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Law, Justice and Landowners in Late Medieval England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 October 2011

Extract

Lawlessness, both the more subtle manipulative and the cruder violent varieties, has long been seen as one of the most marked features of England in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Even in recent years historians have found it a difficult subject to handle. With the notable exception of K. B. McFarlane, and more recently M.T. Clanchy and G.L. Harriss, few have been prepared to deny that there was something intrinsically wrong with the administration of the law in this period, even though they may concede that it was no ‘wronger’ than in the thirteenth century, merely better documented. Underlying these discussions there is, in Clanchy's words, the often unspoken assumption ‘that the king's justice really was the norm and that justice emanated from the centre to the localities.’ Thus, the need for an extension of royal justice is set against local abuses, which all law-abiding men from the king downwards would have wished eradicated.

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Copyright © the American Society for Legal History, Inc. 1983

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References

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74. Hanawalt tends to neglect aristocratic criminals in their role as administrators, in her study of ‘fur collar crime,’ supra note 1.

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85. For other cases, see Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, chs. 3, 4, 7 and 8, and Powell, ‘Public Order,’ supra note 14, ch. 6.

86. Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, appendix, 56; Carpenter, ‘Beauchamp Affinity,’ supra note 76, 515.

87. Carpenter, ‘Political Society,'supra note 70, 120–44; Griffiths, ‘Hazards,’ supra note 84, 2–3. Although Sir James Ormond did not receive the title of Earl of Wiltshire until 1449 (G.E.C.[ockayne], Complete Peerage, 14 vols., (London, 1910–40) XII, i, 734), to avoid confusion he will be given this title throughout.

88. The largest block of Buckingham lands in Warwickshire lay here. Dugdale, Antiquities of Warwickshire, supra note 84, 704, 712, 743; Calendar of Fine Rolls [hereafter] C.F.R.] 1437–45, 19.

89. Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, 198 n.5, 201–5.

90. Rowney, I., ‘The Staffordshire Political Community 1440–1500’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Keele, 1981) 2021Google Scholar, 42–73.

91. P.R.O. C.139/150/33/2.

92. Storey, End of the House of Lancaster, supra note 4, 129–41; C.P.R., 1446–52, supra note 7, 6, 27; P.R.O. K.B. 27/773 Coram Rege rot. 52d.; Proceedings and Ordinances of the Privy Council of England, 7 vols., Nicolas, N.H., ed. (London, 18341837) vi, 232Google Scholar.

93. For the mechanisms by which these mutual benefits of lord and client were advanced, see Carpenter, ‘Beauchamp Affinity,’ supra note 76, 520–32.

94. Carpenter, ‘Sir Thomas Malory,’ supra note 70, 36–38; Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, 195–99, 202–3.

95. Ibid., 199–201, 203–5. He did not grant Baldwin a life annuity until January 1451, which suggests he was still hoping to win William over (P.R.O. S.C. 6/1038/2).

96. Carpenter, ‘Beauchamp Affinity,’ supra note 76, 522–23, Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, 141–42, 199.

97. Ibid., 142, 195–96; C.F.R., 1445–52, supra note 88, 109 (Broun as mainpernor for the men who were keeping the lands at issue, almost certainly to protect Baldwin Porter; they included Wiltshire and William Mountford); P.R.O. K.B. 27/753 Coram Rege rot. 39; Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, Archer Coll. D.R.37 Box 82.

98. Ibid. D.R.37 Box 53.

99. Carpenter, ‘Sir Thomas Malory,’ supra note 70, 38, Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, 197–99.

100. Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’; supra note 70, 199–206; Lambeth Palace Library, Kempe's Reg. f.302; P.R.O. K.B.9/270A/74.

101. C.P.R., 1452–61, supra note 7, 58; P.R.O. C.139/150/33/2, 4; Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, 206.

102. Ibid., 207–10.

103. P.R.O. K.B.9/270A/74; P.R.O. S.C.6/1038/2; Dugdale, Antiquities of Warwickshire, supra note 84, 715; Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, 207.

104. P.R.O. K.B.9/290/7; Carpenter, ‘Political Society,'supra note 70, 210.

105. Ibid., 207–9.

106. See references listed at footnote 92.

107. C.F.R., 1452–61, supra note 88, 67, 70, 72–73; National Library of Wales, Peniarth MS 280 ff. 107, 110; Littleton was a feoffee for Wiltshire from at least 1447–60. Hist. MS Comm., Hastings MS i (London, 1928) 12Google Scholar; P.R.O. C.P.40/802 Rot. 125; Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, 212.

108. P.R.O. K.B.27/771 Coram Rege rot. 73; K.B.27/774 Coram Rege rot. 119.

109. Dugdale, Antiquities of Warwickshire, supra note 84, 718; Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, 212 n.l. The dating of the arbitration is also discussed in Griffiths, ‘Hazards,’ supra note 84, 11 n.23, but the Westminster Abbey deeds he cites in note 24 as quitclaims of Ramenham by Baldwin are quitclaims by other members of the family.

110. C.C.R., 1452–61, supra note 7, 186.

111. P.R.O. K.B.27/774 Coram Rege rot. 77d.; Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, 211.

112. C.C.R., 1454–61, supra note 7, 185–86, 429; Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, 211 n.5. However, Baldwin later claimed that the Ilmington feoffment of June 21, 1459 had never existed. C.C.R., 1454–61, 186. At the same time he also said that the Coleshill feoffment of July 26 had been made but not effected (ibid.), while Simon denied all feoffments of Ilmington, except for one made to him by his father (ibid., 429). The significance of these statements is not entirely clear, but, as they were made at the time of the forced releases (see below, n. 117), Baldwin and Simon were presumably under threat from their enemies, and the declarations are not necessarily to be believed.

113. Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, 213–4.

114. Scofield, C.L., Edward IV, 2 vols. (London, 1923) i, 24Google Scholar; Jacob, E.F., The Fifteenth Century (Oxford, 1961) 513Google Scholar.

115. P.R.O. K.B.9/284/53; Bodleian Lib. Dugdale MS 13 434; Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, 215. See also Carpenter, ‘Sir Thomas Malory,’ supra note 70, 38.

116. Dugdale, Antiquities of Warwickshire, supra note 84, 718–19; P.R.O. K.B.27/786 Rex rot. 4.

117. Dugdale, Antiquities of Warwickshire, supra note 84; C.C.R., 1454–61 supra note 7, 185–86, 364, 429; Westminster Abbey Mun. 4537, 4544.

118. Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, 215–16.

119. C.C.R., 1454–61, supra note 7, 364; for Fillongley, see Birmingham Ref. Lib., Birmingham Coll. 504041; P.R.O. S.C. 6/1003/32; Paston Letters, supra note 23, i, 437; C.P.R., 77, 323, 418.

120. Wedgwood, J. C., History of Parliament: Biographies of the Members of the Commons House (London, 1936) 602Google Scholar; Coventry Leet Book, 4 vols., Harris, M.D., ed. (London, 19071913) 300Google Scholar.

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122. Carpenter, ‘Political Society,’ supra note 70, 218–23.

123. Powell, ‘Arbitration,’ supra note 75; Baker, Spelman, supra note 14, 91–92; J.B. Post, ‘The Ladbroke Manor Dispute,’ Medieval Legal Records, supra note 4, 289–339; Rosenthal, J.T., ‘Feuds and Private Peace-Making,’ Nottingham Mediaeval Studies 14 (1970) 8490CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Civil Pleas of the Wiltshire Eyre, Clanchy, M.T., ed. (Devizes, 1971) 27Google Scholar; Wright, S., ‘A Gentry Society of the Fifteenth Century: Derbyshire c. 1430–1509’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Birmingham, 1978) 292330Google Scholar.

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127. E.g., Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, i, 293, 371, ii, 9, 349–50, iii, 265, 478, iv, 156, 349, v. 108–9, 367. vi. 160. 188.

128. Post, J.B., ‘Sir Thomas West and the Statute of Rapes,’ Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 53 (1980) 2430CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Rotuli Parliamentarum, supra note 13, iii, 139–40.

129. Elton, ‘Crime and the Historian,’ supra note 8, 4-5. And see Ives, E.W., ‘Agaynst taking awaye of Women,’ in Ives, R. J. Knecht, Scarisbrick, J.J., eds., Wealth and Power in Tudor England (London, 1978) 2425Google Scholar, for a piece of almost superfluous legislation resulting from a single case.

130. McFarlane, ‘Parliament and Bastard Feudalism,’ supra note 126, 16; McFarlane, ‘Parliament in the later Middle Ages,’ supra note 2, 293–96; Roskell, J.S., The Commons and their Speakers (Manchester, 1965)Google Scholar chs. 6–11. The number of knights, as opposed to borough representatives, returned was seventy-four. Wedgwood, J.C., History of Parliament: Register of the… Members of both Houses (London, 1938) lxxxiii–viGoogle Scholar.

131. Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, ii, 7–11. Although the evidence at this stage is limited, see also Harriss, G.L., King, Parliament and Public Finance in Medieval England (Oxford, 1975) 122–24)Google Scholar; Rotuli Pariamentorum, 331–57, 364–71, iii, 18–25, 42–45, 62–65, 81, 497–510, 539–44, 598–601. And see footnote 13, above.

132. E.g., Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, ii, 128–29, 142–45, 304–8, iii, 15–28, iv, 347–62, 447–57, v, 52–65, vi, 8, 154–64. Henry V's parliaments are the most notable exception to this rule. See also Harriss, King, Parliament and Public Finance, supra note 131, esp. 253–65, and Roskell, Commons and their Speakers, chs. 6–11.

133. E.g., Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, v, 103–17, 183–203.

134. Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, ii, 331–60, iii, 15–27, 42–48, 61–67, 494–511, 538–44, 585–89, 591–603. See also Holmes, G., The Good Parliament (Oxford, 1975) 108–34Google Scholar and Brown, A.L., ‘The Commons and the Council in the Reign of Henry IV,“ in Fryde, E.B. and Miller, E., eds. Historical Studies of the English Parliament, 2 vols. (Cambridge, 1970) ii, 3160Google Scholar, rpt. from English Historical Review 79 (1964) 583613Google Scholar.

135. Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, v, 322ff.; ibid., vi, throughout.

136. Ibid, vi, 3–166, v, 367–8, 633–4, 322–23. For the background for 1455 and 1459, see Griffiths, Reign of Henry VI, supra note 4, 746–51, and for 1468, see Ross, Edward IV, supra note 4, 405.

137. E.g., Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, ii, 141, 167–68, 230, 260, 262, 31 1–12, 354, iii, 18, 119, 140, 161–62, 223, 267, 468–69, 471–72, iv, 121, 190, 253–54, 350, 401–2, v, 55, 61, 115, 323–24; Rotuli Parliamentorum Inediti, supra note 32, 224–25. See also Harriss, King, Parliament and Public Finance, supra note 131, 401–19.

138. E.g., Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, ii, 141 (justices'receipt of gifts), 165, 230 (excessive fines by justices), 260 (fees taken by coroners), 265 (fines on false indictments by a variety of officials), 314 (bribes taken by bailiffs), iii, 200, 222, 433, 468–69 (excessive fees taken by the marshall), v, 29 (officers'receipt of bribes for partial juries), 110 (‘perjury, extortion and oppression’ of sheriffs and other local officers), 323–24 (extortionate fees charged by officers). But cf. Maddicott, ‘Law and Lordship,’ supra note 6, 42–43.

139. E.g., Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, ii, 128, 141, 148, 202, 286, 305.

140. See footnotes 78 and 79 for references to thirteenth-century complaints. Also English Historical Documents, supra note 28, iii, 527–38 and Statutes of the Realm, 11 vols., Luders, A. et al. , ed.(London, 18101828) i, 154–6Google Scholar for complaints under Edward II, and Mirror of Justices, supra note 31, 155–75, and ibid., xii–xvi, xlixli for authorship.

141. E.g., Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, iii, 21, 42, 318, 445–46, 539, iv, 52, 352–53, v, 138, 181, 367–68, 487–88, 633–34, vi, 8.

142. It is notable that the greatest concentration of such complaints comes between 1376 and 1413 and under Henry VI. For the lapsing of such commissions from the later fourteenth century, see Harding, A., The Law Courts of Medieval England (London, 1973) 9498Google Scholar. Dr. Powell has suggested to me that the assize justices may have had some supervisory capacity over the J.P.s, but this was obviously more limited than the direct supervision over the shires exercised previously by other commissions.

143. See, e.g., Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, iii, 65, 94, 138, 161. It is presumably in reflection of administrative changes that petitions against commissions decrease as those against the overuse of conciliar law grow—both indicating unease at the central government's extension of its authority.

144. E.g., ibid, iii, 42–43, 62, 81, 139, 308, 440, 615–16, 624, 662, iv, 21, 139–40, vi, 159–60.

145. Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, iii, 65. See also Rotuli Parliamentorum Inediti, 271 for similar reactions in 1339 to trailbaston commissions granted at the Commons' request.

146. Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, ii, 261. And see footnote 47 for conciliar justice.

147. Ibid. 142, 161, 261, 376, iii, 44, 159, iv, 10, 380–1, v, 108 etc; Myers, A.R., ed., English Historical Documents (London, 1969) 411Google Scholar (from Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, iii, 416) and Virgoe, R., ‘The Crown and Local Government,’ in Boulay, F.R.H. Du and Barron, C.M., eds., The Reign of Richard II (London, 1971) 218–91Google Scholar show the hostility aroused by Richard II's attempt to pursue such a policy.

148. Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, ii, 128. And see e.g., ibid., 128, 141, 331, iii, 539, iv, 305 (approvers), ii, 258, iii, 505, iv, 81 (outlawries), ii, 265, 277, iii, 505, 506–7, iv, 121, 147, 378 (indictments), ii, 266–67, 270, iv, 110, vi, 620–21 (bail), ii, 354, iii, 319, iv, 305 (false imprisonment).

149. See references in footnote 1. Also Stones, ‘Folvilles,’ supra note 18, 117–36; Bellamy, J.G., ‘The Coterel Gang,’ English Historical Review 79 (1964) 698717CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Fryde, Tyranny of Edward II, supra note 7, chs. 5–8 for governmental oppression.

150. Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, ii, 104; Rotuli Parliamentorum Inediti, supra note 32, 225, 233; also Jones, W.G., ‘Keeping the Peace,’ American Journal of Legal History 18 (1974) 307–20CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Harriss, King, Parliament and Public Finance, supra note 131,403–6.

151. Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, v, 138.

152. E.g., ibid, ii, 295, 311, 364, 376 (pardons); iii, 541, v, 332 (supersedeas).

153. Ibid, iii, 265–66, 269; Storey, ‘Liveries and Commissions of the Peace,’ supra note 147, 131–52.

154. Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, v, 367–68. And see above, footnote 136. Roskell suggests this parliament was packed by the king. Commons and their Speakers, supra note 130, 263.

155. This subject is best discussed in Harriss, King, Parliament and Public Finance, supra note 131. See also McFarlane, Nobility, supra note 2, 291–97, Maddicott, ‘County Community,’ supra note 6, 27–43 and, for evidence that the pursuit of order could be an occupation of Lords and Commons, see A.L. Brown, ‘Parliament c. 1377–1422,’ English Parliament in the Middle Ages, supra note 72, 137–38.

156. Dobson and Taylor, Rymes of Robin Hood, supra note 24, 266–67; Skeat, Complete Works of Chaucer, supra note 24, iv, 665–66.

157. Dobson and Taylor, Rymes of Robin Hood, supra note 24, 82.

158. This is from the translation by Dobson and Taylor in Rymes of Robin Hood, supra note 24, 252, 253. The original is in Wright, T., The Political Poems and Songs of England (London, 1839) vi, 231–36Google Scholar.

159. Dobson and Taylor, Rymes of Robin Hood, supra note 24, 82.

160. See especially ‘A Gest of Robyn Hode,’ Rymes of Robin Hood, supra note 24, 108–10 and ‘Gamelyn,’ Complete Works of Chaucer, supra note 24, iv, 667. The Gower quote is from Cohen, H., A History of the English Bar and Attornatus to 1450 (London, 1929) 479–80.Google Scholar

161. Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, iii, 374–77.

162. Holt, Robin Hood, supra note 18, 10.

163. Cohen, History of the English Bar, supra note 160, 523–24.

164. Piers Plowman, supra note 25, B text, xiii–iv.

165. Ibid., Passus IV ll.171–95; Baldwin, Theme of Government in Piers Plowman, supra note 46, 51; Owst, Preaching in Medieval England, supra note 26, 17–18.

166. See above, 211–13.

167. E.g., Piers Plowman, supra note 25, B text, Prologue ll. 53–91, 100–10, Passus III ll. 251–54, Passus V ll. 70–148, Passus XX ll. 218–94; Wright, Political Poems and Songs, supra note 158, i, 263–70, 304–46. For authorship of these, see Scattergood, V.J., Politics and Poetry in the Fifteenth Century (London, 1971) 15, 17–18.Google Scholar

168. Wright, Political Poems and Songs, supra note 167, i, 323–24.

169. ‘A Gest of Robyn Hode,’ supra note 160, 86. It is worth noting that most of the examples of retaining and influencing justice cited by Maddicott concern the great ecclesiastical estates (‘Law and Lordship,’ supra note 6, 5–40). Could it be that this was the major reason for hostility to the practice? It is one of the abuses highlighted in the ‘Gest,’ supra note 160, 86), and the church was later associated by the Commons with lawlessness in a different way (Rotuli Parliamentorum, supra note 13, v, 151).

170. Sir Fortescue, John, De Laudibus Legum Anglie, Chrimes, S.B., ed. (Cambridge, 1942) lxvi–viiGoogle Scholar.

171. Ibid. lx.

172. Fortescue, Governance, supra note 1, 150–52 and, for reliance on money, throughout. For Richard II, see above, footnote 147 and Barron, supra note 28, 1–18 and Tuck, A., Richard II and the English Nobility (London, 1973)Google Scholar ch. 7. I am most grateful to Dr. Brendan Bradshaw for making me realise the nature of Fortescue's projected reform.

173. Fortescue, Governance, supra note 1, 150–51.

174. Ashby, Poems, supra note 43, 29; Weisser, Crime and Punishment, supra note 49, chs. 1 and 2; and see works cited above, supra note 49.

175. See works cited in supra note 37. Also Turner, The King and his Courts, supra note 38, 90–101; Sayles, King's Bench, supra note 14, iii, xxxix–lx, v, lxxxiii–vii; Harriss, King, Parliament and Public Finance, supra note 131, 401 — 10; Ross, Edward IV, supra note 4, 396–413; Chrimes, S B., Henry VII (London, 1972)Google Scholar chs. 8, 10 and 11.

176. Fryde, A Medieval Robber Baron, supra note 10, 197–221.

177. Harrison, C.J., ‘The Petition of Edmund Dudley,’ English Historical Review 87 (1972) 8299CrossRefGoogle Scholar (86–87 cited here); Chrimes, Henry VII, supra note 175, 212–16. See also the controversy over Henry VIl's last years between Cooper, J.P. and Elton, G.R., Historical Journal 1 (1958) 2139Google Scholar, 2 (1959) 103–29, 4 (1961) 1–29.

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180. Kaeuper, ‘Law and Order,’ supra note 10, 734–84; Stones, ‘Folvilles,’ supra note 18, 132–34; Ingram, ‘Communities and Courts,’ Crime in England, supra note 8, 110.

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185. Dobson and Taylor, Rymes of Robin Hood, supra note 24, 97, 101–4, 262–67, 115–22.

186. Skeat, Complete Works of Chaucer, supra note 24, iv, 665–67.

187. Ashby, Poems, supra note 43, 34.

188. Plucknett and Barton, Doctor and Student, supra note 44, 115.

189. Baldwin, Theme of Government in Piers Plowman, supra note 46, 39, citing C text of Piers Plowman, supra note 25, Passus XXI ll. 246–47.

190. Skeat, Complete Works of Chaucer, supra note 24, iv, 662–63.