his cot what he will." The hus- band, as guardian, was co-possessor with his wife of her property, — that is, property inherited by her, or given to her, including her morning-gift.^ Neither could alienate such property without the other's consent. Sometimes, in aliena- tions, the husband and wife acted together;^ sometimes the husband was the acting, and the wife the consenting, party ; ^ but generally the wife was the acting, and the husband the consenting, party.* In general, the husband had the free disposal of his own property, so far as concerned the wife. But, where a specific morning-gift had not been granted to the wife, she had, in law, a right to an undivided portion of her husband's property, and regularly appears as a consenting party to all alienations by him.^ From the analogy of the continental laws, it is probable that the marriage acquisitions — property derived from the common labor or common prop- erty of husband and wife ; not property acquired, by one of the two, by gift or inheritance, or from the proceeds of his or her own property — belonged to the husband : but, after his death, these formed part of the estate from which the legal morning-gift was granted.^ Gifts were regularly made to husband and wife together,^ and gifts between husband and wife were common.^ The wife's property was not answer- able for the debts of her husband, nor his property for the debts of his wife.^ Here the rights of over-guardianship exercised by the wife's kindred appear clearly. A homicide committed by her must be atoned for, not by her husband, 1 Hist. Eames, 85 : " Cnutonis ergo regis tempore quidam Dacus cum memo- rata muliere, ex permissione regis, connubium trahens, praedictae villas domi- nium jure conjugis est adeptus." Cf. Phillip's Gesch. des Angelsachsischen Bechts, p. 143. 2 Cod. Pip. CLXXVn. 3 Cod. Dip. LXXVI. * Cod. Dip. CCXCVIII. ' Cod. Dip. CCVI. et multa alia. S Schroeder, I, p. 137. ' Cod. Dip. CXX. ; ib. CCLXXIX. ; ib. CCCLXVIII. et al. 8 Cod. Dip. DXXIV. ; ib. DCXLI. « Vide lupra, pp. 123, 175. 12 178 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. but by her kin.' Other fines incurred by the wife were prob- ably paid by the husband, as her active guardian, from her property. But, if this property did not sufQce, not the hus- band, but the wife's kindred, were liable for the rest.^ The wife's kindred seem also to have protected her property from alienations by the husband;^ and probably, if she were abused by him, they could interfere to divorce them, and to bring their kinswoman home.* At the dissolution of marriage by the death of the hus- band,^ the wife was entitled to all property belonging to her by inheritance or gift, and to her morning-gift, either one specifically established by a grant of realty with a charter, or, in lack of this, to half the husband's property.^ The wife had the full ownership in the morning-gift, unless her hus- band had expressly limited her to a life-estate,' and she could dispose of it, during her life ^ or by testament ; * and, if she died intestate, it was inherited by her heirs. She forfeited it, however, to her husband's next of kin, if she violated her year's fidelity. '" It follows that, by keeping her year's fidel- ity, she could take it with her to a second marriage. '^ Ordi- narily, a partition of the property did not take place on the death of the husband, but the widow held the property' in common with the heirs ; '^ and her morning-gift seems, like the rest of the husband's property, to have been liable for ' Hen. I. 70, § 12 {supra, p. 123). 2 Schmid, Anh. VI. § 7 {supra, p. 123). ' It was customary to deposit with the wife's father a copy of the deed of gift when the moming-gitt was granted. Cod. Dip. DCCXXXII. in Jin. * ^thelr. 79 {supra, p. 175). 6 Schroeder, L p. 143 flF. 6 ^thelr. 78-81 {supra, p. 175), Kent. Betroth. § 4. ' Hist. Rames. 29. 8 Cod. Dip. CCCXXVm. {vide App. No. 17); ib.DCClV. (App. No. 26); ib. DCCCCXXVI. 9 Cod. Dip. DCLXXXV. ; ib. MCCXC. « Cnut, II. 73. " Cf. Cod. Dip. MCCLXXXVIII. {vide App. No. 21). 1^ Cnut, n. 72. Wherever the wife is mentioned as having the whole of her husband's property (as in Kent. Betroth. § 5), it is only because of this custom of living in common without a partition of the property. Schroeder, I. p. 98, n. 14. THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 179 the debts of the estate.^ But the widow was never heir of her husbaiid,^ though gifts to her in her husband's will were common.^ At the dissolution of marriage by the death of the wife,* such property as belonged to her by inheritance or gift was inherited by her heirs. The husband was not heir, and got no right in the property of his wife, except through the chil- dren. These were the first heirs of the wife ; and after their death, if they left no children, their father would be their first heir. As the morning-gift was a grant to the wife " if she lived longer than he," it follows that, if the wife died before her husband, the morning-gift remained with the hus- band. Divorce by mutual consent seems to have been permitted in the early law.^ In such case, the wife received half her husband's property, if she took the children with her, or a child's portion if these remained with the husband. If the marriage was childless, she simply received her morning-gift and her inherited property. The husband was permitted to divorce his wife for infidelity or desertion.^ If for infidelity, by a law of Cnut, all her property was forfeited to the hus- band.' It remains only to consider the subject of guardianship. Here the extreme meagreness of the evidence permits only the most general conclusions. The grounds of legal depend- ence were four, — age, sex, physical defects, status or social 1 Hist. Eliens. I. 11 : " XJbi inter alia judicatum est, ut Sifled Relicta Lessii, et haeredes sui, Deo et Episcopo praedictam rapinam emendare deberent, sicuti ipse, si vixisset, facere debuisset." Cf. Phillips, p. 144. 2 Vide supra, p. 124. Phillips (Angels. R. G. p. 147) and Ganz (Erbrecht, IV. p. 308) assert that the widow inherited in want of other heirs. The passage relied on by them proves the exact contrary, — Hist. Rames, 85 : " Cui cum natura li- beros invidisset, sine haerede mortis legem subiens, conjugi suae superstiti earn reliqnit dotis nomine possidendam.'' The widow received dolis nomine, not hoe- reditatis nomine. 3 Cod. Dip. CCCIV. et al. 4 Cf . Schroeder, I. p. 167 fE. 5 ^thelr. §§ 79, 81 ; Poen. Theod. XIX. § 20. 6 Poen. Theod. XIX. §§ 18, 23. ' Cnut, II. 53. 180 THE ANGLO-SAXON PAMILT LAW. condition. All these have their origin in the more general ground of incapacity to bear arms. As the courts were, at first, assemblies of all the armed freemen, no one not a mem- ber of the army could appear in court ; and, of course, no one not able to use weapons could fight in the blood-feud. But the capacity to bear arms, as the criterion of legal indepen- dence, belongs only to the earliest period. As the blood-feud weakened and judicial processes superseded it, and as the courts became purely judicial bodies, we find women acquir- ing a legal independence which would have been impossible under the earlier law. As the guardianship over those legally dependent by rea- son of their status was not a family guardianship, it does not concern us here. Persons dependent by reason of physical defects — the lame, blind, dumb, insane, &c.^ — were under the guardianship of their father, or, if he were dead, of the nearest male of the paternal kindred. The guardian paid their fines, protected them and their property-, and doubtless had the use and enjoyment of their estate. When the household was broken up by the death of the father, the children passed into the guardianship of the near- est male of the paternal kindred. HI. and Ead. 6 : " If a husband die, wife and child yet living, then it is right that the child follow the mother; and let sufficient security be given from among his paternal kindred to keep his property until he be ten years of age." Ine, 38 : " If a ceorl and his wife have a child between them, and the ceorl die, let the mother have her child and feed it ; and let VI. shillings be given her for its fostering, a cow in summer and an ox in winter ; and let the kindred take care of the homestead until it be of age." From these passages, it is clear that the con- trol of the child's person did not belong to the guardian, but to the mother. It was the guardian's duty to supply nour- ishment for the child, to take care of the estate, and to repre- sent the child in the courts. In return, he had, without doubt, the use and enjoyment of the estate during the child's minority. 1 Alf. 14; Hen. L 78, §§ 6, 7. THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. 181 On coming of age, wards could sue for property wrongfully withheld by the guardian, or alienated by him to third par- ties.' Boys became independent on attaining their majority ; but girls continued under guardianship until their marriage, or entrance into a convent. Of the powers of the guardian over women of full age, nothing is said ; and it only remains to suppose that they were the same as those of the father. That widows, in the early law, were under guardianship, is clear from jEthelb. 76 : " If a man carry off a widow not be- longing to him, let the mund be twofold." It is not clear whether they were under the guardianship of their own kin, or of the husband's next of kin, as in most of the continental laws, but probably the former. In the later law, widows were practically independent, -^thelr. V. 21 : " And let every widow who conducts herself lawfully be in God's peace and the king's. And let every one continue twelve months husbandless ; afterwards, let her choose what she herself wUl." ^ The latter clause has generally been taken to mean that the widow might follow her own will in marrying. But it means more than this. She was free to enter a convent. Cnut, II. 73, § 3 : " And let not a widow take the veil too precipitately." It has already been shown that she had the free disposal of her property ; and it appears, from some pas- sages in the charters, that she was free to choose her " fore- speca," or guardian, to represent her in the courts. In Cod. Dip. DCLXXXV., ^Iflaed gives certain lands to jEthel- mere, the ealdorman : " pset he min fuUa freond and mundi- end beo on minum dege," &c., — " that he be my full friend and guardian during my life ; " and, again, "pact he beo on minum life min fuUa freond and forespreca and mira m°anna," — " on condition that, during my life, he be my entire friend, my advocate, and that of my men." So, in Cod. Dip. DCCLV. (^vide App. No. 28), a widow appears as party to a suit brought by her own son, who would necessarily be her guardian if the old rules of guardianship were in force. This necessity of a forespeca, or representative before the courts,* 1 Cod. Dip. LXXXII. {vide App. No. 1). 2 Cf. Cnut, II. 73. » Cod. Dip. DCCIV. (App. No. 26) ; ib. CCCCXCIX. (App. No. 18). 182 THE ANGLO-SAXON FAMILY LAW. was all that remained of the old guardianship of widows ; and even this does not seem to have been always necessary in later times. In one suit, not only is the plaintiff a woman, who prosecutes her suit before the king and in the shire court, but many " good women " take part in the oath.^ Nothing shows more clearly the enormous change that had taken place in the position of women, and in the character of the courts, since the settlement of the Saxons in Eng- land. In want of male kindred of the male stem, the duties of guardian, in some of the continental laws, passed to the near- est male of the maternal kindred ; in others, to the king. The Anglo-Saxon laws throw no light on this point ; but it is clear that the king was guardian for all who had no kin- dred, including natural children ^ and foreigners.^ 1 Cod. Dip. DCXCra. (App. No. 22). 2 Ine, 27. • Ed. and Guth. § 12 ; JEthelr. Vin. 33 ; Cnut, II. 40. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PROCEDURE. A Gekman scholar has well illustrated the distinction be- tween the suit of modern times and that of the primitive German period by comparing the former to a syllogism, in which the body of judicial rules is the major, and the declar- ation of facts the minor premise ; while the latter, without any such structure, might be but a simple demand on the defendant for compensation. The democratic character of German political institutions finds a parallel in the large judi- cial powers vested in the individual (^Selhsthillfe) . Many evi- dences point to the supposition that, in the most archaic German procedure, even seizure — the distress of the com- mon law — was permitted to the individual without inter- vention of the court.^ Whether this was true or not, it is at all events certain that, in the earliest known German sources, permission of the court was always necessary before proceed- ing to execution. The early legal system, which existed throughout the period closed by the Salic law, and which will be designated as the Executive Procedure, in opposition to the enlarged procedure which arose about the time of Childebert, in the sixth century, was pre-eminently a procedure of coercion, as distinguished from that of proof known to later times. A strict exactness existed in the relation between law and procedure, as shown in the case where, when the defendant repeated the claim of the plaintiff and denied it word for word, he lost his suit if he stammered in the repetition. And ' This was true in old Roman law in the Pignoris Capio, which was at first a wholly extra-judicial proceeding. Maine, Early Hist, of Instit. p. 258. 184 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOCEDXTBE. this strict formalism gaye to the individual a means of pro- cedural coercion, fortified, in case of resistance, by a legal sanction. The distinction, for example, between the execu- tive procedure and the procedure in regard to land which arose later, consisted in the narrowness and limited character of the department of proof and judgment in the former, and the absence of any examination of the material basis of the action. The old Germanic law recognized no causae cognitio ; the plaintiffs material right was not examined. Nor did the legal conceptions of the early Germans recognize the distinc- tions of Roman law betwee n real and pe rsojoaJLagtions. To the Romans, a real right was original, unlimited ownership (^dominium'), from which parts could be separated and con- veyed to another (^jura in re) ; while, to the German mind, the ma terial p ossession of, and the right over,_the things were b ound closely togethe r. The conception of the thing as an abstract quantity was foreign to their modes of thought. The right to a movable could not be acquired by a contract in genere, but only by the actual delivery of possession ; while the real right was acquired by a contract in specie, without delivery. But private property in land was unrecognized. In the early executive period, there was no action for in- heritance, or real property ; and the civil procedure was essentially one for debt.^ As legal conceptions advanced and new needs were felt, there arose a pressure for addi- tional judicial aid, and an extension of the procedure. The Lex Salica stood out to mark the close of the old executive period in German law, although even in the Lex Salica the introduction of the action for movables had already widened the old procedure, following a development which was always an extension, but not a destruction, of the old system. To this later period belong the codes of the Ripuarian Franks,^ the Burgundians, the Visigoths, and the Lombards.^ 1 The Swiss law of debt is not a civil procedure, but a transcription of the Lex Salica, 50, § 1, and 52. Heusler, Gewere, p. 489. 2 This law was a rerision of the Lex Salica, section for section, and was writ* ten to adapt itself to the progress in the procedure.' ' This law is especially valuable, both because the Lombards came south later than other tribes, and retained the pure Germanic law in greater complete- THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUEE. 185 To this period also belong all the sources of Anglo-Saxon law ; the earliest laws — those of -(Ethelberht of Kent — hav- ing been written about 600 A.D. But, to justly estimate the Anglo-Saxon laws, appeal must be made to the Saxon law of the continent, and to other German codes ; and the primitive German procedure must be kept clearly in view. Thorpe is, of course, in error when he says that the original institutes of the English were " little beyond that portion of the laws of ^thelberht which contains the penalties for wounds and other bodily injuries."^ Before discussing the separate divisions of the procedure, it will be best to sketch briefly an outline of the German suit,^ and to explain with care the means of proof and the law of evidence. The regular characteristic of the old German law was pre- eminently an iron rigorism of form, and a minute attention to external observances. The free judgment of the court was limited within such narrow bounds as were set by the forms and maxims of the old procedure. The independence of the individual in the sphere of self-help found its counter- poise in the severe constraint of the procedural forms. * — The introduction of the procedure lay in the hands of the ■ person seeking justice, whether in civil or criminal actions ; and he summoned his opponent with prescribed and rigorous formalities. At the court, the plaintiff declared the subject of the suit in solemn words, directed, not to the court, but to the individual defendant ; and on the defendant's answer de- pended the further procedure. The judgment which followed brought the assertion of the plaintiff or the denial of the de- fendant to the proof; and was found, not by the magistrate, but by the whole community in court assembled, who adhered with painful precision to the strict interpretation of the letter and externalities of the procedure. It was not a judgment according to their opinions or conscience ; it was not declara- tory, but constitutive ; nor did it aim at an analysis of the contested question of law. The judgment determined how the question of proof should be decided, and settled the nesB, and because the Lombard law was scientifically studied at Pavia in th« eleventh century. ' Anc. Laws and Inst., Pref. p. 8. 2 Heinrich Brunner, Die Entstehung der Schwurgericbte, pp. 43-59. 186 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL, PEOCEDUEE. question of law by declaring what would happen even after the completion of the proof.^ The party could, if dissat- isfied, challenge the judgment as not according to law ; and then a penalty was, in most German codes, exacted from the judges if he succeeded. The judgment not only settled how the proof should be given, but also who should give it ; and, as a rule, it was awarded to the defendant. But, when no relevant objection could be made against his claim, the plaintiff himself came to the proof. Then, on the perform- ance of the proof, if no default was made, the procedure ended. The chief importance of the procedure centred in the means of proof allowed by the German law. The proof did not pass under the consideration of the judges, but by it was settled, once for all, the conditions according to which the judgment could be carried out. In the proof, the formalism was most severe ; a natural consequence of the fact that by it the communit)', perhaps for the first time, placed their wills over the wUl of the individual. The three ^ means of proof allowable were Oath, Ordeal, and Documents ; and the former might be accompanied with (1) the oath of compurgators, or (2) of witnesses. The first oath was promissory, in which the compurgators swore as to their belief in the credibility of their principal, and not as to the truth of their principal's assertion. The number of compurgators varied " secundum qualitatem ac quantitatem causae atque personae," and were often chosen by the party himself from his kinsmen, who were his usual oath-helpers. In the Norman period, this class of proof gave way to the legis vadiatio (Wager of law) in cases where documents could not be used.^ The second oath was assertatory. The witness-proof of the old law is not to be compared with the modern legal conceptions of evidence. Since personal knowledge did not in itself form the legal ca- pacity of a witness, no one, however much he knew of the transaction, could act as such. He must have been produced by the party himself. A one-sided means of proof, the wit- • H. Brunner, Schwur., pp. 45, 46. 2 K. Maurer, Krit. Uebersch. V. p. 185. ' H. Brunner, Schwur., p. 898. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOCEDUKE. 187 ness swore only to the assertion of his chief. This species of proof by oath drew its witnesses from two classes, — Trans- action and Community witnesses. Those called Court wit- nesses were unknown to the early law,^ and there seems to be no trace of them in Anglo-Saxon law. In the absence of records, judicial acts were established by the party through the normal forms of proof.^ This was shown by : Will. I. 24 : "In onmi curia, praeterquam in praesentia regis, si cui imponitur, quod in placito dixerit aliquid, quod ipse negat se dix- isse, nisi possit per duos intelligihUes homines de (visu et) audita, con- vincere, recuperabat ad loquelam suam." Transaction witnesses were brought to corroborate business transactions of sale, gift, exchange, &c. These witnesses existed in Anglo-Saxon law, as in all the folk-laws. Edg. IV. 4 : "To every ' burg ' let there be chosen thirty-three as witness ; 5 : "To small ' burgs,' and in every hundred, twelve, unless ye desire more. 6 : " And let every man, with their witness, buy and sell every of the chattels that he may buy or sell ; . . . and let every of them . . . give oath that he never . . . will declare any other thing in witness save that alone which he saw or heard : and of such sworn men let there be at every bargain two or three as witness." ' These laws simply set apart certain men who should be capable of bearing witness. Community-witnesses were produced by the party, as were Transaction-witnesses, and they testified concerning circum- stances, long-continued relations, and occurrences known to them as neighbors, or members of the community. The Community-witnesses were chiefly employed in actions re- garding real property and status. From this class of proof arose the " inquisitio per testes " in the Norman period, and the jury of English law ; but no trace of the inquisitio was to » K. Maurer, Krit. TIebersoh. V. p. 192. » H. Brunner, Schwur., p. 50. ' .ffithelst, V. 1, § 5: "Et nominentor in manunga singulorum praepositorum tot homines, qnot pemoseuntur esse credibiles, qui sint in testimonio singularum causarum. Et sint eorum juramenta credibilium hominum butan eyre, id eat Bine electione." Cf. H. & E. 16; Ine, 25; Alfr. 84; Edw. 1 (Pr.) ; uEthelst. II. 10, 12; Edm. III. 5; MthAr. I. 3; Will. I. 45, III. 10. For their oath, vkiU infra, p. 195. 188 THE AITGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCBDUBB. be found in Anglo-Saxon or in Frisian law, which through- out retained their old Germanic procedure.^ In fact, one is struck, in the study of Anglo-Saxon law, with the persist- ency with which forms peculiar to the old law continued throughout this period. When the church introduced the use of documents, they were employed as a means of proof of the same character as the proof of witnesses : a document was only by its nature a better witness, since it was imperishable. This could be drawn up by a notary, or before the court.^ The proof of last resort, standing behind the former meth- ods, was the ordeal, or judgment of God. In cases where, for any reason, no decision could be reached by the other means of proof, God was himself appealed to in aid of the innocent, that He would reveal the truth after the manner of a miracle. At a certain period after the judgment, the term was fixed, and the party gave pledge for the giving of the proof.^ The old German procedure was especially distinguished from that of to-day by the fact that the proof came after, not before, the judgment. By adjudging the means of proof, the judgment at the same time settled the legal question ; and the subject of the judgment was, at the same time, the subject of the oath ; and this was first limited by the word- ing of the plaintiff's assertion. The subject of the proof itself was not limited to facts, but extended over into the domain of legal judgment.* The proof was regarded as a satisfaction to the claimant, and therefore was not directed to the court, but to the opponent ; the principle of the busi- ness transaction was thus carried even into the procedure of proof. The contents of the witness-oath furnished no new material to the proof : each witness reiterated the points of proof declared by the judgment; he appealed to his knowl- edge of the thing, and invoked the Deity to the truth of his statements. The power of the proof lay in the fact that the statement was in the form of an oath. 1 H. Brnnner, Zeugen und Inquisitionsbeweis, p. 41, " K. Manrer, Krit. Uebersch. V. p. 196. ' This was called " Arramatio testlum." Cf. App. No. 11. * E.g., they swore that a man ought to be a slave rather than free. THE AjS^GLO-SAXOST LEGAL PEOCEDTJBE. 189 The Anglo-Saxon sources group themselves into these divisions : Action for Debt ; action for Movables ; action for Real Property; and Criminal Procedure. These shall be examined in the order named. II. The earliest procedural needs of the Germans seem to have been for Debt ; and this procedure was of the most limited range, and stamped with the characteristics of the executive period. It recognized no examination of material right in the suit ; and in cases to which it did not apply, scarcely any medium of justice was furnished except that which the warrior dealt out with the spear. And this early system, common to the German races, probably before the wandering, gave its limitations to subsequent development. The German civil actions were founded on contracts.^ A contract in German law was not binding through the mere agreement of the wills of the contracting parties ; but, as in the old Roman law, only by the performance of a fixed formality, or a fulfilment by one party. ^ Hence, among the Germans, there were, according to Sohm, no consensual, but only real and formal, contracts. In the contract of sale, in which the seller was bound to the buyer only if he had received payment, the contract was not consensual, but real, and conveyed a title to ownership. But to free the buyer from the risk of making actual payment, while yet preserv- ing the efficacy of the contract, German law introduced, in- stead of the payment, the earnest money (handgeld'), the equivalent of the arrha^ of the Lombard law, with the effect, 1 Sohm, Das Eecht der Eheschliessung, pp. 24-46, 78-87, has further en- forced the views of Laband. 2 Loening, on the other hand, holds that the " fides facta " was a simple, one- sided p'omise, based on the will of the party bound, and unrestrained by out- ward form, p. 7 ff. Cf. also Behrend, for an argument against Sohm, on the question of the "fides facta," p. 81 ff. ' The arrha was called " weinkauf," because it was usually spent for wine drunk by the witnesses of the sale ; or " God's penny," because it was de- voted to charity. Sohm, p. 30. The "arrae," in Boman law, however, were deposited with the seller as a proof that the purchase had been made, — e.g., a ring (D. XIX. 1. 11, 6). 190 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDUBB. not of strengthening the contract, as in Roman law, but of concluding it. The arrha was relatively worthless, and was not in fact payment, or part payment ; but it was the means of judicially binding the agreement made by the parties, and a real right arose therefrom. The formal contract of the Germans was not concluded, as in Roman law, by the use of writing, or a fixed form of words ; but, on the continent, by the delivery of the straw (festuca). Instead of the straw, a glove,' an arrow, a stick, or any other object, could be used. This was the German " wette," wadium (wadia) of Lombard law, and the Anglo-Saxon "wed;"^ being derived from the loot vidan (obligare), it signified the means of legally binding the agreement of the parties.^ The formal contract was used in a unilateral case, such as the Anglo-Saxon " borh," or " plegium," or the Frankish " fides facta," where the party promised to bring proof, or make payment ; or in the security of bail (Biirgschaft). As the institution of private law, it was the basis of marriage and of all bargain and exchange, and was concluded in the presence of witnesses. ^THELB. I. 3 : " And let no man either buy or exchange unless he have borh and witness." * By means of the clergy, religious pains and formalities might be added to the pledge, as in " god-borh " (Alfr. 33, Ethels. VI. 51). As an institution of public law it played a large part in Anglo-Saxon procedure : (1) pledge was de- manded of every accused to insure his presence before the court (de judicio sisti) ; ^ and (2) to fulfil the judgment (judicatum solvi). Hloth. & Ead. 8 : " If one man make plaint against another in a suit, and he go with him to the " methel," or " thing," let the man 1 Cf. App. No. 35. 2 Compare the language of Anh. VI. 5 : " Let him confirm all that he has promised with a wed [mid wedde]." ' Sohm, Das Recht der Ehesch. p. 35. * Cf. Ed. Cont. 38. ' This pledge was required of (1) a defendant in a case already pending, or (2) as a security against all charges which might be brought against him. But this latter, in its connection with the " frithborg," was merely a police regulation. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDTJEB. 191 [defendant] always give borh to the other, and do him such right as the Kentish judges prescribe." * Another use of the German formal contract found its employment in the security of the fidejussor as shown in : Ine 62 : " When a man is charged with an offence, and he is com- pelled to give pledge, and he has not himself aught to give for pledge, then goes another man and gives his pledge for him, as he may be able to arrange. In the Lombard law the debtor passed the " wadia " to the creditor, and the latter then gave it into the hands of the fidejussor.^ This explains the principle of German law, that the fidejussor was bound primarily to the creditor, and the debtor but subsidiarily ; since the obligation rested against him who held the arrha. If the debtor could not pay, the fidejussor stood in his place, paid the fine for non-observance of the demand (borh-bryce), and suffered execution. The two points of the formal promise essential to the procedure were, the establishment of a fixed term for payment, and the strictly unilateral character of the obligation entered into by the defendant.^ The Roman ideas of contract can no more be applied to German law than the Roman conceptions of actions in rem and in personam. The Germans made use of a contract in genere, and one for a fixed and individual object (eerte species'), to which corresponded the actions for property. To the contract for the performance of a thing settled in genere, corresponded the action for debt, arising from the obligatory nature of the obligation. It aimed not at a recov- ery of the property, but at indemnification ; for the contract on which it was founded carried with it an obligatory but not a real effect. And, following the established principle of German law, the burden of proof rested on the defendant, while in the Roman system, it rested on the plaintiff. It was the individual, who, through the principle of self-help, was 1 Cf. H. & E. 9, 10; Ine, 8; Henr. 61, § 17, 62, § 3. 2 Sohm, Das Recht der Ehesch. p. i38. ' Sohm, La Procedure de la Lex Salica, p. 13, Paris, 1873, trans, by M. Th* venin. 192 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDtTBE. placed in the foreground of the procedure, and it was he who proceeded to an extrajudicial seizure. At the end of the term fixed by the obligation of payment, the defendant was called on by the plaintiff to fulfil his promise ; if the defend- ant obeyed the demand, the procedure was at an end. Discussion before a court was unnecessary, unless brought about by the acts of the parties. Only in case the defendant refused to perform his obligation, was the matter introduced before the court ; and here the plaintiff rested his claim on a simple extrajudicial promise, and not on a " causa debendi," or assertion of right. The judge pronounced no judgment on the validity of the obligation, or whether it was a real ground of action. It was not a suit in the modern sense, but an application to the court to carry out a judgment made by the plaintiff. "When the debtor refused payment after the demand, he was thereupon fined for " borh-bryce," which corresponded to the fine of the Lex Salica for disobedience to the formal testare. This is evident in the regulations of the marriage contract. Ine 31 : " If a man buy a wife, and the marriage do not take place, let him give the money, and make bot to his byrgea, as his horgbriee may i be." 1 The summons to the court was conducted under solemn formalities. The postponement of a fixed term for a suit, which was manifestly conducted under the same formalities as the summons itself, is thus described in : Henr. 59, § 2 : " Pridie ante solis occasum ad domnm suam, si residens est cum quo agitur, et per bonum testimonium vicinorum et aliquorum, quos secum habeat, qui placitum contramandat, ipsi respec- tetur \i.e. postpone] si domi est ; uxori, dapifero vel praeposito et familiae ejus dicatur intelligibiliter, si idem abfuerit ; et hoc iterum et tertio licet continue sive interrupte." The time and manner bear an interesting resemblance to the same ceremony of the Salic Law, if not taken from it. 1 Cf. also Alfr. 1, § 8 : "If, however, there be another man's borh, let hun make bot for the borh-bryce." THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUBB. 193 The plaintiff summoned the defendant to appear usually at a term of seven days.^ The first mention of the procedure before the court is in : Hloth. & Ead. 10 : " If one accuse another, after he [defendant] has given him borh, and then they have sought out the judge after three days, unless a longer time is satisfactory to the one who makes complaint; then let the man [defendant], if the case has been decided, do the other his right in seven days, in goods or by oath, whichever suits him more.'' In his claim the plaintiff made no proof of his right, but opened the procedure by a fore-oath. Anh. X. 10 : " In the name of the living God, as I money de- mand, so have I lack of that which N. promised me, when I mine to him sold." If the defendant did not appear,^ or did not make answer, the plaintiff could proceed to execution.^ This was shown by an injunction against its abuse in : Ine 9 : "If any one take satisfaction before he demands justice, let him return and pay for what he has forcibly taken, and pay a fine of thirty shillings." But there is more explicit evidence of extrajudicial seiz- ure in : Cn. n. 19 : " Let no one levy execution, either within or without the shire, before he has three times demanded justice in the hun- dred. If, the third time,^ he shall not obtain justice, let him go the fourth time to the shiregemot, and let the shire set him a fourth term. If he then fail of justice, let him take leave, either from hence or thence, that he may seize his own." ^ 1 Hen. 51, § 2 : Et submoneatur comitatus vii dies antea." Cf. H. 7, § 4 ; 41, §2; 46, § 1. 2 Cf. Hen. 49, § 8. 3 Vide Krit. Uebersch. "VT. 270. * Cf. Hen. 60, §2; 52, § 1. 5 Certainly the strongest grounds on -which Sir Henry Maine has urged the alliance of early Irish law with that of other Aryan communities, and especially the Teutonic, are the comparisons in regard to distress (Early Hist, of Inst. Chaps. IX., X.). The Senchus Mor required that : " The plaintiff or creditor, having first given the proper notice, proceeded, in the caic of a defendant or debtor, not of chieftain grade, to distrain. If the 13 194 THE A2^GL0-SAX0N LEGAL PBOCEDTTEE. This law was repeated in William I. 44, and again declared by: Henr. 51, § 3 : "Et nulli, sine judicio vel licentia, namiare liceat alium in suo vel alterius." ' When the defendant made answer, he need not show reason why he was not indebted. He did not oppose the facts on which the plaintiff rested his claim, since the plaintiff brought forward no such facts ; he only attacked the asser- tion that he was indebted. And as the court had no means of proving the correctness of the defendant's answer it accepted his oath as verification of his non-indebtedness. It was a fundamental principle of German law that the defend- ant, where he denied having received property, or given a promise, could establish his denial by oath.^ As in the crimi- nal action it was but natural justice to give the proof to the defendant, and there was no presumption that the defendant was indebted to the plaintiff. The defendant with his single oath swore alone, and freed himself from the charge, no oath-helpers being iised ; since, although in the criminal action oath-helpers might have full faith that he would not defendant or debtor were a person of chieftain grade, it was necessary, not only to give notice, but also to ' fast on him.' The fasting on him consisted in going to his residence, and waiting there for a certain time without food. If the plaintiff did not within a certain time receive satisfaction for his claim, or a pledge therefor, he forthwith, accompanied by a law-agent, witnesses, and others, seized his distress." But this distinguished writer cannot say (p. 284) that the Irish procedure, like the English (meaning thereby early English), required "neither assistance nor permission from any court of justice." For, although the practice of pri- vate seizure was a part of the Teutonic principle of self-help, like feud, and must have been the primitive procedure, yet, after the executive period, and when courts began to regulate the activity of the individual, and even in the Lex Salica, distress required the permission of a court of justice. And this has been shown to be the case in Anglo-Saxon law. This works against the "greatest resemblance of all" in his comparisons. 1 Stat. Rob. I. 7 : " NuUus de caetero capiat namos in alterius terra vel foedo pro debito suo sibi debito sine balivo domini regis vel balivo loci." Cf. Henr. 2, Cart. Libert. Lond. §§ 13, 14, where one was permitted to seize property in the city, or in the county where the debtor resided. Cf. also Ine, 49, as an example of the working of self-help. 2 V. Bethmann-HoUweg, Der Civilprocess des gemeinen Rechts, p. 88. THE AKGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUKE. 195 commit a crime, "in the suit for debt they could hardly be allowed to prove a relation existing between two persons, as that the defendant had not agreed to pay the settled sum.^ His neighbors and friends could in but few cases have had certain knowledge as to whether the defendant had accepted such an obligation. But this oath might be made as the simple negation of the whole debt, or as an exceptio, i.e. claiming that he had paid it. The Anglo-Saxon oath was as follows : — Anh. X. 1 1 : "In the name of the living God, I owe not to N. sceatt or shilling, or penny, or penny's worth ; but I have discharged to him all that I owed him, so far as our verbal contracts were at first." It is here seen that no actual facts were brought forward ; and the proof having been given the defendant, he answered by his oath simply. In the suit for indemnification, as in the case of a buyer, who found his property unsound after he had received it, the plaintiff declared as follows : — Anh. X. 7 : " In the name of Almighty God, thou didst engage to me sound and clean that which thou soldest to me, and full security against after claim, on the witness of N. who then was with us two." The witnesses employed were the Transaction-witnesses, who were present at every legal sale. The oath of the wit- nesses is given in : Anh. X. 8 : " In the name of Almighty God, as I here for N. in true witness stand, unbidden and unbought, so I with my eyes saw and with my ears heard, that which I with him say." The course of the procedure unrolled itself as before ; the judgment awarded the proof to tha defendant, who gave the clearing oath if he could. As in the Lombard law, the defendant aimed by his single oath at the establishment of his bona fides,^ and averred that at the time of the sale he had no knowledge of the unsoundness. ' V. Bar, Beweisurtheil des germanischen Processes, p. 93 ff. ; and, for the whole discussion, pp. 92-130. ' Zom. Das Beweisverfahren nach langobardischem Rechte, p. 17. 196 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUKE. Anh. X. 9 : " In the name of Almighty God, I know not in the thing about which thou suest, foulness or fraud, or infirmity, or blemish, up to that day's-tide that I sold it to thee ; but it was both sound and clean, without any kind of fraud." Then the buyer had no further claim on the seller ; but, if the latter could not take the above oath, he must receive back the property and make full compensation. ^ A striking illustration of this principle, as well as of the fact that mar- riage was a contract of sale, is found in the Kentish code of: ^THELB. 77 : "If a man buy a maiden with cattle, let the bar- gain stand, if it be without guile ; but if there be guile, let him bring her home again, and let his property be restored to him." In case of a disregard of justice, and if the defendant would give no " borh," he was fined thirty shillings, the usual fine for contempt of the hundred court, and was further required to do justice in seven days.^ The legal essoins which excused the neglect of a summons were : infirmitas, domini neeessitas, exercitus, causa suorum hostium, or Justicia regis? But contumacy rendered the defendant '■'■ tiht-bysig ;" he was seized and his property confiscated.* It is to be seen, then, in conclusion, that this procedure was founded on a unilateral obligation arising from a contract in genere, and it shows fully the part which the individual played in the sphere of self-help. On refusal of payment, the defendant was subject to a fine for horh-bryce ; the sum- mons was made by the plaintiff under solemn formalities, and the defendant must usually appear in seven days at the court. Without a substantiation of the suit, the plaintiff made a simple statement of his opponent's indebtedness ; and from this the latter could clear himself by his single oath, and establish his hona fides. But, if the defendant could not take the clearing-oath, or failed to answer, the plaintiff received permission of court to proceed to private execution. 1 Ine, 56. = jng, 8. 3 Henr. 69, § 1. 1 Alfr. 1; iEthelst. H. 20; Edg. IH. 7; .ffithelr. 1. 4; Cn. H. 25, Sa THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDURB. 197 III. German writers, before Laband, have made a distinction in the German law of movables between actions in rem and in personam, claiming that the action against the borrower was purely personal, and that the one against the third possessor was a real action ; and that, both in the procedure begun by the Anefang, as well as in the " simple suit," the real right was used as a defence against an obligatory claim for the sur- render of the object. But they have committed the great mistake of trying to engraft on German law the judicial conceptions of the Romans, with whom this distinction was original, — a development which was never reached by the German law of the middle ages, and which, moreover, is op- posed to the fundamental principles of German procedure. This fact has been most clearly and fully shown by a distin- guished scholar. Dr. Paul Laband. ^ A real action may be defined as one which exists only for the enforcement of a real right. In the German vindication procedure, begun by the Anefang, the plaintiff proved neither ownership nor a real nor jMasi-real right to the thing which could form the subject of the action. Gould it, then, be classed as a real action? But Hanel ^ and Bluntschli hold the untenable theory that the action for movables was a real action, and was based on the fact that the plaintiff "laid his hand on the object itself; " that the action aimed only at the return of the thing, and that it could only be directed against the real owner of the thing. But this Roman conception stands opposed to the German action for cha.ttels, which was based both on obligator}'- ^ and real claims, as will be shown hereafter. Moreover, it is not disputed that no suitor, however clearly he might prove his ownership, could require from any third possessor the return of property which had passed out of his own hands with his 1 Die Vermogensrechtlichen Klagen, Berlin, 1869, p. 51 ff. ^ Hanel, Beweissystem, pp. 137, 138; Bluntschli, Krit. Uebersch., VI. p. 197. " Laband, p. 54 ; Sohm, Das Recht der Eheseh., p. 80. The Roman real action must not be confounded with the English real action, which was brought for the specific recovery of lands, tenements, or hereditaments. 198 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOCEDITEB. consent ; the rule " Hand wahre Hand " forbade. That the German action for movables was a " real action " cannot possibly be admitted. The divisions of the Sachsenspiegel, which set the actions " umme gut, umme varende have " in opposition to the ac- tions for debt, are evidently correct. The action for mova- bles, then, included obligatory as well as real claims.^ It is true that a real right could be the subject of the action, and that upon its establishment the procedure depended ; but a real right, as well as any right of obligation, was good only as a title to retain the object. Having pointed out the nature of the action for movables, it will be necessary to show clearly to whom the action was given, and discuss the rule " Hand wahre Hand," or " Where I have left my trust, there must I seek it." ^ This rule meant that only in case of involuntary loss of possession could any one claim the object from any holder, wherever he may find it. If he surrendered the object of his own will to another, as in case of loan or deposit, his judicial relations were con- fined to him who received the property ; but, if the object was stolen from the borrower, he only, and not the owner, had the action against the thief. But it is not that the owner is deprived of an action founded on a material right. That the action is given to the borrower is not to cut off the owner's right of prosecution ; but, since the action was, in its origin, so closely allied to delict, it was an enlargement of the old procedure, since it gave even to the borrower the only action which could be given in the narrow sphere of the executive procedure. But, in cases where a family inferior, who had physical authority over the object, alienated, the owner could claim it from any possessor. This was no excep- tion to the rule " Hand wahre Hand," since there was no willing surrender by the owner.^ By the later Saxon law, 1 Sohm has added the weight of his high authority to this division in his last work, referred to above, p. 80. ^ Cf. the "Biens meubles n'ont point de suite" of the French law, and "Mo- bilia non habent sequelam," and " Habe hat kein Geleit." 3 If the wife alienated, the Sachsenspiegel allowed the husband to reclaim the property ; but the possessor had an action for indemnification. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDURE. 199 there was an exception to the rule, on principles of equity, when the property of the depositee had been confiscated for crime. But, in the case of inheritance, the exception was only apparent, and based on a wrong view of succession. If A intrusted property to B, and B died, A could claim the prop- erty from B's heir, C ; for the heir stood in the exact posi- tion of the devisor. The heir was not a third possessor, because succession was not alienation.^ This principle is con- clusively shown from the Sachsenspiegel, where, if C had conveyed the property to D, A had undoubtedly no action against D.^ William (I. 6) enacted that an object found could not be claimed after a year and a day ; limiting the operation of the rule by a fixed term, in the interest of trade. But any such prescription was unknown to the Anglo- Saxons. , With this preliminary, the(action for movablfee will be di- vided into two sections, — 1. The action for the return o f an objec t (certe species'), arising from an obligation to restore, when the object had passed out of the owner's hands with his consent. 2. The action, with the Anefang, for the recovery of an object from the^ possessor, accompanied with the charge of dishonesty, when the object was lo st against the owner's will . This dfvision will be treated in the following section (TlV^ 1. In the action for the return of a fixed object, which has been loaned or deposited, Hand's distinction between an obligatory and a real right is untenable. The plaintiff in his claim asserted neither ownership nor a real right, in opening the procedure, nor named the obligation arising from the contract. It was immaterial whether the object passed out of his possession as a commodatwm, depositum, pledge, for inspection with purpose of sale, or for repair. As in the case of debt, a simple claim, without any statement of the legal obligation, set the procedure in motion .^ The Anglo-Saxon 1 Laband, p. 88 ; Lewis, Suec. des Erben, p. 98 if. 2 The " eessio triduana " in German law aimed to exclude all demands of the seller of real estate after that time ; and that this institution was unnecessary in receiving property by inheritance is a proof that inheritance was not aliena- tion. ^ Laband, p. 133 ff. 200 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCBDITEE. sources, while showing the existence of this procedure, are not full in regard to it. As to the proof, the decision rested on two fundamental principles, — a. If the defendant was no longer in possession, he went to the proof by single oath, and swore, without compurgators or witnesses, that without his connivance the specified object had perished, or been stolen, or burned.^ Alfb. (Einl.) 28 : "If any one intrust property to his friend, if he [the friend] steal it himself, let him pay for it twofold. If he know not who has stolen it, let him clear himself that he has therein com- mitted no fraud. If, however, it were live cattle, and he say that the ' here ' has taken it, or that it perished of itself, and he have witness, he need not to pay for it. But if he have no witness, and he [the owner] believe him not, then let him swear." If the defendant were no longer in possession, and his hona fides had been established by oath, it was a relevant defence to the claim of the plaintiff for return. The same principle was shown in the case of carriers. Will. I. 37 : " Si quis in periculo maris ad navem exonerandam, metu mortis, alterius res in mare projecerit, si suspectum eum habu- erit, juramento se ahtolvet, quod nulla alia causa nisi metu mortis fecerit." ^ h. If the defendant was in possession of the object, the plaintiff went to the proof. Homeyer asserts that this was due to an assumed lack of a real defence on the part of the defendant.^ Von Bar holds that, when in possession, the defendant could answer by showing his own right to the thing, as by original acquisition, or inheritance, or that he held the object from a third person ; but if the defendant could not assert a particular right, it was probable he had none, and therefore the plaintiff showed a right by contract, which proved that the defendant was not the owner.* But this does not explain why the defendant had the right of proof, 1 V. Bar, p. 98. ^ The Norman text of this section is a personal reply of the defendant. s Riehtst. p. 492. < V. Bar, p. 106. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOCBDTJKE. 201 when the object was lost. Laband has shown ^ that the defendant had the oath in regard to an obligatory claim only if there were an act of the defendant in question, or an explanation of his will to be made, wherein his hona fides could be shown. In an assertion of the plaintiff in regard to an act performed by himself, as that he gave this very object to the defendant, the defendant could not disprove this by his oath of hona fides ; but, by denial, he simply forced the plaintiff to the proof. The oath of the defendant was sworn without oath-helpers, or witnesses, since it was not of a character to admit them. Even when in possession, how- ever, the defendant had the proof, if he could make a relevant defence such as a claim to the object by original acquisition, by inheritance, or that he held from another, his warrantor. This action was given also for the case where the heir claimed his inheritance from his guardian. The contract for an individual, fixed object (certa species') had not merely a contractual or obligatory effect, but a real effect in acquiring a title ; not giving merely a personal, but a real, right against the promisor. To this contract cor- responded the action founded on both a real and obligatory right, gained without transfer of possession. That is, a con- tract of sale, where the seller had not yet delivered the arti- cle, conveyed a legal title ; and the seller stood, then, exactly in the position of a depositee, subject to the same responsi- bilities and demands.^ The proof was assigned according to the purport of the plaintiff's assertion. According to the Sachsenspiegel, if it was a question whether the buyer had already fulfilled the contract on his side, the buyer (plaintiff) had the right to prove by the men present at the giving of the arrha.3 If the seller asserted that the property sold had perished, or had been lost, and so was not in his possession, he could take the oath to the fact, and, by proving his bona fides, escape payment of its worth. 1 Laband, p. 139. 2 Ibid. p. 151 ff. 5 Ibid. p. 153 ; also cf. art. 1654 Code Civil : " Si racheteur ne paye pas le prix, le vendeur peut demander la resolution de la vente." 202 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOCEDXJBB. This procedure, then, founded on a contract in specie for the return of a specified object, was used also in a contract of sale already fulfilled by one party, or in a suit for inheritance retained by the guardian. The simple claim of the plaintiff opened the procedure, and the defendant must establish his bona fides by the clearing oath, if the object was not then in his possession. If, however, he possessed the object, and could not claim in his defence original acquisition, inheritance^ (if at the same time he could show his devisor's ownership), or vouch in a third person from whom he held the object, the plaintiff received the proof, and established the truth of his assertion. IV. The property of the early Germans being chiefly i n cattle . a judicial need arose for the claim against the (third) pos- sessor, when their" property Jiad strayed awayTor was stolen. Rooted in the old condition of the law, the action for mov- ables necessarily retained the limitations of the old executive system. Originally, it is probable that the pursuit of stolen movables was only permitted by the delict procedure, with which restitution of the thing was joined. Therefore, this procedure, in its origin, was unfavorable to the owner, but favorable to the commodatar, from whom the object had been taken. This theory is clearly explained by Lombard law.^ When a thief stole an object from the house of the commo- datar, the latter must account to the owner ; if the thief was found, the action against him belonged to the commodatar, on the ground that, if the thief were accountable to the owner, the commodatar would have a claim against him for house-breaking, " et non possumus in una causa duas calum- nias imputare." Arising between the existing procedure of debt and the delict procedure, it partook of a double charac- ter. It was an advance on the old procedure in that it was not wholly executive in character, but oidy partially so. The plaintiff was not required to bring forward his right for 1 Laband, p. 141. 2 Ed. Luit. 131. Vide Heusler, Gewere, p. 492. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDUBB. 203 examination ; but the defendant must show how he acquired the object. And, if he could not, the course of the plaintiff, in primitive times, was simply executive again. The action for movables was an extension of the old procedure to meet cases of involuntary loss, and a new exterior form through which a suit might be introduced for goods in case of a denial of possession by the defendant.^ As a means of satis- fying private right to the property, it was a means of gaining possession ; while, at the same time, the plaintiff rested his claim on the commission of a theft. The combination of the judicial procedure with the old executive forms, distin- gxiished this from purely executive actions, and was doubt- less the cause of its persistent vitality. The character of the defendant's defence brings it closer to the procedure of proof, as we know it to-day. As yet, however, no judgment was rendered on the strength of proof offered to the decision of a court. The first act of the procedure was extrajudicial ; and when the plaintiff seized the thing, he said : " The object is mine: it has been stolen from me." The defendant replied: " I have bought the object." This claim and counterclaim was followed by"a promise of the possessor to fui-nish proof. The procedure introduced proof of such a nature that it raised questions of material right and ownership, but not as the subject of the judgment. The counterclaim of the defendant was a negation based on facts which would invali- date the claim of the plaintiff. Of an executive nature, and possessed by the commodatar, the action was not based on the establishment of a material right by the plaintiff. To give the owner an action on the ground of ownership was not allowed. Therefore the owner, who had himself voluntarily parted with the possession of his property could not vindicate, simply because the narrow, executive character of the procedure did not base vindication on the examination of a material right. Although the Ger- man conception of possession involved the legal power over the thing, it is not to be supposed that when the object passed out of the owner's hands voluntarily, he thereby gave 1 Heusler, Gewere, p. 488 flf. 204 THE AJSTGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUBE. up his ownership ; but the old form of the law gave no action in the Roman or modern sense. In movables, — • sheep, horses, cattle, clothing, and slaves, — no legal pro- tection of possession, as preparatory to an action for owner- ship, existed. Detention and seisin existed together over movables ; and detention needed no other legal means of protection than was furnished by gaining the object. So the action was given to the person most closely affected, not that it was a limitation of the action for property, but on the ground that in general no action for property was given. And it was natural that the action should be given, not to the owner, living on a distant estate perhaps, but to the one from whose possession it was taken. And, in case of sale, which, after fulfilment on the part of the buyer, presented the same conditions as deposit, if - A had sold, but not delivered, a thing to B, and A then sold and delivered it to C, B had no action against for the return of the object : his action was against A for indemnification, according to the procedure of debt. In this division of the procedure, there existed a settled judicial rule, governing the action for lost movables. In stolen goods no possessor could acquire an effectual right which could work against the claim of the owner. This rule decided on the relevancy «^f the defendant's exceptions, and the distribution of proof. The foundation of the suit was the unwilling loss of the plaintiff; and it was immaterial what right the plaintiff had to possession, whether as owner, mortgagee, depositor, commodafer, or finder who was looking for an owner. An earlier possession was no basis of the suit. * The defendant could raise no plea of honest possession, if that possession did not exclude the possibility of a loss to the plaintiff against his will. The defence of purchase, gift, or finding in his inheritance was irrelevant if the thing had been lost to the plaintiff against his will. The principle drawn from German law by some writers, that the relatively better title to possession gave an advantage, was fully denied by the action for lost movables. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDTJEE. 205 The n after the p1a,im a,nd counterclaim came the assignment o f proo f. Dr. Laband has here given the best solution of a difficult subject. The usual theory has been that the defend- ant came to the proof with two witnesses by virtue of his po- sition as defendant. But Laband shows that an assertion of possession by the defendant was irrelevant, and he could not on that ground retain the right to prove. So, from a lack of a relevant defence on the part of the defendant, the plaintiff went to the proof. But if the defendant raised a relevant objection, which would destroy the possibility of unwilling loss of the plaintiff, he went to the proof. These general principles will now be shown in the course of the procedure. The vind icatory procedur e, from its original twofold char- acter, aimed at the recovery of the propert y, and t he imposi- ti on of a fine for the ft. And the presumption was that he who p ossessed the stolen property was thet hief, unless h e co uld prove other wise. So rigorous was the principle that the finder of cattle, or the one into whose possession they had strayed, must give public notice of the fact, even to a foe.^ But with this presumption of guilt was connected the corresponding right of the accused to the clearing oath, and the proof of his innocence, although he must give up the property. The first steps of the procedure belonged to the individual, not to the tribunal. When the owner had lost his property, the discovery of the thing and the detection of the thief ' belonged to him ; and for this purpose he called on his neighbors to aid him in following the trail (vestigium minare). ^THELST. VI. 4 : " That every one who hears the call (bannum) should be ready to aid another in pursuing the track, and in riding with him, as long as he knows the track ; and, after the track has failed, always let one man be found where there are many people, as well as from a tithing where there are less people, for the riding or going, — unless there is need of more, — wherever it is necessary and where all choose."* » Alfr. Binl. 42; of. Edg. I. 4, IV. 8-11 ; .ffithelr. III. 5; WiU. I. 6. 2 Cf. .ffithelst. VI. 6. 206 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDITRE. Every possible assistance was to be given to the search ; and where the track was doubtful, there the accusation of theft rested. Edw. II. 4 : " Also I wish that every one have men ready on his land to lead those who wish to search for their property." Edm. III. 6 : " And it has been decreed, concerning the pursuit and search of stolen cattle, that the pursuit be carried to the vill (villa), and that there be no foristeallum, or any prevention of the way or of the search. And, if the track cannot be traced out of the land, let the accusation be made wherever there is suspicion and doubt." 1 In the special laws for the city of London, the loser gave' the pursuit into the hands of the city, if he could not find the stolen property himself within three days.^ The claim- ant having by these measures found the property, without the aid of the court, the first step of the procedure by which he seized the property was extrajudicial. The Anefang of the continent was found in Anglo-Saxon law, both in the use of words ^ and in its usual procedural meaning. The claimant formally laid his hand upon the ob- ject, and declared it was his own (Atheist. II. 9). Its char- acter was essentially executive, and in its nature was a speedy means of satisfaction, having for its especial object the for- cing of the accused to surrender the goods ; and, in the bar- barian codes, a fine was imposed for the simple refusal to ' Anh. I. 1 (Dun-Set.) : "If one follow the track of stolen cattle from one boundary into another, let him give up the tracking to the men of the land, or let him, through proof, show that he follows lawfully." If the owner claim that the track is pursued wrongly, the pursuer makes oath, with five community- witnesses, that the cattle went up there. 2 JEthelst. VI. 8, § 7 : " Also we command our hiremen that every one know when he has his cattle, and when he does not have them, with the witness of his neighbors, and show us the track, if he cannot find them within three days; be- cause we believe many men are careless how their cattle run, because they are over-trustful in our peace." Cf. also 8, § 8. ' The Anglo-Saxon equivalents are : aetfdn, be/Sn, aet-befdn, aetfangan, gefon, anefdhen, and widerjahen. The Latin expressions are : deprehendere, percipere, capere, intercipere, but generally interciare. " Manum mittat ad propria " is used in jEthelst. II. 9, and shows that it was the same as in other German law ; but William I. 10, § 2, says it was customary only in Danish law. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDTJEE. 207 surrender the object, apart from the fine for theft.^ The claim of the plaintiff to the property, made at the place where the goods were attached, contained in itself an execu- tive power of coercion. The reply that he had bought or exchanged the object had no value, for no title could be ac- quired in stolen property. Th e accused must surrender the g oods, or appear b efore the court with the vindic ator. If he surrendered the goods and confe^ed the thef t, he must_p ay the fine to the claimant. Will. I. 45 : " Quod si aliquis rem postmodum calumpniatus fuerit, et nee testes habuerit, nee warrantum, et rem reddat, et forisfacturam, cui de jure corn- petit." If he claimed his innocence, the plaintiff made a fore-oath of his honest intention, to prevent evil-minded men, as the following passage states, from making a charge of theft against another in order to put his property under pledge. Edw. I. 1, § 5: "Also we have decreed, if an evil man should wish to put the property of another under pledge by false accusation, let him confirm with an oath that he does it not out of fraud, but with full right, without deceit or craft ; and then let him (defendant) do as he can, in case one (plaintiff) lays claim to the thing, be it that he (defendant) either proves his ownership, or vouches to warranty." This oath was to be made with one of five men, who ac- companied the claimant. ^THELST. V. 2 : " Et si investigetur pecus in alicujus terram, edu- cat terrae dominus vestigium illud extra terram suam, si possit ; si non possit, stet ipsum vestigium pro superjuramento, si aliquis compelletur ibi." ^ ^THELST. II. 9 : "Si homo pecus aliquod intertiet, nominentur ei V vicinorum suorum, et de illis quinque perquirat unum, qui cum eo juret, quod in recto publico manum mittat ad propria" ° 1 Lex Salica, 80 sol ; Lex Baiuv., 12 sol ; Lex Alam. 40 sol. '^ It is exceedingly interesting to compare the provisions of the Franliish code on this point. Lex Eib. 83, 1 : "Si quis rem cognoverit, mittat manum super earn. Et si ille super quem intertiatur, tertiam manum quaerat, tunc in praesente ambo conjurare debent cum dextera armata, et cum sinistra ipsam rem teneant. Unus juret quod in propriam rem manum mittat et alius juret quod ad earn manum trahat, qui ei ipsam rem dedit." 8 In the laws regarding the Dun-Setas, Anh. I. 8, if A attached B's cattle, A 208 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUEE. From these passages we have no difficulty in recognizing the oath itself. Anh. X. 4: "By the Lord, I accuse not N. either for hatred or for envy, or for unlawful lust of gain ; nor know I any thing soother : but, as my informant to me said, and I myself in sooth be- lieve, that he was the thief of my property." Consistent with the whole spirit of German usage in re- gard to th^at^it established the bona Udes of the claiman t, and was followed by the counter-oath of the defendant, who thereby asserted his innocence, and showed his intention to bring his proof to the court, as follows : — Anh. X. 5 : " By the Lord, I am guiltless, both in deed and coun- sel, of the charge of which N. accuses me." Then the defendant must give proper pledge for the fur- ther course of the procedure : — ^THELR. II. 8 (Pr.) : " Si quis deprehendat quod amisit, advocet inde Ule, cum quo deprehenditur, unde venerit ei, et mittat in manum et dat plegium, quod adducet advocatum suum." * The agramire of the Frankish codes has been shown by Sohm to be the equivalent of the Latin expression, fidem facere; and so corresponds to the Anglo-Saxon giving of " borh," or pledge. The security given was the borh " da judicio sisti," mentioned above, to cause the matter to be brought to the court, " ut placitum illud finem habeat," and that the defendant might produce his defence. By putting forward a claim to the property, and giving borh to present his proof, the defendant prevented the plaintiff from realizing immediately. If he did not follow this course, the plaintiff gained the property, and the fine for theft (Cn. II. 24, § 1). This also acted as a means of fixing the term at which he must make oath with five others " quod ita sibi attrahat, sicut ei furatum f uit." A law of William changed this number to seven men. Will. I. 14 : "Et appel- lator per vii legales homines ex nomine jurabit, quod nee ex odio nee alia aliqua causa hoc ei imponit, nisi tamen ut jus suum adipiscatur." 1 Anh. I. 8 : " Si peous intertietur et ultra flumen advocetur, tunc ponatw in- borh ml underwed mittatur, ut placitum illud finem habeat." Cf. also Will. I. 3, as showing the universal use of this part of the procedure. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCBDUEB. 209 must appear, being usually seven days,^ and, when a charge of fraud could be made, not less than six months. The latitude given to the accuser of charging a man with theft, and the presumption that the charge was true, natu- rally led to abuses. To counteract this evil, if the accused could show that the claim against him was fraudulent, he was relieved from any obligation to prove his property : he thus presented an exception, which rebutted the plaintiffs claim of an unwilling loss, and stopped the procedure. Cn. II. 24, § 3 : " And it does not seem to us right that any one should be compelled to prove property when there is testimony of, and it can be proved, that there is fraud. And let no one be required to prove that property before six months after it was [claimed to be] stolen." ^ The accused, therefore, was not required to prove property if he could bring proof of fraud. The term of six months is well explained by: Hen. 5, § 25 : " Quidam ad repellenda imperiiorum machinamenta, et suas rationes praeparandas, et testes confirmandas, at consilia quae- renda, annum et sex menses concedi mandaverunt ; quidam annum, in quo plurimi concordant, minus vera quam sex menses non reperi." Having now carried the procedure to a point where the term was fixed, and the subsequent steps took place before the court, it wUl be necessary to discuss a very wide distinc- tion as to the course of the procedure ; resting on the fact whether the stolen goods were found by the claimant within three days, or after that period. In the first case, according to the procedure of the Lex Salica as shown by Sohm, " A 1 .aSthelr. n. 8, § 3: "Si advocet ultra unam sciram, habeat terminum, — i.e., ehdomadam .'' " Cn. II. 24, § 3 : " Et nobis non videtur rectum, ut aliquis propiare cogatur, ubi testimonium est et cognosci potest, quod ibi hrede sit. Et nemo illud propiare de- beat ante sex menses postquam furatum est." Cf. Will. I. 46 : " Absonum vide- tur et juri contrariura, ut probatio fiat super testes, qui rem calumpniatam cognoscunt, nee admittatur probatio ante terminum statutum, scilicet vi men- sem, ex quo furatum fuit quod calumpniaturs" Also Hen. 64, § 6 (.end) : "Et nobis non videtur rectum secundum legem, ut aliquis, si propriare velit, compel- latur, ubi cognosci potest, quod et testis intersit, saltem ante vi menses post quam furabitur." 14 210 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PROCEDTJEE. (plaintiff) conducts the procedure ; after the third night, it is B (defendant) ; while the agramire is made by A alone, or by B alone. One of the two is admitted to act in judicio, to the exclusion of the other ; while, by the agramire of B, the vindicator has lost his position of attack, likewise, by the agramire of A, the possessor loses his position of defence." That is, in the first case, the plaintiff went to the proof ; in the second, the defendant. While the explanation of this position is necessary, its solution will give a clearer compre- hension of the procedure. This distinction in the procedure was peculiar to the Frank- ish law, and no similar provision was known to the Anglo- Saxons. But the term of three days was familiar to the old codes in many ways.^ In this case, the term of three days was set as a period within which the thief was regarded as " handhabbende," or " caught in the act." ^ But the thief s life was not forfeit, as in the case of one caught in the act. Sohm's argument is based on : Lex Sal. 37 : " lUe qui per vestigium sequitur res suas per tercia manu debet agramire ... Si vero jam tribus noctibus exactis qui res suas quaerit eas invenerit, ille apud quem inveniuntur si eas emisse aut cambiasse dixerit : ipse liceat agramire." Agramire is the equivalent of fidem facere; in the first passage '■'•per tercia manu " is, as he shows, equivalent to " de tercia manu," de meaning "about" or "concerning," and "tercia manu" the object of the agramire. And Siegel^ has shown that the expression " tercia manu " undoubtedly means the procedure of vindication, which conducts to the " third hand." Then, by Sohm's showing, the passage should read : " The plaintiff ought to give pledge to proceed accord- ing to the vindication procedure." And this is unquestion- ably the meaning. 1 The Lex AUem. gives the buyer of an animal three days for avoidance of a sale on account of a defect in the thing sold. Cf. also the sessio triduana in regard to land. Also Alfr. 2 : three days of protection in the sanctuary for criminals. Cf . Cn. II. 28. '^ Heusler, Gewere, p. 490. ^ Geschichte des deutschen Gerichtsverfahrens. p. 87, ff. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUKB. 211 To this case it is possible now to apply the principles already laid down as the governing rules of the procedure. The foundation of the suit was the unwilling loss of the plaintiff, and no exception made by the defendant was rele- vant which did not refute this claim. That a thief caught in the act could not maintain any such exception, it is unnec- essary to state. And only when the defendant, as shown by Laband, could bring forward a relevant exception was he admitted to the proof. Therefore, in a lack of such a posi- tion on the part of the defendant, the plaintiff went to the proof. So that the case of agramire by the plaintiff meant simply that he went to the proof as was understood in the vindication procedure. When the thief was caught, the owner ^ received the goods, of course. But it is natural and reasonable to expect that he who came forward and claimed to be the owner should, to prevent fraud, show his hona fides by the oath. It was not to be allowed that any man claim- ing to be owner should be given the goods, unless he had indicated his ownership by o^h . Such was required in : ■ Ine, 17 : " Qui furtivam camem invenerit occultatam, si audeat, licet ei inveritare jurejurando quod sua sit." ^ An ir respons ible assertion was not allowed even in the case of cattle which had strayed away and had been claimed by the owner ; for the claimant must give pledge to the finder to secure him from loss in case any one else should claim the cattle within a year and a day.^ Laband says that suits for debt, movables, and immovables in German law rested on a rational foundation, and that the distribution of the one-sided right of proof was always connected with the substantiation of the claim or the objection. In regard to this peculiarity of the Lex Salica, Bethmann-Hollweg ^ holds that the plaintiff promised to make oath with three witnesses that the lost property was in his possession three days before the Anefang. But to make "per tercia manu agramire" I Will. I. 27. •' Will. I. 6. ' Civilproe. IV. p. 482. Vide also North American Review. Apr. 1874, pp. 420. 421. 212 THE AiTGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDTIRE. equivalent to " agramire ut tereia manu juret se rem furto perdidisse " is, as Heusler suggests, hardly to be allowed. It is to be concluded, then, that this case was but one mani- festation peculiar to the Lex Salioa, of the usual laws govern- ing this procedure. Next must be treated the course of the procedure before the court. The Sachsenspiegel required that the plaintiff's claim should include both the fact of his unwilling loss of possession, and that the object belonged to him. It has been strongly claimed that the basis of the action was the ownership of the plaintiff. That the claimant must include his right to pos- session is true ; but that this must be ownership could not be true, since the right to bring the action was given to the commodatar, or even to a finder from whom, while waiting for the owner to claim his property, the object had been stolen. Of the two requirements, it was the unwilling loss of possession which was the essential and only basis of the action. Any assertion of the defendant was relevant which excluded the possibility of the object having been lost against the will of the plaintiff. If the theory were correct that the right of property was the sole foundation of the suit, as alleged by Bruns,^ the defendant could dismiss the action by showing that the plaintiff was not the owner, or that a third person was the owner. But the sources never allowed this ; nor was the plaintiff's right of possession ever a subject of contradiction. The emphasis in the old law on the necessity of showing the property to be " his " did not mean, there- fore, a right of ownership ; but required him to show his right of possession, chiefly to identify that chattel as the one which he had unwillingly lost.^ The Sachsenspiegel required that the plaintiff must go to the proof, in case the defendant raised no counter-objection ; i.e., when he could not oppose the unwilling loss of the plaintiff, and only said he found or bought the thing. For in the refusal of the defendant to give up the object, even if he offered no relevant exception, 1 Recht des Besitzes, p. 315. Also cf. Sohm, Proc. de Lex Sal. p. 36, note 3. 2 Lex Sal. XXXVII. 47 ; Lex Rib. XXXIII 1, XL VII. 1, LVIII. 8, LXXIX. 2 ; Lex Burg, LXXXIII. 1 ; and also, later, Briinner Schoffenb. c. 104. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAi PROCEDTJEE. 213 was contained an opposition to the claim of the plaintiff of a loss against his will. And only, as an exception to the rule, could the property be awarded to the plaintiff without de- manding from him the proof. This has been shown true of the finder of stolen flesh in a previous argument. According to the Sachsenspiegel, the plaintiff must go to the proof with two witnesses who knew the thing to have been in his pos- session, who knew of his unwilling loss, and who could identify the object. These witnesses could become oath- helpers and swear to the plaintiff's credibility. To the double claim of the plaintiff, the defendant must, to make a full defence, oppose both the return of the object, and the charge of illegal possession, to which last a fine was attached. The procedure, then, varied accordingly as : A. The defendant proved an original title; e.g., the object was bom his. B. The defendant cleared himself from the fine for theft, but gave up the property. C. The defendant vouched to warranty. „, (A.) The defendant entered an exception which worked against the claim of the plaintiff for return of the goods, as well as the assertion of unwilling loss. If he could assert facts which, if proved, would rebut the plaintiff's claim, he went to the proof ; that is, by proving that the cattle were his by birth, or that the object was his by manufacture, he maintained a defence which opposed the possibility that it was taken from the plaintiff against his will.' Edw. I. 1, 5 : "And then let him (defendant) do as he can, in case one lays claim to the thing, be it that he either prove his ownership or vouch to warranty." Will. I. 21 : " And if he (defendant) can prove that it is of his own raising hy three of his neighbors, so has he cleared himself." ^THELST. II. 9 : " Et qui hoc propriare sibi voluerit, nominentur 1 The Sachsensp. provides that the proof should be so framed that, if one had alienated an animal born his, and it had strayed back to him, he could not make a relevant defence. Nor was manufacture a relevant defence if the material (e.g., wool) out of which it was made was stolen. 214 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDTTEE. ei XI homines, et ex illis adquirat duos, et jurent, quod illud pecus iV. intertiatum in peculio suo natum sit, sine rima]), et stet thes cyreaj>, — i.e., hoc jusjurandum electum, super xx den." The oath to be sworn by the defendant is as follows : — Anh. X. 3 : " By the Lord, I was not at rede nor at deed, counsel- lor nor doer, where were unlawfully led away N 's cattle. But as I cattle have, so did it come of my own property, and so it by folk- right my own possession is, and my rearing." The words of the oath show most conclusively that the defence aims chiefly to disprove the possibility of the theft and unwilling loss, and establishes this by the fact of original ownership. The oath must be made with tjTO witnesses, which is the number prescribed by ^thelstan, and confirmed by the Sachsenspiegel. The case was not that of a plain clearing oath where the accused only freed himself from the charge of theft, as when the accused was onl}' the finder. That was a matter of simple negation ; but when the de- fendant advanced a claim of ownership, co-awearers were also necessary.! At least in Anglo-Saxon law, the simple oath ^ of the defendant alone was not sufficient in proving his ownership in the property. The general belief that the defendant, as such, went to the proof, is shown to be wrong ; he could not prove unless he offered a relevant objection. But yet the defendant, as such, had a procedural advantage, in that to him was given the power of rebutting the plaintiff by a relevant defence. But in a case where two men were equally positive of their ownership, and each could furnish witnesses, and each party claimed that the object was stolen, who would be awarded the rdle of the defendant ? Who would be given the oath 1 Edw. I. 1, §§ 3, 4 : " Also we have likewise decreed, concerning the claim for ownership, that he (defendant) should bring therefor credible witnesses of it, or find an unchosen oath, if he can, to which the plaintifE is bound [to acquiesce] •" if he cannot, then let there be named to him vi men of his neighborhood where he is resident, and let him select, from these vi, one for an animal or a thing, according to its worth ; and then let there be an increase according to the value of the goods, if more men should be present." '^ Anh. I. 8 (Dun-Set) : "In case one over the boundary proves property, he must do it by the ordeal." THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUEE. 215 for proving property, and gain the thing, since the oath was uncontestable? In such a case the court decided that he who seemed to have the better testimony was allowed the advantage of the proof : Hene. 64, § 6 : " If certain men desire to prove property in a thing in common, and there are witnesses on both sides, and it is claimed that it is stolen, he who shall have the better testimony shall be nearer the proof ; and let him alone prove with the broken oath that it is his own, and let his witnesses confirm it with a plain oath." But if it were impossible to decide as to which party had the better testimony, the law, as usually in German codes, gave a presumption in favor of the possessor : § 6 : "If this cannot be done, the possessor shall always be nearer [the proof] than the claimant; and let him have [the oath], or let him, if he can, make defence by warranty,^ which goes no farther than the fourth vouching." ^ And this was the common rule of procedure in real prop- erty. Not that possession was a relevant defence in itself, but it gave the first power of bringing forward such a defence when the claims were equally balanced. This is confirmed in speaking of the right of a warrantor to prove property : — ^THELK. II. 9, § 4 : " Etiam inter advocandum, si quis hoc inci- piat, nee ultra advocet, si propriare sibi velit, non potest hoc ei jure denegatur, si credibile testimonium locum ei accedendi, quia propria- tio propinquior semper est possidenti quam repetenti." The defendant by this procedure proved his ownership to the property, and thereby rebutted the plaintiff's claim of unwilling loss of possession.* 5. If the defendant could not oppose to the double claim of the plaintiff facts which worked wholly against that claim, he could adduce facts which would rebut only the charge of theft ; and so, not opposing the claim for the return of the 1 Thorpe says (p. 623): "Werminga is supposed by Somner (note) to be a mistake for cenninga. The whole passage is obscure and unintelligible " ! Cf. Edg. I. 4. 2 The remainder of the law is a repetition of Cn. II. 24. Cf. Henr. 5, § 25. ' I have used the term "relevant" to include such defences as would be de- nominated in the Common Law, a traverse or exceptio, as tho case might be. 216 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOCEDTJRB. goods, he dismissed the action by their surrender. It was for the purpose of establishing such a defence, that the Anglo- Saxon laws so bristle with injunctions requiring the presence of witnesses at every bargain, sale, or exchange ; in order that the buyer might repel the charge of theft in receiving goods which once may have been stolen, and in which no title could be acquired. The chief object of such a defence was to vouch in the warrantor ; but this will be reserved for a separate division. If the defendant could not show from whom he purchased the object, but yet was innocent, he could still establish his hona fides by taking the clearing oath, as given in : Anh. X. 3 : " By the Lord, I was not, at rede nor at deed, coun- sellor nor doer where were unlawfully led away N.'s cattle. But as I cattle have, so did I lawfully obtain it ; and as I cattle have, so did he sell it to me who had it to sell." This oath was sworn with oath-helpers, according to the value of the fine. Ine, 25, § 1 : " Si quid furtivum intercietur super mercatorem, et hoc coram bonis testibus non emerit, juret secundum witam, quod nee furti conscius vel coadjutor fuerit in eo, vel emendet XXXVI. sol. witae, — i.e., forisf acturae vel emendationis." The " secundum witam juret " is explained to mean an oath of sixty hides, or sixty sol., the usual wita for theft. Ine, 53 : " Et juret per LX hidas, quod ea mortua manus vendidit ei ; et per hoc jusjurandum wita remeneat, et reddatur interciatus do- mino suo." ^ A " twelve-hynde " man was, however, reckoned the equal of six ceorls, and could swear for LX hides. Ink, 46 : " Quando aliquis inculpatur, quod furtum fecerit vel fur- tivum aliquid firmaverit, tunc debet per LX hidas, — i.e., per VI homi- nes dbnegare, si juramento dignus sit." ^ This explains the earliest mention of the vindication pro- 1 Cf. Ine, 7 : "Si quis furetur sic ut uxor ejus nesciat hoc et pueri sui, red- dat witae lx sol." 2 Cf. Ine, 19. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDUEE. 217 cedure (H. & E. 7 and 16), which allowed this defence of clearing from the charge of theft, and required the oath of his witnesses, or the wic-reeve. Hloth. & Ead. 16 : "If any Kentish-man buy a chattel in Lun- den-wic, let him then have two or three true men to witness, or the king's wic-reeve. ... If he cannot [vouch to warranty], let him prove at the altar, with one of his witnesses or with the king's wic- reeve, that he bought the chattel openly in the wic, with his own property ; and then let him [plaintiff] be paid its worth." ^ The reeve, as a "king's geneat," could swear for sixty hides, or the whole of the fine. In the later laws^ the accused must swear the "plain oath." Will. I. 21, § 1 : " And, if he have neither a warrantor nor a hei- melborh, and he has witnesses that he bought it in the king's market, and that he knows not his warrantor nor his pledge, neither living nor dead, — so let him swear to it with his witnesses, or with a plain oath (jur. planum)." This " juramentum planum " evidently corresponds to the simple oath of the earlier laws, as the following passages show : — Cn. II. 22 : " Et sit omnis credihilis . . . vel juramentum vel orda- lium in hundreto, simplici lada ' dignus." 1 Cf . Ine, 57. 2 But, in the laws of William and Henry.a nominal change in the nomenclature was introduced in regard to oaths. The terms "juramentum frangens,"" jura- mentum f pactum vel observatum,'' and the "juramentum planum " were used. The want of the wager of battle in the Anglo-Saxon system of proof caused the oath to be especially extended in regard to severity ; and hence the "ju- ramentum frangens," which was awarded only for the worst crimes. The same reason probably introduced the "juramentum fractum," sworn "in verborum observantiis," which Schmid says is opposed to the "juramentum planum," but that it cannot be said what difEerence existed between them. The " juramen- tum planum" seems to correspond to the "simplex juramentum." Why does the "juramentum fractum" not correspond to the "triplex juramentum"? Vide H. Brunner, Schwur., p. 398 ; Schmid. p. 617. 3 Schmid. p. 283, Cod. Colb. : " Qui autem conquirere debet simplicem purga- tionem, simplici Sacramento hoc faciat, hoc est ; accipiat duos et ipse (sit) tertius, et sic jurando adquirat. Triplex vero juramen tum sic conquiratur : accipiat quinque et ipse (sit) sextus, et sic jurando adquirat triplex judicium, aut triplex juramentum." 218 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCBDXJBE. Will. 1. 14 : " If any one accuses another of theft, and he is a free man, and has witnesses of Ids legality (si honaefamae hucusque fuerit), then let him purge himself with a, plain oath {jur. planum)" In this clearing oath the witnesses swore as to the state- ment of the accused in regard to what they " have with their eyes seen, or with their ears heard ; " but they ceased to be witnesses, if they became compurgators, and swore only to their belief in the defendant's assertion. The defendant, although he had now cleared himself of the charge of theft involved in the accusation, had offered no relevant objection to the unwilling loss of the plaintiff. Therefore the plaintiff must go to the proof, and continue the procedure. The defendant desired only to clear himself of the presumption that he was the thief, rising from the fact that the property was found in his possession. In conclusion, he who had in his possession by sale, ex- change, inheritance, &c., an object which had been previously stolen, could not set up such a title against the claiming owner. If he could not present at the court his warrantor, who had sold him the object, he could still clear himself by an oath of his bona fides. In the early law the oath was sworn according to the wita of sixty sol. ; but there can hardly have been any persistent uniformity in this regard, since the wita must often have varied according to the value of the stolen goods. In the later law, the oath was defined as a "jura- mentum simplex," or " planum." After the defendant estab- lished his bona fides, the plaintiff went to the proof, and the property was surrendered by the defendant. e. By vouching to warranty, the defendant did not aim at rebutting the claim of unwilling loss suffered by the plaintiff; but by introducing his auctor, he was freed from the suit and the warrantor was substituted in his place. That such a proceeding was allowed by German law shows, per- haps more conclusively than any other argument, that own- ership was not the essential characteristic of the procedure, nor the basis of the action. In the Roman rei vindicatio the defendant could oppose his ownership to the claim of the plaintiff; and the original defendant remained the chief THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUEE. 219 party to the end of the procedure. It was to prove his right of ownership, that he proved his acquisition from the auctor. In German law, the defendant withdrew from the procedure, if his auctor accepted the obligation of war- ranty. The distinction is well expressed by the Lombard law : " Langobardus semper dat auctorem et numquam stat loco auctoris ; Romanus semper stat loco auctoris et numquam dat auctorem." It is the purest German law, the established procedure of the Saehsenspiegel and later German jurispru- dence, as well as that of the Lex Salica, the earliest law extant. This earliest code provided ^ that, if A sold a horse to B, and it was attached in B's possession on the ground that it was stolen, B summoned A as his warrantor ; and to the same term, if A wished to escape the charge of theft, he must summon his seller, C, as his warrantor ; and this pro- cess was continued until the thief was found. And, whoever, in the chain of warrantors, refused to appear at the fixed term, was held to be the thief unless detained by some lawful essoin. And this was the procedure of Anglo-Saxon law also. The first mention of it is given in HoTH. & Ead. 7 : " If any man steal cattle from another, and the owner afterwards lay claim to it, let him [the defendant] vouch to warranty at the king's hall, if he can ; and let him bring there the person who sold or gave it to him. If he cannot, let him give it up, and let the owner take possession of it." The fundamental rule held that no right of possession could be acquired in stolen goods ; nor could the defendant show by an acquisition from a seller that the object was his, since that gave him no title, and did not rebut the claim of unwilling loss of the plaintiff. He produced his auctor, not to prove the tradition of the goods, as in our day ; but that he might escape the charge, and put it upon his auctor. The defendant summoned his auctor to appear at court, and he thereby turned the charge of theft from himself to his auctor; and gave the object into his possession. If the 1 Chap. 47. 220 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCBDTJUE. auctor denied any such relation by oath, the charge fell back on the defendant, and he was held guilty.^ The Sachsen- spiegel prescribed that the plaintiff must again repeat the formalities of the action, and begin anew against the auctor. The auctor now stood in the position of a defendant in the action for movables, and had any of the defences allowed to the latter. He could prove his original title to the property in question, as the defendant might have done. .^THELR. II. 9, § 4 : " Etiara inter advocandum, si quis hoc inci- piat, nee ultra advocet, si propriare sibi velit, non potest hoc ei dene- gari, si credibile testimonium locum ei faciat accidendi." Or, more usually, he himself vouched in his own auctor. ^THELR. II. 8, § 2 : "Si [auctor] recipiat, tunc acquietat eum, cum quo fuerat deprehensum. Appellet deinceps unde venerit ei." The vouching proceeded until an exception was raised which opposed the unwilling loss of the plaintiff. If the auctor proved his property, this was a relevant objection, and the procedure ended as far as concerned the plaintiff ; if the first auctor brought in his a-uctor, the chain of auctors con- tinued until a relevant objection was made, or the thief was found. The last in the series of auctors, who could not put the charge upon another, must make good his defence, or stand convicted of theft. By the Anglo-Saxon as well as the barbarian laws, the warrantor who refused to appear was regarded as the thief; and the defendant, in order yet to clear himself,^ must swear with three witnesses that the defaulter was really his auctor, and that he had summoned him in due form. At the court, since the defendant was both under a charge for theft, and an obligation to restore the thing, the defend- ant, as shown by the oath, formally placed the object in the hands of the auctor. Anh. X. 3 : " By the Lord, I was not at rede nor at deed, neither 1 By the Lex Eibuaria, the auctor could free himself by oath, and then the defendant was held to be thief. 2 jEthelr. II. 9, § 2 : " Manifestet hoc cum testibus, si posset, quod recte adrocat." THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDTJBB. 221 counsellor nor doer, where were unlawfully led away N.'s cattle. But as I cattle have, so did I lawfully obtain it. And as I vouch it to warranty, so did he sell it to me into whose hand I now set it." Then the witnesses swore : — Cn. II. 23 : " Et veritent hoc ipsi testes in fide Dei et domini sui, quod ei in vero testimonio sint, sicut oculis superviderint et auribus superaudierint, quod recte hoc adquisivit." If a series of auctors appeared, the object passed from hand to hand, following in an inverse order the way by which it had come to the present possessor.^ In case the warrantor, B, was dead, the defendant vouched in the tomb of B, by swearing with an oath of sixty hides, the usual clearing oath for theft, that B sold the slave to him when alive. ^ Then having cleared himself of theft, he surrendered the object to the plaintiff. The charge of theft now lay on the dead warrantor ; but, as showing the regular succession of the heir to the same position, and the legal persona of the devisor, if B left an heir, C, C could take up the procedure as B would have done. Ine, 53 : " Si tunc sciat, quis mortui pecuniam hereditavit [defend- ant] appellet in ipsam pecuniam, et roget ipsam manum, ut hoc capi- tale quietum ei faciat, vel ostendat, quod nunquam ipsius mortui pecunia fuit." ^THELR. II. 9, § 2 : "Si mortuum hominem advocet, si non ha- beat heredes, qui purgent eum, manifestet hoc cum testibus, si possit, quod recte advocet, et id per se purget. Tunc erit mortuus in culpa, nisi amicos habeat, qui eum mundiflcent, sicut idem faceret, si posset et viveret." § 3 : "Si tunc amicos habeat, qui audeant hoc facere, tunc deficit advocatio, sicut ille viveret ac negaret. Et habeatk.-* furti reus ille, qui in manibus habet, quia semper est negatio fortior quam affirmatio." Laband has shown from the Sachsenspiegel that the heir was not the third possessor, but that he continued the pos- session of the original receiver. Sachsensp. II. 60, § 2 : " If the tenant of the lord die, Ms heir steps into his place, and pays ' from the property ' that which he should. If the lord 1 Lex Rib. 72, 1 : " De manu in manum ambulare debet, usque dum ad earn manum yeniat quae eum (i.e., the slave) inlicito ordine vendidit vel furavit." 2 Ine, 53. 222 THE AiTGLO-SAXOK LEGAL PEOCEDUBE. also die, likewise the man gives his rent to whom the property falls, as he had promised to the lord."^ This has been already discussed, and it would seem that the Anglo-Saxon laws just quoted make the position so clear that it would hardly need more than the statement. But so high an authority as Sohm,^ in his " Procedure of the Salic Law," has declared that acquisition by inheritance was a relevant defence in the action for movables, and that it worked like the proof of " title to property." He claims, wibh Stobbe, that the German inheritance formed a "particular suc- cession," in which the heir stood a step after the de- visor, and not a " universal succession," as existed in the Roman law, in which the heir stood in the place of the deceased. But the passage of the Salic Law ^ on which he grounds this defence required that the defendant should prove that he found the object in question in the possession of his devisor, and then show how it came into the possession of his devisor. But from the laws above quoted, from the passage of the Sachsenspiegel, and the discussion above on the rule Hand wahre Sand, it results that the heir occupied in the procedure exactly the same legal position which the devisor would have taken, were he alive ; and the inheritor acquired only those rights over the thing which the devisor had before him. And that this is the conclusion to be drawn from the expression of the law above in which, if the defendant knew the heir of his warrantor, he vouched in the " property of the deceased," is without doubt. Then the heir, like any auetor, must, according to the passage quoted by Sohm, prove how the object became property of his devisor, if he would retain possession ; i.e. he might prove his devisor's orig- inal production, and then it would work as a relevant excep- tion for his own possession against the plaintiff. Or, as any 1 Cf. Cn. 11. 72 : " Et ubi bonda, i.e., paterfamilias, manserit sine compel- latione et calumpnia, eint uxor et pueri in eodem sine querela. Et si com- pellatus in vita sua in aliquo fuerat, respondeant heredes eius, sicut ipse deberet, si viveret. ^ P. 72, and n. 1. ' C. 101 : " Debet ille, super quern interciatur, tres testimonia mittere quod in alode patris hoc invenisset, et altera trea testimonia, qualiter pater suus res ipsas invenisset." THE ANGLO-SAXOK LEGAL PEOCEDTJEB. 223 auctor, he could deny by oath that the property, or the de- visor's legal persona, was under the obligation of warranty ; i.e., in the usual expression, he did not " accept," and then the imputation of theft recoiled on the original defendant. And there is no reason to suppose that the heir could not vouch in a warrantor for the object ; but rather a presumption that he could, from the passage of the Lex Salica given above. But this could not often happen ; since, if the devisor was dead, it would be difficult also to find the warrantor. But the rule that no title could be acquired in stolen property, no matter how far it had gone from hand to hand, and the full rigor of the vouching existed even in this case by the showing of Sohm's own passage. For if he could not have shown how the object came into the hands of his devisor, i.e., if he could not vouch in the devisor's warrantor, according to the usual rules of this procedure, he lost the object, but was freed from the charge of theft. Then it is to be concluded that the claim of inheritance was not a relevant defence, and did not act as a title to own- ership ; but that the heir stood, in regard to the procedure, in the same position as his devisor. The Sachsenspiegel and later German law required the plaintiff to follow the warrantor to his court, except over the sea ; and that the object should be presented at the court of the warrantor. This was also the practice in the earlier Anglo-Saxon law, but was changed by ^thelred, who directed the warrantor to appear at the court where the object was first attached. Although formerly the vo aching went as far as the third warrantor at the place (forum) of the Anefang, and then the plaintiff followed the warrantor, jEthelred required the whole chain of warrantors to appear at the court of the defendant, as was the rule in the Lex Salica. iETHELE. H. 9 (Pr.) : " Aliquando fuit, quod ter advocandum erat, ubi prius aliquid interciabatur, et deinceps eundum cum advocante, quocunque advocaret. Unde oonsulerint sapientes, quod melius erat, ut saltern advocaretur ubi deprehendebatur, donee innotesceret, in quo stare vellet, ne forte impotens homo longius et diutius pro suo labpra- 224 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOCEDHEE. ret, et ut vexetur magls, qui injuste conquisitum habeat in manibus et minus qui juste prosequitur." ^ And no subsequent law ^ changed this provision. After the warrantor was summdned he was allowed the usual term ^ of one week in which to make his appearance at court, if he lived in the next shire ; and an additional week for each shire farther distant. JEthelr. II. 8, § 3 : "Si advo- cet ultra unam sciram, habeat terminum, i.e. ehdomadam ; si advocet ultra duas sciras habeat duas septimanas de termino. Et ad quot sciras cennabit, totidem habeat septimanas de ter- mino ; — et veniat uhi primitus fuit interoiatus." The old law required that warranty should go on until the person was found who could make no defence, and was, therefore, the thief; or until one was found who produced a relevant objection. But the severity of the old law was limited as to the number of warrantors by: Cn. II. 24, § 2 : "Si testimonium habeat, sicut praediximus, tunc liceat inde ter advocari, et quarta vice proprietur out reddatur ei, cujus erit." If by the third warrantor the exception was not estab- lished, the defendant was cleared from the theft, and gave up the object. But it is hardly to be supposed that the third warrantor was held to be the thief. This is confirmed by : Henb. 64, § 6 : " Aut Ule, si potest, werminga [warranty] resistat, quae ultra tertiam vicem non procedit." * In the early law ^ a slave could not be vouched in as a 1 Of. Edw. 1. 1, § 1. 2 Henr. 67, § 4 : " Si eum aliquo inventum sit, unde oulpatus sit, ibi neeesse est causam tractari, et ibi purgetur, vel ibi sordidetur." s The Lex Salica (47) gave the warrantor forty or eighty nights, according as he lived this side or beyond the Leye and the Carbonaria Forest. The Lex Kibuaria gave fourteen, forty, and eighty nights respectively, according as he lived within or without the " ducatum," or outside the kingdom. * Colb. : " Quod si testes habuerit, quales supra diximus uuarantum (A) vocet, et ille vocatus (B), vocet alium (C), si potest, et tertius (C) adhuo tertium (D), si potest, et' tertius suum faciet, si valet ; quod si non valet, reddatur ei quod juste habere debet." 5 Ine, 47. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOCEDUEE. 225 warrantor, as having sold him goods ; but this was permitted by w^thelstan,^ and confirmed by Henry .^ After this examination of the plaintiff's position in the procedure of warranty in relation to his defendant and war- rantors, aiming at the discovery of the thief and the estab- lishment of an objection, the original defendant should now be considered in his relation to the warrantor. It is now easy to understand the necessity of having borh and witnesses at every transfer of property, as directed in : ^THELE. I. 3 : " And let no man either buy or exchange, unless he have borh and witness." The peculiarities of the action for movables made the presence of witnesses indispensable, in order to provide for the case that a stolen object had been sold. And this ac- counts for the large number of directions in the laws con- cerning witnesses, and the great precautions required for the publicity of all chattels brought into a village, and the finding of cattle.^ The witnesses served not only to prove that the defendant vouched in the right warrantor — ^THELE. II. 9, § 2 : " . . . manifestet hoc cum testibus, si posset, quod recte advocet." — and so escaped the theft ; but they also served as the witnesses of the action for indemnification against the warrantor, in which the defendant was plaintiff in the action based upon the borh given by the seller, and which followed the procedure for debt, as previously described. And then, if the first warrantor was a bona fide purchaser, he had a like action against his own warrantor, until the thief was found. The later Saxon sources vary greatly as to the length of time of unconcealed possession, which would act as a suit- able defence ; but they all agree that such possession for some period gave a right of defence, mention being made of six weeks, and of a year and a day. Perhaps nothing shows 1 JEthelst. IL 24. '■i Henr. 43. Sic potest ei warrantus esse, qui in servitio suo est. ' Hloth. & Bad. 16 ; Ine, 25; Alfr. & G. 4 ; Edw. 1. 1 ; Edg. IV. 8' 11 j JEtheb in. 5; Cn. n. 23, 24; Ed. Conf. 22; Will. I. 45, IH. 10. 15 226 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDURE. better the freedom from Roman influences enjoyed by Anglo- Saxon law than tiie fact that no such period existed. It was, however, set by : Will. I. 6 : " Si quis averium errans recoUegerit, vel rem quam- cunque invenerit, denunciet illud per tres partes visneti villis proxi- mis, ut sint in testimonium inventi. Quod si quis venerit, rem ut suam damans, det vadium et plegios, quod cam judicio sistet, si quis infra annum et diem eandum requisierit, et suum recipiat." Unconcealed possession for a year and a day was then held to be a defence by William. In conclusion, it is clearly seen that, in the procedure of movables, the action for stolen goods stood opposed to the action for the return of a movable which passed out of the owner's hands with his consent. The action for lost prop- erty belonged to the depositee, (B), if the goods were stolen from him, and not to the owner (A), according to the rule Sand wahre Hand; but if A had lost possession of the property against his will, in any way, whether his cattle had strayed, or been stolen, he had the ac tion against any _ possessor. Nor was this to be distinguished as a real action, as some writers hold. From its origin in the delict proce- dure, this action was rather an action of theft than one aiming at the recovery of the object. And it was this union of both objects, giving it a double character, which caused the claim of the plaintiff, based on the unwilling loss of the property, to be most emphasized, although the claim also included a demand for the return of the property. The extrajudicial act of the Anefang consisted in the assertion of a formal claim to the property by laying hold with the hand, followed by rendering the fore oath of bona fides by the plaintiff; if the defendant refused to give up the object, he raised the following procedure before the court, after having given a pledge to make his defence. If he could not make any defence, he lost the object, and paid a fine. It was a settled principle that no right could be acquired by any possessor in an object previously stolen. The defendant THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDURB. 227 oould (1) make a full and relevant defence against botli the charge of theft, and the return of the object, by proving the property to be his own by original acquisition. (2) By giv- ing the clearing oath, he purged himself of the charge of theft only ; but as yet having made no relevant exception to the chief charge of the suit, the plaintiff went to the proof, aud gained the property. (3) By vouching to warranty, the defendant accomplished the same object as in (2) ; but, know- ing who his seller was, he withdrew and brought the auctor into his place in the procedure. (4) William allowed un- concealed possession for a year and a day as a defence. '& In comparison with movables, immovables very naturally presented great procedural similarities, and also very marked differences, arising from their peculiar nature, and from legal development. Private propertv in land was not recognized in the earliest German period, since land belonged as property in partnership to the community, each partner having rights of use in wood, field, and arable. But when property in la nd was recognize fl, t.Tip. prpvinna p.nnditinps of its holding naturally exercised an influence on the land procedure ; the action in regard to land, "therefore, belonged originally to the community ; and every alienation must have taken place in the court of the community, or, instead of that, before a 'chosen number of witnesses as representatives of the folk community. But when a new form of property arose, and~l contests sprang up concerning the rights of individuals over that property, such disputes woul d naturally have been re g- ulated by the forms of law a lready exist ing. This could not be otherwise, however narrow the existing procedure was in its examination into the material rights of the contesting I parties. J Cn. II. 24 (Pr.) : " Et nemo aliquid emat super iiii denariorum valens, mobile vel immolile, nisi habeat credibile testimcnium iin hominum, sit in civitate sit extra civitatem." 228 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDTIRE. But although, from their preponderating importance as property, and the powerful interests thereby affected, im- movables did not continue to be regulated by the laws of the narrow, executive system which admitted no questions of justice and material right, yet their procedure was closely connected with the principles of law already known con- cerning movables, and was shaped by them ; and only from this starting-point is to be sought a proper conception of the various elements of change and progress afterwards intro- duced. In unwritten law, the judges easily applied to land the only known rules of property, until this want in the laws was supplied. Yet there were essential differences e xisting in th e pro- •'cedures of movabl es" and immovab les! 1. When property was given in trust, a difference existed in regard to the admission of the owner's action. If the trustee lost or alien- ated a movable, the owner could not proceed against the third possessor, as already shown. These limitations of the action for movables in regard to the right of the owner, arose from the narrow character of the old law ; ^ but in real prop- erty they did not obtain. If a vassal conveyed real estate to a third party, the owner could have an action against the _thir^ party for recovery. 2. And a similar difference existed in regard to purchase., which was but one form of deposit, if the contract had been fulfilled on one side. If A had purchased a movable of B, it has been shown that if B, failing to deliver the object to A, sold and delivered it to a third party, C, A had no action against C for the return of the object. But if the seller of real estate, before delivery or investiture, again alienated and delivered the same property with investiture to a third party, the buyer still had an action against the third party, . and could obtain possession. 3. In the action for movables, apart from the case where the defendant was bound by an obligation ex contractu for the return of the property, he could only be held to answer, 1 Heusler, Gewere, Exours. 11., pp. 487-502. The chief authorities followed in the procedure of real property are Laband, Heusler, and Sohm. THE AJJfGLO-SAXON LEGAIi PKOCEDTJEB. 229 if the plaintiff had advanced a claim of loss against his will ; for it was not necessary that he should show the justice of his possession, since no question of material right was examined. In land procedure the defendant was required to make answer, without its being asked how the plaintiff was deprived of his property. These characteristics of the procedure of movables have been shown to arise from the peculiar origin and limited structure of the old executive law of proof; while these marked differences in the land procedure stamp it as the production of a later time, when closer attention was given to establish the material rights of the contestants. For the procedure of movables was less perfect than that of land in regard to the judgment and means of proof. These differ- ences point to the rise and development of the procedure after land became property. Land must be looked to for the element which raised the procedure from the limited system to a more extended view of private right in property. From the very limited actions of debt of the earliest time, through the better system of the movable actions, one is brought by the action of immovables nearer to the more perfect system of to-day. It is through the procedure for laud that a break was made with the nar- rower conditions of the old law, and that questions of right were decided on wider principles of justice, and opened to larger influences of jurisprudence. The procedure for movables had its origin in the old executive period ; but the action fo r real property, having arisen at a time when p ropert y in real estate was finally_recogniged, when d ocuments were admitted as proof, and when the needofa ^ider p rocedure was pressing, was as a consequence freed from the narrowing influences which shaped the action for movables, and was based more / nearly on an examination of material right. The rule Hand wahre Sand resulted from the conceptions of the old law; and found no application in land. On the founding of estates on conquered ground, and especially on the rise of large gifts to the Church, and other circumstances of that time, the old procedure was of course inadequate. No causae cognitio being allowed, a buyer of real estate under the old procedure would 230 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOOEDTIEB. have had but the action arising from the formal promise (contract) against the seller alone, and not the action for de- livery of possession against a third possessor. But this did not happen. A remarkable revolution in the procedure took place, by which the old executive system was brought under the direction of the court, and followed more nearly a judg- ment on proof.^ It has been pointed out that the Lex Salica marked the close of the old executive period, and remained as the only monument of that otherwise prehistoric time ; and Sohm has explained^ that the Lex Ribuaria is the working over of the Lex Salica to adapt it to the new order of things. It was then in the time of the Austrasian king, Childebert II., in the end of the sixth century, that this turning-point was found in the development of the German procedure. The Lex Ribuaria gave a new character to the procedure, es- pecially by the introduction of documents as proof which were wholly unknown to the old law. Written documents were largely introduced through the influence of the Roman church, and became the strongest and most natural means of proof. This was the innovation which gave an additional impetus to the legal development of the land procedure, and aided the separation from the narrowness of the old law ; while the latter, by the corresponding lack of such means of proof, remained unexpanded. The Lex Ribuaria regulated the framing of the documents for transactions concerning land, and their employment ; and introduced documentary proof in its perfected form. Lex. Rib. 59, § 8 : "Si quis interpellatus chartam prae manibus habuerit, nulla ei malo ordine invasio requiratur, quia dum interpella- tur, respondeat ad interrogationis, et sine tangano loquatur et dicat : Non malo ordine, sed per testamentum hoc teneo." ° 1 Heusler, Gewere, p. 497, ff. « Zeitschr. Eechtsg. V. 394, fE. 3 Meichelbeck, No. 122 : " Pater Wagoni portionem suam ad S. Corbinianum tradidit, unde et chartas traditionis eius in praesente attulerunt." Muratori, Antiq. I. 495 : " Habeo, sed non contra legem, eo quod ecce cartula, qualiter mihi quondam Briprandi res dedit." Monum. hist. patr. Chartarum I., p. 74 : " Non contra legem, quia cartula firmitatis per manibus habemus." Baluz. Capit. App. No. 98 : " Teneo per chartas legibus faotas, quas fecit Eldebertus." Vaissette, Hist, de Languedoc, I., No. 88 : " Retineo, quia scripturam emtionis habeo." THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PROOEDUBE. 231 Not that the appeal to the oath and the use of witnesses were laid aside ; but the ( ^cume gt was not only a more serviceable, but also as good a means of proof as thes e. The contents of the document supplied the defence which was hitherto incumbent on the defendant, and which required a showing of his derived or original acquisition by his warran- tor or witnesses. Documentary proof was given by all the early German codes, which stood in the period later than the executive, such as those of the Allemanians, Bavarians, Burgundians, Lombards, and Visigoths. And, in England, documents could have been used only after writing had been introduced by Augustine, late in the sixth century ; in fact, the earliest charters of the Anglo-Saxons belong to the sev- enth century. Heusler ^ has explained that farther progress in the legal de- velopment arose from the confusion of ideas in the German mind between documents as a means of proof, and as the act- ual ground of acquisition. It was as possible for the plaintiff ' as for the defendant to make use of documents, and two docu- ments thus were opposed to each other, as in the case of " duo testamenta regum de una re." ^ Here the folk-laws ^ per- mitted the plaintiff's document not only to destroy the efficacy of the one produced by the defendant, but also to establish the plaintiffs own effective right. In the old one- sided form of proof by warrantors or witnesses, if the defend- ant did not establish his right, he gave up the property ; but the question of the plaintiff's right was not brought into the procedure.* But now the document of the plaintiff not only confuted the right of the defendant, but was in itself the 1 Gewere, pp. 496-500. 2 Lex Rib. Tit. 60, § 7. 3 L. Alam. Cloth. I. 1 : " Per cartam firmitatem faciat et super altare ponat, et proprietas de ipsis rebus ad ipsam ecelesiam in perpetuum permaneat." Cf. L Baiur. I. 1. Cloth. 19 : " Ut res Ecclesiae de laicis absque carta nullus prae- eumat possidere," &c. Cf. Ed. Luit. 22, 54. L. Burg. Add. XIL 1 : "Si quia agrum . . . comparaverit, jubemus et si non habuerit cartam . . . pretium perdat." Cf. 43. 2, and 51. 1. * The plaintiff's claim is shown in this formula : " Male ordine et injuste con tra legem detines, mitte mihi responsum, pone rationem." 232 THE A2>fGL0-SAX0N LEGAL PEOCBDUEE. establishment of a ground of acquisition, and the plaintiff's right. This being the interpretation of a document, it was but natural that the plaintiff would claim this advantage as proof of his right ^ as well as the defendant, for a protection of his right. As a buyer, or receiver of a gift, was secured against attack by the document (" Haec donatio ut firmior sit, cartam scribere jussi"), so not only the buyer would use the documents in bringing an action against a third party, but also the receiver of a gift would do so in an action against an heir of the donor who had denied the gift. In such cases where the defendant or plaintiff might produce documents, the whole weight feU on the question whether the formal and material charta was tenable or not. Here it is to be seen that finally the old one-sided procedure, in which no causae cognitio was allowed, gave way to a contradictory procedure which involved the examination of the plaintiff's right. An interesting case of this period is given where both parties held documents from the same person ;2 but the defendant called in the auctor, only to vindicate the legality of the document (" testamentum defendere debet." L. Rib. 59, 6). But the Lex Ribuaria (60) required one who did not acquire by documents to secure to himself the proof by procuring witnesses. Then as long as these men lived, or their memory remained, they performed the same service as documents.^ The point has now been reached where the contradictory procedure has finally parted with the executive.'^ A question may have arisen as to the reason for the absence 1 Vaissette, I. No. 88: "Res, quas Petrus et uxor sua tradiderimt per ipsam scripturam, injuste retinet." Bouquet, Script. IX. p. 706 : " Res quas Bligardis per scripturam ecclesie donaverat, Genesius invasit." 2 Vaissette, I. No. 88 : " The monastery of St. Johannis, at Carcassonne, plaintiff, vs. Duvigeld, defendant. Both claimed certain goods under charters of the same seller, Petrus. The latter should act as warrantor to defendant, but said, " Ipsam scripturam ego feci, sed legibus earn auctoricare non possum, quia ego et uxor mea antea tradidimus res per scripturam donationis ad jam dic- tam casam Dei." 3 Cf. Troya, Cod. Dip. Longob. V. No. 763. * It is also an interesting fact that in England the " inquisitio per testes," and thereby the English jury, arose from that class of the Anglo-Saxon and Norman proof, community-witnesses, which were chiefly used in regard to land THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDXJBB. 233 of an assertion of property in German pleading. It is clearly seen that the cause, as regards movables, existed in the condi- tions of the old law, which separated the idea of protection in possession, from any consideration of the right over the thing. Detention and seisin ^ existed together over movables ; ^ and the owner did not have the action against a third hand, as was expressed by the rule Hand wahre Sand. There was no decision as to the question of possession preparatory to a pro- cedure in regard to ownership. But this did not hold of land. In the German land procedure seisin was contested by both parties sometimes, not with any effect upon the legal title, but only to gain the rSle of the defendant in the proof. The legal question, whether of inheritance, gift, &c., was always examined. And the right of him who had a real title in land gave him an action against any third acquirer. This shows the wide difference which existed between the conception of movables and of land, and the consequent dif- ferences in the pleading. Although the German conception of ownership in land approached the Roman dominium in an absolute right to the thing, yet in other respects the two ideas were essentially different. The German allowed a division of the right of possession in such a manner, and with such a combination of real and personal rights as was not possible in the Roman jurisprudence. As possessio was the correlative of Roman dominium, so was seisin related to German ownership.^ It is not necessary to follow the reasoning by which it has been indisputably proved that the seisin of the Germans was not for land, as it was for movables, the actual physical deten- tion; but that it included the employment of the revenue and fruits of the land. The Roman conception of possessio did not stop with the physical power over a corporeal thing, but gave the word a judicial meaning by assuming the exist- ence of possession in the absence of physical detention, and 1 I shall use the word "seisin" as the equivalent of the German wor4 " Gewere." 2 Heueler, Gewere, p. 92. ' Heusler, p. 65. 234 THE ANGLO-SAXON LBGAIi PEOCBDTTEB. by excluding possession in spite of actual physical power over the property. How did seisin compare witii this ? German law came somewhat near this conception when the owner, although giving up naked detention and allowing another to cultivate the land, still retained seisin ; and some- times it denied seisin to the one in physical possession. But seisin, manifesting itself in the use of the profits of the land, is the judicial possession of the German law, analogous to the Roman possessio. They were, of course, not synonymous, but seisin occupied the same position in German, which possessio occupied in Roman law ; and as the judicial possessio is the only one recognized by law as giving a claim to legal protection, so, with the Germans, seisin was the only legally recognized possession. But Roman law in its judicial possession united actual power over the thing with the animus domini. If the proprie- tor gave up the usufruct, the usufructuary was not regarded as the possessor; and no delegated possession, existing by the side of the owner's possession, could exist. Yet just as the Germans defined seisin as possession united with actual use, so also the Romans, in the Twelve Tables, spoke of pos- session as usus ; but the Germans held more firmly to the idea than the Romans. The seisin of movables was entirely lost by loan or deposit, and in case of loss by theft the borrower only had the action against the thief for recovery. The seisin of immovables was widened, and the Germans carried to its full consequences the identification of use and seisin ; they recognized the usufructuary as the only possessor, in- stead of the owner, and conceived the possibility of various seisin in case of various uses of the same thing. The seisin of the user did not absorb that of the proprietor, but existed side by side with it, and caused a division of the possession. Seisin of movables only existed when one had them in his house or on his estate, so that he could at any time have actual influence over them, and exclude the influence of another. But in land, he had the seisin who drew revenue from the estate ; and so seisin was not lost by lease. The lord, as well as the vassal himself, had seisin of land given to the THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDUKB. 235 vassal in return for specified services ; while the latter, who again granted the land out of his possession for a fixed rent, did not lose his seisin. If a contest arose between the vassal and lord for the possession of property, he only had the seisin who exercised the derived right ; but in a contest with a third person, not thus bound, the seisin belonged to the first holder, who had transferred the possession. The seisin, or legal possession, of the German law, can then be defined as the actual exercise of a right of possession,^ whether this existed in the immediate physical detention, or in the right to the revenue. As has been stated in the procedure of movables, the actions of German law were largely based on contract. In regard to land, the contract for an object settled in specie conveyed a real title, without transfer of possession, as soon as one party had fulfilled his part. From this point of view, Sohm has first given a rational explanation of traditio and investitura. Traditio was a contract, like venditio or donatio, and on the payment of the earnest-money, or arrha, o wnership arose ; while investitura was but the execution and accomplishment of the acquisition of ownership. Since the beginning of the sixth century, traditio appeared only as a contract (venditio, donatio, concambium) ; while the church, to whom gifts were almost solely made, looked to it that this acquisition of ownership was made through documents, and should be thereby capable of proof at any future time. Investiture has only been men- tioned since the eighth century in Frankish documents; and a document has never since been received as conveying investi- ture. A writing to be sure was received; but this "notitia" or " breve " was only in the manner of an appendix to the con- tract document, and without signatures. The documents with which parties came forward in the procedure to establish owner- ship were always contracts, and the fulfilment of their right (investiture) was adjudged on these. He who had gained a real title by traditio was, by investiture, placed in the enjoy- ment of seisin. The acquirement of possession (investiture) was sometimes an advantage in regard to the distribution oi 1 With this, cf . Sohm, Ehesch. p. 86, and p. 37, note 28. 236 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOOEDUKE. proof; but it possessed no importance whatever in respect of the right of the parties. Then traditio, but not investi- ture, was the legal transaction of the German law ; and the formalities which developed in the giving of possession in real estate had their origin in the fact that German law united to the formal requisites actual acquirement of posses- sion.i The " book " of the Anglo-Saxon sources was the contract or document by which ownership was gained. Sym- bolical forms of transfer were probably customary in the early Anglo-Saxon period, but there are few traces of them.^ A strikingly clear proof of the effectiveness of the traditio exists in the fact that the whole importance was attached to the drawing up of the documents, and their delivery. Investi- ture, then, was not a title to the land, but merely a " modus acquirendi " for gaining a more complete ownership. In the procedure of debt and movables, the claim of the plaintiff was clearly distinguished from the exceptions of the defendant; but in land this was not always possible. There are cases, of course, in which the claimant asked for a change in the existing relations, and sought the co-operation of the court, as when a buyer claimed surrender of purchased real estate. Here the line between claim and objection can be clearly drawn. But there are cases in which a party simply asked the recognition of a right, in whose practice he is, or claims that he is, in order to make defence against an- other's attack, or insure himself against such claims in the future. Here the judgment was not a condemnation, but the sanctioning of a hitherto doubtful right ; and it was decreed that he who was awarded the legal possession should keep 1 The most essential element of investiture was known on the continent a3 " Auflassung." Sohm, opposing Laband and Heusler, has shown this to be the equivalent of resignatio, or a renunciation of possession by a formal casting of the straw. "Per festucam se exitum dioere" was named " exfestucatio," or " warpitio," and indicated the act. This was performed by the seller, and was necessary to the buyer, that he might acquire possession in a legal sense (seisin, or gewere). Auflassung occurred not only in cases of sale, etc., but when owner- ship was transferred by a decision of court; which proved it to be a transfer, not of ownership, but merely of possession. 2 Sohmid, Gloss, p. 637, also says that the ancient runic letters were rarely used in the affairs of common life. Vide supra, p. 101. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PROCEDimB. 237 the property, and exercise all rights over it. Such an exam- ple is found in Charter CLXXXVI. (App. No. 8) : ^theric, when about to dispose of his lands by will, weIs opposed, and, on application to the court, he received an affirmation of his right. The objection might have been raised on the basis of: Alfk. 41 : " The man who has boc-land, and which his kindred left him, then ordain we that he must not give it from his ' maegburg,' if there be writing or witness that it was forbidden by those men who at first acquired it, and by those who gave it to him, that he should do so ; and then let that be declared in the presence of the king and of the bishop, before his kinsmen." Therefore, in such a procedure, vrhich admitted a double claim, — we might say, two plaintiffs, — the consequences of contumacy befell the plaintiff as well as the defendant ; for its object was the admission of one claim, and the establish- ment of peace. In the Roman vindication, the non-possess- ing owner was the plaintiff, and the possessing non-owner the defendant. But, in the German procedure, one or both the parties claimed the property through seisin ; and it was accidental whether the real possessor sued or was sued, al- though, since the possessor as a rule had no motive in begin- ning the suit, he was usually the defendant. The rule for the distribution of proof has been formulated by Homeyer and Planck as follows : He who appealed to seisin had the precedence in the right to prove his assertion ; and, " generally from the differences of the assertions con- cerning the Gewere, one party gained a better right to the proof." ^ And so, when both parties asserted a like seisin, the best title decided.'* But there are many cases in which the one who did not have the seisin undoubtedly acquired the right of proof, and gained the suit by raising a claim by which the possessor was forced to surrender. This shows that it was insufficient to appeal to the seisin as a decision of the right of proof. In opposition to this theory, which is held by most German writers, HaneP and others assert 1 Homeyer, Sachsensp. II. 2, p. 618. ' Planck, Zeitschr. f. D. R. X. p. 284 ff. 3 Beweissys. p. 182 ff. 238 THE ANGL0-SAX02ST LEGAI. PROCEDUP.B. that the claim of a stronger right gave the right of proving ; and that, in a claim of an equally strong right by both par- ties, the seisin decided. Laband has pointed out that, if "stronger right" means, in the abstract sense, more legal power than any other right, as that ownership is a stronger right than loan or annuity ; that loan is a stronger right than inheritance, lease, &c., — then the position hardly needs refu- tation. For it was one of the undoubted points of German law that, the right of proof was given to the holder of prop- erty by loan, and not to the plaintiff who asserted ownership. But if it mean that an examination was made in each case as to which party brought forward the right, stronger " in regard to the actual relations and the legal questions appli- cable thereto," the rule was partly true. It is true so far as it assigned the proof to that assertion which was relevant for the decision of the contest according to the actual situation of the case ; but it is not true that in all cases that party gained the proof, and therefore the decision on which the procedure hung, by raising the assertion of a stronger right. No rule can be laid down by which the weight and impor- tance of an assertion could be abstractly established. Cases are given in which the fact of possession was decisive ; and, also, cases in which the seisin of one party yielded before the right of the other. Whether the one or the other went to the proof depended on the kind of claim, and the manner in which it was advanced by the non-possessor. The latter's simple claim to the legal possession acted only as an opposi- tion to the assertion of a right of possession by the actual possessor.^ If one of two parties laid claim to the property as his own, the other must prove his right of possession, no matter what right of possession he advanced. It was not how he came into possession, but by what right he exercised it. If the plaintiff made a positive assertion, which would break the seisin of the possessor, he must prove this; and such an assertion was decisive. Seisin did not, then, unconditionally give the right of proof; nor if both parties claimed the same title did the 1 Cf. ^thelr. II. 9, § 3. " Quia semper est negatio fortior quam affirmatio." THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCBDTJEE. 239 seisin give one the precedence. But its important meaning in the procedure lay in the fact that without it the claimant who wished to acquire the right of proof was forced to sub- stantiate his claim by a very different process from that which he would have followed had he enjoyed seisin.^ Seisin was not the central point on which the law of proof hung ; but there were suits about seisin which followed the common principles of German law. The Roman system laid the burden of proof on the plaintiff; but the German, on the defendant. If the plaintiff asserted no facts by which the right of the defendant could be attacked, the defendant swore to his right, and the case ended there. Where the simple assertion of one stood opposed to the assertion of the other, the seisin of the defendant gave him an advantage in the proof. Heusler has formulated the rule for the distribu- tion of proof in actions for land as follows : By means of his possession the defendant rebutted the claim by an oath to his right, so long as his right was not, on the part of the plaintiff, assailed by a fact which overcame it. If this oc- curred, and the plaintiff proved his claim, the defendant was only freed by opposing to the plaintiff's claim a proof of his superior right. Seisin, then, had only a negative value in that it freed one in possession from a proof of his right as long as an effectual right was not advanced by the plaintiff. In German ^ as in Roman ^ law, the position of the possessor was advantageous ; and the general principle of both laws, " melior est conditio possidentis," is the same as that in : — Ethelr. II. 9, § 4 : " Propriatio propinquior semper est possidenti quam repetenti." But it can be seen how little seisin acted as a proof of material right. In movables, as well as immovables, seisin 1 Laband, p. 172. 2 " Cum ambae partes nullum testem habere profeasae sunt, judicatum est, ut advocatus, qui ipsam habebat vestituram, diceret juratus," &c. Heusler, Ge- were, p. 87. * " Commodum possidendi in eo est, quod etiamsi res eius non sit qui possi- det, si modo actor non potuerit suam esse probare, remanet suo loco posses- gio." Just, de interd. IV. 15, § 4. 240 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDCTRE. had no effect on the decision as to material right. But while there were no legal means for the protection of possession over movables, this was not true of land. There are ex- amples where the suit was begun by a possessory claim, in order to gain the advantages in the suit that would be given by possession. Yet often the defendant did not answer the claim of possession, but proceeded at once to show his own legal title, or the defect in the plaintiffs. This went to the proof because it was a relevant objection, and rendered a decision on the seisin useless. There was, then, a legal pro- tection of possession over land, but only to give the possessor the defence in the petitory claim ; but in German law there was no marked distinction between the possessory and peti- tory claims involved in the action. It will now be possible to lay down the rules for the distribution of proof.^ Neither seisin nor the " stronger right" always decided the right of proof. If the plaintiff asserted his own right, and denied the defendant's possession, the latter was simply required to prove his right to posses- sion, no matter what right of possession the plaintiff claimed. But if, from the questions involved, the plaintiff advanced a claim which would invalidate the right of the defendant, — whether by contract, or ownership, by an abstractly greater or less right, it mattered not» — he went to the proof. Yet the defendant had the proof, if he could advance a rele- vant objection, according to the special relations of each case in question. In regard to a classification of suits for land, much confu- sion has prevailed from a belief that there was no settled basis of division. It is true that suits for land contained very largely an element of equity ; but a basis of division is to be found in the giving of proof. There are, on the one hand, cases in which, from the claim raised against the pos- sessor, he came to the proof of his right of possession ; and, on the other hand, cases in which a claim was established for the legal surrender of the land, which claim went to the proof. In the former class, the aim was to defend and secure the I Laband, pp. 166-172. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PROCEDURE. 241 possession in which the party was, or from which he had been illegall}' ousted ; in the latter, to bring the possessor to surrender the land. From the peculiar character of the Ger- man judgment, the award of proof to either party practically amounted to a decision of the case ; so that the above division is really one to be sustained by examples, showing in what cases Anglo-Saxon law allowed one party to retain the present state of possession, and in what cases the other party could gain possession. In the first class, the claim of the non-pos- sessor was not a matter of discussion and proof ; but the pro- cedure was concerned only with the establishment of the real state of possession, and the right of the possessor to it. In the second class, the right claimed by the possessor was not a question of discussion ; but the claim of the non-possessor, who demanded surrender, was alone subject to decision. Accord- ingly, without using the terms in the sense of the canon law, these divisions will be designated as : — (A) Judicia retinendae vel recuperandae possessionis.^ (B) Judicia adipiscendae possessionis. The judgment was not concerned with the fact as to which party was in actual possession, but to which the possession legally belonged ; and the right of possession was definitely adjudged to one of the two parties. So by this division it matters not whether a party was in possession or not, or what right of possession was claimed by the parties, be it ownership, or a derived right, of a real, or personal character. The first class (A) admits of two subdivisions : — (a) When one party was admitted to be in actual pos- session. 1 Vide Laband, p. 174. cf. Bracton, 103, a : " Earum quae sunt in rem, quae- dam proditae sunt super ipsa possessione, et quaedam super ipsa proprietate ; est enim possessio rei, et proprietas." Glan. lib. 13, u. 1 : " Placita de recto — placita super seisinis." Fleta, lib. 4, c. 1 : " Est jus possessionis etJMS proprietatis." The historical connection between Anglo-Saxon jurisprudence and the English Common Law is manifest in this classification. The action brought in the Anglo-Saxon procedure for land is the equivalent of the real action of the English law, which was brought for the specific recovery of lands, tenements, or hereditaments. But, " again in [English] real actions there is a division between those founded on the seisin or possession, and those founded on the property or the right." Stephen on Pleading, p. 39. 16 242 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDTJBE. (}) When both parties claimed the actual exercise of possessioD. The second class (B) admits of three : — , (a) /The plaintiff's claim, after the manner of a personal action, obliged the possessor to a surrender; e.g., as in contract. (J) The possessor's right was disputed, because his auctor was not capable of passing possession to him. (c) The plaintiff claimed a right of inheritance superior to that of the possessor. A (a) In this procedure the mere assertion of the plaintiff in itself, without substantiation, of a right to the possession of the property was sufficient to introduce the procedure. And the defendant must answer such a claim, or expose himself to the consequences of contumacy. But to such a claim, accom- panied with no farther substantiation, the defendant, without proving his means of acquisition, received the oath on simply replying that he had a right to the possession. The proce- dure aimed directly at the establishment of the rightful possession ; and in this case seisin brought the advantages of the one-sided means of proof, in that the defendant simply swore to the right which he exercised. Charter CCXIX. (App. No. 11) furnishes an example of this procedure. The bishop of Worcester, being seised of certain rights of pasture at Sutton, was annoyed by attempts of the shire-officials to encroach on these rights, and brought his complaint before the Witan. Here the ealdorman main- tained the claim on behalf of the shire. " Then said the bishop and the chapter's counsellors that they did not confess more to them [the bailiffs] than as it was administered in -Sthelbald's day." The simple claim of the ealdorman stood opposed to the simple denial of the bishop, who upheld his claim to " two- thirds of the wood and the mast." The advantages of seisin appeared in that the case was ended by giving to the bishop the proof of his right by oath. " Then Archbishop Wulfred and all the Witan decreed that THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUEE. 243 the bishop and chapter might declare on oath that it was so administered in j^thelhald^ s day, and that he claimed no more." This was the judgment ; and then the bishop bound himself by formal contract to the plaintiff for the performance of the proof at a fixed term. After thirty days, the oath was given by the defendant as he had promised. This is a good case, not only as showing the regular course of a suit at German law, and the office of the judgment and proof ; but also, that the claim of the plaintiff was not made a subject of contra- diction, but that the defendant simply rebutted the claim by an oath to his right of possession. Another example of the same procedure is given in Charter DCCLV. (App. No. 28). Eadwine, the plaintiff, claimed certain lands of his mother, Eanwene, — probably on the ground that they belonged to his inheritance. The defence was made by Thurkil White, her legal representative. A proceeding was adopted, which points to the use of appari- tors, as in the Saxon law of the continent, by choosing men to ride to Eanwene and hear her defence. To the simple claim to the land, Eanwene " said that she had no land that belonged to him in any way." As in many cases, the full course of the procedure is wanting. The remainder of the charter is occupied solely with an account of the nuncupative will. But since Eanwene was allowed to devise all her property, including the lands in dispute, it is easy to see that Thurkil White undoubtedly made oath for Eanwene, as defendant, to her right of possession ; and that the men de- spatched by the court were " witness to this " as declared in his oath. But although simple demand and simple denial were suffi- cient to decide the course of the procedure, yet they were not the sole elements. After the denial of the defendant, the plaintiff might then judge that he could advance a claim which could not be opposed by the defendant ; and then the suit would pass under division B. But the claim of the plaintiff might contain an assertion of right to the land, which, although unsubstantiated, implied a superior right 244 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOCBDTJBE. and so, to make a relevant objection, the defendant was required to show suoh a right of possession as would be a just defence. In Charter CIV. (App. No. 2), Catwal sold land to Wintran, but did not deliver to him the original charter with the description and signatures which he had received, granting a new one instead. The monastery' of Catwal subsequently brought suit against that of Wintran for the land. The plaintiffs claimed the land by virtue of the original charters which they still held, knowing that by the death of the witnesses to the sale between Catwal and Wintran they might present a better title to the land. Then the decision must have been on the tenability of the charters. The possessors were allowed the proof by oath, since their charter was not effective ; proof by oath serving the purpose of the document. But this was effected by extra- judicial compromise, " in part money being given, and in part an oath added in evidence." This last must have been given by the defendants as explained. While the claim to possession meant only an assertion opposed to the actual fact of pos- session, the claim to possession on higher grounds forced the defendant to show that his right was superior. The law here broke down ; and from the justice and equity of the case was it to be decided whether the defendant's objection was rele- vant, and whether the plaintiff's claim was such in strength as to preclude the proof to the other. In this case, the right to the land resulting from retention of the original charter and description was opposed to the assertion of a bona fide sale ; and such a decision would have implied an examination of material right, which was unknown to the rigorous con- ditions of the old law. It has been elsewhere shown in this volume th at com - promises were freque nt ; but thes e proceedings were a lways conducted afterjt he manner of the regular, legal procedur e. SucFaTcaselslhaTof Charter CCCXXVIII. (App. No. 17), where jEthelm claimed the land of Helmstan. The defend- ant averred that ^thelthrith, who had received the land as her morning-gift from her husband, sold it to Oswulf in full right, and that he held it from Oswulf. The plaintiff had THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOCEDTTKE. il45 asserted no facts which invalidated this, and the oath wag awarded to the defendant.^ So in this procedure when one party was in undisputed possession, and the plaintiff simply contested this right with- out substantiation, the defendant proved his right by an oath. In the Saxon law of the continent, he went to the oath with six others of the same circle of land-possession. But if the assertion of the claimant implied a better right to the posses- sion, no defence was relevant but a proof of his own superior right by the defendant. A. (6.) In this procedure each party might demand that the other should not obtain the seisin, and might wish to prove his own right of possession and to be protected therein. But neither would desire to show that the other's acqui- sition of possession was ineffectual, since each denied that the other was possessed. Two parties, indeed, might appeal to seisin of the same property ; since the possession of land, from its nature, did not imply the necessary exclusion of all influence by another person over the thing possessed. With movables where seisin and detention coexisted, the case was different. Two persons might both claim the actual seisin of a strip of border-land between two estates, or a part of the meadow or wood-lot, and unhesitatingly swear to his actual enjoyment of possession with a sincere belief in his right. Or, again, one party might have claimed that he was forcibly dispossessed, and so both parties might claim seisin. The rule in these cases was simply that, after one of the claims to seisin had been set aside as illegal, the proce- dure resolved itself into the case described in the preceding division. This division, then, is concerned with the manner in which such a result was brought about. Not that there was a separate division of possessory and petitory suits, for in German procedure these are but parts of the same suit. The decision of the question to whom the seisin belonged 1 A notice of Charters CCLVI. (App. No. 14) and CCXVUI. (App. No. 9), which properly belong to this division, has been referred to the subject of la- heritance, B. (c), p. 257. 246 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCBDXJEE. was part of an unfinished judgment, which simply pointed out who should receive the advantages of possession in the subsequent stages of the procedure. There are cases,^ how- ever, in which the possessory claim was decided in favor of one party, and then the petitory in favor of the other ; but the sole object of a special proof of possession was the settle- ment of the rQles of the parties to the procedure. In regard to forcible dispossession, it has been established, as a general principle of German law, that this did not give to the forcible holder the advantages of seisin, although he was in the actual exercise of the right. Transfer of possession (resignatio) was accompanied by the formalities of investiture ; and investiture was necessarj' for the establishment of full legal possession. Therefore, a possession forcibly acquired would not have the force of seisin. A good illustration of this procedure is found in Charter DCXCIII. (App. No. 22). ^Ifric had exchanged land, under proper witness of Arch- bishop Sigeric, Bishop Ordb)Tht, and others, with Wynflaed. The right of Wynflaed was evident ; for " Archbishop Sigeric sent his evidence thereto, and Bishop Ordbyrht his." No separation of the possessory from the petitory claim was made ; but, on the general rule above noted, Wynflaed was held to have the seisin, and the procedure now went on without division to the petitory claim. " Then Wynflaed was instructed that she must prove it her property." She then proceeded to establish her right of possession, as in A (a), — " so she produced her proof of ownership," and would have given the oath had a compromise not been effected ; and rent would have been awarded her, as having been lawfully seised of the land, for the time during which she had been illegally deprived of its use and fruits.^ So, in forcible dis- possession, if the plaintiff would establish his right, he must substantiate his claim, as if he were not in actual possession. The earliest law did not make any definite separation between possessory and petitory claims ; ^ and it has been remarked how often we find the oldest forms persisting in the Anglo-Saxon law. Indeed, this separation seems sometimes 1 Heusler, Gewere, pp. 76, 77. ^ vide Charter CCXX. (App. No. 10). 3 "V. Bethmann-HoUweg. Civil process, p. 63. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOOEDITBE. 247 not to have been comprehended, in a sense that a previous decision must be reached on the question of possession. But it cannot be assumed, from the absence of a clear account of each step of the procedure, that such a distinction was un- known to Anglo-Saxon law ; for the charters were often vague and general on legal points, and only aimed at presenting the results of litigation. In Charter CLXIV. (App. No. 5), Bynna seized lands belonging to the church of Worcester. In cases of forcible dispossession, the one displaced was nearer the proof; and the Bishop of Worcester therefore " confirmed these things with the witness of the charters which ^thel- bald before granted to his predecessors." The dispossession gave him the rdle of defendant in the proof. Another striking example of this procedure is found in Charter MCCLXXXVIII. (App. No. 21). The claimant, Leofsunu, on the ground that the land belonged to his wife from a grant to her former husband, forcibly seized posses- sion. As usual, he was not considered as having seisin ; but the claim to possession led to the establishment of his oppo- nent's right of possession. The judgment awarded the proof to Archbishop Dunstan, who proceeded to show a testamen- tary right from the owner, ^Ifeh. The Archbishop himseli swore to his right to the land by will ; and he enforced this by use of a large number of community-witnesses, who also swore as to the assertion contained in their principal's oath. "And there were many more, a thousand men, who gave the oath." Other examples of this procedure are found in Charters MXXXIV. (App. No. 12), CCXLV. (App. No. 13), and in the trial on Penenden Heath (App. No. 31). In other cases where both parties claimed seisin, one might overcome the other's assertion by establishing an older pos- session ; but, if these claims were evenly balanced, one might claim a right of possession such as ownership. If, however, both could advance such a right, recourse would be had to the manner of acquisition of their right, and hereditary right overcame purchase. Real, uncontested possession gave the right to prove the title to possession ; and this must be set- tled first. That such questions could not always be safely 248 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDTJEE. decided by the one-sided means of proof is evident, since each party might bring the prescribed number of witnesses. Here is the opening through which later change arose in the kind and way of producing the evidence by witnesses. It was through the procedure for real estate-^ that a freer method of proof was introduced after the Norman Conquest, by an examination of the witnesses (inquisitio per testes), which exercised a most powerful influence in placing the procedure on a modern footing. The conquerors brought with them a better-developed polity, which they engrafted on the slower growth of Anglo-Saxon law. Therefore, from this position it is now possible to look back and see the influ- ence of land on the legal development, and how prominent a factor it has been in accomplishing this result. B. (a.) In cases where the defendant was acknowledged to be in possession, and had not obtained it by force, the plaintiff might yet win the possession. This procedure, based on contract for a fixed object, had the character of both a real and obligatory action. As shown before, traditio gave a real right and an action for investiture against the seller, that the buyer might acquire a full ownership ; and the seller was bound to deliver possession. The existence of this procedure is pointed to in : — Will. I. 23 : " Si voluerit quis conventionem terrae tenendae adver- sus dominum suum disrationare, per pares suos de eodem tenemento (par ses pers de la tenure meimes), quos in testimonium vocaverit, dis- rationabit, quia per extraneos id facere non poterit.'' The establishment of a contract for land must be proved by the plaintiff with witnesses of the same circle of land- tenure. The " de eodem tenemento " was evidently a Nor- man provision, and this law simply enforced this rule in re- gard to a procedure already existing. The plaintiff having sued for a fulfilment of the obligation, the defendant might simply deny any such bargain or sale by his oath ; or present a relevant objection by facts from which it would appear he 1 Brunner, Zeugen imd Inci. p. 139 fi. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUKE. 249 was under no obligation to deliver the land. For the sale might have been concluded under agreements which were not kept. If no such defence could be made, the plaintiff could compel the defendant to a surrender of the property according to the terms of the obligation. This procedure is illustrated by a charter (App. No. 33) which concerns the dispute as to the plaintiff's right to ser- vices over lands held by the defendant. From the German conceptions of possession, as already shown, the seisin of the over-lord was often a seisin over revenue or profits ; and, in a contest between the over-lord and his inferior, the holder of the derived right had seisin and its procedural advantages. In such a case as this, the abbot would have the right of proof, if the plaintiff could not bring forward and substan- tiate a positive assertion, which, if proved, would destroy all rights of the defendant. But this ease is good evidence that seisin did not invariably give the right of proof. The plain- tiff resorted to community-witnesses to prove the long-stand- ing existence of the obligation under which the holder of this land rested for the services in question. " The bisliop then claimed legal witnesses who, in the time of King Ed- ward, had seen these things, and had performed the aforesaid services for the bishop." To this positive claim the defendant could make no answer, for " the abbot said he had not wit- nesses against the bishop." After this claim and answer by the parties, which constituted the litis contestatio, came the judg- ment: " It was decided by the chief men that the bishop name his witnesses, and produce them on an appointed day ; and that they should prove by oath the allegations of the bishop." The plaintiff received the proof ; but, on the appointed day, the defendant resigned all objections, and did not require the oath of the bishop. For, as in Charter DCXCIII. (App. No. 22), " it would be better to omit the oath rather than give it, because, after the oath, there could be no amicable arrange- ment." Inasmuch as the legal relations regarding land were more varied than for movables, the class of cases where land was granted only for the time being, under an obligation to re- 250 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDtntE. turn, as iu the case of a mortgage for security of a loan, was naturally wider than the corresponding division of movables. It would include the case of a lessor or pledgeor, suing for return of land after the lapse of the lease or pledge ; or of an owner suing on the death of a life-annuitant. But in all cases the procedure was the same, and depended largely on the same principles already known in similar cases for movables. Suit could be brought by the plaintiff or plaintiff's heir against the present possessor, and the former need not state his real right, but simply claim that he granted the land to the defendant under fixed and obligatory terms for return. But it usually appeared what right was claimed by the plaintiff. The defendant might raise a relevant objection by proving his ownership in the property ; or claiming that, although he held the land as pledge, the time of return had not yet arrived. If no such defence could be made, the plaintiff, in case no docu- ments existed, went to the proof of his assertion with the oath. Anglo-Saxon law gives a clear instance of this procedure in Charter CCCCXCIX (App. No. 18). Eadgifu brought suit against Goda for the return of lands which her father had pledged to him as security for a loan of thirty pounds. Upon claim and answer being made, it appeared that the plaintiff averred the payment of the thirty pounds by her father before his death, which Goda denied. Here, as in the procedure of movables, when the procedure hinged on an act of the claimant, a denial on the part of the defendant only forced the former to a proof of the asserted act.^ Then the judgment was decreed by the Witan " that Eadgifu should cleanse her father's hand by [an oath of J as much value [namely, thirty pounds] ." And this oath having been rendered, the property was restored to her. This class includes those cases wherein lands which an individual held of the grantor, and not of the king,^ were forfeited by the commission of a crime to the grantor, who had an action for their recovery against any holder. These 1 Cf. supra, p. 201. ^ Cn. II. 13 : " And whoever does a deed of outlawry, let the king have power of the frith. And if he have boc-land, let that be forfeited into the king's hands ; be he man of whatever man he may." Cf. supra, the quotations in another essay, pp. 66, 66. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDUBE. 251 crimes by which land was forfeited were, usually, theft, adultery, rebellion, or cowardice in the servicfi_Qf_h^lord. Such a right was claimed in Charte^^CCCXXVliTri^pp- No. 17), by the writer of the documentligaJllstr^fglmstan, who had committed theft. The legal rule of reversion to the grantor in such cases was undoubtedly true, as shown by : — Cn. II. 78 : " Let him forfeit all that he owns, and his own life ; and let the lord seize his possessions and his land, which he previously gave him ; and if he have boc-land, let that pass into the hands of the king." » This rule was the basis of the plaintiff's claim, which worked as a personal claim for the surrender of the land. The plaintiff cited the corresponding case of Ordlaf, in which the working of the rule seemed to have been unquestioned. " And Ordlaf took possession of his land because it was Ms grant that he occupied, and he [Helmstan] could not forfeit his [Ordlaf's land to the king]." And likewise " I took posses- sion of my land." The procedure might take two directions, according to the character of the defence. If the defendant claimed ownership in the property, the assertion of fief-right by the plaintiff was but simple opposition to the existing conditions, and the possessor would have the right to the proof. But if it was admitted by the defendant that he had only such a right to the property as had been granted him by the plaintiff, then the crime and its consequences were the special aim of the procedure. The plaintiff then set forward most clearly and minutely the acts of the defendant by which he claimed restitution of the land, and a right to dispose of it to another : — " Thereupon, after this, about a year and a half, or I know not whether two years after, he stole the untended oxen at Fonthill, by which he was altogether ruined, and drove to Cytlid, and there one surprised him, and his spereman followed up the fugitive's tracks. When he fled, then a bramble cut him over the face. When he wished to deny, then one said to him that, as a proof. Eanulf Peneard- ing then came upon him, who was sheriff, and seized all the property I Vide also Charter MCCLXXXVIII (App. No. 21) and supra, p. 111. 252 THE ANGLO-SAXOK LEGAL PKOCEDTJEB. that lie [Helmstan] owned at Tisbnry. I asked him why he did so ; he said that he [Helmstan] was a thief, and his property was adjudged to the king, because he was a king's man." Stress was put upon every detail connected with the crime as an evidence that such had been committed. And by this claim he would establish his right to the land. In this con- tingency, the defence was either negative or positive. 1. The defendant might absolutely deny having committed the act ; and by the usual rules, as in criminal cases, he would go to the clearing-oath and prove his innocence. 2. Or if the de- fendant raised positive assertions, from which his innocence resulted, he had advanced a relevant objection, and accord- ingly went to the proof himself. In the present case, the defendant evidently could not have made either defence, and the plaintiff should have full right to his land. This division includes all other cases which had no crim- inal character, but which arose from acts that caused a reversion to the grantor. A disregard of the obligations arising from contract, such as injury to the property, refusal to perform services, or pay the revenues, created conditions under which an action could be brought for a surrender of the land. And the positive assertion of such a claim gave the proof to the plaintiff, unless the defendant could oppose to it some relevant objection. B. (6.) The plaintiff might also force the possessor to surrender by disputing the right of the defendant's auctor to convey the land in question. The way taken by the property could be followed back, as in the pursuit of stolen movables, until the man was reached who by the alienation injured the riglits of the plaintiff; and by proof of this the plaintiff destroyed all right of the defending possessor to retain the land. To this rule the Charter of Ely (App. No. 35) is directly opposed, and its forgery would therefore be best proved by this fact. It is also in opposition to other clear and well-authenticated charters, and to the known principles of German procedure. In Charter DCCCCXXIX. (App. No. 25) the Church of THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDTJKB. 253 Rochester held lands which, it seemed, could not be alien- ated from the church, — a condition probably in the conveyance of the original charter from the giver. On the accession of Bishop Godwine, he found that lands at Snodland, of which he had the original charters, had been alienated, and were now in the possession of Leofwine. The plaintiff then laid claim to the land " that was formerly alienated from the church," on the above grounds of a limitation and injury to his rights by the unauthorized and illegal sale to Leofwine. To this positive claim, the defendant could offer no relevant defence. Although he showed his bona fide possession by the deeds of alienation from his auctor, yet this was no refutation of the assertion of an illegal transfer by the auctor proved by the production of the documents. The bishop would have received the land ; but in reconciliation Leofwine was granted a life-occupancy. Charter DCCCXCVIIL (App. No. 27) gives a clearer example of the procedure, and at the same time a negative proof of the non-existence in Anglo-Saxon law of any legal usucapio. No mention of the " praescriptio triginta anno- rum " of the continent is made in the cases where it would have been most natural ; and the only reference to it is in a charter 1 recording the decree of a church-council in regard to a right of refection. Moreover, Charter CCLVI. (App. No. 14) gives an instance of contested real estate, in which thirty-four years had passed since the previous attack by the same plaintiff, without the slightest hint of any influence arising from prescription. There is certainly no evidence to prove its existence in Anglo-Saxon law, but every reason to believe the contrary. Admittedly of Roman origin, it existed in those German codes which had been exposed to Roman influence , yet, even though issue must be taken with histo- rians of reputation on this point, it is certain that no effect whatever of any Roman influence can be found in Anglo- Saxon polity. This charter (No. 27), first mentioned, declares that Leofrio sold and conveyed lands to -^thelstan under the king's leave, 1 CLXXXiV. (App. No. 7). 254 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDUBE. and the witness of the whole Witan, with full and undisputed right ; and that a charter was given to ^thelstan. Then the plaintiff, Wulfstan, claimed possession from -Sthelstan, on the ground that the defendant's auctor was not capable of alien- ating the land. No period of time is mentioned as serving to protect the defendant in his position of bona fide purchaser, although the suit was brought " after many years." The court first passed judgment on the justice of the defendant's acquisition, and declared his right to be good. But this was no relevant defence to a claim asserting the inability of his auctor to alienate, however well the conveyance was made. The plaintiff advanced a positive assertion not met by the defence. Having shown his own right, the defendant with- drew from the procedure, and then had an action for indem- nification against the auctor, Leofric. As in the procedure for movables, the case now stood between the plaintiff, Wulfstan, and the auctor, Leofric, as a new defendant. The substance of Wulfstan's right is not given, but seems to have been a claim such as would have resulted in his going to the proof, and gaining a decision against Leofric ; for a settlement was made by the friends of the parties satisfactory to the plaintiff. Wulfstan now granted a clear title of the land to Leofric, who then conveyed the land anew to ^thelstan "clear and uncontested." It would be difficult to find a clearer statement of the principles of this procedure than in this case, and one confirmed by the known principles of the Sachsenspiegel and other German laws. Possession, if from an unauthorized grantor, was not legal possession, and had no protection except that of indemnity against the grantor. A similar case is to be found in Charter MXIX. (App. No. 6). King Offa, of Mercia, bequeathed lands to his heirs which had been taken from King Cenwulf of the West- Saxons. King Cenwulf had no title to the lands, and after- wards sent back the stolen charters of the lands which he held to the church at Dover, to which they belonged. After the death of Offa, the church of Dover laid claim to the lands and asked restitution from Offa's heirs, who held only by such right as their devisor could have had. The plaintiff THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PROCEDURE. 255 presented a full substantiation of his claim by the presentation of his charters, and showed his right to the land, and the illegal possession of the defendants. Those from whom the defendants received had no title by which they could convey the land. The bequest had been made to them without right, and therefore the plaintiff received the lands ; since no right could be shown by the defendants as a rebuttal of the posi- tive claim and proof of the plaintiff. In the suit of Godwine, and others of this division, it is seen how unnecessary it was to claim a real right to the land as a substantiation ; while, on the other hand, the pivotal point of the suit lay in the question whether the sale or alienation was unauthorized or not, and whether the plaintiff suffered injury thereby. It was immaterial whether the plaintiff's claim was based on a real or obligatory right. In suits of this kind in the Sachsenspiegel, the expression in use, '■'■Q-ewere brechen," explains that the defendant's Grewere was untenable. This class included cases where the seller was only a guardian, or annuitant, or a conditional holder, or holder by right of pledge, or was a debtor to the plaintiff. And such a class cannot be comprehended by the Roman designations of real or personal suits. In the Roman vindi- cation the plaintiff must prove his ownership or acquisition ; and, if this were established, it resulted as a consequence that another could not undertake a legal sale of the property, and so the defendant could not have a legal right of possession. But from the corresponding cases in the Sachsenspiegel we are assisted in understanding the elements in the suit, which are passed over by the Anglo-Saxon charters. From these it appears that the real right of the plaintiff was not taken into account and made the subject of proof and contradiction ; but the suit was based on the question whether, from the relations of the auctor to the plaintiff, the former was author- ized to make the sale to the defendant. Such a basis for the action must separate this division of the German procedure for land from the Roman rei vindicatio, which was founded on a real right. The Roman suit was based on positive, the German suit on negative, grounds : in the one, the plaintiff 256 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUBE. asserted Ms right of ownership ; in the other, he asserted that the defendant could have no right, because his auctor had no authority to alienate. If the defendant could show that he had not received of the auctor designated by the plaintiff, he offered a valid defence. But, from the methods of transfer of land, it could scarcely happen that the auctor could not be identified. No defence could be based on the way and manner of his acquisition ; and, if he would contest the charge that his auctor made an unauthorized sale, the defendant must appeal to his auctor. If the auctor's defence failed, the defend- ant's right of possession disappeared. The case of Charter DCCCXCVIII. (App. No. 27) declares the principle, which is confirmed by the Saxon sources of the continent. The auctor obtained the possession, and the advantages, of seisin, by appearing in the action, and could in his turn vouch in his auctor, until the person was reached who made the unauthor- ized sale. The course was the same as in stolen movables, except that, according to the Sachsenspiegel, the forum rei sitae was always competent. This process of warranty shows well that the object of the suit was to determine on and examine the question whether the sale was unauthorized, or not. Then the action of the plaintiff against the auctor last vouched would be of the character described in the division just preceding B. (a.) ; and the proof would be assigned by the principles shown above. Here it can be seen how impossible it would be, through a desire to give a French-like finish and rotundity to a theory, to lay down a rule which would grant the proof always to the plaintiff, or always to defendant, with unvarying accuracy. Those who have argued the effectiveness of seisin, or, on the other hand, the so-called " stronger right," have fallen into the snare set in matters which do not admit of such an inflexible rule. The proof and the consequent decision of the case went to the assertion which was decided to be relevant from the concrete nature of each special case ; and it was thus determined whether the plaintiff or the defendant went to the proof, and of what kind ; and to him was the possession given. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PROCEDUBB. 257 B. (e.) This rule will be shown in suits based on inheri- tance, the last division in the procedure of land. But to this class are not to be referred those suits which, however they involve questions relating to inheritance, are not solely founded on a right of inheritance. If the devisor had rights to the payment of money, or to the surrender of property, the heir must conduct his claim in the same manner as the devisor would have done were he alive, since the heir entered into the same legal persona as his devisor. Yet this suit was not based on the right of inheritance, but on the personal obliga- tion under which the defendant lay for the performance of the duty. Charter CCLVI. (App. No. 14) cannot be a suit properly based on inheritance right, but belongs more properly to A. (a.) iEthelwulf laid claim to lands in the possession of the church of Dover, which held them from Oswulf by hered- itary grant. The plaintiff had previously made an unsuc- cessful attempt against Oswulf's heirs, and the Witan had held that the heirs had a good right as devised by Oswulf.^ The plaintiff claiming a right of purchase through his devisor, in whose place he stood, the defendant who was in acknowl- edged possession was simply forced by the plaintiffs claim to prove his right by oath. When the rights of the parties were thus opposed, seisin gave the power of establishing the right of the possessor by oath ; this was done, and enforced by many community-witnesses. A similar case is given in Charter CCXVIII. (App. No. 9) of a suit concerning inheritance, but not based on a right of inheritance. In such a case, the plaintiff's assertion was opposed to the possession of the defendant, and worked, since the defendant had the seisin, only to force him to a proof of his right. This suit, therefore, would also properly belong to the class of suits for the maintenance of possession, A. (a), and not to this division, where possession was won by a right of inheritance. To this division are referred those 1 This might have been decreed on the basis of .ffithelr. III. 14 : " And he who remains, without attack and suit, in peace while he lives, let no one, then, after his death, lay claim against his heirs." 17 258 THE ANGLO-SAXON LKGAL PKOCEDTJEB. cases based on inheritance solely, witli an assertion suitable to break the seisin of the opponent. The German suit of inheritance bore a close resemblance to the Roman action of hereditatis petitio. But the vindieatio permitted to the Roman heir was based on the ownership of the devisor, whose acquisition was to be proved by the heir. The plaintiff having asserted that he was the heir, and hav- ing substantiated both claims, it followed that he was the owner of the property, and therefore surrender was demanded. The suit was based on ownership, and was a real action. The action of the German law, on the contrary, did not enter into the question whether the devisor was owner or not ; the procedure did not aim at the discussion and establishment of the devisor's means of acquisition. The action was founded simply on the assertion that the plaintiff had a better right to the inherited property than the defendant. The foundation of the suit was not a real right, but a right of inheritance. And this action was given alike for movables or immovables, with the same distribution of proof, except that some evi- dent differences must be observed. The charters are clearer on the questions of inheritance than on other subjects. Charter MCCLXXXVIII. (App. No. 21) declares how the plaintiff brought suit for lands in behalf of the church of St. Andrew, on the ground of a right of succession by will from ^Ifeh. The defendant held forcible possession, based only on the ground that his wife's former husband was a nephew of jElfeh. The basis of the suit is clearly shown. The defence was, of course, irrele- vant to the claim of succession by will, and the positive assertion of the claimant went to the proof. The usual form of proof was employed ; and the plaintiff made an oath to his right, which was strengthened by community- witnesses. Charter CCCXXVII. (App. No. 16) tells of a suit based on testamentary right, in which the plaintiff advanced a right arising from conditions connected with the bequest. The devisor granted it to Eanbald on this condition, — that the land should not pass to any layman ; and that, if no one in THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDtTEE. 259 orders could be found among his kin, it should revert to the church of Worcester. The property passed from Eanbald to Eastmund ; and, on the latter's death, it came into the hands of laymen. Against these, as defendants, the Bishop of Worcester brought suit to gain possession by the conditions of the original bequest. The assertion of a better right of inheritance by the plaintiff was supported by documents ; but the defence gave up the case, and a compromise was ef- fected, which conceded the right of the bishop. A similar case is shown in Charter CLVI. (App. No. 4). Lands were bequeathed by Hemele and Duda to Worcester, after the death of their legal heirs. The action of the Bishop of Worcester as plaintiff was based on this right of reversion against one of the heirs, as defendant, who wished to set aside the will. The case did not go to a decision ; but the plaintiff had witnesses to prove his assertions, and a reconciliation was effected, conceding the right of the plaintiff.^ The mere assertion of a right by the plaintiff was sufficient to set the procedure in motion, and cause the defendant to prove his right, and from the resulting situation of the case was it possible to decide the necessity of further and stronger claim by the plaintiff. In the case of Charter CXLIII. (App. No. 3), the mere assertion of an inheritance-right would have been sufficient ; but, since the defendant could probably not offer a better inheritance-right, or even any such right, the plaintiff would go to the proof. But here again a compromise shuts us out from the actual course of the pro- cedure. It will be necessary to speak of the institution of German law by which property was given as Morgengabe in this con- nection, and to show its separation from right of inheritance. This distinction Laband has pointed out more clearly from the character of the actions raised to enforce or defend claims to Morgengabe. This institution was an integral part of the German law, by which the husband provided for the wife in case of widowhood. On the granting of the Morgevr 1 This case might almost he classed with Charter CLXXXVI. Vide suprt^ p. 237. v/ 260 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDURE. gahe, the authorities on the Sachsenspiegel agree that the wife acquired ownership in the property, although the hus- band again acquired the gift by riglit of inheritance in case the wife died before him. In other words, the widow stood precisely in the position of a third party who had acquired by gift or sale. Her Morgengahe was not ruled by the conditions of other property belonging to her husband, which made up his inheritance and was divided among his heirs. The widow, who, as plaintiff, demanded possession from the heirs, or who, as defendant, refused surrender of the Morgengahe to the heirs, did not rest her claim on inheritance. Her property, by that institution, seemed as much separated from the inheritance of her husband as if she were a stranger, and held it by purchase. Charter DCCIV. (App. No. 26) points out this distinction clearly, ^theric had been guilty of trea- son, and had never made his peace with the king before his death. His widow, upon a threat that the king would revive the charge and appropriate his estates, offered, through the archbishop, to give her own Morgengahe to the church, if the king should " let the terrible charge fall, and -Stheric's will should stand, — that is, as before mentioned, the land at Boccing to Christ Church, and his other land to other holy places, as his will manifests." Her morning-gift seems to have been safe from the danger of reversion to the crown, which befell all lands and property of a traitor, and was her own to offer as a recompense for pardon. In a legal contest, the basis of the suit rested solely on the proof of right to possession by the widow, arising from a gift by her husband when living. In conclusion, it is seen that the gap between the old executive procedure, as manifested in the actions for mov- ables, and a contradictory procedure, based on an examination of material right, has been bridged by the legal development in the land-procedure. The old means of proof by oath and witnesses found a successful rival in documents which aided the progress of the development. The rule Hand wahre Hand of movables did not hold of land ; and traditio, or the THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDURB. 261 contract of sale, gift, or other bargain, created a real right, which gave the buyer an action against any holder.) Investi- ture (or its common form of Auflassung') was a formal resignation of possession, which in no wise affected owner- ship, but was necessary to that full possession with an enjoyment of the fruits which constituted Crewere or seisin. And this seisin was the legaj^ possessio n of German law, the correlative, but not the synonyme, of the Roman possessio ; for the legal conceptions of the Germans were widely sepa- rated from those of the Romans. The rules of the procedure, also, differed from the Roman. The simple claim of one party against another in possession balanced the situation, and seisin conferred an advantage in giving to the possessor the r81e of defendant and the oath to his right. But neither seisin nor a so-called stronger right always gave the right of proof. Laband has compared the decision on the proof to an auction. If one party asserted seisin, the other might outbid him by claiming older seisin ; but, if their claims to seisin were evenlj' balanced, the plaintiff did not have the proof unless he advanced a right of possession, such as ownership. Then, if these claims equalized each other, the plaintiff could only outbid the other by resorting to the manner of acquisi- tion, where inheritance would be a better right than pur- chase. No rnle can be laid do wn as to the p roof, since the e ssence of the decision __wa p in assigning relevancti to t he_ counter-claim . The relevant objection of the defendant gave him the proof; otherwise the plaintiff had the proof. And the preceding divisions have been based on the assignment of proof : — A. Judicia retinendae vel recuperandae possessionis. B. Judicia adipiscendae possessionis. Division A. is subdivided into classes : (1) Where the seisin of one party was admitted, and (2) "Where both parties claimed seisin. In the first sub- division, the defendant received the proof; in the second, after one of the claimants was recognized as in possession, the case was the same as in the former section. And it was an established rule, that forcible dispossession did not deprive 262 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUEB. the dispossessed party of the advantages of seisin. Division B. is subdivided into three sections ; where the plaintiff acquired possession by an assertion either of (1) a right arising from such obligations as contract and mortgage, which included forfeiture of land to the grantor on commission of a crime ; or (2) the fact that the defendant's auctor had no power to alienate, and thereby injured the plaintiff's right (the hona fide possessor not being protected in Anglo-Saxon law by axij praegcriptio) ; or (3) a better right of inheritance. Morning-gifts were not included in inheritance, since they occupied the same legal position as other gifts or sales. VI. In the most primitive period of German society, and when through the doctrine of self-help, the individual himself exer- cised active judicial powers, the punishment of crimes, as well, perhaps, as the civU procedure of distress, lay without the jurisdiction of courts, — which did not indeed exist. The German was himself judge and warrior ; he levied execution and exacted blood for blood by the sovereign powers vested in himself by that most democratic of all constitutions. The archaic German procedure, as SiegeP has said, is essentially and radically characterized by the absolute independence (as opposed to the judicial power) by which the individual enforces his right. How far this is distinguished from the criminal jurisdiction of England to-day, is very apparent. " Every breach of the peace is a transgression against the king. . . . He alone can prosecute criminals ; . . . and no one must presume of his own authority to exact vengeance from those who have wronged him."^ Therefore it is one of the most instructive lessons in the history of English law to trace the growth of the power of government over the individual ; the establishment of courts of justice ; the gradual suppres- sion of private warfare ; the substitution of permanent kings for temporary leaders ; and, in the course of time, the assump- 1 Geschichte des deut. Geriehtsverf. p. 51. 2 Allen, Inquiry into the Rise and Growth ot the Royal Prerog., p. 88. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDTJKE. 263 tion by the king of the " ideal attributes of absolute perfec- tion, absolute immortality, and legal ubiquity." The king of to-day stands in bold contrast to the individual among the ancient Germans ; and the prosecution instituted at the instance of the king, to the " prosecution by appeal " at the instance of a private party, which long existed in English law, — a remnant of the earliest polity of the Anglo-Saxons. In the most archaic German society, before the organiza- tion of courts and a civil government, — a condition, perhaps, similar to that of the North American Indians, — it is fully accepted that each individual was the protector of his own rights by whatever power he possessed, and was in the same manner the avenger of his wrongs. Both in civil distress and vengeance for injuries, this was a period of summary action by the individual. Vengeance, arising from the doctrine of self-help,^ was the manifestation of this sum- mary execution in the sphere of criminal law, and can be defined as killing, or an assault with arms, resulting in death or wounds,^ and presupposing a wrong for which retaliation was made. German society was organized on a basis of the peace,^ or "frith," and every violation of the peace was a wrong. On the organization of the state, vengeance was a crude method of executing law, since it was not allowed unless clearly used by the individual as an instrument of law. For the folk-courts, as investigation has fully shown,* were 1 Vide Schmid, p. 652. ■ Cf. Wilda, p. 157, ff. In the sources of Northern law, vengeance was also used in the sense of an enmity which caused (1) the injured party to seize, bind, and bring his foe before the court; or (2) to pursue his suit unrelentingly until outlawry was imposed. 3 Of the two words for peace in Anglo-Saxon law,/rif) and gin's, the latter was introduced through the Danes, and first appears in Edw. and Guth. 1. As distinguished from friS, or the general peace, which was the synonym of mund, gri^ denoted the particular protection under which certain persons and places stood. * Rogge holds that they were courts of mediation. But Wilda (pp. 197, ff. 200) disproves this position, and his view has been adopted by Kostlin (p. 62). Cf. ^thelr. III. 13, § 1 : " Et ubi taynus habet duas optiones, amioitiae vel lagae, et amicitiam eligit, stet hoc ita firmum sicut ipsum judicium (dom)." To my mind there can be no doubt what the Germans would have wished their courts to be ; but a great variance between law and fact was not rare. Tacitm 264 THE AJSTGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUKE. not mere courts of intercession. Where the Gragas and Northern law gave the individual power to kill,i the folk- laws gave the power to seize an offender, but only in case of resistance to slay him.^ It was a fundamental rule of German law that vengeance must be authorized by previous permission of the court; or, if it preceded the judgment, it mu.'it afterwards be justified before the same tribunal.^ Ven- geance, therefore, could not legally be an act of pure free- will, since the avenger could always be brought to answer for his deed, and to show reason why he slew his foe.* The common example of this vengeance in the folk-laws was against the thief caught in the act Qiandhahhende) ;* but the kinsmen of the slain must swear an oath not to pursue the feud (unfdK). The idea of vengeance with the Germans was simply that of an angry man ; ^ and he who inflicted on his foe a cold-blooded vengeance, by castration, poisoning, or other cruelties, committed an infamous deed. Moreover, secrecy was forbidden to the avenger,^ even in the case of assigns to the folk-community the authority for the public punishments and the fines. Compare, however, this passage from Sir Henry Maine : " There is much reason, in fact, for thinking that, in the earliest times and before the full development of that kingly authority which has lent so much vigor to the arm of the law in most Aryan communities, but which was virtually denied to the Irish, Courts of Justice existed less for the purpose of doing right universally, than for the purpose of supplying an alternative to the violent redress of wrong" (Ear. Hist, of Inst., p. 288). ' Even for assault, threats, or injuries to property. Wilda, p. 102. 2 Edw. and Guth. 6, § 5 : " And if he fight and wound any one, let hira for- feit his wer." § 6 : "If he kill any one, let him be an outlaw (utlaga), and he who loves the law pursue him with the hue and cry." § 7 : " And if it results that he is slain, because he opposed the law of God and the king, if it can be proved, so let him lie uncompensated." 3 Kostlin, p. 64, and n. 6; Wilda, pp. 160-166, 168, 305-313; Maurer, p. 28. * Ine, 16 : " Qui furem occiderit, debet inveritare cum juramento, quod ilium culpabilem et de vita forisfactum occidisset, et non solvat." Ine, 21 : " Si quis sic occisi weram exigat, licet inveritari, quod pro jure sit occisus, et non solva- tur ipsius occisi congildonibus vel domino suo." Cf. also Ine, 35. Vide Wilda, p. 162. 6 Withr. 26 ; Ine, 12, 16, 21, 28, 35 (Pr.) ; Atheist. II. 11, IV. 6, VI. 8, § 3 ; Henr. 59, §§ 20, 23 ; 64, § 5; 74, § 3 ; 92, § 10. Ed, Conf. 36. 6 Wilda, p. 158. ' Ine, 21, § 1 : " Si celaverit, et fiat deinceps quandoque notum, tunc ampli- abit mortuo ad juramentum, quod licet parentibus suis purgare eum." THE AifGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUHE. 265 an outlaw, who could be slain without compensation.^ Pub- licity gave the avenger the power to prove his bona fides by co-swearers : — Hene. 83, § 6 : " If any one kill another in revenge, or self-de- fence, let him take to himself none of the goods of the dead, neither his horse, nor helmet, nor sword, nor any money; but in wonted manner let him arrange the body of the dead, — his head to the west, his feet to the east, upon his shield, if he it have ; and let him drive deep his lance, and hang there his arms, and to it rein in his steed ; and let him go to the nearest vill, and to him whom he shall first meet, as well as to him who has socn, let him declare it; that he may have proof and make defence against his [foe's] kinsmen and friends." ^ But, generally, vengeance was allowed in those cases in which outlawry would have been the penalty, and was exer- cised somewhat after the manner of a punishment. The formula in Anglo-Saxon law ran thus : " Homini liceat pug- nare."^ Any conception of a lex talionis, as assumed by Kemble, was foreign to early German law, and was only a subsequent effect of the church.* The kinsmen of the slain could exact vengeance from the doer and his kinsmen^ until the sum of the wergelds of the slain kinsmen equalled the wergeld of the person avenged.^ The procedure of the Northern law in making a successful party in an accusation the executioner ^ was almost repeated in Cnut's day : — 1 The Lex Rib. required that the slayer should publicly expose and guard the slain for a fixed number of days. 2 Another procedure was sometimes adopted. Without waiting for a suit by the relatives of the slain, the avenger went before the court and established the legality of the act. Sachsp. I. 69, 64 ; II. 14, § 2. Vide Wilda, p. 163. Njal- Saga, c. 64, p. 99 ff. The suit was regularly brought against the dead, and judgment urged. Then, — a curious confirmation of the position of the heir in the legal persona of the devisor, shown before, — the heir conducted the suit for the dead. 3 Alfr. 42, § 5. « Alfr. (Einl.) 15; Maurer, Krit. Ueberseh. IIL 29; Kemble, Sax. in Engl, Vol. I. pp. 269-270; Wilda, p. 158, and n. 3. 5 For the rights and obligations of the family in regard to the feud, vid$ supra, p. 140. 6 Anh. Vni. 1. ' Wilda, p. 167. 266 THE AiiTGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOCEDTJEB. Cn. II. 56 : " Qui murdrum aperte perpetrabit, reddatur parentibus interfecti." Alfred ^ also allowed immediate vengeance before a judg- ment in case a husband found another within closed doors or under a covering with his wife, daughter, sister, or mother. But the Anglo-Saxons did not permit vengeance for bodily injuries or mere threats as in the old Northern law.^ If A had slain B without cause, it was an unallowed breach of the peace ; but if C, B's kinsman, slew A in revenge for B's death, it was a case of vengeance. It is now possible to draw a distinction between vengeance and feud? Feud does not presuppose a right of feud. The word/oeAS has the simple meaning of enmity^ but its equivalent, feud, was chiefly used in the sense of vengeance in the folk-laws.* In the above example, when C was seeking with his kinsmen to revenge B's death, if A and his kinsmen resisted, — as was usually the case, — and prepared to defend themselves, a private war arose, which could strictly be called " feud," or warfare in our sense. At this point the wild spirit of freedom among the Germans, and a pride, which forbade all submission, led naturally, in a rude system of government, to a resist- ance whose consequences were perilous to the state and destructive to life and peace. Even the offender who ap- peared at the court came prepared to gain by force a protec- tion which might be denied him by a judgment of outlawry ; and therefore the accuser must be attended by such numbers as insured a bloody conflict, if he hoped to prosecute his suit.^ 1 Alfr. 42, § 7. 2 Wilda, pp. 160, 161. ' This is the equivalent of Maurer's distinction between legal and illegal feud, which is a little obscure. Krit. Uebersch. III. p. 28. Schmid also admits the same thing, p. 571. * Vide Wilda, p. 189. Schmid (p. 571) says : " Fehderecht " was the right of one to treat his opponent as an enemy, and to exercise vengeance against him, — using feud in the sense of vengeance also. Curiously enough, the word " feud " was unknown to the Northern Law, vengeance alone being used. Cf. Edm. II. 1 (Pr.) : "If any one afterward kill a, man, let him himself bear the enmity (fsehSe)." Also Ine 74. 5 The guilds were required to attend a brother to the court if charged with a eerioua crime ; and the decrees of the state were often made inoperative by sucli regulations. Vide Wilda, p. 186. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCBDXJKB. 267 This conflict led to others, the loser always endeavoring to compensate himself, and the victor to humble and subdue his foe.^ While vengeance was an appendage of the law, like private execution in the procedure of debt, feud, in the sense in which the word will be here used, was outside of the law, and in bold opposition to it ; it was the antagonistic element of the individual warring against the interests of society, and which society was naturally, and generally without success, striving to control. For it must be kept in mind, more than has commonly been done, that law and fact were varying and different quantities in their relation to each other. The high- spirited and democratic Germans were not quick in bending their wills and in imbibing objective law ; in fact, the feud which was chronicled by Tacitus ^ held its position even in England long after the Conquest. This system of vengeance and feud occupied a large place in the Anglo-Saxon laws, as well as in other German codes ; ^ but many attempts were made to control it. The great step toward the limitation of vengeance and the 1 Cf . Allen, p. 101 : " Among the ancient Germans, if any one was wronged, it was the duty of his relations and friends to resent his injury, and take part in his quarrel. His adversary was in the same predicament. However question- able his conduct, he found kinsmen and associates to maintain liis cause. The redress which the one party demanded, the other thought it pusillanimous to grant. Violence was resorted to ; retaliation followed ; and a civil, or rather domestic, war ensued." 2 Germ. o. 22 : " Suscipere tam inimicitias sen patris seu propinqui quam amicitias necesse est. Nee implacabiles durant ; luitur enim etiam homicidium certo armentorum ac pecorum numero, recipitque satisfactionem universa domus: utiliter in publicum; quia periculosiores sunt inimioitiae iuxta liber- tatem." ■f Its history and bearings were first definitely established by Wilda's great work (Das Strafrecht der Germanen, 1842); but Kemble (Saxons in England, Vol. I. Chap. X., 1848), afterwards wrote without acquainting himself with this, and afforded Konrad Maurer (Kritische Ueberschau, III., pp. 26-62, 1858) an op- portunity to attack him with success, and at the same time to present a picture of the workings of feud in Anglo-Saxon law. Wilda has based his conceptions of the German criminal system on the assumption that a system earlier than that of the folk-laws is to be found in the Gragas, Sagas, and other Northern sources. This, if true, furnishes an historical connection for the later period of the folk- laws, and has been accepted by Kostlin (p. 63), and Maurer (Krit. Uebersch.). Compare also, Sohm, Proced. de Lex Sal., pp. 122, 123. 268 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDUEB. consequent feuds was the extension of the system of com- positions 1 over cases of killing. In the case given above, if A offered B's wergeld to C, the state guaranteed the peace to A, and forbade C to exercise vengeance. But if the wer were not paid, then C could fight his foe, as is expressed in the old proverb, " Bicge spere of side 6?5er here." This step,^ although probably not fully recognized in the earliest laws,^ was surely reached in the time of Ine and Alfred. The first case was only of an unfree Welshman who had slain an Eng- lishman : — Inb 74 : " Si servus Waliscus Anglicum hominem occiderit ; debet ille, cujus est, reddere eum domino et parentibus, aut LX sol. dare pro vita sua. § 1. " Si dominus ejus nolit hoc capitale pro eo dare, liberum faciat eum, et solvant parentes illius weram occisi, si cognationem habeat liberam ; si non habeat, observent eum inimici sui." If neither the lord nor his kinsman would make a settle- ment, then only might vengeance be taken. And it is to be noticed that whatever duty was formerly imposed on the kin to aid in exacting vengeance seems to have been transferred under the composition system to a duty in paying the wer. But the familiar law of Alfred is more definite : — Alfe. 42 (Pr.) : " Also, we decree that the man who knows his foe to be home-sitting shall not jight him before he asks satisfaction.'' The same chapter then goes on to illustrate by other provisions the principle that the injured party could only 1 The system of compositions is mentioned here without further explanation, because it will be treated hereafter, and because it has seemed best to treat feud and vengeance without interruption, only introducing other subjects so far as they affect this. 2 Christianity contributed essentially to the substitution of compositions for outlawry and vengeance, by its teaching mildness and forbearance (Wilda, p. 320). 3 Since it is most probable that compositions were first fixed by private agreement, and later adopted by the courts, a trace of this arbitration, and therefore an evidence of the slender hold the couiposition system had as yet attained at that time, is to be found in JEthelbert, 66: "If a thigh shall be broken, let him pay 12 sh. ; if he become lame, then must the friends arbi- trate." THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDUKE. 269 proceed to vengeance after he had given his foe every oppor- tunity to make compensation, or if his foe resisted : — § 1 :" If he have power to surround and besiege his foe, let him watch him during seven days, and not attack him, if he (foe) wish to remain there. If he wish to surrender and give up his arms, let him guard him unhurt thirty days, and announce it to his kinsman and friends " [i.e. in order that they might make composition for him]. § 3. "If he have not power to besiege him within, let him go to the ealdorman and ask aid ; if he be unwilling to aid him, let him go to the king before he attack his foe." § 4. " If any one comes on his foe unexpectedly, . . . if his foe be willing to give up his arms, let him be held thirty days, and announce it to his friends. Jf he be unwilling to give up his arms, then may he Jight him." The preliminary procedure in which negotiation was made for the settlement is thus described : — Edm. II. 7 : " First, according to folk-right, ought the slayer to give pledge to his spokesman, and the spokesman of the slayer to the kindred of the slain, that the slayer will make them full satisfaction. Then should security be given to the spokesman, that the slayer may draw nigh in peace, and himself give pledge for the wer. When he has given his wed for this, let him further find a werborh, or security for payment of the wer. After this shall have been done, let the peace (mund) of the king be raised between them." ^ Such was the aim of Anglo-Saxon law ; but that its decrees were practically nugatory in regard to vengeance is shown by the necessity of subsequent laws, as well as the influence of other matters : — ^THELR. IV. 4. § 1 : " If he fight before he demands his satisfac- tion, and live, let him pay the king's ' burhbrece ' of five pounds." The state desired to see a weakening of the family bonds as a means of diminishing the blood-vengeance, and decrees 1 Cf. Anh.VII. 1, 4 : " When that is done then let the king's peace be estab- llBhed, that is, that they all of either kindred, with their hands in commoD -ipon one weapon, engage to the mediator that the king's peace shall stand." Vide Henr. 76, §§ 1, 6-7. 270 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUBE. were passed with this aim ; ^ but with little success.^ The church employed its influence in the amelioration of ven- geance and feud, and so far as the establishment of asylums in the churches ^ effected any thing, or protection in going to and coming from a church festival, she succeeded. But, not- withstanding the efforts of church and state, vengeance and private warfare continued throughout the whole Anglo-Saxon period. The government was only as strong as unruly ealdormen permitted ; the people were turbulent ; and it was reserved to William the Conqueror to strengthen the power of the state, and effect the practical suppression of feud. Yet it was not until the reign of Edward IV. that the last ex- ample of private warfare occurred.* In the early legal history of the Germans, two different cur- rents must be followed: one, that of vengeance and feud, out of real harmony with the state, and yet allowed to exist by the very power ready to destroy it ; and another of law, which sometimes mingled its current with the former. This last took place when the state legalized an act of private vengeance. When an offender broke the peace, he became ipso facto " peace-less " (^friedlos) ; he was outside the pale of law and protection ; vengeance against him was not regarded as a crime, and his life was forfeit. By bringing the charge before the court, the permission of the community formed an enlarged right of vengeance, so to speak, in that by now en- gaging all members of the community to assume a state of warfare against the peace-breaker, he became an outlaw. In other words, vengeance was limited to such acts as, if brought to a legal decision, were followed by outlawry.^ Finding the principles of summary action deeply imbedded in the early German mind, the state adapted that which they found in 1 Alfr. 42, §§5, 6; Edm. II. 1. 2 jEthelr. II. 6 ; VIII. 23 ; Cn. I. 5, § 2 ; cf. supra, pp. 71, 72, 139, 140. > Alfr. 5, Pr. §§ 1-3 ; 42, § 2. * Dugdale, Baronage, 1. 138, 362, 36.5. Vide Allen, p. 123, 124. * The Gragas allowed killing in vengeance even for assaults, threats, and injuries to property ; but in all these cases the characteristic was, that if they came to a judgment outlawry would have been declared (Wilda, p. 162). In vengeance the individual became the judge, and acted on his own risk. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDUKB. 271 existence, and made outlawry a last resort, should tlie indi- vidual need the aid of the community. The old folk-com- munity, as a confederacy bound to peace, was among the Anglo-Saxons held together by the king ; and what was originally folk-peace became king's peace, without materially changing its meaning. The peace-breaker was " inimicus regis et omnium amicorum eius ; " ^ but yet he who held out against the law was declared " untrue to the folk " ^ (" tiht-bysig," and " folce ungetrywe ") and the old folk-peace. The ex- communication from the folk-peace in its old meaning still existed, but with special emphasis on the relation to the king. The offender was put out of the pale of the peace (" fritS- leS,san " ^) ; he was outside of all law (" utlah " *) until the king restored the peace to him (" friSian " °), or inlawed him again ("inlagie "^). But the outlaw was an enemy to the whole folk as well ("utlah wiS eall folc " ^), and his act was called Htlages weorc? And then because he was an enemy both of the king and folk, no one might harbor or support the outlaw ; this, if done, itself constituted a great crime.^ His land was forfeited to him of whom it was held.^" Rather is the outlaw to be hunted down and slain, and rightly termed a fugitive (" flyma " ^i), on whose head a price was set.^^ He was a " lupinum caput," ^^ a wolf, glad to escape the country, and spend his life as a wretch '^'^ (" wreccena ") ; and when excommunication from the church, as among the Anglo- Saxons, befell him, nothing more could be added to his dis- mal situation. So among the ancient Germans it is clear that vengeance and outlawry contained no conception of a punishment as such ; but it was rather an ex parte proceeding based on the breach of the peace. The state put itself in an attitude of 1 JEthelst. II. 20, § 7. = ^thelr. I. 4 (Pr.). 8 Cn. II. 15, (Pr.). « Edw. and Guth. 6, § 6. 6 iEthelst. II. 20, § 3. « Cn. L 2, § 4. ' ^thelr. I. 1, § 9. 8 Cn. II. 13. ' Cf. Ine 30 ; and, for many corresponding passages, vide Schmid, p. 34. 10 Cn. II. 13, 78. Vide, supra, p. 250, fE. 11 Vide Schmid, p. 675. " Wihtr. 26. 13 Ed. Conf. 6, § 2. " Alfr. 4 (Pr.) ; ^thelr. VIII. 26. 272 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDUEE. war in regard to the offender, as it would have done against a foreign enemy.' In the earliest times outlawry was de- clared for killing and the more grave offences, which it will be well to term causae majores,^ in opposition to lesser misdemeanors, or causae minores, which were settled by a composition from the remotest historical period.^ Causae majores were premeditated, wilful, and not accidental* in- juries to body and property, involving a breach of the folk- peace, in which the plaintiff could sue for outlawry ; while in causae minores the suit could be brought only for a settled sum. This shows that the criminal system of the early Germans, however crude, aimed at the dispensation of justice ; and Tacitus also states that the punishment was accommodated to the offence (^pro modo poena'). In the Northern sources, in which Wilda finds the oldest procedure, the causae majores included almost all offences, except slight injuries to property and body (which left no visible traces),^ slander, &c. ; while expiable offences, or causae minores, were few. If, then, Tacitus can be supplemented by the Northern law,® there were three stages of development ; that is, three periods when one particular penalty preponderated over the others. The first or earliest stage was when the causae majores, which were followed by outlawry, included, as just said, almost every offence. The Scandinavian sources are an ex- ample of this stage, with yet an apparent leaning toward the second. But the large number of the offences in this class diminished through several means. First, through the com- 1 Maurer, Krit. TJebersch. III. p. 29. 2 Cf. Wilda, p. 269. Wilda (p. 264 ff.) has termed these divisions " breaches of peace " (causae majores), and " breaches of law " (causae minores), — designa- tions which must lead to much confusion in the lay mind. Therefore I have used other, but equivalent, terras. " Wilda, p. 818 ; Maurer, Krit. tTebersch. III. p. 30. Expiation by payment seems to have been a common Aryan institution. * For the German conceptions of casus and culpa, vide infra, pp. 295-7. 6 Wilda, pp. 269, 270. 6 The fact which makes this almost positively certain for Anglo-Saxon studies, is that Wilda makes many of his deductions from the Anglo-Saxon laws, and finds in them the same institutions as in Northern law (vide Wilda, p. 386). THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUEE. 273 position system (or the extension of the causae minores over those formerly causae majores), the prevalent class of penalties during the second stage. The causae minores now included by far the largest number of offences for which a fixed com- pensation was made ; and, inasmuch as the peace was broken, as well as a damage done to the individual, a part of the sum went to the state as peace-money {fredus, from friV, and wite or wette}, and another to the individual as damages (bot).^ The development brought such of the causae majores as were least aggravated, like simple killing, under the head of causae minores, and permitted expiation by a payment.^ Although this sum was at first the result of private agreement, later the state asserted the right to avert the vengeance from him who had paid, or offered to pay, the fixed sum. In the course of this second period, almost all the causae majores, which originally had been attended by outlawry, became expiable ; except when the offender, or his kindred, refused to make the settlement. These expiable causae majores differed from those offences always atoned for by a settlement in that, when the composition could not be, or was not paid, the offender laid himself open to the con- sequence of the old causae majores, — outlawry. These formed an intermediate class of expiable causae majores. This is the period of the folk-laws, which show an inclina- tion to pass on to the third stage, or that of true punish- ments. By the side of the causae majores and minores, or beside outlawry and compositions, there existed the third class of true punishments for particularly disgraceful crimes, to which neither outlawry nor compositions applied. While Tacitus speaks of the other offences, he mentions punish- ments of a different nature imposed for treason, desertion, cowardice, and adultery.^ In these cases, the state appeared ' Tac. Germ. c. 12: " Sed et levioribus delictis pro modo poenarum equorum pecorumque numero convicti multantur. Pars multae reigi vel civitati, pars ipsi qui vindicatur, vel propinquis suis exsolvitur." 2 Apply to the question of vengeance and outlawry, supra, p. 268. ' Germ. <^. 12 : " Distinctio poenarum ex delicto. Proditores et transfugas arboribus suspendunt : ignavos et imbelles et corpore infames coeno ao palude, injecta insuper crate, mergunt." Vide, c. 21, 22. 18 274 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCBDTJEE. not as a belligerent party against a member of society, but in a higher position, as that of castigator.^ The number of these crimes for which originally a true punishment was inflicted gradually increased with the growth of legal conceptions. And in the few heavier causae majores for which no composition was allowed, the outlawry, from being a species of warfare in which the individual forces of the com- munity were enlisted against the offender, gradually took on the character of a true punishment. The unlimited right to kill passed into a duty to catch and deliver the offender to the state. If he resisted capture, or escaped from custody, then he could as before be slain with impunity ; so that, although vengeance now began to be confined within narrow 1 Tacitus, in his account of the German criminal system, has chronicled the existence of the means of composition as well as the public punishments; but, strangely enough, made no mention of outlamry (cf. Wilda, p. 267, Kostlin, p. 72). This has led to the discussion of the question of the public punishments. Wilda is staggered by the omission of Tacitus, and does not boldly state whether he regards these cases as true punishments, or not ; but inclines to the former (p. 267). Kostlin holds that they were not, and sums up his conclusions as follows : " Each crime is a breach of the peace, and by law is attended by outlawry. The consequence of this outlawry, in regard to offences which were committed directly against the community, is that which, in Tacitus, appears as pubUc punishments ; in regard to other offences, the doer was given up to the vengeance of the injured kindred, in case the injured party or his legal repre- sentative did not prefer to sue for the compensation (busse). According to Tacitus, private crimes in general belong to this class, while the Northern laws made many of them inexpiable. In every case, private crimes only are expia- ble, not those committed against the community itself. If suit be brought for the compensation, the community decides ; if the condemned refuse payment of the composition, then again outlawry befell him, so that he could be slain by any one without compensation ; and the same befell his companions bound to security in case they did not execute their obligation " (pp. 73, 74). Kostlin has tried to show that the above cases were a manifestation of the community, acting as an avenger (for which he can draw no support from his references to Wilda) ; and that the Germans had no conception of crime or delict in the modern sense. He argues that Tacitus saw in these cases the acts of the state as an " avenger ; " and, as a Roman, saw in them only true punishments (p. 72). But why is it not as fair on the other hand, admitting the existence of outlawry in his day, to suppose that Tacitus saw its exercise, and, as a Eoman, could not see in it any thing but a true punishment, and, therefore, classed it with the actual cases of true punishment which he found; finding, consequently, no reason to mention outlawry'? Maurer (p. 33) holds that the cases in question were true punishments, and finds support in so good an authority as Walter. THE AjSTGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOCEDUKE. 275 bounds, it was not yet extinct. The same progress, in order to better adapt the penalty to the crime, also converted the outlawry imposed for the less aggravated offences into per- petual or even temporary banishment ; and the offender's life was forfeit only if he did not quit the country, or returned before his term expired. Then, at a time before this change in the outlawry was fully completed, the compo- sitions assumed a position under the system of true punish- ments, and the violated peace was bought of the magistrate or king. The Anglo-Saxon criminal system was still in the midst of the transition. Outlawry and vengeance appeared in Anglo- Saxon law, but in a limited form ; and the private composition still excluded public punishment. While true punishment had also obtained a foothold in the law. But while the ban of outlawry was originally the consequence of all great crimes, it now appeared among the Anglo-Saxons rather as an exceptional and last means of coercion. Maurer has clearly shown that outlawry was only allowed, as an external means of necessity, against the criminal who stubbornly opposed the usual course of the law.^ And, therefore, ven- geance was confined within the bounds set by outlawry ; for the state tried to enforce the rule that no one could proceed to self-help who had not first sought satisfaction in the regu- lar way.^ Even the thief caught in the act, whose life was always forfeit, could not be killed unless he opposed his pro- duction before the court.^ He must be bound and taken to 1 Alfr. 1; Edw. and Guth. 6; Atheist. IL 20; Edg. III. 7; ^thelr. I. 1, 9, V. 31, VL 38; Cn. II. 30, 33, 48; &c. 2 Vide supra, p. 264. 8 He had committed a crime by which he forfeited his life, or could, under the limitation of vengeance by compositions, pay the value of that life, or his wergeld : — Ine, 12 : " Si fur capiatur, mortem patiatur vel vitam suam weregildo suo redi- mat." And his slayer could be brought to account, if he did not give the thief an opportunity to buy off his life, and slew him before he attempted to fly : — Ine, 28, § 1 : " Si repugnet vel aufugiat (i.e., not before), reus sit witae. Ine, 35 (Pr.) : " Qui furem Occident, licet ei probare jurejurando, quod mm fugientem pro fure occidit." The laws show, therefore, that, if the slayer could not make oath that he 276 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUEE. prison, and only if he tried to defend himself, or to escape, might he be slain : ^ — -ffiTHELST. II. 1, § 2 : "Si velit se defendere, vel aufugare, tunc ei postea non parcatur." § 3 : "Si fur ponatur in careers, sit ibi XL noctibus, et inde redimatur foras per CXX sol., et eat cognatio eius in plegium, quod deinceps se abstineat." Again, while a thief might thus be slain, and the act went unpunished, Anglo-Saxon law prescribed certain penalties against him who slew another in self-defence : — Henr. 80, § 7 : "Si quis in domo vel in curia regis fecerit homi- cidium vel bominiplagium, de membris componat. Et domum regis vel curiam hoc loco dicimus ubicunque in regions sua sit, cujuscunque feodum vel mansio sit. Si quis tamen legitimas coactionis testes habeat, vel Dei judicium ofFerat, quod se defendendo fecerit, Dei rec- tum ut emendare liceat. It cannot be explained here that the compensation must be made because of a breach of a special peace, since the act se defendendo did not go without a fine in later English law.^ For a solution of the difficulty. Von Bar^ points to the fact slew the thief trying to escape, he had no defence, and must pay the thief s wergeld. Cf. also Atheist. VI. (Jud. Civ. Lond.) 1, § 1 : " Ut non parcatur alicui latroni supra XII annos et supra XII den., de quo vere fuerit inquisitum, quod reus sit et ad negationem aliquam non possit." — § 4 : " Et fur, qui saepe forisfactus erit aperte, et ad ordalium vadat et reus appareat, occidatur, nisi tribus sua vel dominus velit eum redimere secundum weram suam et pleno ceapgildo, et plegiare, quod semper in reliquum cesset a malo." Cf. Lex Angl. et. Wer. (Merkel) II. 5 : " Homo in furto occisus nonsolra- tur. Sed si proximus eius dixerit innocentem occisum, [let the slayer swear] 12 hominum sacramento furem credi juste occisum." ' Cf. also the procedure of the Lex Salica : " At the same time that he uttered the hue and cry, the injured party seized him, and forthwith drew him, using force if necessary, before the court K the court was not in session, the community immediately assembled, in order to judge the flagrant crime.'' (Sohm, p. 86, 87). 2 Statut. Glocester, 6 Ed. I., 1278, c. 7: "Pourvu est ensement que nul brief ne issera desormais de la chancerie pour mort d'homme d'enquirer, si homme dccist autre par iviisaventure ou soi defendant ou en autre maniere sans felony, mais celui soit en prison jusque k la venue des justices eyrans ou assign^ Ji gaol deliverie, et se mit en pays devant eux de bien et de mal. Et si soi trouve par pays, qu'il le fist soi defendant ou par misarenture, done fera les justices assa- voir au Roi et le Koi lui en fera sa grace s'il lui plait." 8 V. Bar. Beweisur. p. 72, S. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDTJKE. 277 that the German procedure awarded the proof according as the presumption, on prima facie evidence, leaned to one or the other party. If the slayer admitted the killing, and could assert that otherwise the slain would have committed a heavy crime, he went unpunished ; but if he admitted he had a dispute with the slain, and a combat thence arose, — this is defensio in the old laws, — it was probable that the killing, although not intentional, was culpable. It was pos- sible that the slain might be innocent ; but this could only be established by such an examination into the circumstances of the act as was unknown to the old procedure. There- fore German law assumed a, praesumptio juris etde jure against the slayer, and presupposed a possible culpa of the slayer, in that he might have transgressed the bounds of strict self- defence. It is under such a principle as this, that, in English law, until a recent date,^ while killing in order to prevent a great crime went unpunished, killing se defendendo was only in a measure excusable ; since the law presumed that whoever killed another in a contest was not wholly guiltless. So when Blackstone ^ recorded a punishment in this case to be the payment of an amount of property, in Anglo-Saxon law it was the payment of the wergeld.^ In Anglo-Saxon law, therefore, outlawry had given way partly to the system of compositions, and partly to the theory of true punishments. To the first corresponded expiable (" botwyrSe "), to the second inexpiable (" botleas ") crimes, of which the former occurred most frequently in the earlier, the latter in the later, laws. As time passed, more civilized conceptions arose as to wrongs against society, and the energies of the state were directed more and more to the repression of crime and the punishment of the offenders. In 1 Vide 9 Geo. IV. c. 31, § 10. 2 IV. p. 184-188. ' The Sachsenspiegel (IL 14) gives a case, where if the slayer could not remain, as was required, with the dead body, nor bring the body before the court, he must pay the wette to the magistrate, and the wergeld to the rela- tives. In the Richtsteig Landrechts, if the slayer convicted the slain of a breach of peace, he need not pay the wergeld (V. Bar. p. 82). The above doc- trine is evidently consistent with the killing of a thief caught in the act : if ha was slain as a thief, the killing was justifiable ; otherwise not. 278 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PROCEDURE. crimes of an especially serious nature, or those which had become too frequent, not even a compensation was allowed to be paid by the wrong-doer ; and the state itself inflicted summary punishment. Front the' time of Alfred, the offences multiply for which no compensation could be received ; and even crimes for which compensation could be received were also threatened with punishment, and thus became condi- tionally expiable at the will of the king. Apart from the indemnification (" ceapgild ") and the information-money (" meldfeoh "), in crimes expiated by compositions there was a double payment, one to the injured party, and another to the state. The first part of the "bot " ^ (from the root meaning to better') was intended to repair the wrong inflicted on an opponent, and, seeming to be an indem- nification for honor, health, and such injuries as bore no market value,^ implied a confession of the wrong done, and was, in fact, termed " satisfactio " by Tacitus ; the second part was known as "wite,"^ and was the purchase-money for the forfeited folk-peace in the old sense, the equivalent of "lahcop"* (law purchase). And since the king, under the Anglo-Saxon kingship, represented the old folk-peace, to him ^ The comparatiye study of the German codes gives the following result in regard to fines : — (1) The older the law, the more simple the system of payments. But in time they all became more complex ; the sums paid instead of outlawry intro- duced a new series of amounts ; and the old amounts were divided and multi- pUed in order to adapt them to the gravity of the offence. (2) The amount of the wergeld formed a new basis of computation, and sometimes crowded out the older system. (3) The payments gradually assumed more and more the character of pun- ishments, often driving out all conception of a peace-money. (4) In some offences, as theft, the payment depended on Lhe worth of the thing; and, therefore, always varied in amount (Wilda, p. 322, ff. ). 2 Wilda, pp. 314, 315. 3 " Wite" meaning punishment, as Maurer points out (p. 4.3), was found in Norwegian, Icelandic, Swedish, and Danish, as well as Anglo Saxon law. He has opened a question of derivation, whether " wite " originally meant " punish- ment," and afterward came to mean the fine inflicted as punishment; or whether it was originally the " peace money," and later took on the meaning of punish- ment, because the sum was so intended 'i 4 .ffithelr. III. 8. Cf. also (HI. 8), "bicge lah," and (II. 1, Pr) "fri« gebio gean." THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDTICE. 279 usually went the wite ; but for some minor crimes to the hun- dred, or lord who had sacu and socn. The basis of the hot made to the injured party in causae minor es and expiable causae maj'ores, was the " mund," ^ or " mund byrd." The word meant the protection conferred by any one, and the peace he enjoyed ; and the " mund-bryce " was the sum to be paid for injury to this peace and protec- tion. The amount of the " mund-bryce " varied with the rank of the person, and the gravity of the offence. In the Kentish laws the hot for the ceorl, eorl, and king were 6, 12, and 50 shillings respectively;^ but these were subsequently changed in amount and proportion.^ Alfred* fixed the king's "borhbryce" or "mund-bryce" at five pounds (240 sh.), and the king's " burg bryce " (burgi infractura, invasio man- sionis) at 120 shillings, and thus they remained from that time.^ One of the expiable causae majores was simple kill- ing, for which the hot to be paid was technically called wer- gyld (leodgyld, or wer and leod in short), varying according to the rank^ of the slain, and including even the price of the king's life. The wergeld for the common freeman was 200 shillings in Wessex and Kent;'^ and in Mercia^ and North- t > The equivalent in Northern law was "rettr" (Wilda, p. 354). 2 ^thelbt. 5, 8, 13, 15 ; Withr. 2. ' The changes in the different ranks of society make it impossible to give an orderly statement of the various sums ; while, in addition, each stem in Eng- land had a, diflFerent system. But the duodecimal system (6, 12, &c.) con- tinued to exist by the side of a decimal system (5, 10, 80, &c.) from Alfred's time. * Alfr. 3, 40; vide Henr. 34, § 3, 76, § 4 (of. Ine, 45). The pound contained 48 (or 50 in large payments, to cover worn coins) shillings, of five pennies each. The pound of 20 shillings of 12 pennies each was adopted after the Conquest. 6 ^thelr. VIII. 11 ; Cn. II. 58. ' The primary division was into Tio)/-, Six-, and Twelfhyndesmen, whose wer was respectively 2, 6, and 12 hundred shillings. But the wer of the first or common freeman, was not 200 shillings throughout all England, as Wilda states (p. 408). To the time of lue, the common freeman, ceorl, was simply opposed to the eorl. But the higher classes were known by either of the terms eorl, gesi'.h, thegen, in opposition to ceorl, without positive distinctions. But ealdorman gained a higher station, and was a twelf hyndesman. In Cnut's time the ceorls had been depressed, and were termed illiberaJ.es (Cn. III. 21, &c.). ^ Vide Maurer, p. 48, n. 1, who disproves Kemble's estimate of 180 shillings. 8 i.e., 200 Mercian shillings, or about 160 West-Saxon shillings. 280 THE AKGLO-SAXON LEGAL PROCEDUKB. umbria, 160 West Saxon shillings. For the king's thane, in Wessex and Northumbria 1,200, in Mercia 960,^ West-Saxon shillings; for the eorl in Kent 600. For the ealdorman^in Northumbria ^ 4,800 West Saxon shillings. The king's wer- geld in Wessex stood in relation to the common freeman, 60 : 1 ; in Mercia, 72 : 1 ; in Northumbria, 112 : 1 ; but in the Kentish codes there is no mention of the king's wergeld. One part of the king's wergeld was paid to his own kinsmen, and another part (^cynegeld) to the people.* A constituent part of the wergeld was the " healsfang " paid to the nearest of kin.^ "FaeSbot" and "maegbot" were equivalent^ words, and only the synonyms of wergeld. The peace-money, or payment for breach of the public peace, was termed " wite," and was in its narrowest sense the equivalent of the " lahslit " of the Danes in England. The ofPender thereby bought back his position in the broken folk-peace, so that he could now make lot for the wrong to the injured party (mid fam hine sylfne inlagige td bdte'). The Kentish laws fixed this fine at 30 shillings,* but it was changed according to the rank of the injured person,^ or the doerii^'and according to the gravity of the crime. For in theft, the worth of the stolen goods influenced the " wite."^^ 1 I.e. 1200 Mercia shillings. " cf. Stubbs, I. p. 152 fe. ' Although of different sums, the Northumbrians retained the relatire amounts of the twy-, six-, and twelfhyndesmen, in the wer of the eeorl (666 thryrasen), lesser thane (2,000 thry.), and king's thane (4,000 thry.)- Vide Wilda, p. 412. Cf. Maurer, p. 48, ff. Schmid, Gloss, pp. 637, 675, seems to think that these were not Northumbrian but Norfolk wers. « Anh. VII. 2, § 1. s Cn. III. 14 : . . " et pro culpa solvat regi decern solidos, quos Dani vocant Halfehang, alias Halsehang." Cf. Will. I. 9. But it was usually 1-10 of the wer. Vide Schmid, p. 608, and Wilda, p. 415. The oflSce of this amount, and the reason of its position first in the order of payments, making up the wer, was that, because given to the immediate kin, it precluded from vengeance those most ready to avenge. It prevented also an appearance at the court, and, like the Norwegian "skovkaup," must be paid before the remaining wer; and acted as a permission to make further expiation. Also vide supra, pp. 128, 144. 6 Ine, 74, § 2; JEthelr. VIII. 23, 24. Vide also Wilda, p. 388. I ^thelr. VIII. 2. 8 Ine, 6, § 3. The lahslit was 36 shillings. Edw. & Guth. 3, 7 ; Cn. II. 15. 9 Ine, 6. i» ^thelr. VI. 52. II Alfr. 9, § 1, &c. ■ THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUEE. 281 Another form of " wite " appeared in cases of slaying as the " manbot" and " fyhtwite."i These payments were always required,* and were probably the divisions of the " mund- bryce ; " ^ the " manbot " belonged to the lord* independent of his rights of sacu ; while the " fyhtwite " went to the king, or to a lord by special grant of jurisdiction, and appears as belonging to the king's right of reservation.^ These pay- ments varied with the wergeld, but were usually 30 shillings for a twyhyndesman.^ Another payment of 120 shillings (the same as his " burgbryce ") was the " oferhyrnes," or " oferseunesse," made for a breach of the king's personal peace ; but, from its original meaning as a private fine of the king, it came to be used in the sense of a punishment for disregard of different state commands, such as disobedience to a summons of the court. In practice, however, no rule can be laid down as to the amount of the peace-money, since it was usually settled by agreement with the accused. The expiation by money was but gradually taking the place of the old outlawry, and, under the growing theory of punish- ments, the state only as an act of grace allowed composition to the accused. While Anglo-Saxon law has clearly distinguished between expiable and inexpiable crimes, it must be understood that the king always possessed an unlimited power of pardon;'' although the exercise of this power was to be understood as exceptional. So that, in one sense, no crime was absolutely inexpiable. In cases where a criminal forfeited his life as a punishment, he was sometimes allowed to pay his own wer- geld to the state that his life might not be taken,^ just as ' Maurer (p. 50) holds that these were the component parts of the old " drihtinbeah " (^thelb. 6), or lord-ring, the equivalent of the Norwegian " logbangr." 2 Edm. n. 3. a Vide Wilda, p. 454. * Ine, 70, 76; Cn. I. 2; Henr. 43, § 6, &c. » Cn. n. 15, cf. Schmid, p. 629. « Ine, 70 (Pr.). ' Cn. II. 13: . . . " wealde ae coninge paes frilSes." Ine, 36, § 1 : . . . "nisi ei rex pareere velit." Alfred (Einl. 49, § 7) declared treachery to a lord to be inexpiable, but pardon was reserved by Edgar (in. 7). 8 Mt\i&W. VIII. 2; Cn. II. 62. 282 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUEE. formerly payment was made to escape outlawry. Such pun- ishments as death, and cutting off the hand,i could be paid for by the offender's wer ; slander, which forfeited the tongue, by half the wer.^ " And be it in the king's doom whether he shall or shall not have life."^ In this way, the many pun- ishments to life, body, freedom, property and honor,* might be forgiven by the king. Outlawry and compositions did not apply to a slave, who was made to suffer with his skin, castration, hanging, stoning, branding,^ and like penalties, for his crime. No composition could be exacted, since his lord would be effected thereby. It is now easy to understand the summary of offences in : — Henk. 12, § 1 : " Ex his placitis quaedam emendantur C solidis [i.e., 240 old shillings, the equivalent of the borgbryce],' quaedam wera, quaedam wita, quaedam non possunt emendari, quae sunt : hus- breche,' et bernet, at openthLfthe, et eberemorJ>, et hlafordswike, et infractio pacis ecclesiae vel manus regis per homicidium [also add witchcraft ' and counterfeiting °]. § 2 : " Haec emendantur C solidis : grifebreche, stretbreche, fore- stel," burchbreche,'^ hamsokna,^^ flymonflrma.'' § 3 : " Haec emendantur wera, si ad emendationem veniat : qui in ecclesia fecerit homicidium : persolutio furti vel robariae ; " qui furem plegiatum amiserit ; qui ei obviaverit, et gratis sine vociferatione di- miserit ; qui ei consentiet in aliquo ; homicidium wera solvatur, vel weralada negetur ; si uzoratus homo fornicatur ; " qui viduam duxerit > Alfr. 6. 2 Cn. II. 36. 3 ine, 6 (Pr). * For the possible punishments vide Sehmid, p. 656. Also of. Charter No. 29, Appendix. 5 Ine, 3, § 1 ; Alfr. 25, § 1 ; Ine, 24 (Pr.) ; .ffithelst. IV. 6, § 5; Cn. H. 32. 8 Cf . Henr. 85, § 2. ' Cf. Cn. n. 64, for housebreaking, arson, open theft and killing, and dis- loyalty to one's lord. 8 .Slthelst. n. 6; Cn. II. 4, Cod. Dip. DXCI (App. No. 20). 9 ^theb. III. 8. 10 Xthe\T. V. 31. " {.e., burhbryce, cf. Henr. 10, § 1. 12 A less crime than housebreaking, of a similar kind. w Harboring an outlaw, cf. JEthelst. 11. 20, § 8; V. (Pr.) § 3; Edm. n. 1, § 2; Cod. Dip. DCCXIV, DCCXIX, MCCCIV. I* Henr. 88, § 4; Anh. XV.; .^Ethelr. VHI. 4; Cn. H. 47, &c. Cf. Henr. 69, §21. 15 Cf. Cn. n. 54. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDTJEE. 283 ante unum annum ; qui in hostico, vel familia regis pacem fregerit, si ad emendandum venire poterit; si praepositus pro firmae adjutorio witam exigat ^ [also add rape ^ and kidnapping ']." Having stated the Anglo-Saxon system of fines and pun- ishments, it is now necessary to unfold the actual course of the procedure in which these were employed. The hundred courts were competent to judge only of the minor offences ; treason, cases of outlawry, theft punished by death, secret killing, counterfeiting, arson, hamsocn, resistance to law, har- boring outlaws, premeditated assault, injury to the highway, &c., belonged to the jurisdiction of the higher courts.* Unlike the action of movables, the criminal procedure was begun before the court,^ and the Anefang of movables found no corresponding act in criminal law ; but in both it was the individual who put the judicial machinery in motion, and himself summoned the defendant. The action was brought to compel the defendant either to make compensation or clear himself of the charge. If it were a case of homicide, the defendant must give pledge to pay the wer ; but, if he re- fused, his contumacy was met by outlawry and the use of private vengeance. The plaintiff must summon the accused three times in the presence of good witnesses to appear be- fore the court,^ a formula corresponding to the mannitio of the Lex Salica (c. 49) : — Hene. 82, § 1 : " In omni causa, si quis inimicum residentem habeat, non ante impugnet eum, quam ipsum ter et per honos testes d'e redo requirat." Will. I. 47 : " Si quis malam habens famam et de infidelitate rec- tatus tertio vocatus non comparet." Hene. 41, § 2 : " Qui residens est ad domum suam, submoniri debet de quolibet placito cum testibus, et si domi est, eidem dicatur, vel dapi* f ero, vel denique familiae suae liberae denunciatur." ' 1 It should be added that false imprisonment (Will. I. 4), wounding (Will. I 10), and trespass (Cn. II. 80 ; Henr. 17), were expiable. 2 Cn. n. 52. 8 Ine, 11 j Alfr. (Einl.) 15. « Henr. 10, § 1. « Cf. Sohm, Proc^d. de L. Sal. p. 79. 6 Vide supra, p. 192, for the usual form, which corresponds closely to the solem collocare of the Lex Salica. ' Henr. 42, § 2 : — " Et idem coram testibus suscepit, ut negari non possit." 284 THE ANGLOSAXON LEGAL PBOCEDTJEB. It was one of the fundamental personal rights accorded by German law^ that the accused should have a term in which to reply and prepare his proof, and thereby the defendant was permitted at least seven days before the assembling of the court, as usual in the movables procedure and actions brought before the shire court : — Hene. 7, § 4 : " Debet autem scyresmot et burgemot bis, himdreta vel wapentagia duodocies in anno congregari, et sex [septem ^"J diehus ante summoniri, nisi publicum commodum vel dominica re^s necessi- tas terminum praeveniat.'' After this extrajudicial summons, the defendant was re- quired to make his appearance, unless detained by a legal essoin.^ The accused must answer because of the force resid- ing in the formal summons made by the plaintiff, since a refusal given to the plaintiff's demand was punished the third time by the fine of the king's " overseunesse " (120 shillings). That is, the act of the individual who made the summons was regarded as a constituent part of the procedure, and dis- regard of it entailed a heavy fine : — ^THELST. II. 20 (Pr.) : Si quis gemotum, id est publicum comi- tum, adire supersederit ter, emendet overhyrnessam, id est subaudi- tionem regis, si placitum ipsum VII diebus praenunciatum sit." But the penalty against a delinquent might be turned against the claimant, who did not appear to substantiate his charge ; the rigor of the law, acting, as Sohm has said, like a two-edged sword. In a case where charges were made that a thief was wrongly slain is found this provision : * — ^THELST. II. 11: . . . "and if the kindred of the dead are not willing to come again to the appointed term, let each one who before made the charge pay 120 shillings \i.e., the ' overseunesse 'J.^ " In fact the provisions against unjust accusations in Anglo- Saxon law, were many and severe.^ 1 Siegel, Gesch. dea Deutsch. Ger., p. 58. "^ The correctness of the number " septem," of which there is no doubt, is shown by Henr. 41, § 2 ; 46, § 1 ; 51, § 2, and other passages. 5 Vide supra, p. 196. 4 Cf. Henr. 74, § 2. ' The remainder of the section is quoted infra, p. 287. * Cf. Edw. I. 1, § 5, and similar passages. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDITRE. 285 It will be necessary here to note a peculiar case, arising from the use of vengeance. All German codes regarded theft as a heinous crime, and it has been the subject of many laws which provided that the thief caught in the act could be immediately seized and imprisoned ; or, if he resisted, killed. As before said, the common requisite in the use of vengeance was publicity, and this, therefore, gave rise to the necessity of the hue and cry ^ (^clamor) in pursuit of a thief : Will. I. 4: "Si quis latronem sive furem, sine clamore et insecu- tione eius, cui dampnum factum est, ceperit, et captum ultra duxerit, dahit X solid, de henwite, et ad primam divisam faciet de eo justitiam."^ Such offenders, if caught in the act, had no right to the usual term in which to answer, and could be imprisoned im- mediately.^ This procedure is shown by the passage just quoted, where, too, a fine of 10 sol. was imposed for a wrong use of the ligare (" henwite "). Like the summons, the ligare , was an extrajudicial means of bringing the offender before the court. If no resistance were made to the seizure, the accused necessarily made his appearance, and the procedure took its regular course. He might then go to the proof and make denial : — Ink, 28 (Pr.) : " Qui furem ceperit, habeat inde X sol, et rex ipsum furem, et parentes ejus abjurent ei f actionem." § 1 : "Si re- pugnet vel auf ugiat, reus sit witae.'' § 2 : " Si negare velit, abneget secundum modum pecuniae et witae'' Or, if he confessed, and was condemned, he must pay his wergeld, or forfeit his life : — Ine, 12 : "Si fur capiatur, mortem patiatur vel vitam suam were- gildo suo redimat." Withe. 26: "If any one seize a freeman in the very deed, then let the king have power over three things : whether he be slain, or sold over the sea, or free himself with his wergeld." * 1 Sohm says that, "The cry in ancient France was called hu, his (Grimm, Kechts Alt., p. 878)." 2 Cf. Will. I. 50 : " Qui clamore audito insequi supersederit, de sursisa erga regem emendet, nisi se juramento purgare potuerit." 3 Vide Atheist. II. 1, and Sohm, Proc^d. de L. Sal. p. 86, ff * Cf. Henr. 69, § 23 : " Si [servus] in mortificantibus handhabbenda sit, sicut liber moriatur." 286 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDTJEE. But if the supposed thief fled, or offered resistance to the ligare, as was usual from a hope of escape, he might be slain on the spot. The aim of the subsequent procedure was to save payment of the thief's wergeld by the slayer ; ^ to justify his use of summary vengeance : — Ine, 16 : " Qui furem Occident, debet inveritare cum juramento, quod ilium culpabilem et de vita forisfactum occidisset, et non solvat." Ine, 21 : " If any one claim the wergeld of a slain man, he (slayer) may prove that lie killed him as a thief ;^ the kindred or lord of the, slain are not admitted to the proof." ^ § 1 :" If he conceal the deed, and afterward it become known, then the way to the oath is open to the slain man, so that his kindred may purge him." * The claim ex delicto had been already satisfied by the death of the offender.^ It will be necessary now to continue the regular course of the procedure before the court, with both parties present. There was first the litis contestatio, consisting of the solemn charge by the claimant and the confession or denial of the accused, followed by the judgment. The judgment separated the litis contestatio from the proof. The procedure at the first assize was closed by the judgment ; the proof was given at a second assize : — H1.0TH. and Ead. 10 : . . - " so let the man [defendant], if the mat- ter was adjudged, do the other his right in seven days, be it in prop- erty or through an oath." This shows, then, that the proof went on at a term subse- quent to that in which the judgment was given .^ 1 Sohm (p. 88) has well shown that the procedure did not aim at a pursuit of the delict committed by the thief, but at disculpation by the slayer. ' In Ine 35, he swore that he killed him " fugientem." * Cf the Latin text : . . . " et non solvatur ipsius occisi congildonibus vel domino suo." * .Slthelst. II. 11 : "Dictum est de illo, qui culpam exigit pro fure occiso, ut eat se tertio, et duo sint de cognatione vel tribu patris, tertius de cognatione matris, et jurent, quod in cognato suo nullum furtum erat pro quo ritae suae reus esset ; et eant alii cum xii, et superjurent eum in contaminationem, sicut ante dicebatur." » Sohm, p. 89. ^ Cf. Lex Alam. 36, § 3 : " In uno enim placito mallet causam suam : in secundo si Tult jurare, juret secundum constitutam legem. Et in primo mall» THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUBE. 287 The procedure was begun by the fore-oath of the plaintiff, who thus declared his bona fides in solemn form;^ but, like the fore-oath sworn in the Anefang of the movables proce- dure, it did not act as proof. It prevented malicious men from making false and baseless accusations, and required that the existence of a real offence should be shown as a base for further proceedings.^ Employed not only in civil but criminal actions, in both the fore-oath must contain the chief facts of the allegation ; this was the case in the action for debt^ and stolen property,* and, on the other hand, where the kindred claim the wergeld of a slain man on the ground that he was not a thief : — ^THELST. II. 11 : " Dictum est de illo, qui culpam exigit pro fure occiso, ut eat se tertio, et duo sint de cognations vel tribu patris, tertius de cognatione matris, et jurent [in the fore-oath] quod in cog- nato suo nullum furtum erat pro quo vitae suae reus esset." The oath given as proof at the second term is then described by the remainder of the section, viz. : — " Et eant alii cum XII, et superjurent eum in contaminationem, sicut ante dicebatur." The fore-oath, which seems to have played the same part as the obsolete "tangauo" of the Lex Salica,^ was a regular part of the procedure, never to be omitted : — spondeat sacramentales, et fldeiussores praebeat, sicut lex habet, et wadium suum donet Misso Coniitis vel illi Centenario qui praeest, ut in constitute die aut legitime juret, aut si culpabilis est, componat, ut per negleetum non evadat." Vide also K. Maurer, Krit. Uebers. V. p. 204. 1 Cf. Lex Baiuv. Deer. Tags. (De Pop. Leg.) VI.: . . . "dicat, qui quaerit debitum : Haec mihi iniuste abstulisti, quae reddere debes, et cum tot solidis componere. Reus vero contra dicat : Non hoc abstuli, nee compouere debeo. Iterata voce requisitor debiti dicat : Extendamus dexteras nostras ad iustum indicium Dei. Et tunc manus dexteras uterque ad coelum extendat." 2 A clear example of its nature is shown by a provision that the material evidence of a wound shown to the court dispensed with the fore-oath. Henr. 94, § 5 : " Si vulnus fiat alicui, et accusatus neget, se [defendant] sexto juret sine praejuramento, quia sanguis et vulnus ipsum forage praevenerunt." 8 Vide supra, p. 193, and Arch. X. 10. * Vide supra, p. 208, and Anh. X. 2. 6 Vide Sohm, p. 95. 288 THE AITGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDtTEE. ^THELST. II. 23, § 2 : " Et persequatur omnis homo compellatio- nem suam praejuramento." Cn. II. 22, § 2 : " And let no fore-oath ever be omitted." ^ The fore-oath could be sworn singly,^ or with oath-helpers, and had the same forms as the subsequent oath in proof ; it corresponded to this last, and was simple or triple, fractum, non-fractum, planum or observatum, accordingly : — Cn. II. 22, § 1 : . . . " et inducatur simplex lada, i.e., purgatio, sim- plici praejuramento, triplex lada triplici praejuramento." § 2 : "Si taynus habeat credibilem hominem ad antejuramentum pro eo, sit. Si non habeat, ipse taynus causam suam praejuret." ' In answer to the fore-oath, the accused must either confess or deny ; he could have no positive assertions to establish by way of exceptions, as in the procedure of movables. Then followed the judgment. In Roman law the judgment decided the dispute between the litigants on the ground whether the claim was rightly founded or not, and after the hearing of evidence. The Ger- man judgment, on the contrary, did not close the judicial procedure, but was given lefore the hearing of proof. " The former decides that the claim of the plaintiff is, or is not, materially founded ; the latter that the claim and counter- claim are relevant or not, from the procedural point of view. It condemns the accused who confesses to pay the fine, or the accused who denies, to furnish proof."* So that the judg- ment was as a rule pronounced against the defendant. Apart from the presiding officer of the court, the judgment was theoretically given by the whole assembly ; but, practically, and from convenience, often by a chosen number of "ju- dices : " ^ — 1 Vide Will. I. 14 ; Henr. 64, § 9 ; 66, § 8 ; Anh. I. 6. 2 It seems very doubtful whether the accused also could have given a fore- oath when we tliink of its nature and aim. But vide Sohmid, p. 579, for the very scanty authorities. 8 Cf. Anh. V. 3. * Sohm, p. 90. Cf L. Sal., 56 : " Rachine burgii judicaverunt, ut aut ad ineo ambularet aut fldera de composicione faceret." * Vide North American Review, July, 1874, p. 243. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PROCEDUEB. 289 Hene. 5, § 5: "Judices sane non debent esse, nisi quos impetitus (accused) elegerii ; ' nee prius audiatur vel judicetur, quam ipsi eli- gantur ; et qui electis consentire distulerit, nuUus ei communicet, donee obtemparet." Nor could it be said that this was a provision only arising from the influence of Norman law, as is shown by the earlier Anglo-Saxon laws : — Anh. I. 3 : " Postea vel coactus rectum faciat, qui antea gratis noluit. Duodecim lahmen, i.e., legis homines, debent rectum discernere Walis et AngHs, VI Walisci et VI Anglici ; et perdant omne quod suum est, si injuste judicent, vel se adlegient, quod rectius nescierunt." JEthelr. III. 13 : " Et judicium stet, uhi tayni consenserint ; si dissideant, stet quod ipsi VIII dicent ; et qui supervicti erunt ex eis, reddat unusquisque VI dimidias marcas." ^ The language of the sources has no reference to a presiding officer when speaking of the "judices" and the judgment. The provision of JEthelred III. 13, moreover, has reference to the same body mentioned in Henr. 5, § 5, above ; for the latter is completed by a succeeding section, as follows : — Henk. 5, § 6 : " Quodsi in judicio inter partes oriatur dissensio, de quibus certamen emerserit, vinoat sententia plurimorum." ' The "judices" were taken from the "best of the county," but probably acted under the direction and advice of the presiding officer, who was supposed to be conversant with all the old customs.* They were under obligations to render justice, and the many provisions for clearing themselves of an unjust judgment by an oath to their ignorance proves, as a rule, their unprofessional character.^ An example of their ' Cf. Henr. 33, § 5 : " Judices sane non debent esse nisi quos impetitus ele- gerit." 2 It seems hardly necessary to resort to the explanation which Briinner (Schwurg. pp. 403, 404) has given, in order to show that it did not refer to the existence of a jury. 8 Cf. also Henr. 31, § 2. * Anh. in. 4, § 4 : " Videat qui scyram tenet, ut semper sciat, quae sit antiqua terrarura institutio vel populi consuetudo." * Edg. III. 3 : " Et judex, qui injustum judicium judicabit alicui, det regi CXX sol., nisi jurare audeat, quod rectius neacivit, et admanniat scyrae praesul emendam illam ad manum regis." Cf. Cn. 11. 15, § 1 ; Will. I. 13, &c. 19 290 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUBE. use, as representatives of tlie whole body o£ the judicial assembly, is to be found in a case given in the Appendix (No. 32) ; having made an unjust judgment, they were re- quired to purge themselves, as above, but failed. The judgment, therefore, condemned the accused who confessed, to pay the fine, or prove his innocence. In either case he must give pledge for the fulfilment of the judgment. The plaintiff could demand security [vadium recti] for the defendant's answer at the appointed term, and for the pay- ment of aU assessments made by the judgment. ^ The gen- eral expression " vadium recti " therefore included both the meaning of a pledge ^ " de judicio sisti " and " judicatum solvi," and played the same part in Anglo-Saxon procedure as the "judicial fides facta" of Sohm^ in the Lex Salica. The first mention, and the character of the mortgage security, a variety of the formal contract, has been already given.* Its office in the procedure is described by : — Ine, 8 : " Si quis sibi rectum roget coram aliquo scirmanno vel alio judice et habere non possit, et accusatus ei vadium recti dare nolit, emendet XXX sol. et infra VII noctes faciat ei recti dignum." Henr. 34, § 4 : " Vadium affirmandi vel contradicendi judicium m. redditione debet dari." ^ 1 Vide Henr. 52, § 1 (as summarized by Allen) : " 1. Whoever is impleaded, at the suit of the king, by one of his judges, must give vadiitm recti, i.e., security that he will answer the charge, and make good the damage, that may be awarded against him. 2. If he were not summoned to appear, and came not on that account, he must give the above-mentioned security, and find bail, if required. 3. But if he were legally summoned, and the day of trial fixed, he must answer without delay, if required by the judge, or lose liis cause. 4. If he refuse to give the security required, after it has been three times demanded, he is guilty of overseunessae, and may be detained in custody till he finds bail or gives satisfaction : ' maxime si judicatum sit de vadio, si de capitalibua agatur in eo.' " 2 Vide Schmid, p. 644. 3 Proc^d. de L. Sal., p. 105, ff. 1 Hloth. & Ead. 8. Vide supra, pp. 190, 191. ^ Henr. 61, § 17 : " Quando autem aliquis inplaeitatur sine domino suo, nisi de illis sit, in quibus statim oporteat responded, ut de furto, de incendio, de murdro, de hamsocna, et capitalibus, terminum quaerat ac re.spectum (postpone- ment), donee dominum suiim habeat secundum rectum ; et iterum, si opus est, vadium det, et plegios (bail) mittat." Cf Will. I. 3; Henr. 51, § 5; 67, §§ 6, ?• 62, §3. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PROCEDTJKB. 291 As a formal contract, the "vadium recti" could not only be employed in the form of mortgage, but also of bail (^fide- jussio, Burgschaft) ; and although the relatives of the accused were not his legal securities, it was most natural that they should undertake the pledge ^ : — Ine, 62 : " When ^ a man is charged with an offence, and he is compelled to give pledge, and has not himself aught to give for pledge, then goes another man and gives his pledge for him,' as he may be able to arrange, on condition that he pass under his hand,* until he [defendant] can free himself from the pledge ; but, if afterward one accuse him [defendant] again, and he is compelled to give pledge, and he who before gave pledge will not be answerable for him, and he [second plaintiff] take possession of him, so let him lose the pledge which he before gave." If the accused fled, the pledgeor must pay the indemnifica- tion and the offender's wergeld to the king, or, as the case might be, the " wite " to whom it belonged.^ The Mercian law gave a respite to the pledgeor of one month in which to bring the defendant to court ; if he could not do so, he could swear that he did not know the defendant was a thief at the time he made the pledge and establish his hona fides, but was not relieved from making compensation.^ If the accused gave this pledge, the means of satisfaction was in the hands of the plaintiff; but the accused was often a delinquent. If from inability the defendant could not give security or bail, he must go to prison : — 1 Edw. II. 3; JBthelst. IL 8; Henr. 8, § 4. 2 Cf . the rubric and first sentences of the Latin text : " De accusato pro delicto et iterum fuit accusatus. 62. Quando aliquls. . . . nee habet aliquid ad dandum ante certamen." 8 Vide Alfr. 1, § 8; .^thelr. I. 1, § 7. * The terms under which the defendant passed into the control of the fide- jussor are given in : — Henr. 89, § 3 : " Liber qui se vadii loco in alterius potestate commiserit, et ibi constitutus dampnum aliquod cuilibet fecerit, qui eum in locum vadii susce- pit, aut dampnum solvat, aut hominem in mallo productum dimittat, perdens simul debitum, propter quod eum in vadio suscepit; et qui dampnum fecit, demissus, juxta qualitatem culpae, cogatur emendare." * ^theh-. III. 6; Cn. II. 30, § 6. « WiU. L 3. 292 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDTJBE. Edw. II. 3, § 2 : "Si neutrum habeat, nee pecuniam suam nee alium plegium, tunc aervetur ad judicandum." Cn. II. 35 (Pr.) : " Si quia amicis destitutus vel alienigena ad tan- tum laborem venerit, ut plegium non habeat, in prima tihle, i.e., aecu- satione, ponatur in carcanno, et ibi sustineat, donee ad Dei judieium eat." ^ If, however, the accused were contumacious, he brought upon himself graver penalties, finally crowned by outlawry. Refusal three times to obey the summons, as said, was pun- ished by the fine of the " overseunesse," and then judgment was made by the tribunal condemning the accused. The law of -Sthelstan (II. 20) quoted above,^ which treats of this procedure, gives no hint of any judgment intervening between the defaults and the seizure. But in rehearsing the same procedure of default, it is said by : — Will. I. 47 : " Si quia malam habens famam et de infidelitate rec- tatus tertio vocatua non eomparet, quarto die ostendunt summonitores ires defaltas et adhuc aummonitionem habeat, ut plegios inveniat et juri pareat. Quodsi nee aie eopiam aui feeerit, judicetur aive vivus sive mortuus." * This then shows that the plaintiff with the witnesses of the summons must prove the three separate acts of summons, which had been disregarded ; and repeat the act once again. Then judgment was declared against the absentee : — Henr. 50 : " Si quis a domino vel praelato sue de nominatis plaei- tis secundum legem inplacitatus, ad diem condictum non venerit, omnium placitorum, de quibus nominatim inplacitahatur, incurrit emen- dationes, nisi competens aliquid respectaverit.'' That is, judgment was made condemning the absent defend- ant to pay the fine. Although there is no express mention of the judgment in this last passage, it is made in another law bearing on this very point : — 1 Edw. and Guth. 3 (Pr.) : "Et si quis ordinatus vel furetur, vel praelietur, vel purjuret, vel fomicetur, emendet sicut factum erit, sic weram, sic witam, sic lahslit, et erga Deum saltern emendet juxta sanctorum canonum doctri- nam ; et plegium facial inde, vel miltatur in carcere." Cf . Edw. and Guth. 4, § 2 ; Cn. IIL13; Henr. 66, § 5. 2 Supra, p. 284 8 Tide Cn. II. 25 (Pr.). THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOCBDUBE. 293 Henr. 53, § 1 : . . . " et si de nominatis et susceptis placitis pulsa- batur, nisi competens aliquid iatervenerit, reus omnium judicetur." The delinquent who still held out, and would not give satisfaction, or pay the fine of the overseunesse, was pursued by seizure of his property. At this point is to be found a striking comparison with the earlier law of the Salian Franks. The criminal procedure of the Lex Salica proved inade- quate, in that, only if the accused were willing to make the promise to fulfil the judgment, could the accuser receive any compensation through the execution ; and, if the offender fell under the ban of outlawry, it was profitless to the claimant ; that is, the accused had power to decide whether the claim- ant should have satisfaction or not. The Salian criminal procedure aimed not at procuring so many solidi for the plain- tiff, but at bringing the offender under the control of law ; so that a refusal to give satisfaction was followed not by a procedure of execution but of contumacy.-' The Anglo- Saxon law had reached a higher development. Outlawry was, from the growth of the theory of punishments, a last and severe means of direct coercion, which befell the recalci- trant offender ; and the procedure, instead of aiming solely, in case of a refusal to give satisfaction, at bringing the offender under the control of law, also aimed at giving the claimant pecuniary compensation. This is the clear expres- sion of every provision relating to contumacy : — ^THELST. II. 20, § 1 : " Si tunc [i.e., after judgment against the delinquent] etiam rectum facere nolit, nee overhyrnessam reddere, eant seniores homines omnes, qui ad eam curiam obediunt, et capiant quicquid habet, et eum mittant per plagium." Cn. II. 25 (Pr.) : . . . " videatur qui quarto placito mittantur ad eum, et inveniat tunc plegios, si possit; si non possit, exsuperetur [seized] siont alter utrum poterit, sive vivus sive mortuus, et capiatur omne quod kaiebit." 1 Sobm, Proc^d. de L. Sal. p. 122. Sohm also says, in regard to the previous discussions on outlawry : " That which, looking from the standpoint of the composition system, is to us the procedure of contumacy, would be, looking from the standpoint of the ancient criminal system, only the execution of the primitive procedure of delict. The Jides facta would be necessary, in order to replace the ancient and severe execution by a new and much milder form, which aimed at recovering the fine." 294 THE ANGL0-SAX02Sr LEGAL PROCBDTJBB. Hene. 53, § 1 : " Quod si [after judgment] overseunessam dare et rectum facere renuerit, mittantur qui de suo capiant, et eum, si opus est, per plegium ponant. Si neque sic satisfecerit, totum quod habet amiserit, et idem capiatur, nisi plegios inveniat." Every effort was made by which property should be found in payment of the " overseunesse " and the plaintiff's claim. If the property did not suffice, he was forced to find bail for the amount. That this was the purpose of the procedure is shown by the section of Cnut succeeding to the one just quoted : — Cn. II. 25, § 1 : " Si solvatur repetenti capitale suum ; reliqui habeat dominus ejus dimidium, hundretus dimidium." ^ That the procedure of contumacy in Anglo-Saxon law aimed also at rendering satisfaction to the accuser, there can be no doubt. Further contumacy and resistance to the law, as before laid down, could be met by summary punishment : — -ffii'HELST. II. 20, § 5 : " Si plegium non habeat, idem capiatur." •^ § 6 : "Si repugnet, occidatur, nisi aufugiet." Hene. 53, § 1 : " Si repugnet et cogatur, occidatur." Flight, then, forfeited all right to protection, and he be- came ipso facto an outlaw : — ^THELST. II. 20, § 8 : " Si aufugerit, et aliquis eum interim firma- bit, werae suae reus sit, nisi se possit idoneare, secundum ipsius pro- fugi weram, quod eum nesciehat fiyman, id est fugitivum esse." Hene. 53, § 1 : "Si evaserit et aufugerit, pro utlago repvtetur." Leaving the outlaw, the procedure of proof by the accused at the second term will be now treated. It will be necessary, first, to determine to whom the proof was awarded ; and, next, to explain the system of proof itself. (a) The judgment in criminal actions having, as a rule condemned the accused either to pay, or prove his innocence, • Cf. Cn. 33 : " Si quis homo sit, qui omni populo sit incredibilis, adeat prae- positus regis et ponat eum sub plegio, qui ad rectum habeat eum omnibus acaisan- tibus." § 1 : "Si plegium non habeat, occidatur et cum dampnatis mittatur ; si quis eum defendere praesumat, sint ambo unius recti digni." Vide, also, Ine, 74, for a case of vengeance when no satisfaction could be gained from lord or kin of a slave. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDXTRB. 295 the proof, therefore, on natural principles of equity, was usually awarded to the defendant. But in certain cases the plaintiff went to the proof : — When a criminal caught in the act was pursued -with the hue and cry, and brought before the court with evident marks of crime about him, the proof was awarded not to the accused, but to the accuser, who must swear with oath- helpers as to the guilt of the accused. Von Bar^ has ex- plained this and other cases on a principle of presumptions (^praesumptiones juris et de jure) of the defendant's guilt, which under the circumstances seemed most probable. To allow the defendant, under solemn forms, to explain his inno- cence, when he was presumably guilty, was mere nonsense ; and, therefore, the proof went most naturally to the plaintiff, who asserted the defendant's guilt, and whose oath was streng- thened by irreproachable men. But if, on the contrary, the accused had immediately given himself up, it was the pre- sumption from this act that he was innocent, and so he went to the proof himself.^ In the earlier law, the possibility of a false accusation in regard to a criminal caught in the act was never considered, and it was reserved to the later German law to permit to swear, e.g., that the object claimed to be stolen had been placed on his person by force ; but, even in that case, the accused must not have kept the object concealed, that his neighbors might have no reason to suspect his truth. Against Kostlin and others. Von Bar has shown that Ger- man law did conceive of the Roman distinctions of casus and culpa.^ That one should be held always answerable for injuries inflicted by what might be in itself a meritorious act, was a principle too barbarous even for the rude ideas of justice among the ancient Germans ; but still the doer was in many cases forced to make compensation for such an act. Where was the line to be drawn ? Had the doer exercised that due care which would be expected of an intelligent man, he was free from culpa; and this was decided according to the prob- abilities of casus or culpa in the act. ' Beweisurtheil des germ. Proc. pp. 58-92. 2 The oath was then sworn as in Ine, 28, § 2. s p. 84, ff 296 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUEB. (1) If the injury happened from the disobedience of cer- tain fixed police regulations, the doer was held responsible : — Ine, 40 : " Ceorles weortSig, i.e. rustic! curtillum, debet esse clausum aestate simul et hyeme. Si disclausum sit, et introeat alicujus vicini sui capitals per suum apertum, nihil inde recipiat, sed educat et patia- tur dampnum suum." The owner of the cattle could not be held for damages, inasmuch as the cattle would have inflicted no injury had the close been properly protected, and no culpa could be shown. Likewise, if a meadow held in common had been left open by some of the parties, these must indemnify the others, if cattle came in and inflicted any damage.' But if the meadow had been properly protected, and cattle had broken through the hedge, the owner of the cattle must be held responsible for their dangerous habits : — Ine, 42, § 1 : " Si vero sit animal, quod sepes frangat, et quolibet introeat, et dominus, cujus animal est, nolit ipsum custodire, vel non possit, capiat hoc in cujus acra obviabit, et occidat, et recipiat agen- friga corium ejus et carnem, et patiatur de cetero." ^ Also, if strange swine were found in another's mast, in- demnification was immediately taken by seizure of the swine.^ (2) Acts not forbidden in themselves, but possibly dan- gerous, such as shooting a weapon or driving a wagon, must be accompanied with the necessary care, to be deter- mined from the nature of each special case. Inasmuch as the procedure never allowed an examination of the objective* truth, the judgment in each case was assigned upon the prima facie presumption for or against culpa. And, as before ■ explained, if there were a presumption of the defendant's ' Ine, 42 (Pr.)- For other regulations, compare Ine, 29, and Alfr. 36 (Pr.) : " Inventum est etiam, si quis habeat lanceam super humerum suum, et homo asnasetur vel inpungatur, solvat weram ejus sine wita." § 1 : "Si ante oculos asnaset, reddat werame jus, et si possibilitatis accusetur in eo facto, purget se juxta modum witae." § 2 : " Et ita remanent de wita, si acutum lanceae sit altlus tribus digitis quam cuspis ; ei equaliter ferantur acies et cuspis, sine culpa repu- tetur." 2 Cf. Alfr. 24. The Sachsenspiegel made the owner of a pond responsible for damages from its overflowing. 3 Ine, 49. THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PBOCBDURE. 297 culpa, the plaintiff went to the proof with oath-helpers, and simply swore to his conviction of the defendant's guilt ; if not, the defendant swore ^ without oath-helpers. Where intention was charged against the defendant, the stronger guaranty of oath-helpers was required ; for while, on the one hand, a neighbor would be slow to swear in regard to a fatal accident that the accused did not act with carelessness, on the other, he could easily swear that the chief-swearer, whose character was known to him, would not have intentionally struck a death blow. (S) In regard to the means of proof, it has been said already that wager of battle was unknown to Anglo-Saxon law ; therefore it remains to speak only of the oath and ordeal. Since the witness-oath, sworn as to what was seen with the eyes and heard with the ears, was only possible, under the pecuharities of the German procedure, within the narrowest limits, resort must be had to the oath with oath-helpers. The whole power of the oath-helpers, as seen from their designation as conjuratores, consacramentales, compurgatores, lay in the fact that they swore to the credibility of their chief and the purity of his oath, and that their numbers and stand- ing strengthened his assertion.^ This is seen from the decla- ration of the oath-helper, as given in : — Anh. X. 6 : " By the Lord, the oath is pure and not false, which N. swore.'' Nor could any one as chief-swearer take the oath who was not of good repute, or had ever before sworn a false oath.' As to oath-helpers, all German codes required that they should be full-grown and irreproachable men (" getry we men," " &8-wyrSe ") ; and from these the oath derived its strength: Henr. 66, § 9 : " xxx consacramentales habeat, quorum nullus in aliquo reculpandus sit." * 1 e.g., The owner of a house, built for him by another which had fallen upon and injured the plaintiff, went to the proof without oath-helpers. ^ While the witnesses made oath as to the truth of the plaintiff's assertion. 2 Edw. I. 3 : " Item diximus de illis hominibus, qui perjuri fuerint, si mAni- feetum sit, vel eis juramentum fregerit, vel overcythed fuerit, ut deinceps nou sint digni juramento sed ordalio." Cf . Ine, 46 ; Atheist. II. 25 ; Cn. II. 36. * Cf. Wihtr. 23; .Sthelr. III. 4; Cn. II. 30, § 7; Will. L 14, 15; Anh. 1. 1. 298 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUEB. Rank, moreover, gave additional strength ; for a thane could have the effect of six ceorls.^ That the oath -helpers were not necessarily taken from the kindred of the chief-swearer is proved from the use of words and numerous authorities, as well as the essence of the oath system.2 Although the oath-helpers swore only to the purity of their chiefs oath, it is known that a possibility of knowledge on the part of the co-swearer was also considered of importance.^ Therefore, because they must also be in a position to judge of their chiefs character, the oath-helpers were naturally taken from his neighbors,* peers,^ or kins- men.* The number'^ of oath-helpers varied according to the importance of the charge, the property in question, the nature of the crime, the amount of the hot, wite, and the wergeld, and the personal trust enjoyed by the swearer. In the earlier laws, the oath was reckoned on a scale of " hides," which remains quite obscure, since it afterwards totally dis- appeared.^ In Anglo-Saxon law, the chief-swearer could choose the oath-helpers;^ but in certain cases they were "named" by the magistrate, and the swearer was allowed a choice from the whole number : — Edw. I. § 4 : . . . " nominentur ei sex homines, . . . et adquirat ex illis sex unum pro animali," ^^ etc. 1 Tide supra, pp. 216, 217; and Anh. VIII. 1, 2; Henr. 64, §§ 2, 3. 2 The Anglo-Saxon expressions for oath-helpers are only cewda, cewdaman, or midstanda'S. » Vide K. Maurer, Krit. Ueber. V. p. 204. * Edw. I. 1, § 4: "Nominentur ei sex homines de eadem geburscipa, in qua ille residens est." Cf. Hloth. and Ead. 5 ; .Sithelst. II. 9. ' Vide Wihtr. 19, 21 ; Alfr. and Guth. 3 ; ^thelr. VIH. 19, 20 ; Cn. I. 5 (Pr.), § 1 ; Anh. II. 52, 53 ; Henr. 64, § 2 : . . . " jurabunt, oongruo numero consacra- mentalium, et qualitate parium suorum retenta." 6 Henr. 64, § 4 : " Qui ex parte patris erunt, fracto juramento, qui ex ma- terna cognatione erunt, plane se Sacramento juratoros advertant." Vide, also, Anh. II. 51. ' Anglo-Saxon laws give various numbers of oath-helpers, as : 1, 2, 3, t, 5, 6, 12, 24, 36, 48. 8 For a discussion of the question, vide Schmid, p. 564. 9 JEthelr. I. 1, § 2 ; Cn. H. 30, § 7, 44. 10 Cf. ..ffithelst. n. 9; Cn. II. 65; WiU. 1. 14, 15; Henr. 66, § 6. The choice THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDirRE. 299 The Anglo-Saxons distinguished between the " ungecoren S.8," sworn with oath-helpers chosen by the swearer him- self, and the "cyre-§,8,"i sworn with oath-helpers chosen by the magistrate ; 2 and Schmid has deduced the rule, that, whenever the oath must be sworn collectively, the chief- swearer had the entire selection ; otherwise, the magistrate " named " them. The force of such a medium of proofs is more apparent when we consider the simple and public lives of the ancient Germans, and the opportunity each enjoyed of forming a safe judgment of the character of another ; that, moreover, a cer- tain time elapsed between the assize in which judgment was rendered and the assize in which the proof must be given ; and that the oath-helper might refuse to swear, if he were not satis- fied of his chiefs truth. Therefore, while a witness swore to the objective truth, and must state the fact as he with his eyes saw and his ears heard, under an appeal to the Deity, whether this operated for or against his chief, the oath-helper never swore against his chief; nor could any one swear to his chief's want of truth. Therefore, with Maurer, it is best to decide that the oath with oath-helpers was a means of proof of considerable power in that early society, and that its raison cCitre need not be sought by Rogge,* Gemei- by the magistrate and by the swearer are both combined in Anh. II. 61. But that the oath-helpers were designated by the court, vide JEthelr. lit. 13 : . . . . "praepositus nominet ipsam ladam," and Henr. 66, § 9. Sometimes they were chosen by lot. Henr. 66, § 10. 1 K. Maurer (Krit. Ueber. V. p. 199) holds that the "rima'S" was the equiv- alent of " cyre-iiS ; " but Schmid (p. 566) does not state clearly what the "ri- ma'S" was. 2 V!de Schmid, p. 566. ' Maurer, however, points out that the very reason why those to whom the chief-swearer was best known were chosen, was an argument against the force of the proof, in that they might be led by p^sonal motives to give a false oath in his favor. But, whUe we must not gauge the simple living in the early time by the distrustful measure of to-day, it must be admitted that the force of the proof varied with the standards of different times and places. * The oath-helpers, as viewed by Eogge (Ueber das Gerichtswesen der Germanen), were not a means of proof, but came into existence from the right of vengeance and feud. The peace-breaker, who had the choice between paying the composition and bearing the feud, was allowed, if innocent, to present him- 300 THE A2JGL0-SAX0N LEGAL PKOCEDUKB. ner,^ Waitz,^ and others, through ingenious speculations. From this point of view, it will now be easy to expUin the position occupied by the ordeal in the Anglo-Saxon proce- dure, and the rules by which it was governed. As the witness-proof was insufficient, and the procedure needed the oath with oath-helpers, so, when this last means of proof became inadequate, a last resort lay in the judg- ment of God, or the ordeal. Of heathen origin,^ although later encrusted with ecclesiastical forms, the ordeal was held to be a means similar to an oracle, by which God, in cases which did not allow further decision, would miraculously self with his comrades in the feud, and with them as oath-helpers deny the deed. The oath-lielpers stood on the side of their friend, as they would have done in the feud. Against this, Maurer (1) cites Wilda to show that no such choice was allowed. That it was not a question in regard to oath-helpers as to which party could bring the greatest number of men into the field, but whether the charge was well founded or not. (2) That oath-help was found as far back as the sources go, in civil as well as in criminal cases ; so that it could not have had such an origin there. Kogge here maintains that the criminal procedure was older, and that oath-helpers came into civil cases later; but Maurer (p. 209,ff.) shows this to be untenable, and opposed to the whole meaning of earlier law. 1 Gemeiner (Ueber Eideshiilfe und Eideshelfer des alteren deutschen Eechtes, 10 ff., 37-8) holds that the wager of battle was the original means of showing the purity of an oath. In those cases which were expiable, it had first been replaced by the oath-help ; and excluded feud the more fittingly because in the wager of battle each party was originally accompanied by an attendant, who afterward became the nucleus of the oath-helpers. But feud, compositions, and oath-helpers are found side by side. L. Sax. 18 (Merkel). Moreover, there is no mention of wager of battle in Anglo-Saxon law. 2 Waitz (Deutsche Verfass. I. 210-2, &e.) declares against Rogge, and, with better reason, asserts that oath-helpers were originally taken from the kinsmen ; that, because the kin were obliged to make recompense for the ofiender's wrong, they had a corresponding right, in case the offender was innocent, to prove the charge was unfounded ; and that the right of election, and the choice of those outside the kindred, were a later development. This origin caused the close con- nection which existed between the oath-helpers and the amount of the composi- tion, as if payment were made with oaths instead of money. Maurer argues that this close connection, unfortunately for Waitz, existed in civil cases also ; and therefore another explanation must be given. Moreover, there is no proof that oath-help originally coincided with kinship ; while, on the contrary, although kins- men are mentioned as oath-helpers in the Lex Salica and the earliest laws, so also are those outside the kindred. Therefore, because oath-helpers sometimes came from the kindred, it is not just to conclude that they could come only from that class. s Maurer seems to have shown this fully against Wilda. Krit. tTeber. V. p. 216,fK THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PROCEDITEE. 301 assist the innocent and unveil the truth. And, when per- mitted, it was regarded by the person concerned as a favor ; since it allowed a last, although desperate, possibility of gaining a suit already lost.^ The three varieties of ordeal in Anglo-Saxon law were those of fire, water, and the morsel. The candidate must fast three days, and was then led by the priest to the church, where mass was celebrated.^ Before the communion was given him, the priest urged the candidate to a confession, if he were guilty. If silent, the priest then administered the communion to him. Before the ordeal of fire or water, of which the -accuser had the choice,* was recited the adjuratio. In the ordeal of cold water, holy water was prepared by the priest before mass, and taken to the place of ordeal. Having given the holy water to the candidate to drink, the priest recited the adjuratio, which adjured the Deity to take the innocent within the waters, but to cast the guilty forth from them. The accused was then disrobed, kissed the Bible and crucifix, was sprinkled with holy water, and thrown into the water. If the person sank, he was innocent ; if he floated, guilty. For the ordeal of fire and hot water, the same number of men from each side shall be present in the church where the fire is lighted. These men, who must have fasted and have abstained from their wives that night, must stand on each side of the space. Into this the candidate steps, and, grasp- ing the hot iron, carries it across the floor nine feet distant. The hand is then covered, and opened again in three days : if the wound had festered and showed bloody matter (janiea erudescens}, the accused was guilty; if he was uninjured, his innocence was proven. For a single ordeal, the iron weighed one pound ; for a three-fold ordeal, three pounds. In the ordeal of hot water, the hand was plunged into the water for a stone hanging by a rope ; then the arm was cov- ered and opened, as in the ordeal of hot iron. In a single 1 Maurer, Krit. Uebersch. V. p. 215. ' The forms are given at great length in Anh. XVII. 8 JEthelr. III. 6: Anh. XIIL 302 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCBDTJEB. ordeal, the hand was only plunged in as far as the wrist ; in a triple ordeal, to the elbow.^ The ordeal of the morsel, or " corsnsed," seems to have been most used with the clergy.^ A morsel of bread or cheese weighing an ounce was prepared, and, after the usual forms, it was given to the candidate to swallow, if he could. The adjuratio exhorted the Deity to treat the guilty one as follows : — Anh. XVIL, III. : " Fac eum, domine, in visceribus angustari, ejusque guttur conclude, ut panem vel caseum istum, in tuo nomine sanctificatum, devorare non possit hie, qui injuste juravit." If the candidate turned pale and trembled, he was held guilty. The general rule for the use of the ordeal is contained in : — Cn. III. 11:" Sed purgatio ignis nuUatenus admittatur, nisi ubi nuda Veritas nequit aliter investigari." The failure of the usual means of proof would be best illustrated by the case of a friendless stranger who had been charged with a crime. Under an accusation such that a sin- gle oath would have been impossible, having, of course, no friends who would swear to his credibility, his only escape from condemnation was through the desperate chance of an ordeal : — Cn. II. 35 (Pr.) : " Si quis amicis destitutus vel alienigena ad tan- tum laborem venerit, ut plegium non habeat, in prima tihle, i.e., accu- satione, ponatur in carcanno, et ibi sustineat, donee ad Dei judicium eat." » Or, in other cases, when for any reason oath-helpers failed the accused, the ordeal was his only resort: — Will. I. 14: " Quod si [juramentum] defecerit, et jurare cum eo noluerint, defendet se per judicium aquae vel ignis." In fact, the ordeal was a means of strengthening an asser- tion when oath-helpers failed, and served the same office.^ It 1 .ffithelst. n. 23, § 1. 2 Tide Mi\\eti. VIII. 22, 24; Cn. I. 5, § 2. » Cf. Cn. III. 18 ; Henr. 66, § 6. * Schmid, p. 640. THE AiTGLO-SAXON LEGAL PKOCEDUBE. 303 was emploj'ed by perjured men, by those who were not " ^"S- wyrSe," and those who had been "over-sworn";^ and if any one had been charged with crimes of a peculiarly bad character, as killing with burning, treason, or witchcraft.^ Whether a single or threefold ordeal was taken depended on the gravity of the offence. Although forbidden by some German codes, Anglo-Saxon law permitted the slave to go to the ordeal.^ In conclusion, it is possible to find a connection between English law and the primitive institutes of the early period of summary execution. Vengeance existed, after the organi- zation of society, as an instrument of the law, but in varying forms ; since such an act must be justified, if necessary, before a legal tribunal ; as, e.g., the slaying of a thief caught in the act. Also, such vengeance must be free from premedi- tation and cruelty, and no concealment was allowed. But while vengeance was justifiable killing, the opposition to its exercise gave rise to private warfare, or feud, as here used. The attempt was made to restrain this undue exercise of power by the individual, by many decrees ; but they were generally powerless during the Anglo-Saxon period. Yet the most effectual and satisfactory result came through the introduction of the composition system, as early as Ine and Alfred. By the side of vengeance, and closely bound to it, arose the institution of outlawry, founded on the fact that German society was based on the " friS " or peace, and that any peace-breaker became originally " peaceless," and liable to be kiUed by any member of the community. In short, it was an enlarged means of vengeance, acceptable to an arm- bearing people like the Germans. 1 Vide Edw. I. 3; JEthelst. II. 7; VI. 1, § 4; -ffithelr. L 1; III. 3; Cn. H. 22, § 1 ; 30 (Pr.) ; Will. L 14; Henr. 65, § 3; 67, §§ 1, 2. 2 -ffithelst. II. 4, 5, 6, §§ 1, 2; 14, § 1; ^thelr. III. 8; IV. 5, &e. And be- tween Englishmen and Welshmen, it was the regular means of proof (Anh. I. 2, 8). On Sundays and Feast Days it was forbidden (Edw. and G. 9 ; ^thelr. V. 18; VL25; Cn. L 17, &c.). « .Atheist, n. 19; -ffithelr. I. 2; Cn. H. 82. Women also proved their inno- cence by ordeal. Vide Ed. Conf . 19. 304 THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDUEE. But these institutions were mere adaptations of private exertion, and contained no principle of punishment such as is known to the criminal system of to-day, which arose by slow development from the slightest germ. Wilda has made it probable that the earliest stage of the criminal sys- tem, as given in Northern law, was distinguished by the pre- ponderance of outlawry: making the causae majores, which were attended by outlawry, the most numerous ; and the causae minores, for which compensation only could be de- manded, very few in number. The second stage, or the time of the folk-laws, showed a growth of the causae minores, and a consequent diminution of the causae majores, and was dis- tinguished by the preponderating number of expiable offences. By the side of these two systems had existed a third, — that of true punishment, which later, in the third stage, absorbed those of the causae majores which had not become expiable. Outlawry and vengeance did not disappear from the criminal system ; but became punishments of last resort, or only in exceptional cases. Eventually, the system of punishments extended over the composition system also. Anglo-Saxon law was in the midst of the transition from the second to the third stage. Outlawry was the last penalty only of stubborn resistance to the law ; and vengeance was possible, with a few exceptions, only after satisfaction had been asked in vain, or to prevent a crime, or when one caught in the act tried to escape ; but not in se defendendo. The theory of compositions was fully acknowledged, and the punishments increased rapidly after Alfred's time. Of the compositions, a part went to the injured person, and a part to the state. The special price awarded for unjust slaying to the injured persons was the wergeld, which varied in different parts of England, and for the different and com- plex ranks of society in each section ; but the wergeld of the common freeman was equal to or somewhat less than 200 shillings. The procedure was begun with an extrajudicial summons of the individual by the plaintiff, under solemn forms, at sunset ; and the third refusal to heed this summons was pun- THE ANGLO-SAXON LEGAL PEOCEDTOBE. 305 ishable with the overseunesse of 120 shillings; and a similar penalty befell the accuser who would not continue the suit. As in the action for stolen movables, the judicial procedure began with a fore-oath, in order to prevent trivial accusa- tions. This, with the confession or denial of the defendant, was the litis contestatio, and, with the judgment, completed the procedure in the first assize. A short interval elapsed in which the proof might be prepared for the second assize. But, if the condemned did not give pledge to fulfil the judg- ment and made default, he was followed by the procedure of contumacy ; in which the one who would not find pledge, or who fled, suffered confiscation of property, and finally be- came an outlaw. In the assize of proof, the defendant as a rule went to t"he oath with oath-helpers ; but the proof was given to the plaintiff whenever the guilt of the defendant was presumably clear ; as in case of a thief caught in the act, or whenever culpa was apparent. In casus, the defendant swore, and simply explained his innocence. The oath-helpers must be considered to be a real means of proof ; because, although they swore to the purity of the chief-swearer's oath, they were selected from peers, neighbors, and kinsmen, in order that they might be able to judge of the character of their chief. Whenever the swearer was not oath-worthy, a perjurer, " overs worn," or friendless, or when he could not find oath- helpers, he must go to the ordeal either of fire or water ; if of the clergy, to that of the morsel. 20 To Professor F. A. March of Lafayette College, and to Professor F. J. Child of Harvard College, acknowledgment is due for essen- tial assistance in the translation of the Anglo-Saxon Charters in- cluded in this collection. SELECT CASES IN ANGLO-SAXON LAW. No. 1. NoTHHELM, 734-737. Cod. Dip. LXXXn. This is not a siiit at law, but a case in which a church council regu- lates the right of possession to church property, and certifies to the na- ture of the title. Land had been granted to two women, Dunna and her daughter Bucga, for the construction of a monastery. Bucga seems to have died, leaving her mother Dunna sole proprietor. Dunna, on her own death, bequeathed all her land, including the monastery, to her grand-daughter, Hrotwar, entrusting the deeds to the possession of Hrot- war's mother, whose name is not mentioned. When Hrotwar came of age, and demanded possession of the deeds, her mother alleged that they had been stolen. Thereupon the daughter appealed to the church coun- cil, which caused a certified statement of the case to be made out and delivered to her for her protection. Gloeiosissimus Mercensium rex Aethelred, cum comite suo, subre- gulo Huuicciorum Oshero, rogatus ab eo, terram xx cassatorum iuxta fluuium, cui uocabulum est Tillath, duabus sanctimonialibus, Dunnaa uidelicet et eius filiae Bucgan, ad construendum in ea monasterium, in ius ecclesiasticum sub libera potestate, pro uenia facinorum suorum condonauit, propriaeque manus subscriptione banc eorum donationem firmauit. Praefata autem Dei famula Dunne, constructum in prae- ^THELBED, most glorious king of the Mercians, with his ealdor- man Oshere, under-king of the Hwicci, at his request, for the pardon of his own sins, granted twenty hides of land, near the river Tillath, to two holy women, — namely, Dunna and her daughter Bucga, — to hold in free possession, according to church right, for the purpose of constructing a monastery thereon ; and he confirmed this donation by the subscription of his own hand. Now, the aforesaid servant of God, 310 SELECT CASES IN dicto agello monasterium, cum agris suis nee non et cartulam descrip- tionis agri, cui tunc sola ipsa praeerat, filiae, nimirum filiae suae, in possessionem, ad dominum migratura largita est. Sed quia haec in paruula adhuc aetate erat posita, cartulam conscripti agri, necnon et omnem monasterii procurationem, quoad usque ilia ad maturiorem peruenisset aetatem, matri illius maritatae conseruandam iniunxit. Quae cum cartulam reddi poposcisset, ilia reddere nolens, furtu hanc sublatam respondit. Quo tandem omni negotio ad sanctam sacerdo- talis concUii synodum perlato, decreuit omne uenerabile concilium, cum reuerentissimo archiepiscopo Nothelmo, hanc cartulam donatio- nis, vel regum vel supradictae Dei famulae Dunnan, manifestissime describi, praefataeque Abbatissae Hrotuuari reddi, eiusque possessio- nem monasterii firmissimam esse ; damnato nimirum eo, atque anathe- matizato synodi sacratissimae decreto, qui cartam illam subscriptionis agri primitiuam vel per furta vel quolibet modo fraudulenter auferendo subripere praesumpserit. Atque hoc decernit sacra synodus, ut post obitum eius, sicut ante statutum fuit a senioribus eius, ad episcopalem sedem castrum Uueogernensis liber hie, cum terra, reddatur. Dunna, being about to depart to the Lord, gave the monastery con- structed on the aforesaid land, together with her own lands, and a charter descriptive of the territory over which she then had herself sole authority, to the daughter, namely, of her own daughter, as her possession. But, because she was then of immature age, Dunna en- trusted to the married mother of the child the charter of the afore- said land, and the charge of the whole monastery, until the child should come to maturer years. When she then demanded that the charter should be given up, her mother refused to surrender it, alleg- ing that it had been stolen. All this affair having at last been brought to the holy synod of the sacerdotal council, the whole reverend coun- cil, with the most reverend Archbishop Nothelm, decreed that this deed of grant, both that of the kings and that of the aforesaid servant of God, Dunna, should be most clearly written down, and given to the aforesaid Abbess Hrotwar, and that her possession of the monastery should be the firmest possible ; at the same time declaring him who should have presumed to abstract the original charter, either by theft or by any kind of fraud, to be condemned and anathematized by the decree of the holy synod. And, further, the holy synod decreed, that, after her death, as had been formerly determined by her parents, this charter, together with the land, should be returned to the church at Worcester. ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 311 No. 2. Ctnwtjlp, 759. Cod. Dip. CIV. CoiNHED gave land to Abbot Bectun. Bectun's successor, Catwal, sold the land to Abbot Wintran, giving him a new charter, but retaining the original charter with the signatures. Subsequently a dispute arose between the two monasteries, Wintran's being in possession of the land and the other holding the original charter. The Witan effected a com- promise, and ordered a new charter to be drawn up. . . . QtjAPEOPTER ego Coinredus, pro remedio animae meae et relaxacione piaculorum meornm, aliquam terrae particulam donare de- creuerim uenerabili uiro Bectune abbati, id est xxx. manentes : . . , nam earumdem supradictarum cespites pro ampliori flrmitate euange- lium snperposui, ita ut ab hac die tenendi, habendi, possidendi, in om- nibus liberam et flrmam habeat potestatem. . . . Successor abbatis praenominati Bectuui Catuuali nomine dedit terram supra designatam .XXX. manentium Uuintran abbati pro pecunia sua, et scripsit libellum alium donationis huius atque possessionis suprascriptae, subtraxit ta- men et donationis primae litteras et subscriptiones regum, episcopo- rum, abbatum atque principum, quia inter caetera terrarum suarum testimonia haeo eadem terrae particula conscripta non facile potuit eripi neque adhuc potest : et propterea, decedentibus primis testibus longa . . . Whekbfobe, I, Coinred, for the relief of my soul and the remission of my sins, have decreed to give to the venerable Abbot Bectun a certain parcel of land, that is, thirty hides. . . . Now, for more ample" confirmation, I have placed sods of the aforesaid lands upon the gospels, so that from this day he may have free and firm power in all things, of holding, having, and possessing. . . . Catwal, the successor of the aforesaid Abbot Bectun, gave the aforesaid land of thirty hides to Abbot Wintran for his money, and wrote another charter of this donation and of the aforesaid possession ; but withheld the writings of the first donation, with the signatures of the kings, bishops, abbots, and chief men ; because, from the other testimonies of his lands, the description of this parcel could not easily be detached, and yet cannot be. And, after the death of the first vritnesses, a long 312 SELECT CASES IN deceptatio inter familias duorum monasteriorum orta est et perseverat usque nunc : habebant autem banc terram semper ex quo a praefato abbate primo data est Uuintran successores eius ; et alterius familiae et successores primum libellum, qui manibus praedictorum testium ro- boratur. Iccirco ego nunc atque rex noster caeterique quorum testifl- catio et subscriptio infra notatur, reconciliauimus eos in pace, partim data pecunia, partim iuramento adhibito in testimonium ; ut deinceps successores Uuintran abbatis, id est Eguuald et familia eius quae est in monasterio quod dicitur Tissebiri, cum licentia alterius familiae cui praeest Tidbald abbas, habeant possideantque perpetualiter terram de qua diu altercatio erat : et praesens libellum ego discripsi atque ex- cerpsi ab illo primitus dato Bectuno abbati, concedente scilicet Tid- baldo abbate et familia eius, et dedi Eguualdo abbati, testibus infra notatis consentientibus atque confirmantibus banc scripturam, repro- brantibus autem alia scriptura quae sunt edita de hac terra. Et baec acta sunt ab incarnatione domini nostri Ihesu Christi. DCCLTim. Indictione xii. dispute arose between the families of the two monasteries, which has continued till now ; for the successors of Wintran always retained possession of this land, from the time when it was first given to Win- tran by the aforesaid abbot; and the family and successors of the other retained the first charter, which was confirmed by the hands of the aforesaid witnesses : — Therefore I, now, and our king and the others, whose witness and signature are herein contained, have recon- ciled them in peace ; in part money being given, and in part an oath added in evidence ; so that henceforth the successors of Abbot Win- tran — that is, Egwald and his family, in the monastery which is called Tisbury — with the license of the other family, of which Tidbald is abbot, may have and possess in perpetuity the land so long dis- puted. And, with the consent oi. Abbot Tidbald and his family, I have drawn up and extracted the present charter from that originally given to Abbot Bectun, and have given it to Abbot Egwald; the witnesses herein named consenting to and confirming this writing, and annulling other writings which have been put forth concerning this land. And these things were done in the year 759 from the incarna- tion of Jesus Christ, indiction 12. ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 313 No. 3. Hbathored, 781. Cod. Dip. CXLm. Ofpa complained that the church at Worcester unjustly held land belonging to the inheritance of his kinsman, JEthelbald. A suit was brought before the Witan, ending in a compromise. . . . Quaes ego HeaSoredus, deo dispensante supplex Huicciorum episcopus, insimul etiam cum consensu et consilio totius familiae meae quae est in Uuegema ciuitate constituta, diligentissime scrutans cogi- taui atque de pace uel statu aecclesiastica rimatus sum. Equidem de aliquibus agellis conflictationis quaerulam cum Offano, rege Mercio- rum, dominoque dilectissimo nostro habuimus. Aiebat enim nos, sine iure baereditario propinqui eius, AeSelbaldi scilicet regis, haereditatem sub dominio iniusto habere ; id est, in loco qui dicitur aet Beathum. xc. manentium, et in aliis multis locis ; hoc est, aet Stretforda xxx. cassatos; aet Sture .xxxtiii. Simili etiam uocabulo aet Sture in Usmerum .xiiii. manentium, aet Breodune .xii. in Homtune xvii. cassatorum. Haec autem praefata contentionis causa in sinodali con- ciliabulo demissa in loco qui dicitur aet Bregentforda. Reddidimus quoque illo jam nominato regi OfEan, monasterium illud celeberrimum aet Bafum, sine ullo contradictionis obstaculo, ad habendum, uel etiam, cui dignum duxisset, ad tribuendum ; semperque perfruendum, . . . Wherefoke I, Heathored, by the grace of God humble bishop of the Hwicci, with the advice and consent of all my family in Worcester, diligently inquiring, have meditated and pondered concern- ing the peace and state of the church. We have had a dispute about some lands with Offa, king of the Mercians, and our beloved lord ; for he said that we, without hereditary right, held in our unlawful posses- sion the inheritance of his kinsman. King ^thelbald : that is, at Bath ninety hides, and in many other places ; that is, at Stratford thirty hides ; at Stour, thirty-eight hides ; also at Stour, of the same name, in Usmere, fourteen hides ; at Bredon, twelve hides ; and in Homton, seventeen hides. Now, the aforesaid cause of strife was laid before the synodal council in the place which is called Brentford. We re- stored to the aforesaid King OSa that well-known monastery at Bath, to have, or even to give to whomever he should think worthy, without 314 SELECT CASES IN iustis eius haeredibus libentissime concessimus ; et in australe parte fluminis ibi iuxta quod dicitur Eafen .xxx. cassatos addidimus, quam terrain mercati sumus digno praetio a Cyneuulfo rege Uuestsaexna. Quapropter idem ille praefatus rex Offa, ad reconpensationis satisfac- tionem, et pro unanimitate flrmissimae pacis, praefata loca aet Stret- forda, aet Sture, aet Breodune, in Homtune, aet Sture in Usmerum, extra omni controuersionis et ammonitionis causa, ea libertate, . . . concessit . . . dispute ; and we most willingly granted it to be always enjoyed by his legal heirs. And on the south side of the river near by, which is called Avon, we have added thirty hides, which we bought for a just price from Cynwulf, king of the West Saxons. Wherefore the aforesaid King OfEa, for this consideration, and for the establishment of a firm peace, con- ceded the aforesaid places at Stratford, at Stour, at Bredon, in Horn- ton, and at Stour in Usmere, free from all cause of counter-claim, to our aforesaid church at Worcester, with this liberty. No. 4. Heathoked and Wulpheaed, 789. Cod. Dip. CLVI. Hemele and Duda left their inheritance to their heirs, and, after their death, to the church at Worcester. Wulfheard, one of the heirs, tried to set aside this reversion, and the Bishop of Worcester brought suit before the Witan to prevent his doing so. The Witan decided in favor of the bishop. . . . Anno dominici incarnationis dcc°lxxx°tiiii°- indictione vero XII* qui est annus xxxi. regni ofFan strenuissimi Merc regis fac- tum est pontiflcale conciliabulum in loco famosa qui dicitur celchytJ praesidentib: duob: arcepiS lamberhto scilicet et Hygberhto mediante ... In the year of our Lord's incarnation 789, indiction 12, — which is the thirty-first year of the reign of Offa, most mighty king of the Mercians, — an ecclesiastical council was held in the famous place which is called Caelchyth ; the two archbishops lamberht and ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 315 quoq: offan rege cum uniuersis principibus suis ; ibi inter alia plura aliqua contentio facta est inter heathoredum epiS et Wulfheardum filium Cussan de haeriditate hemeles et dudae quod post obitu suoru nominarent ad weogornacaestre, hoc est intanbeorgas et bradanlege uoluisset ergo uulfheardus ilium agellulum auertere ab ecclesia prae- fata in weogornacaest cum ignorantiae et insipientiae si potuisset. Tunc ille episcopus ilium refutabat cum his testibus qui eorum nomina infra scripta liquescunt coram synodali testimonio. Et aiebat quod ei rectum non fieret uUi alio post se tradere praeter et antedictS ciui- tatem hoc est weogrinacaestor. Et propter eorum prece et amore qui illam terram adquisierunt et ad ecclesiam praefatam dedissent illi sena- tores familiae consentientes fuerunt ut illud custodiret et haberet diem suum. Tunc arc episc simul cum uniuersis prouincialibus episc ita finem composuerunt et reconciliauerunt. ut wulfheardus terram possi- deret tamdiu uiueret et postquam uiam patrum incederet sine aliqua contradictione Uluc ad weogornense ecclesiae terras atq: libellus cum semetipso redderet ubi corpora requiescunt hemeles et dudae. Hygberht presiding, King Offa also taking part with all his chief men. There, among several other disputes, was one between Heathored the bishop and Wulfheard, son of Cussa, about the inher- itance of Hemele and Duda, which, after the death of their heirs, they assigned to Worcester : that is, Inkberrow and Bradley. Wulfheard wished to divert that land from the aforesaid church at Worcester, taking advantage of her ignorance, if he could. Then the bishop refuted him with these witnesses, who inscribe their names in this writing, with the witness of the synod ; and said that it was not right for him to give it after himself to any other than to the afore- said city, — that is, Worcester. And, on account of the prayer and love of those who had acquired this land, and had given it to the aforesaid church, they, the elders of that church, consented that he should keep it, and have it for his life. Then the archbishop, together with all the provincial bishops, made a composition, and reconciled them, so that Wulfheard should possess the land so long as he lived ; and, after he had gone the way of his fathers, without any contra- diction he should restore the land and the charter, with himself, to the church at Worcester, where rest the bodies of Hemele and Duda. 316 SELECT OASES IN No. 5. Offa, 794. Cod. Dip. CLXIV. This is a suit brought by the Bishop of Worcester for lands, of which his church had been forcibly dispossessed. A charter of King ^thelbald was shown, and the land was adjudged to the bishop, and his rights confirmed. . . . CoNTiGiT autem in diebus Offani regis Mercionim quod Bynna, comes regis, sustulit sine recto hanc terram aet Austan .t. manentes, quod AeSelbald rex ante liberauit, et hoc recte pertinebat ad sedem episcopalem in Uuegrin ciuitate. Tunc fuit synodus in loco, qui dici- tur Clofeshoas, anno ab incarnatione Christi .dcc.xc.iiii. regni OfEani .xxxvii. anno. Tunc episcopus HeaJSoredus, cum conscientia totius synodalis concilii referebat, et fiducialiter incunctanterque con- firmauit cum testimonio scripturarum illarum quae AeSelbald rex ante in aeternam libertatem suis processoribus praescripsit. Et tunc rex cum omni consilio sancti concilii consentiebat, quod episcopus prae- fatus salua manu accipiebat in contenditum suam propriam praenomi- natam terram, et hoc cum confirmatione sanctae crucis Christi omnes munierunt, ut firma et infracta permaneat in aeuum. . . . Now, it happened in the days of 0£Ea, king of the Mercians, that Bynna, king's ealdorman, took without right this land at Aston- magna of five hides, which King ^thelbald before freed ; and this rightly belonged to the episcopal see of Worcester. There was then a synod in the place which is called Clovesho, in the year of Christ's incarnation 794, iu the thirty-seventh year of the reign of OfEa. Then Bishop Heathored, with the witness of the whole synod, laid the matter before them, and credibly and without delay confirmed these things with the witness of the charters [of those lands] which ^thel- bald before granted to his predecessors to hold freely for ever. And then the king, with the advice of all the synod, consented that the aforesaid bishop should receive in security the aforesaid land as his own, without dispute. And this all have strengthened with the con- firmation of the holy cross of Christ, that it may remain firm and unbroken for ever. ANGLO-SAXON LA"W. 31^ No. 6. Aechbishop JEthelheakd, 798. Cod. Dip. MXIX. ^THBLBALD, King of Mercia, gave the monastery at Cookham to the church of Dover, and deposited the charters on the altar. Daeiheah and Osbert stole the charters, and gave them to Cenwulf, king of the West-Saxons, who appropriated the lands. Then Ofia, king of Mercia, among other conquests, took Cookham from Cenwulf. After- wards Cenwulf repented, and sent the charters back to Dover. But OfEa kept the lands without the charters, and bequeathed them so to his heirs. Then in a synod at Clovesho, in the second year of the reign of Offa's successor. King Cenwulf of Mercia, the title to Cookham was brought up by Bishop .Slthelheard, and the lands were adjudged to belong to the church at Dover. In settlement with the heirs of Offa, Dover received- Fleet, and gave Cookham with Pectanege to Cynethryth. . . . Ego Aethelhardus larga omnipotentis dei gratia annuente Dorobemensis aecclesiae metropolitanus, cum praestantissimo rage nos- tro Cenulfo, conuocans uniuersos prouinciales episcopos nostros, duces et abbates et cuiuscunque dignitatis uiros, ad synodale concilium in locum qui nominatur Clouesho, . . . prolatae sunt inscriptiones monas- terii quod uocatur Coccham in medium, terrarumque sibi adiacentium ; quod uidelicet monasterium, cum omnibus ad Ulud pertinentibus terris, rex inclytus Merciorum Aethelbaldus aecclesiae saluatoris quae sita est in ciuitate Dorobernia dedit ; utque illius donatio perseuerantior fieret, ex eadem terra cespitem et cunctos libellos praememorati coenobii, per uenerabilem uirum Cuthbertum archiepiscopum misit, et super altare Baluatoris pro perpetua sua salute, poni praecepit. Sed post mortem ... I, ^THELHEAKD, by the grace of omnipotent God archbishop of the church of Dover, with our most illustrious King Cenwulf, con- voking all our provincial bishops and ealdormen and abbots, and men of every rank, to a synod at Clovesho, . . . the charters of the monastery called Cookham, and of the adjacent lands, were pro- duced. This monastery, with all the lands belonging thereto, ..Sthelbald, the renowned king of the Mercians, gave to the Church of our Saviour at Dover ; and, to confirm the donation, he sent by that venerable man. Archbishop Cuthbert, a sod from the same land, and all the charters of the aforesaid monastery, and ordered them to 318 SELECT OASES IN praefati pontiflcis, easdem inscriptiones Daeiheah et Osbertus, qnos idem pontifex alumnos nutriuit, maligno acti spiritu furati sunt, et Cenulfo regi Occidentalium-Saxonum detulerunt; at ille, accipiens statim testimonia litterarum, praedictum coenobium cum omnibus ad illud rite pertiaentibus suis usibus coaptauit, neglectis praenominati archiepiscopi Cuthberti dictis et factis. Item, Bregwinus et lanbertus archiepisoopi per siagulas synodus suas, questi sunt de iniuria aeccle- siae saluatoris illata ; et apud Cenulfum regem Occidentalium-Saxo- num, et apud Offam regem Meroiorum qui uidelicet saepememoratum coenobium Coccham et alias urbes quamplurimas Cenulfo rege abstu- lit, et imperio Merciorum subegit. Tandem Cenulfus rex sera ductus poenitentia, telligrapMa, id est, libellos quos a supradictis hominibus Daeiheab et Osberto iniuste perceperat, cum magna pecunia, aecclesiae Christi in Doroberniam remisit, humillime rogans ne sub tantae au- thoritatis anathemate periclitaretur. Uerum rex Offa praememoratum coenobium Coccham, sicut sine litteris accepit, ita quanto tempore uixit, detinuit, et absque litterarum testimonio suis post se haeredibus reliquit. Secundo autem anno regni Cenulfl facta est synodus sicut supra est praelibatum apud Clouesho ; at ego Aethelhardus . . . libel- be placed on the altar of our Saviour, for his eternal salvation. But, after the death of the aforesaid prelate, Dseiheah and Osbert, whom he had nurtured as sons, led by an evil spirit, stole these charters, and carried them to Cenwulf, king of the West Saxons. But he, at once on receiving the testimony of the charters, appropriated to his own use the aforesaid monastery, disregarding the acts and words of Cuth- bert, the archbishop. Likewise Bregwin and lanbert, iu each of their synods, complained of the injury to the church, both before Cenwulf, king of the West Saxons, and before Oila, king of the Mercians, who wrested the aforesaid monastery of Cookham, and very many other cities, from Cenwulf, and placed them under the power of Mercia. Then King Cenwulf, with late repentance, sent back the charters which he wrongfully received from the aforesaid men, Daeiheah and Osbert, with much money, to the church of Christ at Dover, humbly asking that he be not placed under the anathema. But, as King Offa without charters received the aforesaid monastery of Cookham, so he retained it as long as he lived, and left it without charters to his heirs. And, in the second year of the reign of King Cenwulf, a synod was held, as has been above mentioned, at Clovesho ; and I, ^thelheard, . . . brought to the council the charters of the aforesaid monastery ; and, when they had been read before the synod, they unanimously de- ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 319 los praefati coenobii Coccham, in concilium detulimus ; cumque coram synodo relicti fuissent, omnium uoce decretum est iustum esse ut metro- polis aecclesia saepepraefatum coenobium Coccham, cuius inscriptiones in suo gremio habebat, perciperet, quo sub tanto tempore tarn iniuste spoliata fiierat. Tunc autem placuit mihi Aethelhardo dei gratia archi- sacerdoti et Cynethrythae abbatissae quae eodem tempore saepedicto coenobio praefuit, ac senioribus ex utralibet parte, Cantia scilicet et Bedeforde, ad hoc ibidem congregatis, quatenus ipsa Cynethrytha in regione Cantia daret mihi pro commutatione saepepraefati coenobii, terram centum et decern manentium, sexaginta cassatorum uidelicet in loco qui dicitur Fleote, et triginta in loco qui dicitur Teneham, in ter- tio quoque loco ubi dicitur Creges aewylma, uiginti. Quas scilicet terras olim rex Offa sibi uiuenti conscribere fecit, suisque haeredibus post eum ; et post eorum cursum uitae, aecclesiae quae sita est apud Beodeford consignari praecepit, . . . ut ipsa abbatissa a me percipiet saepe-nominatum coenobium cum suis inscriptionibus ; et ego terras et libellos terrarum illarum quas mihi in Cantia reddit, ab ea accipe- rem, quatenus nulla imposterum inter nos haeredesque nostros et Offae regis surgat controuersia . . . Ego quoque Aethelhardus archie- piscopos concedo Cynithrithae abbatissae monasterium quod situm est in loco qui dicitur Pectanege ad habendum, quod mihi rex plus Egfri- dus haereditario iure possidendum donauit atque conscripsit. creed that it was just that the metropolitan church should recover the aforesaid monastery, whose charters it held in its bosom, and of which it had been despoiled so unjustly and so long. Then I, -ffithelheard, archbishop, and Cynethryth, abbess at that time of the aforesaid monastery, and the elders on both sides, namely in Kent and Bedford, assembled there for the purpose, decided that Cynethryth herself should give to me in Kent, in exchange for the aforesaid monastery, one hundred and ten hides of land, — sixty in the place called Fleet, thirty in Tenham, twenty in Cregesaewylma. These lands King Offa had caused to be conveyed to him when alive, and to his heirs after him ; and, on their death, he commanded them to be conveyed to the church at Bedford. . . . And it was decided that the abbess should receive from me the aforesaid monastery, with its charters ; and that I should receive the lands in Kent, and charters of the same, which she gave up to me, in order that no trouble should hereafter arise between our heirs and those of King OfFa. ... I, ^thelheard, archbishop, also grant to Cynethryth, abbess, the monastery of Pectanege, which the pious King Egfrith gave to me, to hold and to bequeath. 320 SELECT CASES IN No. 7. Dbnbbbrht and Wxjlpheaed, 803. ' Cod. Dip. CLXXXIV. This seems to be a case o^arbitration^etween churches by a church council, rather than a suit at common law. Deneberht, Bishop of Worcester, claimed agaiust Wulfheard, Bishop of Hereford, the right of refection in two monasteries belonging to the latter church. Wulfheard denied Deneberht's title, and also alleged thirty years' possession. Deneberht proved the exercise of the right by his predecessors, and the interruption of the possession. Finally, by the intervention of the arch- bishop, the suit was compromised. . . . Anno dominicae incarnationis dcoc".!!!". indict, xi' uero qui est annus vii. regni CenwuM pii regis Merciorum, factum est siaodale conciliabulum aet Clofeshoum, praesidente Aethelheardo archiepiscopo ; . . . ibi etiam inter alia plura facta est contentio inter Deneberhtum, TJueogemensis aecclesiae antistitem, Uulfhe- ardumque Herefordensem praesulem. Sunt autem monasteria in parochia Deneberhti Celtanhom, Beccanford, quae olim in antiquis diebus ad Herefordensem aecclesiam praestita fuerunt, in quibus pos- tulabat suam pastum qui ei episcopali iure pertinebat, ipse Deneberht sibi reddi. Uulfheard autem e contra narrabat, ut ei nullam dare de- buisset, neque umquam antecessores Ulius aliquam ibi haberent. Et si erat umquam, iam x.xx. annis et eo amplius nemo Ulum, neque ante- ... In the year of our Lord's incarnation 803, indiction 11, — that is, the seventh year of the reign of Cenwulf, pious king of the Mercians, — a synodal council was held at Clovesho, Archbishop JEthelheard presiding. . . . There, among several other matters, a dis- pute arose between Deneberht, bishop of the church at Worcester, and Wulfheard, Bishop of Hereford. Now, Cheltenham and Beckford are monasteries in the diocese of Deneberht, which formerly, in old times, were given to the church of Hereford. In these, Deneberht demanded that his right of refection, which belonged to him by epis- copal right, should be restored to him. Wulfheard, on the other hand, said that he ought not to give him any refection, nor had his predecessors ever had any refection there ; and, if it was ever so, now ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 321 cessores eius, huiuscemodi pastu pulsaret neque tangeret. Deneberht autem cum testimonio narrabat, ut Uuermund episcopus pasttim acci- peret aet Beccanforda, HatSoredus similiter aet Celtanhomme, insuper et ipse Uuulflieard ei pecuniam daret pro pastu, haecque cum testimo- nio comprobauit. Cum uero huiuscemodi hinc et inde multa conten- derunt, uentum est ad sermonem, ut archiepiscopus Deneberhtum rogabat dimidia sibi huius pastus praestare et altero anno semper aet Beccanforda suam refectionem acciperet, altero aet Celtanhomme. Ille autem respondebat se et uelle et debere in omnibus eius parere praeceptis ; hoc modo tamen in testimonio totius sinodi in diem eius praestare et non amplius ; idque litteris confirmare ut scient omnes qui eius sunt successores, quod ipse nunquam intermittit, quod Uueo- gemensi aecclesiae ad utilitatem recte pertinet. . . . for thirty years and more no one had ever either demanded or re- ceived such refection from him or his predecessors. Then Deneberht narrated with witness how Bishop Wermund received refection at Beckford, and Hathored, in the same way, at Cheltenham ; how, moreover, Wulfheard himself gave money to him, instead of the re- fection ; and these things he proved with witness. When, in this way, they asserted many things on this side and on that, it came to speech that the archbishop asked Deneberht to give up, for his sake, half of this right of refection, so that he should receive his refection always, one year at Beckford, and the second at Cheltenham. Then he replied that he wished and ought in all things to obey his precepts, yet with this limitation, in the witness of the whole synod, to give it for his life only and no longer ; and to confirm this in writing, that all his successors may know that he never neglects any thing which rightly pertains to the advantage of the church at Worcester. . . . 21 322 SELECT CASES IN No. 8. iETHELRIC, 804. Cod. Dip. CLXXXVI. ^THELRic apparently wished to dispose of his lands by ■will, and suit was brought to prevent his doing so (perhaps by his legal heirs). The Witan decided that .SltheWc had the right. . . . Anno ab incarnatione Christi .dccc.iiii. Indictione .xii. ego Aethelric, filius Aethelmundi, cum conscientia synodali inuitatus ad synodum, et in iudicio stare, in loco qui dicitur Clofeshoh, cum libris et ruris, id est, aet Uuestmynster, quod prius propinqui mei tradiderunt mihi et donauerunt, ibi Aethelhardus archiepiscopus mihi regebat at- que iudicauerat, cum testimonio Coenuulfi regis, et optimatibus eius, coram omni synodo, quando scripturas meas perscrutarent, ut liber essem terram meam atque libellos dare quocunque uolui. . . . ... In the year of Christ's incarnation 804, indiction 12, I, ^thelrio, son of ^thelmund, with the knowledge of the synod, being summoned thereto, to stand in judgment ia the place which is called Clovesho, with the charters of the land at Westminster, which formerly my kinsmen gave and delivered to me, there Archbishop -ffithelheurd presided and judged, with the witness of King Cenwulf, and all his chief men, ia the presence of the whole synod, when they had examined my charter, that I was free to give my land and charters wherever I would. . . . ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 323 No. 9. Beornwulf of Meegia, 824. Cod. Dip. CCXVIII. The monastery of Berkley brought suit against Bishop Heaberht for the monastery of Westbury, part of the inheritance of ^thelric. The oath was given to the bishop, who was in possession and held the char- ter. After thirty days, the bishop swore to his title. . . . Anno uero ab incarnatione domini nostri Ihesu Christi Dccc xxmi. Indictione autem ii. regnante Beornulfo, rege Merciorum, fac- tum est poDtificale et sinodale conciliabulum in loco qui dicitur Clo- feshoas. praesidente ibi rege praefato, ac uenerando uiro Wulfredo archiepiscopo illo conuentu regente ac moderante. Illic omnes episcopi nostri, et abbates, et uniuersi Mercensium principes, et multi sapien- tissimi uiri congregati adessent, ubi, inter alia plura colloquia, aliqua contentio allata est inter Heaberhtum episcopum, et illam familiam aet Berclea, de haereditate Aethelrici fllii Aethelmundi, hoc est, mo- nasterium, quod nominatur Uuestburh. Habuit autem episcopus ante nominatus terram illam cum libris, sicut Aethelricus ante praecepit, ut ad Uueogernensem aecclesiam redderetur. Statuta est autem atque decreta ab archiepiscopo, et ab omni sancta sinodo ilia consentienti, ut episcopus, qui monasterium et agellum cum libris haberet, cum iura- ... In the year of the incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ 824, indiction 2, in the reign of Beornwulf, king of the Mercians, a pon- tifical and synodal council was held in the place which is called Clove- sho, the aforesaid king presiding, together with the venerable man. Archbishop Wulfred. There all our bishops and abbots, and all the chief men of the Mercians, and many of the wisest, were assembled, when, among several other suits, one was brought between Bishop Heaberht, and the chapter at Berkley, about the inheritance of ^thelric, son of -SJthelmund, — that is, the monastery which is called Westbury. Now, the aforesaid bishop held this land, with the charter, according to JEthelric's command that it should revert to the church at Worcester. Then it was ordered and decreed by the arch- bishop, and by all the holy synod consenting, that the bishop, who had the monastery and the land, with the charter, on the oath of 324 SELECT CASES IN mento dei servorum presbiterorum, diaconorum et plurimorum mona- chorum, sibi in propriam possessionem terram illam cum adiuratione adiurasset. Et ita finita est praescripta ilia contentio coram episcopo : post XXX. noctes illud iuramentum to Uuestmynstre deductum est. . . . servants of God, priests, deacons, and very many monks, should swear that land to himself, to his own possession, with an oath. And so the aforesaid dispute was ended, in the presence of the bishop. After thirty days, that oath was performed at Westminster. No. 10. WULFRED, 825. Cod. Dip. CCXX. Cenwulf of Mercia deprived Archbishop Wulfred, against his will, of his dignity and lands. After the death of Cenwulf, the archbishop sued his daughter and heir, Cwenthrjrtha, before the Witan, and obtained a judgment against her for restitution, and compensation for damages. This judgment seems not to have been carried into effect. King Beom- wulf interposed to bring about a reconciliation ; and, after several ef- forts, a settlement was effected by the submission of Cwenthrytha. Anno vero Dominicae incarnationis Dcccxxv., indictione in., de diuersis Saxoniae partibus congregatum est synodale concilium in loco praeclaro quae nominatur aet Clofeshoum. praesidente. . . . Uulfredo archiepiscopo . . . seu etiam Beornuulfo regi Merciorum . . . caeterisque episcopis et abbatibus necnon et ducibus, omniumque dignitatum optimatibus . . . generositatem stabilitatemque regni terrestris consiliantes ac quaerentes . . . Tantumdem uero inter alia- rum allocutionum uerba patefactum est quod praefatus archiepiscopus Uulfredus per inimicitiam et uiolentiam auaritiamque Coenwulfi regis In the year of the Lord's incarnation 825, indiction 3, a syno- dal council was assembled, from the different parts of Saxony, at the famous place called Clovesho, Archbishop Wulfred presiding. ... as also Beornwulf, king of the Mercians, . . . and the other bishops and abbots and ealdormen, and most eminent persons of all ranks [being present], taking counsel and making inquiry in regard to the excellence and stability of the earthly kingdom. ... At length, among other matters of discussion, it was made known that ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 325 ... in testimonio totius populi omni dominatione propria priuatus est. . . . Postea etiam ille praedictus rex Coenwulf cum suis sapien- tibus ad regalem tiillam Lundoniae perueniens ad hoc eodemque con- cilium ilium archiepiscopum cum sue foedu foenoreque principum suo- rum inuitabat. Tuncque in eodem concilio cum maxima districtione illo episcopo mandauit quod omnibus rebus quae illius dominationis sunt dispoliatus debuisset fieri omnique de patria ista esse profugus et nunquam nee uerbis domne papae nee Caesaris seu alterius alicuius gradu hue in patriam iterum recipisse nisi hoc conseutire uoluisset ; hoc est quod illam terram aet logneshomme CCC. manentium reddi- disset istamque pecuniam tradidisset cxx. librarum. Sed et ille episcopus banc reconciliationem diu recussans . . . tamen tantundem . . . coactus, hac conditione banc reconciliationem sic inuitus consen- sit : ut omni potestate oboedientiaque quae ad illius episcopalem sedem pertinebant iuxta auctoritatem gradus eius dignus fuisset, ^icut prae- decessores eius iuxta iustam ordinem in pristinis temporibus ante per omnia habuerant . . . Sed nihil huius condicte conditionis impletum est. . . . Postea uero contigit ut in temporibus praedicti Beornwulfl regis ad Ulamque praenominatam synodum aet Clofeshoum ille archi- episcopus Uulfred Cwoenthrytham abbatissam heredem Coenwulfl the aforesaid Archbishop Wulfred, by the enmity, violence, and ava- rice of King Cenwulf, ... in witness of the whole people, had been deprived of all his rightful authority. . . . Afterwards, also, the afore- said King Cenwulf, coming with his Witan to the royal residence at London, invited that archbishop thereto under his own guaranty, and with the surety of his chief men. Then, in this same council, with the greatest severity, he ordered the bishop to be despoiled of every thing which belonged to his authority, and to be utterly exiled from this country, and never to return to it, either at the intercession of the Lord Pope or of the Emperor, or of any other person of what- soever rank, until he had consented to this, — namely, to return the three hundred hides of land at logneshomme, and to give up the one hundred and twenty pounds of money. And the bishop, after long refusing this settlement, yet at last, . . . under compulsion, unwillingly consented, on this condition, — that he should enjoy all the power and obedience which belonged to that episcopal see, according to the au- thority of his rank, in all respects as his predecessors had held it in former times. . . . But nothing of all this stipulated condition was per- formed. . . . But it afterwards happened that, in the time of the afore- said King Beornwulf, Archbishop Wulfred summoned to the aforesaid 326 SELECT CASES IN cum eadem hereditate illius inuitabat, emendationemque sibi omnium supradictarum molestiarum iniuriarumque postulauit, quae ille idem rex Coenwulf sibi et ecclesiae Christi . . . perpetrasset. Tunc uero omnis ille synodus ad aequitatem inuenerunt huncque indicium una- nimo consensu constituerunt : quod illi episcopo reddere omnia debu- isset quod uiolentia abstulerat in omnibus rebus quibus cum aliqua iniuria in omni spatio ilia spoliata fuerat, et alteram sinulem partem ad hoc ipsum adiecisse, et omnem usum emendasse qui in ipsa spatio confracta fuerat. Postea autem placuit Beornwulfo regi . . . recon- ciliationem et emendationem diligentissime facere. ... In postremo autem ille praenominatus episcopus . . . banc . . . reconciliationem . . . suscepisset ut ilia abbatissa Cwoenthryth filia Coenwulfi he- resque illius . . . terram . . . c. manentium illo archiepiscopo cum propriis et antiquis telligraphis et cum eadem libertate quam ante habuerat in perpetuam hereditatem ad habendam et possidendam postque dies eius cuicumque ei placuerit dereliquendum tradiderat . . . Sed statim ista praedictae reconciliatio confracta est . . . Ite- rumque secundo anno postquam haec omnia ita peracta sunt, haec eadem abbatissa illius episcopi colloquium flagitabat eumque in pro- uincia Huiccioriim expetiuit illo in loco quae nominatur Oslafeshlau, synod at CloYesho the Abbess Cwenthry tha, Cenwulf 's heir, together with his inheritance, and demanded compensation for all the aforesaid evil and injury which the same King Cenwulf . . . had inflicted on him and the church of Christ. And then all that synod equitably adopted and unanimously affirmed this judgment, — that she ought to restore to the bishop every thing which had been violently taken from him during all that time, and make good all injury, and add as much more over and above, and make compensation for the use during the same period. But afterwards it pleased King Beornwulf ... to make most earnestly a compromise and settlement. ... At last, also, the aforesaid bishop accepted . . . this . . . compromise, — that the Ab- bess Cwenthrytha, daughter and heir of King Cenwulf, should deliver to the archbishop land to the amount of one hundred hides, ... to- gether with the ancient charters belonging to it, and with the same freedom which he had before, to hold and possess in perpetual inherit- ance, and to bequeath to whomsoever he would. . . . But this treaty of reconciliation was immediately broken. . . . And again, in the second year after all these things so took place, this same abbess asked an interview of the aforesaid bishop, and sought him out in the province of the Hwicci in the place which is called Oslafeshlaw, and ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 327 eique suam insipientiam confessa est retardate reconciliationis . . . Turn autem ilia abbatissa cum omni humilitate promiserat ut omne quod ei reddita non fuerat . . . emendare uoluisset . . . Tuncque episcopus hoc idem consensit. . . . confessed to him her folly in regard to the delay of the reconciliation. . . . Then, too, the abbess, with all humility, promised to make amends for all that had not been restored to him. . . . And then the bishop gave his consent to the same. . . . No. 11. Beoknwtjlp of Meecia, 825. Cod. Dip. CCXIX. This was an action in the nature of an appeal, by the Bishop of Worcester, from a decision of the bailiffs encroaching on old rights of the chapter in the wood-pastures at Sutton. The bishop claimed, under established custom of ^thelbald's day, two-thirds of the woods and mast. The Witan allowed him the oath, and he established his claim. . . . fy gere Se wes from cristes gebyrde agaeen eahta bund wintra and XXV and sio aefterre indictio wses in rime and waes biornwulfes rice mercna cyninges Sa wses sionoSlic gemot on tJaere meran stowe ?Se men hateS Clofeshoas and Sser se siolfa cyning biornwulf ond his biscopas ond his aldormenn ond alle 8a wioton Sisse Siode Sser gesom- nade wseron Sa wses tiolo micel spree ymb wudu-leswe to suStune ongsegum west on scyrhylte waldon 8a swangerefan 8a Iseswe forSur gedrifan ond 8one wudu gefiogan Son hit aldgeryhto weron 8on cuaeS se biscop and Sara hina wiotan Set bio him neren maran ondeta Son hit araeded wses on Aethelbaldes daege Srim hunde swina msest ond . . . The year that was from Christ's birth eight hundred and twenty-five agone, and was the second indictiou in number, and was the reign of Beornwulf, king of the Mercians, there was a synodal gemot at the famous place called Clovesho ; and there the aforesaid King Beornwulf, and his bishops and his ealdormen, and all the witan of this people, were there assembled. Then was a very great suit about the wood-pastures at Sutton, westwards, in Scirholt. The bailiffs wished to extend the pasture, and feed out the wood further than it was old right. Then said the bishop and the chapter's coun- sellors that they did not confess more to them [the bailiffs] than as it 328 SELECT CASES IN se biscop [and 3a higen*] ahten tw«de Saes wuda ond Saes maestes. 3a gerashte Uulfred arcebiscop ond alle 8a wiotan Set se biscop ond Sa higen mosten mid aSe gecySan Set hit sua wsere araeden on AeSel- baldes dsege ond him mare to ne sohte ond he Sa sona se biscop be- weddade eadwulfe Ssem aldormen Saes aSaes biforan allum Saem wio- tum ond him mon Sone gelaedde ymb xxz naehta to Saem biscopstole et wiogoerna ceastre in Sa tiid wses hama suangerefa to suStune ond he rad Saet he wses et ceastre and Sone aaS gesaeh ond gesceawada sua hine his aldormon heht Eadwulf ond he hine hweSre ne grette. . . * And & higeu. Conjectural for Sa tugen, which gives no meaning. was administered in ^thelbald's day, — mast for three hundred swine ; and the bishop and the chapter had two-thirds of the wood and the mast. Then Archbishop Wulfred and all the Witan decreed that the bishop and the chapter might declare on oath that it was so administered in ^thelbald's day, and that he claimed no more. And the bishop at once pledged the oath to Eadwulf, the ealdorman, before all the Witan ; and it was administered to him after thirty days, at the bishop's seat at Worcester. At that time, Hama was bailiff at Sutton, and he rode to Worcester, and saw and looked at the oath, as his ealdorman, Eadwulf, commanded him, and he yet did not greet him (the bishop). . . . No. 12. Archbishop Wulfeed, 825. Cod. Dip. MXXXIV. Offa granted some land at Denton to Abbot Plegheard, who conveyed it to the church at Selsey. The church having been despoiled of this land, suit was brought before the Witan for recovery, and restitution ordered. . . . Anno ab incarnatione Christi. dccc.xxt. indictione tertia, anno secundo regni Beornulfi regis Merciorum, synodus fuit ad Clo- besham, praesidente archiepiscopo Wulfredo ; post mortem uero Coe- nulfl regis Merciorum multae discordiae et innumerabiles dissonanciae ... In the year of the incarnation of Christ 825, indiction 3, in the second year of the reign of Beornwnlf, king of the Mercians, a synod, over which Archbishop Wulfred presided, was held at Clovesho. After the death of Cenwulf, king of the Mercians, many discords and ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 329 extollebantur contra unius cuiusque principalium peraonarum, regum et episcoporum, et pastorum aecclesiarum dei, erga plurima saecularia negotia ; ita ut multum dispoliatae fuerant per loca diuersa aecclesiae Christi in rebus, in terris, in tribute, in omnibus causis. . . . Episco- pus Australium-Saxonum Goenredus fuerat spoliatus de aliqua parte terrae illius .xxv. aecclesiae quae uocitatur Deanton, quod Plegheard abbas dudum tradidit ad sedem episcopalem quae est in Selesegh, cum corpore suo, quod ei rex OfEa ante condonauerat et conscripserat de liaereditate aecclesiae Bedingehommes, quam ipse sibi adquisierat in haereditatem propriam. Tunc in praefata synodo iudicatum est ut ille episcopus, cum consensu et unanimi consilio episcoporum et abbatum seu.principum, in ius proprium aecclesiae haereditatem sine ullo obsta- culo accipiat; sicut et ante prius at Caelchythe iudicatum est inter Coenulfum regem et "Webthunum de eiusdem terrae assumptione, coram archiepiscopo Aethelheardo, tertio anno Coenulfi regis. Et haec acta sunt coram omni concilio at Clobeshom, cum consensu et licentia regis et principum et archiepiscoporum, quorum nomina infra anno' tantur. . . . countless disputes arose among kings, bishops, and priests of the church of God concerning secular matters, so that the churches of Christ in different places had been despoiled of their property, lands, and trib- ute. . . . Coenred, bishop of the South Saxons, had been despoiled of a certain part of that twenty-five hides of church land called Denton, which, together with his body. Abbot Plegheard long since conveyed to the episcopal see at Selsey, [and] which King Offa had before given and booked to him out of the inheritance of the church at Bed- dingham, which he had acquired for himself as hereditary property^ Then, in the aforesaid synod, it was decreed tha-t this bishop, by the consent of the bishops and nobles, should receive the inheritance of the church, without hindrance, in full ownership as before it had been adjudged at Cselchyth between King Cenwulf and Wehthun concern- ing the seizure of the same land, before Archbishop ^thelheard, in the third year of the reign of King Cenwulf. And these things were done in the presence of the whole assembly at Clovesho, with tha approval and permission of the king and his chief men and the arch< bishops, whose names are written below. . . . 330 SELECT CASES IN No. 18. Berhtwulf, March 28, 840. Cod. Dip. CCXLV. Bekhtwulp, king of the Mercians, despoiled the church at Worcester of certain lands. Suit was brought by Bishop Heaberht, who presented his charters before the Witan, and the lands were restored. . . . Anno autem ab incarnatione eiusdem dei et domini nostri Ihesu Christi .dcocxi,°. Indictione iii. Contigit autem quod Berh- tuulf rex Merciorum, tollerat a nobis et tradidit terram nostram quod recte ac iure sub proprio potestate ac libera possessione cum firma donatione tradita est et concessa et firmata ad sedem episeopalem, id est, ad Uueogernensem aecclesiam rex praefatus suobus propriis homi- nibus condonauit, sicut se inimici homines docuerunt, hoc est, Stoltun, Uassanburna, Cyneburgingctun, Tateringctun, Codesuuelle. Tunc per- rexit ille episcopus Heaberht, cum suis secum senioribus, in pascha, ad TomeworSie et suas libertates et cartulas ante nominatorum terrarum secum habentes et ibi ante regem eiusque proceres fuerunt allecta et ibi Merciorum optimates deiudicauerunt illi, ut male ac iniuste dispo- liati essent in sue proprio. Tunc illis terra sua reddita est cum pace, et simul etiam ille episcopus banc donatiuum regem predonauit iterum in Uuelesburnan, hoc est mi. caballos bene electos, et unum anulum in XXX. mancusis et discum fabrefactum in tribus pundis et duas aJbas ... In the year of the incarnation of our Lord and Master Jesus Christ 840, of the indiction 3, it happened that Berhtwulf, king of the Mercians, led by wicked men, took from us, and gave away to his own men, our land, — Stoulton, Washborne, Kingston, Tarrington, and Codswell, — which had been given, granted, and confirmed, rightfully and lawfully, with full power and free possession, to the episcopal church at "Worcester. Then Bishop Heaberht, with his elders, at Easter, went to Tamworth, taking the liberties and charters of the aforesaid lands ; and there, before the king and his nobles, they were read, and the Mercian nobles decided that they had been wrong- fully and unjustly despoiled of their property. Then their land was returned to them in peace ; and the bishop besides presented this gift to the king, at Wellsburne, namely : four chosen horses, a ring worth thirty mancuses, a wrought dish of three pounds' weight, aid two ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 331 comas in iiii. libris, et ille regina dedit duos equos bonos et duas stea- pas in twaem pundum, et unam cuppam deauratam in duobus pundis. Et tunc rex cum testimonio has terras firmiter liberauit sibi in aeuum coram suis archontis uniuscuiusque necessitatis et sustulionis. . . . silver drinking-horns of four pounds ; and he gave to the queen two good horses, two stoups of two pounds, and one gilded cup of two pounds. And then the king, with witnesses, freed the land for ever from every burden, in the presence of his nobles. . . . No. 14. ^THELITULF, 844. Cod. Dip. CCLVI. OswuLF, ealdorman of East Kent, devised his property to the church after the death of his wife and children. A dispute having arisen con- cerning the will, a decision of the Witan was obtained confirming its provisions. Thirty-four years after, jEthelwulf claimed that the land devised by Oswulf had been sold to his father ; but the Witan decided the suit against him, and gave the oath to the churches. . . . Idcirco etenim Osuulf del gratia dux atque princeps prouin- ciae Orientalis Cantiae circa suae propriae hereditatis iura tractare studuit. Et hoc coram beatae memoriae Uulfredo archiepiscopo co- ramque abbatis Uuernotho atque Feolgeldo caeterisque fidelissimis et religiosissimis Ceolstano, uiz ; Aethelhuno atque Heremodo presbyte- ris aecclesiae Christi, necnon saepe coram sociis suis et amicis fidissi- mis, qualiter post discessionem suam circa haereditatem suam impos- terum agere uoluisse, id est, ut post dies uxoris suae et fllii eius Ear- duulfl filiae quoque suae Ealfthrythae, ad aecclesiis dei omnia dare deo . . . Therefore Oswulf, by the grace of God ealdorman of East Kent, desired to execute a testament ; and in the presence of Wul- fred, of blessed memory, and Wernoth, and Feolgeld, and other most trusted and Christian men, — namely, Ceolstan, ^thelhun, and Here- mod, priests, — and of his most faithful friends, he showed what dis- position he wished to be made of his property after his death. He commanded that, after the death of his wife and of her son Eardwulf, and his daughter Ealfthry th, all his property should be given to God and His holy church, under their testimony, as is clearly and plainly shown 332 SELECT CASES IN et Sanctis eius sibi in sempiternam hereditatem sub eorum testimonia dare praecepit, a sicut in altera kartula manifeste et lucide comproba- tur. Sed tamen post obitum Osuulfi ducis surrexit excitata a quibus- dam quaestio et contentio magno circa hereditatem Osuulfi contra uxorem eius Beornthrythae ; . . . sed utrique partes ad synodale con- cilium aduocari et inuitari iubebantur : et cum ad synodum deuenis- sent et diligenti inuestigatione ueritatis sententia utrarumque partium a sancto synodo, quae facta est in loco praeclaro aet Aeclea, quaerendo examinaretur, inuentum est nihil iustius nee rectius esse posse constare, quam sic perseuerare haereditatem Osuulfi sicut ipse Osuulf prius pro- prio arbitrio per omnia donare coram praedictis testibus decreuerat : atque ita hoc etiam ab illo sancto synodo perpetuae perdurare deiudica- tum est. . . . Sed . . . Hie antiquus uenenatissimus serpens . . . post cur- ricula quantorum annorum, id est, xxxiiii, iterum . . . haereditatem sanctorum eius adgrauere . . . conatus est. . . . Quamobrem congre- gata multitudine spiritalium saeculariumque personum in Dorouernia ciuitate, anno dominicae incarnationis dccc.xliiii. indict. Aethel- uulfo regi presente atque Aethelstano filio eius, Ceolnotho quoque archimetropolitano archiepiscopo, necnon Tatnoth presbitero electo ad episcopalem sedem Dorobreui, id est, ciuitatis Hrofi, cum prin- cipibus, ducibus, abbatibus, et cunctis geaeralis dignitatis optimati- bus, inter quas etiam ille uenenatissimus anguis cognomento Aethel- uulf, . . . deueniens, . . . dicens haereditatem Osuulfi ducis cum auro et in the other charter. But after the death of ealdorman Oswulf , a great dispute arose concerning the inheritance of Oswulf against his wife. . . . But both parties were summoned to the synod ; and when they came, and the claims of each had been carefully examined by the synod con- voked at Aclea, it was found that nothing more just or right could be determined than to maintain the testament of Oswulf as he had himself first executed it, in the presence of the aforesaid witnesses ; and this de- cree was to continue for ever. But that most deadly serpent, after the lapse of thirty-four years, made another attack upon the inheritance of the holy ones of Christ. Wherefore, in the year of the incarnation of our Lord 844, an assembly of spiritual and temporal lords having been convened in the city of Dover, in the presence of King ^thel- wulf and his son ^thelstan, and the metropolitan Archbishop Ceol- noth, and Tatnoth, chosen priest of the episcopal church of Rochester, with the lords, ealdormen, abbots, and all the nobles, that most poison- ous reptile, -ffithelwulf by name, . . . said that the property devised by Oswulf had been purchased by his father, iEthelheah, with gold ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 383 argento patris sui Aethelheah esse comparatum, et per hoc spoliare aecclesiam dei, ... ad quas haereditas ilia pertinebat, . . . nisus est. Tunc ille archiepiscopus Ceolnoth et familia eius, id est aec- clesiae Christi ilia, per ordinem replicauit qualiter in illo sancto synodo de illo reconciliatum et deiudicatum est. At ille nolens adqui- escere, neque iudicio synodis et probabilium patrum sanctionibus, ne- que adsertione et ueredica uoce episcopi uel alicuius personis, tunc etenim a sapientibus et prudentibus trutinatum ac diiudicatum est, familiam aecclesiae Christi, et familiam aet Folcanstane, familiam quoque at Dobrum, necnon et famUiam aet Liminge ad quos haereditas ilia per- tinebat, iusto iuramenta haereditatem Ulam sibi ipsis contra haeredita- tem Aethelheahes castigare ; nam et ita fecerunt. lurauermit xxx. homines de familiis praedictis, xii. presbeteri, caeteri communi gradus ; et sic etiam ilia altercatio utrarumque partium perenniter sedari decre- tvmi est. . . . and silver, and thereby strove to despoil the church of God. Then Archbishop Ceolnoth and his chapter duly unfolded what had been decreed in that holy synod. But, he refusing to submit to the decision of the synod, or to the voice of the bishop, or of any person, then it was decreed by the Witan that the chapter of Christ's Church, and the family at Folkstone, and at Dover, and at Lyminge, to whom this inheritance belonged, should by just oath claim that inheritance for themselves against the inheritance of ^thelheah , and this they did. Then thirty men of the aforesaid families swore, — twelve priests, the others common monks ; and so that dispute was decreed to be for ever settled. ... 334 SELECT CASES IN No. 15. Dtjke ^theluulf, 897. Cod. Dip. CCCXXIII. King Cenulf left certain property to the church of Winchcombe, •with the injunction that no one should convey it away for a longer term than one life. A part of the inheritance was found in the possession of WuUaf , who held it by a grant from Cynethryth to his father for three lives, whereupon the Witan adjudged the gift to be void ; but the land was granted to WuUaf to hold during his life, on condition that it should go to the church at Worcester after his death. Anno dominicae incarnationis .dccc.xcvii. indictione uero. xv. eo anno contigit quod Aetheluulf uenerabilis dux recitauit et iauesti- gauit haereditarios libros Cenuulft regis, et in priuilegiis illius scriptum inueniebat, quod nullus haeres post eum licentiam haberet haereditatem Cenuulfi quae pertinet ad Wincelcumbe alicui hominum longius donan- dam uel conscribendam quam dies unius homiQis ; . . . Accidit autem tunc inter alias looutiones, quod Aetheluulf loquebatur de ilia terra quae appellatur Inuptune. V. manentium, ad Uullafum qui tunc earn possi- debat, quoniam de haereditate ipsius Cenuulfi fuit. Tunc ille dicebat quod Cynethryth patri suo illam terram dies trium hominum donasset, et Aelflaed sibi postea trium addidisset ; sed Aethelred et illi omnes adiudicabant, quod ilia donatio aliter stare non posset, nisi sicuti in diebus Cenuulfi constitutum erat. Tunc ille praedictus Wullaf red- In the year of the Incarnation of our Lord 897, indiction 15, it happened that the revered Duke ^thelwulf read and examined the charters conveying the inheritance of King Cenwulf, and found it written in his privileges that, after him, no heir should have the power to give or convey the inheritance, which belongs to Winch- combe, to any man for a longer term than one life. . . . But, then, it happened that, among other discourse, -ffithelwulf spoke to Wullaf, who then possessed them, about the five hides of land called Upton, because they were a part of the inheritance of Cenwulf himself. Then Wullaf said that Cynethryth had given that land to his father for three lives, and ^Elflsed had added three more. But ^thelred and they all adjudged that this donation could not stand in any other way than it had been appointed in the days of Cenwulf. Then the aforesaid ANGLO-SAXON LAW, 335 didit Aetheluulfo pristiaos libellos a Cyaethrytha et Aelflaeda con- scriptos, et Aedeluulfus ei istum postea scribere praecipiebat : ea namque dictione, ut habeat et perfruatur per tempora uitae suae, et postea sine contradictione reddatur ad sedem episcopalem quae est in Uueogernensi ciuitate, antistiti, qualiscumque rector et gubernator illius tunc existerit, pro redemptione animae Cenuulfi regis et omnium haeredum ipsius, necnon quoque et pro renouatione et reconciliatione pacis inter illam familiam quae est in Uueogernensi ciuitate et illam quae est in Uuincelcumbe. . . . Wullaf gaTe up to JEthelwulf the original charters written by Cyne- thryth and -ffilflaed ; and JEthelwulf ordered this charter to be given him, granting that he should have and enjoy the land during his life, on the condition that, afterwards, it should go to the Episcopal Church at Worcester, to the abbot, or whatever rector, or governor, should then exist, for the redemption of the soul of King Cenwulf, and all his heirs, and also for the renewal of peace between the families of Worcester and Winchcombe. No. 16. Weefeith, about 900. Cod. Dip. CCCXXVII. Suit brought by the Bishop of Worcester before the Mercian Witan to recover lands which had been granted out on special conditions, these conditions not having been observed. The Witan sustained the claim, and thereupon the land was regranted on new conditions. In usses dryhtnes naman haelendes Cristes ! Ic WerferS bis- ceop cySe swa me Alchun bisceop saegde and eac mine gewrytu wisodon Saet Mired bisceop gesealde Eanbalde ?5aet land aet Soppan- byrg mid tJis bebode. and seoSSan Eanbald hit sealde Eastmunde and In the name of our Lord Christ the Saviour ! I, Bishop Werfrith, make known (as Bishop Alchun told me, and also my charters showed) that Bishop Mired granted to Eanbald the land at Sodbury, with this injunction — and, afterwards, Eanbald gave it to Eastmimd — 336 SELECT CASES IN him bebead Mired bisceop bebod on Godes ealmihtiges noman and on Sane halgan Srinesse 8aet 8a hwile Se aenig man waere on hire maegeJe Se godcundes hades beon walde and 8aes wyrSe waere 8aet he Sonne fenge to Sam lande aet Soppanbyrg. gif hit Sonne hwaet elles geselde Saet hit naefre on laedu hand ne wende. Ac hit seoSSan code to Sam bisceopstole to Weogornaceastre for heora ealra saule. Ond he Sa Eastmund aer his ende bebead on Saes lifgendan Godes noman Sam men Se to Sam lande fenge Saet he Sone on Sa ilcan wisan tofenge Se Mired bisceop bebead. gif he Sonne to San gedyrstig waere Saet he Saet abraece Saet he wiste hine scyldigne beforan Godes heahsetle aet Sam miclan dome. Sa aefter Eastmundes forSsiSe bereafode seo maegS Saes ilcan londes ge Sa gastas Sara forSgewitenra manna ge Sone bisceop and Sa ciricean aet Weogorna- ceastre. and Heahberht bisceop oft Saes myngode oSSe Saes landes baed and seoSSan Alchun bisceop for oft Sa hwile Se he waes. and eac ic WerfertS bisceop oft his baed and we ne mihton to nanum rihte becuman aer Aefielred waes Myrcna hlaford. t5a gesamnode he Mercna weotan to Saltwic ymbe maenigfealde ^earfe ge Godes daeles ge worolde daeles. Sa spraec ic on Sa magas mid Sy erfegewrite and wilnade me rihtes. Sa beweddode me EadnoS me and Aelfred and and Bishop Mired enjoined him, in the name of Almighty God, and that of the Holy Trinity, that while there were any man among their kin who desired to be in holy orders, and should be worthy of it, that he should succeed to the land at Sodbury ; if it happened otherwise, that it should never come into a layman's hand ; but it should after- wards go to the bishop's see at Worcester for all their souls' sake. And then he, Eastmund, before his end, enjoined in the name of the living God the man who should take the land, that he should take it in the same wise as bishop Mired commanded. If he, however, should be presumptuous enough to break this [command] that he should know that he would be guilty before God's throne at the last judgment. Then, after Eastmund's death, his kinsfolk deprived both the souls of the departed men, and the bishop, and the church at Worcester, of this same land. And Bishop Heahberht often ad- monished them of this, or asked for the land ; and afterwards Bishop Alchun very often while he was [living], and also I, Bishop Werfrith, often asked for it, and we could not obtain any justice tUl ^thelred became lord of the Mercians. Then he assembled the Witan of the Mercians at Saltwick about manifold needs both spiritual and tem- poral. Then I brought suit against the kinsfolk with the testament ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 337 Aelfstan tSaet hio o5er Sara dydon oS'Se hit me ageafon oStSe on hira maegSe Sone man funden 6e to Sam hade fenge and to lande and me waere gehearsum for Gode and for worolde. Sa EadnoS Se I5aet land haefde gebead hit eaire tSaere maegSe hwae'Ser hit aenig swa gegan wolde Sa waes aelc Saes wordes Saet him leofre waere Saet he land foreode Sonne he Saene had underfenge. Sa gesohte he AeSelred and AeJSelflaede and eac AeSelnoS urne ealra freond and heo ealle to me wilnodon Saet ic hine laete aet me tSaet land begeotan him to agenre aehte swelcum erfeweeardum to syllenne swelce he wolde and ic Sa swa dyde ealles swySost for hiora bene and he eac me gesealde feowertig mancesa. and ic 8a mid mira higna leafe aet Weogorna- ceastre him sealde i5aet lond on ece erfe and Ha, bee and Saet East- mundes erfegewrit and eac ure agen raedengewrit tSaet waere him to 8am gerade Saet land tolaeten Se mon aelce gere gesylle fiftene scillingas claenes feos to Tettanbyrg 'Sam bisceope and him eac Sone nescrift healde. [oi Eastmund] and claimed justice for me. Then Eadnoth and Alfred and -^Ifstari pledged themselves to me that they would do one of these [two things] ; either they would give up [the land] to me, or would find among their kinsmen the man who would ac- cept the order [of priesthood] and the land, and would be obedient to me in spiritual and in worldly matters. Then Eadnoth, who had the land, offered it to all their kinsmen [to see] whether any one would so acquire it. Then every one said that he would rather forego the land than take orders. Then he went to ^thelred and ^thel- flaed and also JEthelnoth, friend of us all, and they all desired me to let him acquire the land of me for his own property, to bestow on such heirs as he liked ; and I then did so, most of all for their prayer, and he also gave me forty mancuses. And I then with the leave of my chapter at Worcester gave him the land in inheritance for ever, and the charters, and Eastmund's testament, and also our own certificate that the land was relinquished to him, on the condition that fifteen shillings of pure money be paid every year to the bishop at Tetbury, and he should also make his shrift to him. (?) 22 838 SELECT CASES m No. 17. , AFTER 900. Cod. Dip. CCCXXVni.i This letter, written apparently to King Edward the Elder, explains a disputed title to five hides of land at Fonthill. In the reign of Alfred, a certain Helmstan committed a theft. Thereupon iEthelm claimed Helmstan's land at FonthiU, on grounds not stated. Helmstan obtained the intercession of the writer with the king to remove his outlawry. .Sthelm's suit was then tried before arbitrators, who adjudged the oath to Helmstan, who appears then to have pledged himself to convey the land to the writer, in consideration of receiving his assistance in giving the oath. The oath was successfully given, and the writer received the land according to the pledge. He then allowed Helmstan a life occu- pancy. Helmstan soon afterwards drove off the oxen at Fonthill, was outlawed, and the land, coming again into the writer's possession, was exchanged for other land. Mthehn, in Edward's reign, attempted to recover the land, but seems to have desisted before trial. -j- Leof ic 8e cy8e hu hit waes ymb Saet lond aet Funtial aS fif hida 3e AeSelm Higa ymb spycS Sa Helmstan Sa undaede gedyde tSaet he AeSeredes belt forstael. Sa ongon Higa him specan sona on mid oSran onspecendan and wolde him oSflitan Saet lend Sa sohte he me and baed me Saet ic him waere forespeca forSon ic his haefde aer onf ongen aet biscopes honda aer he Sa undaede gedyde. Sa spaec ic him fore and Singade him to Aelfrede cinge Sa God forgelde his saule Sa lyfde he Saet he moste beon ryhtes wyrSe for mire forspaece and ryht race wiS AeSelm ymb Saet lond Sa het he hie seman Sa waes ic Sara Beloved : I make known to you how it was about the land at Fonthill, the five hides that iEthelm Higa lays claim to. When Helmstan committed the crime of stealing ^thered's belt, Higa at once began to bring charges against him, among other accusers, and wanted to litigate the land from him. Then he sought me and prayed me to be his intercessor, because I had received him formerly from the bishop's hand before he committed the crime. Then I spoke in his behalf, and interceded for him with King Alfred, whose soul may God reward ; so he allowed him to be law- worthy at 1 The original of this charter has also been consulted, and a few slight varlationB from Mr. Kemble's text have been adopted. ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 339 mouua sum Se 3aer to genemmed waeran and Wihtbord and Aelfric was 8a hraelSen and Byrhthelm and Wulfhun Ses blaca aet Sumor- tune and Strica and Ubba and ma monna Sonne ic nu genemnan maege Sa reahte heora aegSer his spell 8a 8uhte us eallan Saet Helmstan moste gan for8 mid 8on bocon and geagnigean him 8aet lond Saet he hit haefde swa AeSelSriS hit Osulfe on aeht gesealde wiS gemedan feo and heo cwaeS to Osulfe Saet heo hit ahte him wel to syllane for Son hit waes hire morgen-gifu 8a heo aest to ASulfe com and Helmstan Sis eal on Son aSe befeng and Aelfred cing Sa Osulfe his hondsetene sealde Sa he Saet lond aet AeSelSriSe bohte Saet hit swa stondan moste and Eadward his and AeSelnaS his and Deormod his and aelces Sara monna Se mon Sa habban wolde Sa we hie aet Weardoran nu semdan Sa baer mon Sa boc forS and raedde hie 8a stod seo hondseten eai Saeron Sa Suhte us eallan Se aet Saere some waeran Set Helmstan waere aSe Saes Se naer 8a naes AeSelm na fullice geSafa aer we eodan into cinge and raedan eal hu we hit reahtan and be hwy we hit reahtan and AeSelm stod self Saer inne mid and cing stod 8woh his honda aet Weardoran innan Son bure Sa he Saet gedon haefde Sa ascade he AeSelm hwy hit him ryht ne Suhte Saet we him gereaht haefdan cwaeS Saet he nan ryhtre geSencan ne meahte Sonne he my intercession and plead against ^thelm about the land. Then he [Alfred] ordered an arbitration. I was one of the men who were named for the purpose, and Wihtbord and ^Ifric, who then was robe- keeper, and Byrhthelm and Wulfhun the black, of Somerton, and Strica, and Ubba, and more men than I can now name. Then each of them told his tale. Then it was the opinion of all of us that Helm- stan might go forth with the charters and prove his right to the land, that he held it as ^thelthrith gave it to Oswulf in full property for a fair price ; and she told Oswulf that she was fully entitled to sell it to him, because it was her morning-gift when she first came to Athulf. And Helmstan included all this in the oath. And King Alfred, when Oswulf bought the land of jEthelthrith, gave his signa- ture to Oswulf that [the purchase] might so stand, and Eadward his, and jSEthelnath his, and Deormod his, and each of the men whom they wished to have. While we were now engaged in reconciling them at Wardour, the charter was brought forth and read. There stood the signatures, all of them, thereon. Then it was the opinion of us all who were at the arbitration, that Helmstan was so much nearer to the oath ; but ^thelm was not fully satisfied before we went to the king ; and reported in full how we judged it, an i why 340 SELECT CASES IN Sone a5 agifan moste gif he meahte <5a, cwaetJ ic Saet he wolde cunnigan and baed Sone cing 8aet he hit andagade and he 3a swa dyde and he gelaedde Sa to ?$on andagan tJone aS be fullan and baed me Saet ic him fultemade and cwaeS Saet him waere leofre Saet he . . . aide Sonne se aS forburste oSSe hit aef . . . aede Sa cwaeS ic Saet ic him wolde fylstan to ryhte and naefre to nanan wo on Sa gerada Set he his me uSe and he me Saet on wedde gesealde and we ridan 8a to Son andagan ic and Wihtbord rad mid me and Byrhthelm rad Sider mid AeSelme and we gehyrdan ealle Saet he Sone aS be fulan ageaf Sa we cwaedan ealle Saet hit waere geendodu spaec Sa se dom waes gefylled and leof hwonne biS engu spaec geendedu gif mon ne maeg nowSer ne mid feo ne mid aSa geendigan oSSe gif mon aelcne dom wile onwendan Se Aelfred cing gesette hwonne habbe we Sonne gemotad and he me Sa boc Sa ageaf swa he me on Son wedde aer geseald haefde sona swa se aS agifen was and ic him gehet Saet he moste Ses londes brucan Se hwile Se he lifde gif he hine wolde butan bysmore gehealdan Sa on ufan Saet ymban oSer healf gear nat ic hweSer Se ymb twa Sa forstael he Sa unlaedan oxan at Funtial Se he mid ealle fore forwearS and draf to Cytlid and hine mon Saeraet aparade and his speremon ahredde Sa we judged it ; and ^thelm himself stood there present with us, and the king stood, washed his hands within the chamber at War- dour ; when he had done this, he asked -ffithelm why our judgment seemed to him not right, he said that he could not think any thing more just than that he [Helmstan] should give the oath, if he could. Then said I that he [Helmstan] wished to attempt it, and prayed the king to appoint a day for it, and he did so ; and he [Helmstan] then took the oath in full on the day fixed, and asked me that I should assist him, and said that he would rather that he [should give me the land ?] than the oath should break down or Then I said that 1 would help him to right, and never to any wrong, on condition that he granted me his [land], and he gave me that in pledge. And we rode then at the appointed day, I, and Wihtbord rode with me, and Byrhthelm rode thither with JEthelm, and we all heard that he gave the full oath. Then we all said that it was a finished suit, since the [king's] decision was complied with. And, beloved, when will any suit be ended, if one may neither end with money nor with oath, or if one will overthrow every judgment which King Alfred has decided ? When shall we then have finished a suit ? And he then gave me the charter as he had formerly pledged himself ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 341 spor wreclas ?5a he fleah Sa torypte hine an breber ofer Saet nebb 8a he aetsacan wolde 3a saede him mon Saet to tacne 8a swaf Eanulf Penearding on waes gerefa tSa genom eal Saet yrfe him on 8aet he ahte to Tyssebyrig Sa ascade ic hine hwy he swa dyde 8a cwaeS he 8aet he waere 8eof and mon gerehte Saet yrfe cinge forSon he waes cinges mon and Ordlaf feng to his londe forSon hit waes his laen Saet he on saet he ne meahte na his forwyrcan and tu hine hete Sa flyman 8a gesahte he 8ines faeder lie and brohte insigle to me and ic waes aet Cippanhomme mitte 8a ageaf ic Saet insigle 8e and Su him forgeafe his eard and Sa are Se he get on gebogen haefS and ic feng to minan londe and sealde hit Son biscope 8a on Sine gewitnesse and Sinra weotena 8a fif hida wiS Son londe aet Lidgeard wiS fif hidan and biscop and eal hiwan forgeafan me Sa f eower and an waes teoSing lond Sonne leof is me micel neodSearf Saet hit mote stondan swa hit nu gedon is and gefyrn waes gif hit elleshwaet biS Sonne sceal ic and wylle beon gehealden on Son 3e Se to aelmessan ryht SincS. to do, so soon as the oath was given ; and I promised him that he might enjoy the land so long as he lived, if he would keep himself without reproach. Thereupon, after this, about a year and a half, or I know not whether two years after, he stole the untended oxen at Fonthill, by which he was altogether ruined, and drove to Cytlid, and there one surprised him, and his spereman followed up the fugitive's tracks. When he fled, then a bramble cut him over the face. When he wished to deny, then one said to him that as a proof. Eanulf Penearding then came upon him, who was sheriff, and seized all the property that he [Helmstan] owned at Tisbury. I asked him why he did so ; he said that he [Helmstan] was a thief, and his property was adjudged to the king, because he was a king's man. And Ordlaf took possession of his land because it was his grant that he occupied, [and] he [Helmstan] could not forfeit his [Ordlafs land to the king]. And thou, then, didst give order to proclaim him outlaw. Then he sought thy father's body, and brought a seal to me, and I was at Chippenham with thee. Thereupon I gave the seal to thee, and thou didst remit to him his citizenship and the prop- erty which he yet occupies. And I took possession of my land, and gave it to the bishop, with thy witness and that of thy Witan, the five hides for the land at Liddiard, in exchange for five hides ; the bishop and all the family gave me four, and one was tithing land. Then, beloved, it is very necessary for me that it may stand as it is now ai;- ranged, and long has been. But if it shall he otherwise, then I shall and will be holden to whatever in thy bounty seems right to thee. 342 SELECT CASES IN In dorso. -\- and AeSelm Higa eode of Sam geflite Sa cing waes aet Worgemynster on Ordlafes gewitnesse and on OsferSes and on Oddan and on Wihtbordes and on Aelfstanes Sys blerian and on AeSelnoSes. Indorsed, -j- And ^thelm Higa desisted from the suit when the king was at Warminster, with witness of Ordlaf and Osferth and Odda and Wihtbord and ^Ifstan the blear, and ^thelnoth. No. 18. Eadgifu, 961. Cod. Dip. CCCCXCIX., MCCXXXVn. SiGELM pledged land to Goda for thirty pounds. He having died in war, his daughter, Eadgifu, averred that he had, just before his death, re- deemed the land, and bequeathed it to her. Goda denied the redemption, and refused to surrender the land. Eadgifu sued Goda, and the Witan gave her the oath to prove the redemption. Goda still refused to surren- der till the king, Edward the Elder, threatened him with confiscation, when, as is averred, he did surrender. Still he did not escape a judg- ment for some ofEence not stated, which put his life and property in the queen's hands. In Edwy's reign, the sons of Goda again took possession of the land; but, in Edgar's reign, a new suit restored it to Eadgifu, who gave it to Christ's Church. Anko dominicae incarnationis Eadgifu cyS Sam arcebis- DCCCCLXI., ego Eadgiva regi- , ^ . i. -c J J- i. -c J J- cope and Cristes cyrcean hy- na et mater Eadmundi et iLadredi ^ j j regum, pro salute animae meae, rede hu hire land com at Culin- concedo aecclesiae Christi in Do- robernia monachis ibidem deo ser- g°° ' ^^^^ ''' ®^^* ^'^ ^^^^^"^ ^''^ vientibus has terras, Meapeham, faeder land and boc swa he mid Culinges, Leanham, Peccham, Fernlege, Munccetun, Ealdintun, '^^^ ''^S^*' ^""^ ^™ ^^« y^"^'"*'^ liberas ab omni saeculari gravitate lefdon. Hit gelamp 8aet hire Eadgifu makes known to the archbishop and the community of Christ's church how her land at Cooling came [to her] ; that is, that her father left her land and charter as he rightfully got, and hi8 ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 3J:3 exceptis tribus, pontis et arcis con- structione, expeditione. Qualiter autem istae terrae michi venerunt, operaepraetiumduxi intimare om- nibus, scilicet Odoni archisacerdoti tociusque Britanniae primati, et f amiliae Christi, id est monachis in Dorobernia civitate. Contigit ali- quando patrem meum Sigelmum habere necessitatem .xxx. libra- rum quas a quodam principe nomi- ne Goda mutuo accepit, et pro va- dimonio eidem dedit terram quae nominatur Culinges, qui tenuit eam septem annis. Septimo itaque anno expeditio praeparabatur per omnem Cantiam, .cum qua Sigel- mum patrem meum ire oportuit ; cum vero se pararet venerunt illi in mente .xxx. librae quas Godae debebat, quas statim ei reddere fecit. Et quia nee fllium nee fi- liam nisi me habuit, haeredem me fecit illius terrae et omnium terra- rum suarum et libros michi dedit. Forte tunc evenit patrem meum in bello cecidisse ; postquam au- tem idem Goda audivit defunc- faeder aborgude xxx punda aet Godan, and betaeht him Saet land 8aes feos to anwedde, and he hit haefde vii winter. Da gelamp emb Sa tid 3aet man beonn ealle Cantware to wigge to Holme. Da nolde Sighelm hire faeder to wigge faran mid nanes mannea scette unagifnum, and agef 8a Godan xxx punda, and becwae?5 Eadgife his dehter land and boc sealde. Da he on wigge afeallen waes, 8a aetsoc Goda Saes feos aegiftes and Saes landes wyrnde oS 8aes on syxtan geare. Da spraec hit faestlice Byrhsige Dy- rincg swa lange 08 Sa witan Se 8a waeron gerehton Eadgife 8aet heo sceolde hire faeder hand ge- parents left them to him. It happened that her father borrowed thirty pounds of Goda, and assigned him the land in pledge for the money, and he held it seven years. Then it happened about that time that all Kentishmen were summoned to Holme on military service ; so Sighelm, her father, was unwilling to go to the war with any man's money unpaid, and gave thirty pounds to Goda, and bequeathed his land to Eadgifu, his daughter, and gave her the charter. When he had fallen in war, then Goda denied the return of the money, and refused to give up the land till some time in the sixth year. Then [her kinsman] Byrhsige Dyrincg firmly pressed her claim, until the Witan, who then were, adjudged to Eadgifu that she should cleanse her father's hand \.j 344 SELECT CASES IN turn iu bello esse, negavit sibi xxx libras persolutas f uisse, terramque quam pro vadimonio a patre meo accepit detinuit fere per sex an- nos. Sexto vero anno quidam propinquus mens nomine Byrh- sige Dyring coepit instanter aperte conqueri apud optimates et prin- cipes et sapientes regni de injuria propinquae suae a Godone facta. Optimates autem et sapientes pro justicia invenerunt, et justo judi- cio decreverunt quod ego quae filia et haeres ejus sum, patrem meum purgare deberem, videlicet sacramento.xxx.librarum, easdem- que .XXX. libras patrem meum per- solvisse; quod, teste toto regno, apud Agelesford peregi ; sed non tunc quidem potui terram meam habere, quoadusque amici mei re- gem Eduuardum adierunt, et ilium pro eadem terra requisierunt. Qui videlicet rex eidem Godoni, super omnem honorem quem de rege tenuit, praedictam terram inter- dixit, sicque terram dimisit. Non multo autem post tempore conti- claensian be swa miclan feo, and heo Saes aS laedde on ealre tSeode gewitnesse to Aeglesforda, and 3aer geclaensude hire faeder tJaes agiftes be xxx punda aSe. Da gyt heo ne moste landes brucan aer hire frynd fundon aet Ead- warde cyncge Saet he him Saet land forbead swa he aeniges brucan wolde, and he hit swa alet. Da gelamp on fyrste Saet se cynincg Godan oncutSe swa swySe swa him man aetrehte bee and land ealle 3a ?5e he ahte, and se cynincg hine Sa and ealle his are mid bocum and landum for- geaf Eadgife to ateonne swa swa heo wolde. Da cwaeS heo Saet heo ne dorste for gode him swa [an oath of] as much value [namely, thirty pounds]. And she took oath to this effect at Aylesford, on the witness of all the people, and there cleansed her father in regard to the return of the money, with an oath of thirty pounds. Even then she was not allowed to enjoy the land until her friends obtained of King Edward that he forbade him [Goda] the land, if he wished to enjoy any [that he held from the king] ; and he so let it go. Then it happened, in course of time, that the king brought so serious charges against Goda, that he was adjudged to lose charters and land, all that he held [from the king, and his life to be in the king's hands]. The king then gave him and all his property, charters, and lands to Eadgifu, to dispose of as she would. Then ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 345 git eundem Godonem coram rege ita inculpari, quod per judici- um judicatus sit perdere omnia quae de rege tenuit, vitamque ejus esse in judicio regis. Rex autem dedit eundem michi et omnia sua cum libris omnium terrarum sua- rum ut de eo facerem secundum quod promeruit. Ego autem pro timore dei non ausa f lii reddere ei secundum quod contra me prome- ruit, sed reddidi ei omnes terras suas excepta terra duorum aratro- rum apud Osterland; libros au- tem terrarum non reddidi ei, pro- bare enim volui quam fldem de beneficio contra tot injurias michi ab eo illatas tenere vellet. De- functo autem domino meo rege Edwardo, -SIthelstanus Alius sus- cepit regnum, quem videlicet re- gem requisivit idem Godo ut pro eo me rogaret quatinus ei redde- rem libros terrarum suarum. Ego autem libenter, devicta amore vi- delicet regis -lEthelstani, ei omnes libros terrarum suarum reddidi, excepto libro de Osterlande, quem leanian swa he hire to geearnud haefde, and agef him ealle his land butan twam sulungum aet Osterlande, and nolde 3a bee agi- fan aer heo wyste hu getriwlice he hi aet landum healdan wolde. Da gewat Eadward cyncg and fencg AeSelstan to rice. Da Go- dan sael Suhte, Sa gesohte he Sone kynincg AeSelstan and baed Saet he him geSingude wiS Eadgife his boca edgift, and se cyncg 3a swa dyde and heo him ealle agef butan Osterlandes bee, and he Sa boc unnendre handa hire tolet, and Sara oSerra mid eaSmettum geSancude ; and uferran Saet twelfa sum hire aS sealde for ge- borenne and ungeborenne Saet said she that she durst not, for [fear of] God, make such a return to him as he had merited from her, and gave up to him all his lands except two hides at Osterland, but would not give up the charters before she knew how truly he would hold them in regard to the lands. Then King Edward died, and ^thelstan took the throne. When it seemed to Goda seasonable, he went to King ^thelstan, and prayed him to intercede with Eadgifu for the return of his charters ; and the king then did so, and she returned him all except the charter of Osterland ; and he relinquished the charter voluntarily to her, and thanked her with humility for the others. And, further, he, with eleven others, gave an oatTi to her, for born and unborn, that the matter in dispute was for 346 SELECT CASES IK scilicet humiliter bona voluntate dimisit. Insuper pro se et omni- bus parentibus suis, natis et non- dum natis, nunquam quaerimo- niam facturos de praedicta terra, secum acceptis undecim compari- bus suis, michi sacramentum fecit. Hoc autem factum est in loco qui nominatur Hamme juxta Laewes. Ego autem Eadgiva habui terram cum libro de Osterlande diebus duorum regum ^thelstani et Eadmundi filiorum meorum ; Ea- dredo quoque rege filio meo de- functo, despoliata sum omnibus terris meis et rebus. Duo quo- que filii jam saepenominati Godo- nis, Leofstanus et Leofricus, ab- stulerunt michi duas superius nom- inatas terras Culinges et Oster- lande, veneruntque ad puerum Eadwium, qui tunc noviter leva- tus est in regem, et dixerunt se majorem justiciam in illis terris habere quam ego. Eemansi ergo illis terris et omnibus aliis privata usque ad tempora Eadgari regis. Qui cum audisset me ita dehones- Sis aefre gesett spraec waere, and Sis waes gedon on AeSelstanes kynincges gewitnesse and his wy- tena aet Hamme wiS Laewe, and Eadgifu haefde land mid bocum Sara twegra cyninga dagas hire suna. Da Eadred geendude and man Eadgife berypte aelcere are, Sa naman Godan twegen suna, Leofstan and Leofric, on Eadgife Sas twa foresprecenan land aet Culingon and aet Osterland, and saedon Sam cilde Eadwige Se Sa gecoren waes Saet hy rihtur hiora waeron Sonne hire ; Saet Sa swa waes oS Eadgar astiSude, and he and his wytan gerehton Saet hy manfull reaflac gedon haefden, and hi hire hire are gerehton ever settled ; and this was done in the witness of King ^thelstan and his "Witan, at Hamme, near Lewes. And Eadgifu held the land, with the charters, during the days of the two kings, her sons [^thelstan and Eadmund]. Then Eadred died, and Eadgifu was deprived of all her property ; and two sons of Goda (Leofstan and Leofric) took from Eadgifu the two before-mentioned lands at Coo- ling and Osterland, and said to the child Edwy, who was then chosen king, that they were more rightly theirs than hers. This then re- mained so, till Edgar obtained power ; and he and his Witan adjudged that they had been guilty of wicked spoliation, and they adjudged and restored to her her property. Then, by the king's ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 347 tatam et despoliatam, congrega- and agefon. Da nam Eadgifu be tis principibus et sapientibus An- „ ■, ^ ■, • V • i 11 .^ ■ oaes cynincges leafe and gewit- gliae, intellexit enim me cum j b o magna injusticia rebus et terris nesse, and ealra his bisceopa 8a meis despoliatam, idem rex Ead- garus restituit mihi terras meas et omnia mea. Ego autem li- tescyrcean mid hire agenum han- bec and land betaehte into Cris- dum up on tJone altare lede X»{o<. No. 19. Eadgar, 966. Cod. Dip. MCCLVIII. Forfeiture of Bromley and Fawkham, by the widow of .Sllfric, to the king, for the theft of the charter of Snodland. The Bishop of Roch- ester bought them of the king, and allowed the widow a life-occupancy. She thereupon assumed property in them, and was supported by the shire gemot. -)- Drrs waeron Sa land aet Bromleage and aet Fealcnaham Sam cinge Eadgare gereht on Lundenbyrig, purh Snodinglandes landbec, 3a Sa preostas forstaelon Sam biscope on Hrofesceastre, and gesealdan heo Aelfrice Aescwynne sunu wiS feo dearnunga. And heo Aescwyn Thus were the lands at Bromley and at Fawkham assigned to King Eadgar, at London, through the charters of Snodland, which the priests stole from the Bishop of Rochester, and sold to iElfric, the son of -SJscwyn, secretly, for money. And -ffiscwyn, ^Ifric's mother, formerly gave them to the church. When the bishop had 348 SELECT CASES IN Aelfrices modor sealde heo aer Siderin ; tSa geacsode se biscop 8aet Sa bee forstolene waeron, baed Sara boca Sa geornlice. Under Sam Sa gewatt Aelfric, and he baed 8a lafe sySSan o3 man gerehte on cinges feningmanna gemote Saere stowe and Sam biscope 8a forstole- nan becc Snodiglandes and bote aet 8aere fiyfSe ; Saet waes on Lun- dene, 8aer waes se cing Eadgar, and se arcebiscop Dunstan, and Aethelwold biscop, and Aelfstan biscop, and o8er Aelfstan, and Ael- fere ealdorman, and fela cynges witena. And man agaef 3a into 8aere stowe Sam biscope Sa becc ; Sa stod Sara wyderan are on Saes cinges handa ; Sa wolde Wulfstan se gerefa niman Sa are to Saes cinges handa, Bromleah and Fealcnaham ; Sa gesohte seo wydewe 8a halgan stowe and Sane biscop, and agaef Sam cinge Bromleages boo and Fealcnahames ; and se byscop gebohte Sa becc and Sa land aet Sam cinge on Godeshylle, mid fiftegan mancesan goldes and hundte- ontigan and prittegam pundum, furh forespraece and costnunge into sancte Andrea ; siSSan Sa lefde se biscop Sare wydewan Sara lande bryces. Under Sam Sa gewatt se cing : ongan Sa sySSan Byrhtric Sare wydewan maeg, and heo to Sam genedde Set by brucan Sara landa on reaflace ; gesohtan Sa Sane ealdorman Eadwine and Saet folc, learned that the charters were stolen, he earnestly asked for the char- 1 ters. Meanwhile iElfric died, and he [the bishop] after this sued his widow until they adjudged the stolen charters of Snodland to the ' church and the bishop, at a gemot of the king's officers, and the in- demnity for the theft. This was in London, where was King Eadgar and Archbishop Dunstan and Bishop ^thelwold and Bishop ^If- stan, and the other ^Ifstan, and Alderman ^Ifere, and many of tho king's Witan. And the charters were then deposited in the church, [in charge of] the bishop. Then the widow's property stood in the king's hands. Eeeve Wulfstan wanted to take the property into the king's hands, — Bromley and Fawkham ; but the widow came to the holy church and the bishop, and gave up to the king the charter of Bromley and of Fawkham. And the bishop bought the charters and the land of the king at Godshill, for fifty mancuses of gold, and a hundred and thirty pounds, by intercession and urgency, for Saint Andrew's. Then, afterwards, the bishop allowed the widow the en- joyment of these estates. Meanwhile the king died : then, after- wards, began Byrhtric, the widow's kinsman, and constrained hftr that they should occupy the lands by force. Then they sought the ealdorman, Eadwine, and the people, who were God's adversaries, AKGLO-SAXON LAW. 849 8e waes Godes anspreca, and geneddan Sane biscop be ealre his are agiftes (Jara boca; ne moste he beon Sara Sreora nanes wyrSe 8e be eallum leodscipe geseald waes on wedde, tale, ne teames, ne ah- nunga. and forced the bishop, by [penalty of] all his possessions, to the return of the charters ; nor was he allowed to make use of an y on e of those thre e [m odes of p roof"] wh ich was granted by every people on [giv- ing] pledge, neither tale, nor team, nor ownership. No. 20. iETHELWOLD, 963-975. Cod. Dip. DXCI. This charter witnesses an exchange of lands. In tracing the title of one of the parcels of land, the following case of murder by witchcraft is Bet forth. . . . And Saet land act AegeleswyrSe headde an wyduwe and hire sunu aer forwyrt, forSan Se hi drifon [ijserne stacan on Aelsie "WuK- stanes faeder, and Saet werS aereafe and man teh Saet morS forS of hire inclifan. Da nam man Saet wif and aSrencte hie aet Lundene- brygce, and hire sune aetberst and werS utlah, and Saet land code Sam kynge to handa, and se kyng hit forgeaf Sa Aelfsie, and Wulf- stan TJecea his sunu hit sealde eft AeSelwolde bisceop^. . . . ■ ■ B ~"~ — ' . . . And a widow and her son had formerly forfeited the land at Aylesworth, because they drove iron pins into [an image of] ^Isie, Wulfstan's father, and this was law-breaking ; and the [image on which they had practised] murder was taken out of her closet. They took the woman, and drowned her at Londonbridge ; and her son es- caped and became an outlaw, and the land went into the king's hands ; and the king then granted it to jElfsie ; and Wulf stan Uccea, his son, gave it afterwards to Bishop ^thelwold. . . . 350 SELECT CASES IN No. 21. ^THELRBD, 965-993. ffiekes. Diss. Epist. 59. Cod. Dip. MCCLXXXVm. JElfeh bequeathed Wouldhani to the Church of Saint Andrew, in Roch- ester, leaving Cray to his nephew's widow as her morning-gift. She mar- ried Leofsun, and they entered by force upon Wouldham, as hers through her first husband. The bishop recovered the land by suit in the shire gemot. Rex Aethelberhtus primum hereditaverat de Wuldaham apos- tolum S. Andream at ecclesiam su- am in Hrofeceatra aeterno jure, et commisit illud manerium Eardul- f o epipcopo Hrofensi ad custodien- dum, et ejus successoribus. Igi- tur in manibus successorum abla- tum est iterum apostolo, et eccle- siae suae in manibus regum, ita quod plures reges unus post alte- ram habuerunt illud postea usque ad tempus regis Eadmundi. Tunc quidam probus homo nomine Aelf- stanus Heahstaninc emit illud a rege Eadmundo, et dedit illi pro eo centum duodecim mancas auri et XXX libras denariorum. Hujus pecuniae majorem partem dedit postea ipsi regi Aelfegus filius ip- sius Aelfstani. Postea mortuo rege Eadmundo, Eadredus rex he- -(- Dus waeron 8a seox sulung aet Wuldaham sancte Andrea ge- seald into Hrofesceastre. Aethel- bryht cine hit gebocode Sam apes- tole on ece yrfe and betaehte hit Sam biscope Eardulfe to bewi- tenne and his aef tergaencan ; Sa betweonan Sam wearS hit ute, and haefdon hit cynegas oS Ead- mund cine ; Sa gebohte hit Aelf- stan Heahstaninc aet Saem cince mid hundtwelftigan mancesan goldes and frittigan pundan, and Thus were the six hydes at Wouldham given to Saint Andrew at Rochester. King ^thelbert deeded it by charter to the apostle in perpetuity and delivered it to Bishop Eardulf and his successors to ad- minister. Then among them it was alienated, and the kings had it down to king Eadmund. Then jJilfstan Heahstaninc bought it of the king for a hundred and twenty mancuses of gold and thirty pounds, and his son JElieh. gave him almost all this. After King Edmund, King ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 351 reditavit inde predictum Aelfsta- num in aeternam hereditatem. Itaque post mortem hujus Aelf- stani, praefatus Aelfegus, qui regi Eadmundo dederat majorem par- tem pecuniae pro patre suo prop- ter Wuldeham, successit huic Aelf- stano in hereditatem. Qui statim conclusit et oninino confirmavit totum quod pater suus in vita sua fecerat. Hie autem fratri suo Aelfrico et terras atque pecunias patris sui ita plene subtraxit quod ipse Aelfricus nichU omnino inde poterat habere nisi servitio illud ab eo promeruisset, quemadmo- dum quilibet extraneus. Tamen praecogitatus tandem Aelfegus propter consanguinitatis fraterni- tatem concessit illi Earhetham et Craeiam et Aeinesfordam et Wul- deham in diebus vitae suae tantum, in praestito solummodo. Itaque mortuo Aelfrico, Aelfegus statim accepit omnia praestita sua quae fratri suo viventi praestiterat. Aelfricus autem habuit filium nomine Eadricum. Aelfegus vero non habuit. Et ideo Aelfegus concessit illi Eadrico Earhetham et Craeiam et Wuldeham, et re- Saet him sealde maest eal Aelfeh his sunu : aefter Eadmunde cincge 3a gebocode hit Eadred cine Aelf- stane on ece yrfe : 8a aefter Aelf- stanes daege waes Aelfeh his sunu his yrfeweard, and (Jaet he leac on halre tungon, and ofteah Aelf- rice his breSer landes and aehta butan he hwaet aet him geear- node; 8a for 8aere bro8orsibbe geu8e he him Earhi8es and Crae- gan and Aenesfordes and Wulda- hames his daeg ; 8a oferbad Ael- feh Saene bro8or and feng to his laene ; 8a haefde Aelfric sunu Eadric hatte, and Aelfeh nanne : 8a geu8e Aelfeh Sam Eadrice Earhi8es and Craegan and Wul- Eadred deeded it to -ffilfstan in perpetuity. Then, after -Sllfstan's day, ^Ifeh, his son, was his heir ; and [all] this he established in due form and deprived his brother ^Ifric of land and property, unless he earned it of him by service. Then, because of his brotherlove, he grant- ed him Erith, and Cray, and ^nesford, and Wouldham for life. JElfeh then outlived his brother, and resumed possession of his grant. ^Ifric had a son called Eadric, and ^If eh had none ; so ^Ifeh granted Eadric Erith, and Cray, and Wouldham, and held ^nesford S52 SELECT CASES IN tinuit in manu sua Aeinesford. Mortuus est autem ipse Eadricus absque commendatione vel distri- butione rerum suarum ; tunc ite- rum Aelfegus accepit praestita sua omnia. Habebat etiam ipse Ead- ricus uxorem et non liberos. Hac de causa concessit Aelfegus Uli viduae donum dotis suae tantum quod ei dederat Eadricus, quando earn primum accepit uxorem, in Craeia. Et tunc remansit Litel- broc et Wuldeham in praestito suo. Postea quando ei visum ac placitum fuit, accepit flrmam suam in Wuldehame, et in aliis volebat similiter facere, sed iterum infir- matus est, et quia infirmatus est valde, misit illico ad archiepisco- pum Dunstanum ut veniret ad eum. Qui absque mora venit ad eum et locutus est illi in loco illo qui vocatur Scelf a. Ibi coram archiepiscopo fecit Aelfegus com- mendationem sive distributionem omnium rerum suarum, et consti- tuit unam partem ecclesiae Christi Cantuariae, et alteram partem ec- clesiae S. Andreae, et tertiam partem uxori suae. Postea fuit quidam' Leofsunu, qui uxorem dahames and haefde himsylf Aenesford ; 8a gewat Eadric aer Aelfeh cwideleas, and Aelfeh feng to his laene ; 8a haefde Eadric lafe and nan beam ; 8a geu8e Aelfeh hire hire morgengife aet Craegan, and stod EarhiS and Wuldaham and Lytlanbroc on his laene ; 8a him eft geSuhte, 8a nam he his f eorme on Wuldaham, and on Sam o8ran wolde, ac hine geyflade ; and he 8a sende to Sam arcebiscope Dunstane, and he com to Scylfe to him and he cwaeS his cwide beforan him, and he saette aenne cwide to Cristes cyrican and o8erne to Sancte Andrea and Sane friddan sealde his lafe. Da braec himself. Then Eadric died, intestate, before JElfeh, and -ffilfeh resumed possession of his grant. Eadric had a widow and no child ; then ^If eh granted her her morning-gift at Cray ; and Erith, and Would- ham, and Littlebrook stood at his disposal. When it seemed good to him, he took his [rights of ] farm at Wouldham, and intended to do so in the other places. But he became ill ; and he then sent to Arch- bishop Dunstan, and he came to Scylf to him, and he declared his testament before him, and he deposited one [copy of his] testament in ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 353 Eadrici nepotis Aelfegi relictam accepit sibi in uxorem, et per ip- sam mulierem incepit frangere constitutiones Aelfegi, quas fece- rat coram archiepiscopo, et vitu- perare arehiepiscopum, et testimo- nium ejus irritum facere. Tandem multa stimulatus cupidine cum ilia muliere sua, quasi quadam securitate Ulius uxoris suae induc- tus intravit in terras illas absque concilio et judicio sapientum viro- rum. Quod ubi archiepiscopus audivit, sine omni mora indaxit statim calumniam proprietatis in omnem distributionem Aelfegi, cui ipsemet afEuit, et quae per eum facta fuerat. Diem ergo placiti hujus rei constituit archiepiscopus apud Erhetham per testimonium Aelfstani episcopi Lundoniae, et Aelfstani episcopi Hrofescestre, et totius conventus canonicorum Lundoniae, totius conventus ec- clesiae Ckristi Cantuariae, et omnium orientalium et occidenta- lium Cantiae, et Wulfsii presbiteri qui turn vocatus est scirman, id est judex comitatus, et Brihtwaldi de Maerewurtha. Ad ultimum ita notificatum est in Suthseaxa, syScJan Leofsunu, furh Saet wif Se he nam Eadrices lafe, ?5aene cwide, and herewade Saes arcebiscopes gewitnesse ; rad Sa innon 8a land mid Sam wife butan witena dome. Da man Saet Sam biscope ciSde, Sa gelaedde se biscop ahnunga ealles Aelfehes cwides to EarhiSe on gewitnesse Aelfstanes biscopes on Lundena, and eaUes Saes hire- des, and Saes aet Cristes cyrican, and Saes biscopes Aelfstanes an Hrofesceastre, and Wulfsies pre- ostes Saes scirigmannes, and Bryhtwaldes on MaereweorSe, and ealra East-Cantwarena and West-Cantwarena, and hit waes gecnaewe on SuS Seaxan and on Christ's Church, and another at Saint Andrew's, and gave the third to his widow. Then, afterwards, Leofsunu, through the wife that he took, Eadric's widow, broke the will and rejected the archbishop's witness, and rode in upon the land with his wife without a decree of the Witan. When this was made known to the bishop, the bishop proved ownership of all -^Ifeh's bequest, at Erith, by witness of ^Ifstan, bishop of London, and all the family, and of that at Christ's Church, and of Bishop -iElfstan of Rochester, and of Wulfsie the 28 354 SELECT CASES IN et in Westseaxa, et in Middelae- axa, et in Eastseaxa, quod archi- episcopus Dunstanus cum libris ecclesiastici juris, et signo crucis Christi, quam suis manibus tene- bat, sui solis juramento adquisivit in aeternam hereditatem deo ac S. Andreae apostolo omnes terras illas quas Leofsunu sibi usurpa- bat. Ipsum vero juramentum archiepiscopi accepit Wulfsi scir- man, id est judex provinciae, ad opus regis, quandoquidem ipse Leofsunu illud suscipere nolebat. Insuper ad hoc perficiendum fuit hoc quoque maximum adjumen- tum temporibusque futuris maxi- mum securitatis probamentum, quod decies centum viri electissimi ex omnibus illis supradictis comi- tatibus juraverunt post archiepis- copum in ipsa cruce Christi, ratum et aetemae memoriae stabile fore sacramentum quod archiepiscopus juraverat. "West Seaxan and on Middel- Seaxan and on East-Seaxan, Saet se arcebiscop mid hisselfes a!Se geahnode Gode and Sancte An- drea mid Sam bocan on Cristas hrode Sa land ^e Leofsunu him toteah. And tJaene aS nam Wulf- sige se scirigman, (Sa he nolde to Saes cinges handa ; and Saer waes god eaca ten hundan mannan 3e Sane aS sealdan. priest, who was shire-man, and of Bryhtwald of Maereworth, of all the East-Kentishmen and West-Kentishmen ; and it was known in Sus- sex, and in Wessex, and in Middlesex, and in Essex, that the arch- bishop with his own oath, with the books and on Christ's rood, proved that the land which Leofsunu appropriated to himself belonged to God and Saint Andrew. And Wulfsie, the shire-man, received the oath for the king, since he [Leofsunu] refused to receive it. And there were many more, a thousand men, who gave the oath. ANGLO-SAXON LAW. 355 No. 22. Wynfl^d, 990-994. Cod. Dip. DCXCIII. .SIlfric exchanged lands with Wynflsed. By some meai.s, left perhaps intentionally unexplained, Wynflsed had money of .Sllfric's in her pos- session. JElfric's son (?) Leofwine entered by force upon the land as his property. Wynflsed appealed to the king, who sustained her, and noti- fied Leofwine to that efl ect. Leofwine insisted upon a legal decision in the shire-gemot; and the king sent the case by writ to the shire, who gave the oath to Wynflsed, but stopped the suit by a compromise. -(- Hee cyS on tJysum gewrite hu Wynflaed gelaedde hyre ge- witnesse aet Wulfamere beforan Ae?5elrede cyninge. (Saet waes 8one Sigeric arcebiscop and Ordbyrht biscop, and Aelfric ealderman, and AelfSriS Saes cyninges modor. Saet hi waeron ealle to gewitnesse Saet Aelfric sealde Wynflaede Saet land aet Haccebuman and aet Bradanfelda ongean Saet land aet Deccet. Sa sende se cyuing Saer rihte be Sam arcebiscope and be Sam Se Saer mid him to gewitnesse waeron to Leofwine and cySdon him Sis. 3a nolde he butan hit man sceote to scir gemote. Sa dyde man swa. Sa sende se cyning be Aelvere abbude his insegel to Sam gemote at Cwicelmes-hlaewe and grette ealle Sa witan Se Saer gesomnode waeron. Saet waes Aethel- sige biscop, and Aescwig biscop, and Aelfric abbud,, and eal sio scir, and baed and het Saet hi scioldan Wynflaede and Leofwine swa riht- lice geseman swa him aefre rihtlicost fuhte. and Sigeric arcebiscop Here is made known in this writing how Wynflsed brought her witnesses before King ^thelred at Wolfmere, namely, Arch- bishop Sigeric, and Bishop Ordbyrht, and Ealdorman ^Ifric, and ^Ifthrith, the king's mother ; that they were all witness that -SIKric gave to Wynflsed the land at Hagborn, and at Bradfield, in exchange for the land at Datchet. Then sent the king forthwith by the Arch- bishop, and by those who were with him there as witnesses, to Leofwine, and made this known to him. Then would he not [consent] without it were referred to the shire-moot. So was it done. The king sent by Abbot ^Ifhere his seal to the gemot at Cuckamslow, and greeted all the Witan that were there assembled, namely. Bishop JEthelsig, and Bishop -^scwig, and Abbot ^Ifric, and all the shire, and requested and ordered that they should reconcile Wynflsed and Leofwine on such terms as seemed most just to them ; and Archbishop Sigeric sent 356 SELECT CASES IN sende his swutelunga