登陆注册
5431000000041

第41章 SPEECH ON THE POWERS OF JURIES IN PROSECUTIONS FOR

You are so corrupt, that I should consider myself a partaker of your crime, were I to be guided by your opinion; or you are so grossly ignorant, that I, fresh from my bounds, from my plough, my counter, or my loom, am fit to direct you in your profession. This is an unfitting, it is a dangerous, state of things. The spirit of any sort of men is not a fit rule for deciding on the bounds of their jurisdiction. First, because it is different in different men, and even different in the same at different times; and can never become the proper directing line of law; next, because it is not reason, but feeling; and when once it is irritated, it is not apt to confine itself within its proper limits. If it becomes, not difference in opinion upon law, but a trial of spirit between parties, our courts of law are no longer the temple of justice, but the amphitheatre for gladiators. No--God forbid! Juries ought to take their law from the bench only; but it is our business that they should hear nothing from the bench but what is agreeable to the principles of the Constitution. The jury are to hear the judge, the judge is to hear the law where it speaks plain; where it does not, he is to hear the legislature. As I do not think these opinions of the judges to be agreeable to those principles, I wish to take the only method in which they can or ought to be corrected, by bill.

Next, my opinion is, that it ought to be rather by a bill for removing controversies than by a bill in the state of manifest and express declaration, and in words de praeterito. I do this upon reasons of equity and constitutional policy. I do not want to censure the present judges. I think them to be excused for their error. Ignorance is no excuse for a judge: it is changing the nature of his crime--it is not absolving. It must be such error as a wise and conscientious judge may possibly fall into, and must arise from one or both these causes: first, a plausible principle of law; secondly, the precedents of respectable authorities, and in good times. In the first, the principle of law, that the judge is to decide on law, the jury to decide on fact, is an ancient and venerable principle and maxim of the law, and if supported in this application by precedents of good times and of good men, the judge, if wrong, ought to be corrected; he ought not to be reproved, or to be disgraced, or the authority or respect to your tribunals to be impaired. In cases in which declaratory bills have been made, where by violence and corruption some fundamental part of the Constitution has been struck at; where they would damn the principle, censure the persons, and annul the acts; but where the law having been, by the accident of human frailty, depraved, or in a particular instance misunderstood, where you neither mean to rescind the acts, nor to censure the persons, in such cases you have taken the explanatory mode, and, without condemning what is done, you direct the future judgment of the court.

All bills for the reformation of the law must be according to the subject-matter, the circumstances, and the occasion, and are of four kinds:- 1. Either the law is totally wanting, and then a new enacting statute must be made to supply that want; or, 2. It is defective, then a new law must be made to enforce it. 3. Or it is opposed by power or fraud, and then an act must be made to declare it. 4 Or it is rendered doubtful and controverted, and then a law must be made to explain it. These must be applied according to the exigence of the case; one is just as good as another of them.

Miserable, indeed, would be the resources, poor and unfurnished the stores and magazines of legislation, if we were bound up to a little narrow form, and not able to frame our acts of parliament according to every disposition of our own minds, and to every possible emergency of the commonwealth; to make them declaratory, enforcing, explanatory, repealing, just in what mode, or in what degree we please.

Those who think that the judges, living and dead, are to be condemned, that your tribunals of justice are to be dishonoured, that their acts and judgments on this business are to be rescinded, they will undoubtedly vote against this bill, and for another sort.

I am not of the opinion of those gentlemen who are against disturbing the public repose; I like a clamour whenever there is an abuse. The fire-bell at midnight disturbs your sleep, but it keeps you from being burned in your bed. The hue and cry alarms the county, but it preserves all the property of the province. All these clamours aim at redress. But a clamour made merely for the purpose of rendering the people discontented with their situation, without an endeavour to give them a practical remedy, is indeed one of the worst acts of sedition.

I have read and heard much upon the conduct of our courts in the business of libels. I was extremely willing to enter into, and very free to act as facts should turn out on that inquiry, aiming constantly at remedy as the end of all clamour, all debate, all writing, and all inquiry; for which reason I did embrace, and do now with joy, this method of giving quiet to the courts, jurisdiction to juries, liberty to the press, and satisfaction to the people. I thank my friends for what they have done; I hope the public will one day reap the benefit of their pious and judicious endeavours. They have now sown the seed; I hope they will live to see the flourishing harvest. Their bill is sown in weakness; it will, I trust, be reaped in power; and then, however, we shall have reason to apply to them what my Lord Coke says was an aphorism continually in the mouth of a great sage of the law, "Blessed be not the complaining tongue, but blessed be the amending hand."

同类推荐
  • 华严经章

    华严经章

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 明伦汇编官常典刑部部

    明伦汇编官常典刑部部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 太上正一解五音咒诅秘箓

    太上正一解五音咒诅秘箓

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 太上九天延祥涤厄四圣妙经

    太上九天延祥涤厄四圣妙经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说缘本致经

    佛说缘本致经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 生活知识百科4

    生活知识百科4

    琐碎的生活中充满了神奇与魅力,平凡的生活却教会了我们很多不凡的伟大。《生活知识百科(学生版)》告诉你酒为何不会结冰,看完电视、用完电脑为何要洗脸,吸尘器如何吸尘等诸多生活知识,让你收获无限精彩。
  • 炼金魔法目录

    炼金魔法目录

    一名宅男成为异世贤者的故事。被重新定义的炼金术,不同于传统魔法的分类,在蒸汽朋克世界掀起魔导革命吧!日式奇幻,剧情向。……“你见过空中高塔嘛?”“没有。”“海上列车呢?”“没有。”“音速飞艇呢?”“都没有。”“这些都是炼金术的产品,没有什么是炼金术解决不了的!”“听你吹牛逼我嘴巴都干了,(掏出卷轴)容我点个外卖先。”
  • 北大口才课

    北大口才课

    成功学大师卡耐基曾说:“一个人的成功,15%取决于知识和经验,85%取决于沟通能力——发表自己意见的能力和激发他人热忱的能力。”可见,语言表达的力量是巨大的。在人际交往中,高超的口才技巧能够帮我们准确地表达思想、维护人际关系,甚至可以变危机为转机、化劣势为优势。它可以让我们在社交活动中如鱼得水,左右逢源;在职场中应付自如,游刃有余;在朋友面前口若悬河,谈笑风生;在恋人面前甜言蜜语,海誓山盟;在演讲台上慷慨激昂,意气风发;在论辩场上舌战群儒,雄智多辩。甚至可以毫不夸张地说,好命不好命,说话来决定。因此,好口才是人们闯荡社会的一项基本技能,是每个人都推荐的社交能力。
  • 驭龙

    驭龙

    这是一个与你们想象中不同的世界,人类在这个世界处于世界的底端,是高高在上的龙族的奴隶,千百万年从未更改。可是,当一个奴隶领导另外的奴隶站起来的时候,一场关于自由的战争便轰然爆发!风阳看着苍茫的大地,双手捏紧,仿佛掐住了那高高在上的神灵!
  • 星少长情

    星少长情

    戴秀卿,一个出生在塞北江南的灵动姑娘,清丽脱俗,温婉可人。她说,在她小小的世界里,只要有天纯蓝云纯净可看,碧海青草可摸,风过耳花袭香可听,怦然心动可守,这一生便是如诗如画般的存在。或许命运听到了她的心声,于是她便和她的怦然心动相遇了。“叶声哥哥,你会一辈子守在我身边吗?”“当然,我会一直陪着你,直到垂阳西落,暮雪白头…”或许上天有些嫉妒她,于是便带走了她的挚爱。那一刻,她觉得自己被“无情”推向了黑暗的悬崖,任凭她如何挣扎都听不到任何回答。当她选择放弃挣扎,准备拥抱黑暗时,一只温暖的手伸向了她,告诉她,幸福在等着她。“秀卿,相信我,我会用爱烘干你眼角的泪珠,让它不再轻易滑落…”“我相信…”直到最后,她说她依然喜欢记忆中的晴空碧海,香风沁脾。只有那份怦然心动留在了那记忆的长河中…
  • 活到最后的男人

    活到最后的男人

    钱如命因为没钱失恋后中了彩票,想去网吧发泄一下,谁知道老天又跟他开了一个玩笑,直接被神仙一个歪雷劈死了。神仙为了补偿钱如命送了他穿越与金手指,不过这一条蜈蚣,一个弱智的身体是闹哪样啊!在这强者生存的世界该怎么靠着一个不听话的金手指成为异界双雄。
  • 有你温暖这寒夜

    有你温暖这寒夜

    “我想和你一起看星星,看月亮,或者太阳也行,和你一起漫步在雨中,夕阳下。”在没有遇到你之前,我从未体验过心动的感觉。在没有遇到你之前,我也没有想过陪一个人一生。
  • N道贩子康采恩

    N道贩子康采恩

    汉唐有我的商店,宋明有我的商船,春秋与三国更是有我的军队!你问我一个商人要军队做什么?岂不知:下贾贾粮、中贾贾丝、上贾贾国。且看康采恩如何打造一个时空贸易帝国?!
  • 奈何丞相非我不嫁

    奈何丞相非我不嫁

    她当了半辈子的定安君老夫人,满朝文武没有一个是不敬她的,连皇帝都对她以师礼相待。被人换做君老夫人的时间太久,在她寿宴时那一声‘少夫人’竟让她泪目了。是啊,她曾经被人唤少夫人是最多的。特别是那个风华绝代的男人,只是他再也回不来了。晚间,笑容伺候她入睡时她好像看见了他。他笑着说:“少夫人,本少伺候你休息可好。”在次睁眼醒来,她回到了那个豆蔻年华的时候,她是护国郡主。重来一世,她定要护他至老!
  • 皇朝末日

    皇朝末日

    近午时分,西南方的小太阳高高挂着,像一个燃烧的火盆,炙烤着甲申年(1644年)八月的江淮大地,把一条黄土路烤得龟裂发烫。黄土路上逃难的人们连成了线,三个一群,五个一伙,一个个垂头丧气。谁能想到,就在这样的南逃队伍里,竟然混杂着皇太子朱慈和内宫高起潜。皇太子是崇祯皇帝的第一个儿子。这一年三月十九日,李自成兵破北京,崇祯皇帝自缢身亡,皇太子被俘。后来,皇太子随李自成攻打山海关,李自成兵败一片,皇太子趁乱逃出后,碰到高起潜,两人一起南逃。