The history of law must be a history of ideas. It must represent to us not merely what men have done and said, but what men have thought in bygone ages . . . we must infer what people thought in the past from what they wrote.
F. W. Maitland, “The Corporation Aggregate,” 1893.Footnote 1
The English common law relies upon the abilities of counsel and judges to interpret and evaluate precedents. This makes the law reports, which record the argumentation used to inform the judgments subsequently offered as precedents, critical to the process of administering justice. So they are today, as they were in the early modern period, when the industry professionalized. As reports became produced in large quantities and consumed by students, so too were they eradicated of variations in language, style and substance. Whether adjectival or declaratory, all of the ideas found within the reports could then be seen to fall, as still they can today, into one of two categories: ratio decidendi, which is the reasoning behind a specific decision that binds later judges, and obiter dictum, which is an observation hashed out in the course of reaching a specific decision that is not considered to bind judges but may nevertheless be persuasive to them. This article will concern itself principally with dicta in order to consider the circumstances whereby they have come to be discredited or used to develop new precedents in the context of legal and political crises associated with trade, war and slavery. Specifically it will look at those circumstances which compelled individuals working within the English common law to consider the idea that infidels were somehow different to Christians. Inspired by work at the crossroads of legal history and the intellectual history of the British Empire, this article presents a novel way to write the history of ideas.Footnote 2 This involves setting aside, but never forgetting, some of the best-known treatises and pamphlets in history, political philosophy and political economy, in order to take jurisprudence seriously on its own terms.Footnote 3 Approaching the law reports in their totality, and in isolation, encourages us to think like common lawyers did: for them, no material was more important than these reports. They represent a repository of ideas. Furthermore, and this is not trifling, here is an approach that allows for some consideration as to how far the trajectory of any single idea may be determined by the medium of its presentation.
This article begins with a consideration of perhaps the most important English common lawyer of his time, Sir Edward Coke (1552–1634). Coke was a man who expressed a number of the profound constitutional anxieties associated with the Tudor–Stuart transition. For J. G. A. Pocock, it was at this very moment that there began to flourish a kind of “historical thought” especially idealistic of timeless custom. It has been tempting for some legal historians to simplify and contort Pocock's argument to suggest that, as the royal prerogative came to be used and misused by Stuart kings, so too did the “common law mind” look with greater selectivity and insularity into the English medieval past for evidence of institutional stability perseverant of that prerogative.Footnote 4 Coke's pronouncements in Calvin's Case (1608) may be seen in this light, though it is more difficult to see all of Coke's offerings upon the subject of infidels in a similar way. Besides running the risk of overlooking some subtleties of distinction between dicta and ratio in his jurisprudence, more recent scholars, like David Chan Smith and Ian Williams, have persuasively cautioned against seeing Coke's approach to the powers of crown, parliament and common law as inflexible. Instead we might rather see Coke as somewhat more of a reformist than he has been allowed by the strictest proponents of the theory that his “ancient constitutionalism” was entirely oppositional to the royal prerogative.Footnote 5
Commerce and empire were crucial to the modernization of the English common law. Scholars of Calvin's Case and the imperial constitution have long appreciated this.Footnote 6 What is less common among historians, however, is an approach which takes a selection of Coke's ideas on the same topic from different sources in order to follow these through the jurisprudence. Doing so, as this article does, reveals how lawyers and judges responded to developments at home and abroad. The jurist of most importance in this frame will be Lord Mansfield (1705–93), whose reputation for intervention made him a favorite among private law reporters then, and historians now.Footnote 7 As a revamping Chief Justice, Mansfield made a sport of discrediting Coke's dicta, conscious of the need to make the common law more functional within a religiously tolerant commercial society such as Great Britain, he thought, should become.Footnote 8 Between Coke and Mansfield there lived John Holt (1642–1710), who is thoroughly interesting for managing to survive the officeholding upheavals of the 1680s to become a proponent of the unpopular idea of imposing limitations on government.Footnote 9 This article will suggest, moreover, that a number of Holt's observations about infidels within debates about conquest, commerce and slavery became influential in the development of the imperial constitution in his lifetime too. As Holt and his colleagues were made to engage with Coke's assertions about infidels, they were also confronted with an odd adaptation of these ideas; that is, one which suggested that the faithlessness of heathen slaves could provide for the possibility of recognizing property in them.
By no means, it is important to qualify, did Coke introduce the concept of faith into the English legal tradition. In the Middle Ages, tenants abided by the feudal expectation that an oath of fidelity (or “fealty”) was owed to their lords. Analogical to this was the expectation that clerks, merchants and men of religion from Christendom beyond England were required to profess, upon arrival into the realm, their fidelity to the king (ad fidem regis).Footnote 10 Separate to this was the qualification of good faith (bona fide) for actions and obligations. This was a recognizable standard for individual interactions within the later medieval common law, just as it had been for civilians, canonists and theologians on the Continent.Footnote 11 A requirement of faithfulness was even set out in the very name of the action at common law which developed in the sixteenth century to account for contracts (assumpsit et fideliter promisit).Footnote 12
By contrast, what pertained within English law to faithlessness—specifically the inability to keep faith with other Christians—was obscure ever since the early emergence of this prejudice around the time of the Crusades. It may have been natural for William of Newburgh (1136–98) to associate the Jews of York with “perfidy,” for this had become something of an ethnographic trope across Western Europe since at least Isidore of Seville (560–636), but how far such rhetoric can be said to have influenced English law is certainly a question.Footnote 13 Many Jews bought and sold land and other things in England without much difficulty or harassment; or, at least, they did until 1290, when Edward I orchestrated a widespread eviction of Jews entirely on the basis of what he perceived to be the pernicious effects of their moneylending, rather than their faithlessness.Footnote 14 With England purged of its Jewish population during the fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, that left few subjects of the realm around to identify openly as non-Christians—and none, it is surely more important for the purposes of this article, to record their pleas before the courts of common law. Not until 1520 was the inability of a “pagan” to have an action at common law first observed by Justice Richard Broke on a case of trespass in the Court of Common Pleas: to Broke's mind, the circumstances of that case—concerning the disputed ownership between two Christian Englishmen of a bloodhound—required a distinction between damages and injury, for which purpose it was necessary to run through the legal disabilities of outlaws, traitors and pagans (all of whom featured alongside women and villeins).Footnote 15 Pagans belonged to this motley crew of common law rejects owing to their inability to keep faith and swear oaths, a disability that was subsequently expanded, through legislation, to make them out to be the enemies of the crown.Footnote 16
In other words, whereas good faith could attach itself to customs governing the intention and performance of individuals within contractual relations, and fidelity could attach itself to the symbolism and ceremony of loyalty and ligeance, infidelity was a vague condition of legal disability up to the end of the Tudor period. Coke's importance owes to his association of infidels with three particular characteristics in the early seventeenth century: infidels could be conquered and taken over in toto; infidels could be traded with only at the discretion of the monarch; infidels could never give evidence at common law. While these novelties were conceived in England from dicta and commentaries offered to explain conditions in England, their effects would be most remarkable beyond the British Isles. Lawyers at home and abroad had no choice but to return to Coke time and again to make sense of the developing imperial constitution from the earliest settlement at Jamestown to the aftermath of the Seven Years War. As a result, a variety of different colonial interests were drawn into contemplations of their activities in relation to Coke's feelings about infidels. At different times, chartered corporations, private traders, slavers, planters and settlers were affected in their own different ways by the idea of infidels.
In his assessment of Protestant wariness towards infidels in early modern empires, Richard Tuck argues that the idea of maintaining distance from non-Christians because they were non-Christians had finally become absurd by the early eighteenth century. Within the English common law tradition, Tuck sees East India Company v. Thomas Sandys (1683–5) as the turning point, despite judgment in that case actually supporting Coke's argument for the prerogative to impose restrictions upon trading with infidels.Footnote 17 This article will suggest, instead, that it was not until the other side of the Glorious Revolution that Coke's views upon infidel disability were abandoned. Additionally, it is acknowledged here that prohibiting communication and trade with infidels was only one of the hindrances faced by non-Christians in English law. When it came to the circumstances of conquered infidels, Coke's dicta were not dismissed definitively until the delivery of Lord Mansfield's adjudication in Campbell v. Hall (1774), as is shown below. When it came to the assertion that infidelity provided for a qualified property in slaves, again it was Lord Mansfield, in Somerset v. Stewart (1772), who did the same.
In conclusion, this article will reveal how the question of non-Christian deposition provides a fine way to understand, per Maitland, “what people thought in the past” not only about infidels but also about the entire common law enterprise. Here, as with every one of the major turning points presented in this article, we see one of two tendencies shown by common lawyers on the topic of empire: sometimes they responded to political change, and at other times they anticipated it.
“ALL INFIDELS ARE IN LAW PERPETUI INIMICI”
The earliest and constitutionally most significant instance whereby Sir Edward Coke was drawn into contemplation of infidels occurred with the changing of the dynasty. When James VI of Scotland accepted the English crown to become James I late in 1603, his head quickly swelled into it. Embracing a superciliousness and style as the self-ordained “King of Great Britain,” James grew fond of the prerogative and frightened the House of Commons. In a flurry of no less than fifty royal proclamations in just the first two years of his reign, one issued in October 1604 advertised the king's desire to reign above a “Union” of the realms, which also proclaimed that “divers of the ancient Lawes of this Realme are Ipso facto expired,” just because of his succession.Footnote 18 This reeked of conquest, but common lawyers generally took little fright from the prerogative instrument of proclamation, so they were happy to remain unconvinced (for the time being) by this suggestion that their whole enterprise was somehow now in jeopardy.Footnote 19 parliamentarians, on the other hand, would require further convincing that they were not, in fact, sitting in a conquered institution, with James himself doing little to diminish these fears by his desperate invocation of muddled imagery to explain a constitutional relationship between Scotland and England: “London must be the Seat of your King, and Scotland joined to this kingdom by a golden Conquest, but cemented with Love, as I said before; which, within, will make you strong against all civil and intestine Rebellion.”Footnote 20
So unprecedented were these developments—and those metaphors—that the laws of England had no advice to offer on the rights available to, and jurisdiction over, Scottish postnati (that is, those subjects of the Scottish crown born after the union of the two realms in 1603). Here was the issue to charge up the common lawyers. For centuries, the fullest access to English law required a subject to profess singular allegiance within England. As separate realms were now united under the same crown, it remained to be seen, in the common law, whether or not this rule would be upheld or modified. A defect like this might have been addressed through statute were the issue less directly to concern the new king and his powers. After a special commission installed to investigate the matter only deferred it back to parliament, however, the issue was watchfully set aside for the scrutiny of the courts. A collusive action led in 1607 to the bringing of two suits in the name of a Scottish infant and legatee, Robert Colville, who had been born fresh upon the accession of James to England. Occasioning the input of England's legal professionals in the King's Bench and the Exchequer Chamber, there was clearly more at stake in these proceedings than whether or not the three-year-old Colville was capable of inheriting land in England. What gave Calvin's Case (1608), as it became known, its great “weight and importance” was the chance it provided to resolve a series of controversies about mixed allegiances, the process of naturalization, the substance of birthright and the prerogative itself.Footnote 21
Conquest emerges as one of the key issues in Calvin's Case. Though nobody in support of the postnatus considered James's accession of 1603 to be a conquest, still it had to be shown through persuasive argumentation that it was not a conquest. The problem here was that the common law contained no clues about what a conquest actually consisted of. Nor did the common law contain much apart from a few incidents of personal prescriptive pleas to indicate how conquest might disturb existing usages and customs.Footnote 22 What Calvin's Case presented, during the constitutionally anxious beginnings of the Stuart period, was the opportunity to develop the historical argument that conquest did very little which the common law recognized.
Counsel for both sides talked at great length about the extent to which the conquest of Ireland “by descent,” as such it could be interpreted, allowed for the laws of England to be imposed there, what privileges the Irish enjoyed as English subjects as a result, and how (though this was largely Coke's mastery) it was parliament which bonded its relation to the crown.Footnote 23 The Norman conquest was even discussed, if as an abstraction, for Calvin's Case was less about the reception of foreign conquerors in English law than about the reception of foreign-born subjects.Footnote 24 For Coke, the conquest of 1066 had no relevance except insofar as it generated a mixture of claims by descent in Jersey and Guernsey, which formed only small parts of a great historical survey in which little could be said for the conquest of 1066.Footnote 25 It was in this survey that Coke developed his theory of allegiance, which required some categorization of the types of alien that may be recognized or shunned by English law.Footnote 26 This drew him into an unconnected exploration of the “diversity between a conquest of a kingdom of a Christian king, and the conquest of a kingdom of an infidel”:
for if a king come to a Christian kingdom by conquest, seeing that he hath vitae et necis potestatem [a power over life and death], he may at his pleasure alter and change the laws of that kingdom, but until he doth make an alteration of those laws, the ancient laws of that kingdom remain. But if a Christian king should conquer a kingdom of an infidel, and bring them under his subjection, there ipso facto the laws of the infidel are abrogated; for that they be not only against Christianity, but against the law of God and of nature, contained in the Decalogue: and in that case, until certain laws be established amongst them, the king by himself, and such judges as he shall appoint, shall judge them and their causes according to natural equity, in such sort as kings in ancient time did with their kingdoms, before any certain municipal laws were given, as before hath been said.Footnote 27
Insofar, then, as Coke was prepared to contemplate the legal personalities of conqueror and conquered, it was religion, more than political or corporate affiliation, which mattered. According to Coke's improvisation, victorious wars waged upon non-Christian polities vested more to the conqueror than those waged upon Christian polities. And that was not all:
All infidels are in law perpetui inimici, perpetual enemies (for the law presumes not that they will be converted, that being remota potentia, a remote possibility) for between them, as with the devils, whose subjects they be, and the Christian, there is perpetual hostility, and can be no peace; for as the Apostle saith, 2 Cor. 15. Quae autem conventio Christi ad Belial, aut quae pars fideli cum infideli, and the Law saith, Judaeo Christianum nullum serviat mancipium, nefas enim est quem Christus redemit blasphemum Christi in servitutis vinculis detinere. Footnote 28
The first of these expressions is Italian, not Latin, and appears to derive from the Discorsi of Machiavelli, at least one copy of which Coke appears to have owned. Whereas Machiavelli referred, however, to Equians and Volscians as enemies of the Romans, Coke referred here to infidels as enemies of Christians. In support, Coke gives 2 Corinthians.Footnote 29 But he gives nothing away in respect of the passage following “the Law saith,” which establishes that no Christian, by virtue of his redemption, should ever be made the slave of a Jew or anyone else who blasphemes against Christ.Footnote 30
The extent to which Coke was knowingly placing an Easter egg here for subsequent jurists of the British Empire to fall upon in their considerations of an expanding Christian empire is, of course, a question. Alternatively, and more traditionally, these remarks might instead be understood as part of Coke's larger agenda of venerating the resilience of laws within England: infidels are invoked only to reveal what sort of conquest 1066 was not. Elsewhere, best of all in the prefaces of his Reports, Coke is at more strenuous pains to show “that the Common Law of England had beene time out of minde of man before the Conquest, and was not altered or changed by the Conquerour.”Footnote 31 In this, Coke was unshakeable for the rest of his life.
Coke never wrote again about the conquest of infidels, though he had other observations to make about their disabilities at common law. When, around the same time, a case came before the Court of Common Pleas concerning the validity of trading privileges granted to Sir Edward Michelborne, Coke remembered infidels again. The report, however, is brief. In 1604, Michelborne received letters patent for himself from James I/VI which permitted him to trade into Asia. Subsequently Michelborne headed into the Indies, where he plundered some booty from the Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie, before returning home to England. Were his letters patent still good for another voyage after this? Or were they in conflict with Elizabeth's 1601 charter of incorporation for the East India Company, which included—as was her style—provisions of trading exclusivity within them?Footnote 32 These were likely the questions which prompted Coke to return the politics of religion to the common law on the question of traders beyond the realm. In his assessment of the legality of Michelborne's exploits, Chief Justice Coke laid down “that no subject of the King [can] trade within any realm of infidels, without license of the King.” His only cited authority for this remark is an obscure trading license, “made in the time of Ed. 3,” apparently issued by the king to keep subjects from lapsing from their “faith and religion.”Footnote 33 It is not clear what, if any, pressure the East India Company had placed on the case, nor can we be sure what result came of it. Michelborne never returned to Asia; his name is listed among the named members of the Virginia Company by its charter of 1609, but he was dead by the time the charter was issued by the great seal.Footnote 34 Importantly, Michelborne had revealed another side to Coke: in the report, Coke identifies among the personal powers of the monarch a right to impede traders from leaving the realm to communicate with non-Christians. In this was an assertion that ran contrary to the one offered by a burgeoning free-trade lobby that parliament through legislation should wrest control of commerce from the crown.Footnote 35
The third of Coke's contributions in shaping the defective personality of infidels at common law differs in form and context to Calvin's Case and Michelborne, where his arguments take the form of dicta and reason in judgments. Rather, it would be his scholarly commentaries and elaboration on the work of the English jurist Littleton, The Institutes of the Lawes of England (1628–44), wherein Coke professed his belief that infidels, along with those of “non-sane memory,” could never appear as witnesses in England, and only Christians could take oaths.Footnote 36 A number of factors, among them Coke's career at this time moving out of the courts and into parliament, and the opportunities he took while making this transition to reiterate his own views on contentious aspects of the law, combine to instil some caution into modern scholars in approach of this compendium.Footnote 37 Seventeenth-century common lawyers in training and in practice shared no such caution. They consulted the Institutes when it suited their particular purposes, and subsequently the work is one of the most-cited texts in the reports before Blackstone. Though Coke's offerings in the Institutes were not always strictly derived from the precedents of case law (and that is to be charitable), still many of these ideas influenced the common law on infidels well after Coke's death in 1634.
“THAT STRANGE EXTRAJUDICIAL OPINION . . . AS TO THIS PURPOSE IS WHOLLY GROUNDLESS”
The earliest pieces of news and fool's gold from Jamestown had already reached England by the time Coke's contributions to Calvin's Case were quickly rushed into print (in English instead of the Law French) to appear in the Seventh Part of his reports at the end of 1608.Footnote 38 There may have already been some talk about the conquest of infidels in London, then, before Robert Gray, early in 1609, delivered a sermon contemplating the prospect of conquering Virginia and its annexure thereby to England. But unlike Coke, whose mostly needless remarks about the conquest of infidels had been offered hypothetically to imply a restriction upon the arbitrary will of conquerors within Christian realms, Gray gestured more towards the motions to be made before a conquest than to any of those consequences that may follow afterwards. Citing unnamed authorities, Gray suggested that “all Polititians doe with one consent holde and maintaine, that a Christian King may lawfullie make warre uppon barbarous and savage people, and such as live under no lawfull or warrantable government, and may make a conquest of them.”Footnote 39 Scarce can be made of this kind of grandstanding, which is best, in this window, to be seen as part of a wider attempt to drum up support for the flailing enterprise in Virginia by preachers and laymen looking favorably upon the Virginia Company of London.Footnote 40 After 1622, however, Gray's prophesy played out, as the London “court” of the Virginia Company and the Jamestown government looked actively “to destroy” their “barbarous and p[er]fidious enemys,” the Powhatans, right up to 1624.Footnote 41 The faithlessness of the Powhatans was also invoked in this window to undermine Powhatan donations of land. The company resolved to avoid all identification of any legal personality in an infidel sufficient to allow either his public or his private alienation of land.Footnote 42 Perceived defects in the capacity of infidels well favored the Virginia Company, in other words, before Charles I replaced the company administration with a system of direct rule and inaugurated the first New World crown colony in the history of the British Empire in 1625.Footnote 43
The Virginia Company may have waged war upon the Powhatans in 1622–4, just like the Massachusetts Bay corporation would upon the Pequots in 1637, but it was not until the reign of Charles II that corporations chartered for foreign trade began to receive explicit authorization to declare martial law and wage wars on infidels abroad. The East India Company would become the most enthusiastic recipient of the powers of war and peace upon infidels. Though founded by the patents of Elizabeth I in 1600, and sustained thereafter by the patents of James I and an obscure guarantee of Protector Cromwell, only in 1661 did the corporation receive a charter permitting it “to continue or make Peace or War with any Prince or People, that are not Christians, in any Places of their Trade.”Footnote 44 In other words, all infidels found between the Cape of Good Hope and the Straits of Magellan could be (and would be) attacked without need for prior endorsement of the home government.Footnote 45 This was no one-off grant, either: the Hudson's Bay Company was granted similar powers of war and peace for non-Christians in Rupert's Land in 1670; in 1672, the Royal African Company was likewise equipped with a martial capability for all of its dealings with non-Christians along the west coast of Africa.Footnote 46 If it was not bizarre enough, within the English legal tradition, that a Christian prince might justly impose an entirely new constitutional predicament upon non-Christian communities by virtue of their faithlessness alone (per Calvin's Case), now chartered corporations were vested, by the royal prerogative, with powers of subordinating non-Christian communities as just such a Christian prince might.
In this period, for the first time since Coke, infidels made a comeback in the common law reports. These reports are highly abbreviated, but appear to reveal some ambivalence with regard to his dicta: whereas the conquest of infidels was easily invoked as a point of contrast to discussions about legal receptivity in Ireland and Wales, there is evidence of a slight move away from the idea that infidels were automatically the “perpetual enemies” of the king (oddly, however, in a case concerning the recovery of property seized from a Christian Dutch merchant).Footnote 47
Infidels were soon to figure in separate discussions about the empire as a result of the great doubts which abounded in the middle decades of the seventeenth century over the status of overseas colonies and plantations.Footnote 48 It had become unclear, in the Stuart period, whether or not colonies like Virginia or Jamaica should be considered conquests, and, consequentially, how far and why the king's prerogative could alone create laws for them. Until Blankard v. Galdy (1693), no reported case at common law contained any clues as to which overseas possessions could be considered conquered and what their conquests entailed for government. This case concerned an attempt to recover debts in Jamaica. When counsel in defense made recourse to a statute from Elizabeth's time to disqualify the action, counsel for Blankard advanced the argument that Jamaica “was an island beyond the seas, which was conquered from the Indians and Spaniards in Q. Elizabeth's time, and the inhabitants are governed by their own laws, and not by the laws of England.”Footnote 49 Chief Justice John Holt found for the plaintiff, but he did more than that. Modifying Calvin's Case, his judgment removed all actions of this kind, concerning Jamaica, from the consideration of the Court of King's Bench. As the more detailed report of the judgment makes clear, Holt felt that Jamaica was “a conquered country.” Whether that conquest was of Christian Spaniards or infidel natives was unclear; regardless, the court qualified in conclusion that “in the case of an infidel country, their laws by conquest do not entirely cease, but only such as are against the law of God; and that in such cases where the laws are rejected or silent, the conquered country shall be governed according to the rule of natural equity.”Footnote 50 Whatever the needlessness of any recourse to the “law of God,” this was a pragmatic distinction: sometimes it was unpractical, uneconomical and administratively impossible for formerly non-Christian plantations to receive automatically all the laws of England upon conquest, as was just becoming clear during the reign of Charles II.
What is more remarkable for our purposes is Holt's decision to apply this idea to Virginia a few years later in Smith v. Brown and Cooper (1702). This was a case before the Court of King's Bench which saw two individuals attempting to escape from obligations to pay for a slave they agreed to buy on the grounds that the conveyance of human chattel was contrary to the laws of England. Chief Justice Holt would not be moved, “for the laws of England do not extend to Virginia, being a conquered country their law is what the King pleases; and we cannot take notice of it but as set forth,” for “negroes are saleable” there. Quite how Virginia was so conquered—if at all by a corporation—was not clear. What is surely more important is how, with the merest of twists to Coke's jurisprudence, the conquest of infidels was here perceived to provide for the jurisdictional separation of slavery abroad from slavery at home.Footnote 51
After Holt's opinions appeared in the Salkeld reports (published between 1717 and 1722), it became increasingly possible to contemplate separately the performance of conquest and the process of settling. This led to some muddling of the freshly made theoretical distinction between the two types of colony, and how, if at all, the presence of infidels could help to define either condition. In practice, the colonial peripheries defied neat classification. In Maryland between 1722 and 1726, Blankard v. Glady was consulted by members of the lower house to determine “how far they are to be regarded [as] Conquerors or Occupants,” in respect to the reception of English laws after the usurpation of the “Native Indian Infidels.”Footnote 52 In Newfoundland during the 1730s, jurisdictional conflicts between magistrates and “fishing admirals” raised similar dilemmas over the applicability of certain statutes too, leading the solicitor general, Francis Fane, to advise “that all the statute laws made here previous to H.M. subjects settling in Newfoundland are in force there: it being a settlement in an infidel country . . . laws passed here subsequent to the settlement . . . will not extend to this country unless it is particularly mentioned.”Footnote 53 References either side of this opinion to the Privy Council and Chancery from Barbados confirmed a similar stance towards the receptivity of English statutes, along with further confirmation of Holt's convention that only such “laws and customs” as “are contrary to our religion” are voidable “by the conquering prince.” Again, however, there appeared no concrete examples or guidelines to allow for some clarification of the distinction between settled/“uninhabited” and conquered colonies, let alone any judgment about the types of law and custom that might be considered repugnant to the Church of England.Footnote 54
Although India was not yet considered to be compatible in relation to distinctions of this kind, political developments in Bengal would contribute to the abandonment of faith as a criterion for determinations of legal obligations in overseas territories. Following the death of Aurungzeb in 1707, the unified Mughal empire to which the East India Company had grown accustomed began to spall off in a number of jostling successor states. In this context, the scope for martial conduct expanded, which was endorsed in the martial provisions of new charters granted to the company in 1726 and 1753.Footnote 55 The latter of these was issued just in time for the official outbreak of war with France, an event responsible for removing any practical division between Christian and non-Christian combatants in India. Even though European trading companies had been squaring off with each other intermittently during the 1740s—often on behalf of their allied Indian princes—the formal outbreak of the Seven Years War in 1756 made the crown a direct interest in the company's skirmishes with the French state, the French East India Company and native Indians. A theater of war of such complexity was unforeseen by basic wartime legislation on the matter of French prizes, which made no provision for royal armies, corporate armies and native armies facing off on many fronts, sometimes in uneven combinations, and sometimes on their own.Footnote 56 In consequence, as the attorney general and solicitor general were confounded to propose a way to distinguish between company “treaties” and crown “conquests,” it was deemed no longer practical or necessary to distinguish between enemies on account of their faith. Their new preference was instead to develop a distinction between “European” and “Indian.”Footnote 57
Besides those in the sub-continent, the Seven Years War (1756–63) had a number of overseas theaters in the Atlantic. Victorious in many of these, Great Britain collected a number of new cessions, which finally prompted parliament and the courts to contemplate anew the juristic meaning of conquest and its place in the imperial constitution. Early on, Quebec formed the centerpiece of discussions on this head: being Christian, though Catholic, its receptivity to English laws (and English Protestantism) remained uncertain for over a decade.Footnote 58 The island of Grenada fell into the same boat, of course, but what brought it, and not Quebec, to the attention of the courts was not the applicability of statutory law there, but rather the issue of prerogative taxation. When the planter, Alexander Campbell, called the king's jurisdictional bluff by bringing an action to recover the amount he paid to a crown customs officer, the matter made its way to the King's Bench. With that, the scene was set for a special verdict to expose what conquest actually entailed for king and parliament in the British Empire.
Chief Justice presiding was Lord Mansfield. True to form, he appeared uneasy about references to Calvin's Case during the arguments of Campbell v. Hall (1774).Footnote 59 When Archibald MacDonald invoked Coke in his appearance for Campbell, Mansfield interjected with an observation that those “opinions are very loose.” Later, when Francis Hargrave, appearing for the customs collector, Hall, insisted that the ability to alter conquered constitutions belonged entirely to the royal prerogative, and proceeded to use Calvin's Case to distinguish between countries acquired by “conquest” and by “descent,” what little credibility remained for Coke's lines on infidels is clear from the interchange that followed:
- Hargrave:
Coke mixes it with another distinction between Infidel and Christian countries which is now justly exploded. But this ought not to prejudice the other part of the doctrine, which is not liable to the same objection—
- Mansfield:
Don't quote the distinction for the honour of lord Coke.
- Hargrave:
My lord, I cite the case, not on account of the distinction between Infidel and Christians, but for the doctrine assented to by the judges in respect to the right of the king over all conquered countries. Though the difference derived from the religion of the country may be absurd and unreasonable, still there may be other parts of the case not liable to objection. Lord Coke, describing the king's power over a conquered country, says, “He may at pleasure alter and change the laws of the kingdom: but till he does make an alteration the ancient laws remain.” So that according to the opinion in this case, the king has the complete power of changing the laws of the conquered people, as he thinks proper and convenient.Footnote 60
Later in the trial, when John Glynn, for Campbell, mentioned Coke's dictum about conquered infidels only to confirm that he should hope “for the honour of lord Coke [that] it ought not to be spoken of [again]”, he was nearly correct.Footnote 61 It would be spoken of again, but once more, as Mansfield drove the final nail into the coffin with his ruling. Still deferential, Mansfield moved the modern jurisprudence of his court from Coke's medieval prejudices: “The laws of a conquered country continue until they are altered by the conqueror . . . the absurd exception as to pagans, in Calvin's case, shews the universality of the maxim. The exception could not exist before the Christian era, and in all probability arose from the mad enthusiasm of the crusades.” Preserving Coke's distinction between “conquest” and “descent,” Mansfield is elsewhere less mannerly in his contempt for “that strange extrajudicial opinion, as to a conquest from a pagan country . . . which as to this purpose is wholly groundless, and most deservedly exploded.”Footnote 62
That Mansfield should have offered in the process some new dicta of his own, advice more befitting the wars of the later eighteenth century, should not be surprising either, nor indeed should it surprise that it would be these dicta which gave Campbell v. Hall (1774) its weighty importance in the imperial constitution. Among other things, Mansfield went out of his way to clarify the relationship between crown, parliament, and colonial legislatures. According to Mansfield, the king's power to create laws by his prerogative alone for Grenada was disqualified by his earlier endorsement of the installation of a legislative assembly for the island. Thereupon, only such laws as were passed by the imperial parliament, and those passed subordinately “by the assembly with the governor and council,” were valid in conquered countries. Over the next few decades, those plantation colonies of the West Indies which accrued to Great Britain were governed according to this dictum, but teething problems abounded, for merely the acquisition of colonies by conquest or cession imposed no obligation upon the crown to grant local legislatures. Many colonies therefore went without legislatures for some time, wherever they were regarded, from the viewpoint of London, as unready for self-government in the English model.Footnote 63 Trinidad by dint of its mixed composition and hybrid legal system, for example, was administered after 1797 by a despotic crown governor who preferred instead to corrupt those customs he inherited from the previous Spanish régimen than to receive English laws, and this was no aberration thanks to Campbell v. Hall.Footnote 64 Courtesy of Mansfield, conquest in English legal thought, though shorn of its ridiculous intolerance of non-Christian legal systems, now carried a clear message to colonial subjects that their teleological progression towards self-government was something that had to be accomplished and politely received. This too would remain a recurring theme in the imperial imagination for the next 150 years.
“AS TO THE TRADING WITH INFIDELS, AND THEIR BEING PERPETUI INIMICI, THIS WAS LAUGHED AT BY HIM”
Michelborne was exhumed in 1681. This was done to find a meaningful way to address the problems caused by private unlicenced traders abroad, those called “interlopers.” Interlopers had been raising all sorts of questions about infringements upon the liberty or privilege of trade throughout the 1670s. Multiple authorities in different corners of the world developed strategies in response that were often inconsistent in approach and jurisdictionally dissonant. Colonial courts and councils, company tribunals, courts of admiralty, vice-admiralty, common law and equity, the Commons, the Lords, and the Councils of Trade and Plantation—each reporting to the Privy Council, which in its turn, referred questions to the revolving doors of the king's lawyers—were all confounded by interlopers and the odium of monopoly.
Making matters more complicated, infidels were thrown into this mix. Referred an enquiry about the East Indies trade by the Privy Council in November of 1681, the attorney general, Robert Sawyer, recalled Coke's recommendation in Michelborne that trading with infidels was impossible without the king's license. As Sawyer would advise the king, “by law, your Majesty's subjects ought not to trade or traffic with any infidel country not in amity with your Majesty, without your licence.” Sawyer therefore recommended a royal proclamation be issued to “require your subjects’ obedience” to this assertion, and to remind potential interlopers that the company's license to prohibit others from India was “good in law.”Footnote 65 The same day, Charles II issued a proclamation to this effect, forbidding all private trade with “infidels or barbarous nations,” and restating the exclusive trading region of the East India Company.Footnote 66 This was not positive law, but an expression of how the king and council thought law should bind, and as such it did not sit around for long before facing a test in the courts.
Late in 1682, king and council received inside word that Thomas Sandys, unaffiliated with the East India Company, was outfitting a ship bound for the Indian Ocean. On 13 December, the king's advocate general in the Court of Admiralty, Sir Thomas Exton, was directed to issue an order “that the said ship shall not go nor trade with any infidel country within the limits of the East-India Company's charter without His Majesty's licence.”Footnote 67 The wording here is curious for its conflation of reasons for restricting the trade within this particular region: owing to its irreligion (“shall not go nor trade with any infidel country”), and also its delimitation within letters patent (“within the limits of the East-India Company's charter”). It is telling for us that the infidel portion of this equation for staying the ship on the Thames appears absent from the presentations before the Court of Chancery, where the issue headed next. Here, where common law dicta and ratio need not apply, representatives for the company hoped for a swift first-instance honoring of the charter. In January, Lord Keeper Francis North cared not for any argument about infidels, assessing only the validity of the seizure on the basis of the patent, and “the Antiquity of their Possession, which had not been till now of late Interrupted by these Interlopers.”Footnote 68 Sandys, for his part, declared simply that the patent was a monopoly and therefore void. Although North thought that the patent had been issued for the regulation of trade rather than for its monopolization, he refused to be drawn into an assessment of its validity, which was better the job, he insisted, for the common law.Footnote 69
Submissions and appeals were brought into the inferior courts in the middle of 1683, requiring arguments to be rehearsed intermittently before the King's Bench up to the beginning of 1685. Space does not permit any excursion here into the many fascinating aspects of this case, which circled around the prerogative writ of ne exeat regnum (restricting departure from the realm), the authority of letters patent in regard to the awarding of exclusive trading privileges, the extent to which the corporation could be considered a monopoly, and the extent to which the company's activities ran afoul of statutes from the time of Edward III (1327–77) opening the seas to all merchants and prohibiting stockpiling.Footnote 70 Besides all of that, East India Company v. Thomas Sandys (1683–5) necessitated a conversation about the power of the crown to permit or prohibit trading with infidels. “I do conceive that by the law of the land,” offered counsel for the company, the up-and-coming John Holt, citing Michelborne, “that no subject of England can trade with infidels, without licence from the king; or at least it is in the power of the king to prohibit it.” This Holt followed up with a reminder that infidels were the perpetual enemies of England. Off Holt then set on a zealous imploration of the “preservation of Christianity,” before rounding off with a recitation of Coke on the cessation of all laws upon the conquest of infidels.Footnote 71 In response, George Treby, the recorder for London, took aim, first, at Coke's remarks upon infidels in Michelborne: “a casual saying,” based on “slender authority,” and “reported as dictum obiter . . . which the clerk took, and likely mistook, for it is no where said in my lord Coke's own books, though they are voluminous . . . Neither Mr. Holt nor I can find [the licence from Edward III], nor does my lord Coke tell us where it was.”Footnote 72 But this hardly mattered: “If the law had been according to this conceit, there would have been much said and done about it in divers cases.”Footnote 73 So much, then, for Michelborne. Moving onto Calvin's Case, Treby was more categorically dismissive. “As to this singular opinion of infidels being perpetual enemies, it is not easy to understand what my lord Coke means by it”:
It seems by these words, that it is to be understood of a spiritual discord in respect of religion, and not a temporal between the nations: for he says, it is because they are the Devil's subjects, and he relies upon the texts of scripture: and if this perpetual hostility be taken in a political and proper sense, and the law be so, it destroys the licence and privilege of the Company, and their action brought, and all possibility of such a thing for them. There is not nor can be any peace, treaty or intercourse between the English and the Indians, but a constant never-ceasing state of war; and especially if it lie founded upon a Divine precept: for whatsoever prerogative the king may have, he cannot have a prerogative to dispense with the canon of the scripture.
Treby, tempted here to argue that prohibitions from trading with infidels applied as much to the company as it did Sandys, ultimately dismissed the whole “notion” to be “a conceit absurd, monkish, fantastical and fanatical.”Footnote 74 Trade ought to be free between consenting peoples regardless of their predispositions of faith.Footnote 75
Before the King's Bench in the summer of 1684, the solicitor general, Heneage Finch, opened proceedings with a reminder of Michelborne before then recounting Holt's case.Footnote 76 The most original interpretation in Finch's presentation concerned the ordering of the empire, one that was probably conceived, it might be guessed, with all of those references from the Privy Council about the Caribbean fresh in his mind. Chartered trading corporations, Finch declared, “are in the nature almost of foreign plantations, under a regulated and Christian government within themselves, whereby those mischiefs are prevented, that would have fallen upon an unlimited and unregulated trade with infidels, that are enemies to our religion and nation; which the law . . . takes so much care to prevent.”Footnote 77 That the politics of Caribbean legislatures could be seen in the same light as trading companies purely to reaffirm the suggestion in Michelborne that trade with non-Christians was prohibited gives a remarkable indication of how functionally synthetic—but still unthought-through—the imperial constitutional imagination had become within officialdom by the end of the Stuart period.
Responding to this for Sandys was Henry Pollexfen, who was adamant that this case concerned neither the king's power to organize trade nor his power to prevent subjects from leaving the kingdom, but was rather just about monopoly and the means by which the joint-stock corporation had acquired it.Footnote 78 Unlike the regulated trading companies for the Levant and Russia, which allowed merchants to trade with their own stocks in distributive collaboration with the corporation, the East India Company operated on a closed model with a sole stock, which restricted all trade to direct employees of the corporation. “[W]e must be as silly as the infidels they deal with in these matters not to distinguish betwixt these corporations,” Pollexfen joked, before then vilifying the corporation for being organized around a joint stock.Footnote 79 What made this case all the more absurd to Pollexfen, perhaps more than anyone else, was the irrelevance of religion to any contemplation of the trading privileges found in the possession of a fictitious corporate personality.Footnote 80 He then concluded with a parting stab at Coke's remarks about infidels in Calvin's Case in relation to the customary reception of Jews, “Turks,” and “Barbars,” with whom no contract could be possible if they truly were perpetual enemies in the common law.Footnote 81 Nothing of this was sufficient to influence the decision of Chief Justice George Jeffreys, however, who ruled unequivocally for the prerogatives of the crown and, by extension, of the chartered corporation. This unusual adjudication advised Sandys to consider himself lucky to have been stopped from attracting penal punishment, for as Jeffreys warned with much ambiguity, should Sandys had gone out to trade with infidels in the Indies, then the consequences would have been far worse.Footnote 82
One final controversy regarding monopoly and letters patent came into King's Bench before the disappearance of James II, though it is often overlooked. Early in 1687, Pollexfen appeared for an interloper against the Company of Merchant Adventurers. Holt, one of the king's newest serjeants, appeared for the corporation with Finch, fresh from his dismissal the year earlier from his position as solicitor general for his refusal to support a Catholic appointment to the mastership of an Oxford college.Footnote 83 The “very ancient company” of London at the center of the dispute had enjoyed privileged control of the cloth export trade to the Low Countries for over two centuries. On the basis of its Elizabethan letters patent, the corporation brought a special action against a trader by the name of Rebow, who “did trade into those parts without their authority, and imported goods from thence.”Footnote 84 Fresh on the heels of Sandys, the case against Rebow was polished. Pollexfen, in response to the counsel for the company, was clever to insist that this case was different from Sandys for the critical reason that nobody considered Western Europe to be an infidel territory.Footnote 85 This forced the litigants into deeper reflection upon the king's prerogative to regulate trade; or, more specifically, how this prerogative measured up, first, to fourteenth-century statutes of the realm opening the seas to all merchants, and second, to the prohibitive tenor of the common law towards patents of monopoly. Finch now found the tide running against him. With the suit irreparably discredited, because no infidels were involved, he made the desperate objection at this stage that the company's patents were good because “we trade with separate stocks,” rather than “a joint-stock.”Footnote 86 The case fell apart and no judgment was entered, with the report left only to suggest ambiguously that prerogative grants touching staple trades were void without parliamentary authorization.Footnote 87
This turned out to be the first of many common law rulings which slowly, if unevenly, peeled back some of the privileges granted by prerogative to chartered trading companies.Footnote 88 The most important intervention in this respect curtailed the ability of the Royal African Company and the East India Company to seize vessels suspected of interloping, and once again, Holt as Chief Justice leaves his mark upon the law. The case concerned Jeffrey Nightingale, an interloping slave trader, who sought to recover his ship, the James, which had been seized by the Royal African Company's vice-admiralty court. Upon an action of trover (for the recovery of damages for the conversion of personal property) in the King's Bench, a special verdict was delivered on the validity of the charter, which necessarily entailed the measuring of the company's delegated authority of vice-admiralty against the common law's protections against the seizure of property. The case gets uneven coverage in the reports, with Sir Bartholomew Shower's account of his own showing in defense of Nightingale the most elaborate and, for our purposes, revealing. Anticipating an argument “that infidels are alien enemies, and to trade with them is unlawful, and therefore a seizure lawful,” Shower is reported to have offered the following appraisal:
I find [no] pretence for such an opinion in the books; there is nothing but Michelburn's case, and that is but a short and imperfect note of a case, and all that it amounts to is this: that the King may restrain his subjects from commerce with them, which argues nothing to this purpose here in our case, and it is plain that commerce is allowable with the Jews, which according to the gospel are greater enemies to Christianity than the Gentiles are. That it was not unlawful antecedent to their charter, appears from the statutes, for they open the seas to all merchants for all manner of trade, as 18 Edw. 3, st. 2, c. 3, “that the seas are open to all manner of merchants to pass with their merchandizes where it shall please them”. Besides, the charter prohibits trade there, not because it is inhabited by infidels, but doth indefinitely forbid all but the company, whether the country shall be Christian or Pagan. Secondly, it is no argument that they were infidels, and trade with them might be prohibited, that therefore the goods should be forfeited . . . I will suppose their principle true, that they are perpetui inimici, and then according to that notion a trade with them is treason, as an abetting of the King's enemies; and yet even in that case there ought to be no seizure of the offender's goods till conviction, or at least indictment or inquisition: but further, I will suppose their charter makes it unlawful, yet it cannot impose the penalty of confiscation of goods, for by Magna Charta no man is to be dispossessed of his property but by legale judicium parium suorum.
A wonderful example of the chaotic method typical of common law arguments of the period, all this maneuvering between different interpretations of custom, statute, case law, letters patent, and the Magna Carta might instead be seen as just the kind of thing good counsel had to do to win cases. Holt indeed was swayed, awarding damages and costs to Nightingale.Footnote 89
This beckoned the return of Thomas Sandys to the courts in 1692 to make good his earlier losses. Procedurally and jurisdictionally, his task was made somewhat harder by having to prove a tort for which the company should be responsible (for in his case it had been the king who ordered Admiralty to seize his ship). Here is not the place for a detailed account of the complexities involved in this fascinating interchange which, despite the company's attempts to evade the charge by hiding behind a corporate personality, ultimately confirmed on appeal that Sandys should expect damages.Footnote 90 It is sufficient here merely to note how, in arguing for the company in the first stages, Sir Creswell Levinz is said to have “laughed at” any notion that trading with infidels was prohibited because they were perpetual enemies. With this gesture, “the Court seemed to agree . . . for how shall they be converted, if conversation with them is not lawful?”Footnote 91
“SO ODIOUS, THAT NOTHING CAN BE SUFFERED TO SUPPORT IT, BUT POSITIVE LAW”
If the recognition of property within persons was impossible within England, this did not necessarily mean that slavery was therefore impracticable in the English Atlantic. Rather, all it ensured was that no suits could be heard at common law anywhere that required an assessment of the value of human chattel. This was about to change, however, and the rehashing of Coke's remarks upon infidels and villeinage allowed for this. Thus came about the oddest cameo for infidels in English courts in the century following 1670: made to perform in such a way as to make chattel slavery compatible with the common law.Footnote 92
Butts v. Penny (1676) introduced faithlessness definitively into the jurisprudence of slavery. Before the Court of King's Bench, it was alleged by trover that “negroes were infidels, and the subjects of an infidel prince,” and for that reason purchasable and sellable “by the custom of merchants.” Mainstream reports of the case are spare and highly compressed, but it appears that the Institutes were used to facilitate an enquiry into the suitability of the analogy of villeinage, despite the very little by way of support offered by Coke (or Littleton, for that matter) on chattel slavery. In the course of subsequent argument, it then appears to have been implied that baptism was sufficient to enfranchise slaves, but until such point “there might be a property in [negroes] sufficient to maintain trover.”Footnote 93
The implication that baptism might modify the personality of a formerly faithless slave was queried in dicta and ratio of subsequent case law often hinging on the technicalities of common law pleading.Footnote 94 The first case of importance would be Sir Thomas Grantham's Case (1686). Having come into the possession of a “monster” from “the Indies,” Grantham wished to make a spectacle in England of his rare disfigurement. Upon returning to England in 1685, however, the slave was baptized and detained, compelling Grantham to bring a writ of replevin in order to restore his property. His action appears to have been successful notwithstanding doubts about the type of property actually restorable.Footnote 95 Trover emerged again in Gelly v. Cleve (1694). There it was held, before the Court of Common Pleas, “that trover will lie for a negro boy; for they are heathens, and therefore a man may have property in them.”Footnote 96 Trespass was subsequently allowed for “qualified property” in slaves in Chamberline v. Harvey (1696), following the baptism and removal to England of a slave originally in the possession of Chamberline without his consent. Elaborate arguments were made on either side of the proposition that baptism brought about the manumission of a slave. In the end, however, this was inconsequential to the more important contention of the case, namely as to the kind of damages awardable to slave owners (ultimately circumscribed here to account only for the loss of service instead of value or damages).Footnote 97 One final case of importance in this window was Smith v. Gould (1705), which cast fresh doubts upon the action of trover for slave property. Turning over Butts v. Penny, and finally dismissing the notion that infidels were property by default, Chief Justice John Holt recommended that the superior action to bring was a suit in trespass upon the servitude of a captive, the ownership over whom was ambivalently conceded.Footnote 98
The real scare, first exposed in Chamberline v. Harvey (but impossible without the support of the Institutes and Calvin's Case), that slaves converting to Christianity might hasten their evasion of the completest condition of chattel, carried over into the early eighteenth century. In the slaveholding American colonies, a consensus began to emerge, from a slew of statutes, that a slave who converted after enslavement would not attain freedom, but a slave originally Christian in his or her country of birth might enjoy the case for conditional leave from bondage.Footnote 99 However bold it was to measure straight-talking colonial legislation against the abbreviated judgments of English law reports, the result of these acts was a drop in opposition among slaveholders to converting their slaves to Christianity. Reservations about slave baptism remained among a few slaveholders, particularly those in Jamaica, until the crown law officers were advised to weigh in on the question in 1729.Footnote 100 In that year, the attorney general, Philip Yorke, and solicitor general, Charles Talbot, offered their opinion that a slave was not made free just by reaching Great Britain, “nor doth baptism bestow freedom on him, or make any alteration in his temporal condition, in these kingdoms.”Footnote 101 Ostensibly, the opinion was offered to encourage slaveholders to christen their slaves and also to deter escapees from attempting to reach the British Isles, but stood, for two decades, without much by way of support before the judgment of the Court of Chancery in Pearne v. Lisle (1749). Yorke, now as Lord Chancellor, here confirmed his opinion of 1729 while in the process discrediting Smith v. Gould (1705):
I have no doubt but trover will lie for a Negro slave; it is as much property as any other thing . . . There was once a doubt, whether, if they were christened, they would not become free by that act . . . till the opinion of Lord Talbot and myself, then Attorney and Solicitor-General, was taken on that point. We were both of opinion, that it did not at all alter their state.Footnote 102
Only in equity could the presiding Lord Chancellor cite his own benediction as attorney general in order to disqualify precedents at common law. But statute was now on his side: seeing negroes as property was encouraged by imperial legislation of 1732.Footnote 103
The combined effect of this statute, the colonial statutes and Pearne v. Lisle was to remove the question of infidel status from the equation of property rights in slaves for the next few decades, however repugnantly this was beginning to run against the feelings of metropolitan opponents to slavery. Legal scholar William Blackstone pulled no punches in his treatment of “the infamous and unchristian practice of withholding baptism from negro servants, lest they should thereby gain their liberty,” in his Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765–7):
The law of England acts upon general and extensive principles: it gives liberty, rightly understood, that is, protection, to a Jew, a Turk, or a heathen, as well as to those who profess the true religion of Christ; and it will not dissolve a civil obligation between master and servant, on account of the alteration of faith in either of the parties: but the slave is entitled to the same protection in England before, as after, baptism.Footnote 104
This was stirring, but not, strictly speaking, jurisprudence. The definitive chance for that would have to wait until Somerset v. Stewart (1772).Footnote 105 This case concerned the detention of James Somerset, an African slave, in England, in preparation for his voyage in bondage to Jamaica. Ordering Somerset to be discharged and given freedom, Lord Mansfield in the Court of King's Bench declared slavery to be “so odious, that nothing can be suffered to support it, but positive law.”Footnote 106 With that, Mansfield threw away the old common law of slavery and created a new common law of slavery, one that anticipated, but could not yet respond to, the momentous discord about to break out between central abolitionism and peripheral pro-slavery. Faithlessness played no part in the legalism of this distinction as it then developed in the British Empire: following Somerset, through to the statutory abolition of the slave trade in 1807, and finally with the substitution of slavery with apprenticeships in 1833, parliament and the common law strode with their heads together, Whig alongside wig, to eradicate slavery.Footnote 107 In the southern slaveholding states of America, by contrast, lawyers tried their hardest to forget Somerset in order to develop their own common law of slavery for the nineteenth century.Footnote 108
“THE COMMON LAW WORKS ITSELF PURE”
This article has shown how, piecemeal, after Nightingale, judges in the English courts of common law aggressively queried many of the incapacities associated with the legal personality of infidels. Certainly the most stubborn of these incapacities to carry into the eighteenth century was the inability of infidels to give evidence in court. It is ironic that some of the earliest moves away from Broke and Coke on this head concerned only Christians. In Wells v. Williams (1697), for example, the plaintiff was a French Protestant who brought a suit for the recovery of debts. His action was queried owing to his status as an “alien enemy,” it was alleged for Williams, amid the Nine Years War. “But now,” counsel for Wells retorted, “commerce has taught the world more humanity.”
It was beginning to teach the world political economy, as well. At the end of so many years of making new enemies on the Continent, it was never so evident to common lawyers that it was now necessary to retain peaceful foreign merchants “sub protectione” in England, and to provide them with the fullest capacity to maintain actions at law. Finding for the French plaintiff, the Chief Justice of the Common Pleas also took the opportunity to affix to the judgment a repudiation not only of Coke's dictum about perpetui inimici but also Broke's dictum about pagans in the Year Books of Henry VIII.Footnote 109 The Chief Justice in question was George Treby, who as counsel for Thomas Sandys had been the first to take issue with Coke's pronouncements on infidels thirteen years earlier, losing, though, as he did on that occasion. Treby could now try to set things right, if only with his own dicta. As such, that left it up to later judges to determine if they could be used to overturn preceding dicta and custom touching the inability of non-Christians to bring actions and give evidence in court. Herein we see a recurring trend in the early modern common law, a trend which, this article has argued, can best be understood by historians of ideas sensitive to the contingencies of personae, politics and pragmatism, all of which together shaped the laws of England and its empire. The replacement of old dicta with new dicta amounts to more than just a thing of jurisprudence; it reveals the history of political and economic ideas at work.
Few examples illustrate this phenomenon better than Omychund v. Barker (1744), which allowed Hindus to swear oaths, and present depositions, in pursuit of debts from the East India Company. Great Britain, at this stage, was strategically embedded in an alliance against France, amid a global fight over monarchy and religion that was soon to reach the shores of the Carnatic. All the while, the first intellectual strides were being made towards embracing “commercial society” and abandoning all “jealousy of trade.”Footnote 110 It was in this context that the law officers of the crown were appointed counsel to “witnesses of the Gentoo religion” before Chancery late in 1744. “It is of the greatest moment,” argued the attorney general, Dudley Rider, “that we should have commerce and correspondence with all mankind; trade requires it, policy requires it, and in dealings of this kind it is of infinite consequence, there should not be a failure of justice.” These sentiments were then advanced, in the framework of an argument for a reforming common law tradition, by the capable solicitor general, William Murray (twelve years before swearing into the King's Bench as Lord Mansfield). For the young Mansfield, Coke's remarks from the Institutes were “not warranted by any authority, nor supported by any reason, and lastly contradicted by common experience.” Recognizing, further, that the age of discovery had given way to the age of global commerce, Mansfield argued that the statutory requirement for providing oaths had fallen out of step with the times, warning that Chancery, if careless, may commit the same error: “All occasions do not arise at once; now a particular species of Indians appears; hereafter another species of Indians may arise; a statute very seldom can take in all cases, therefore the common law, that works itself pure by rules drawn from the fountain of justice, is for this reason superior to an act of parliament.”Footnote 111 Expressions like this were to become emblematic of a common law tradition that could look just as comfortable tearing strips off its competing institutions as it could in Coke's time. That Edmund Burke, during the impeachment of Warren Hastings before the Lords, would “use Lord Mansfield's expression” about the common law and the fountain of justice, while making the case for “conforming our Jurisprudence to the Growth of our Commerce and of our Empire,” suggests something of the circumstantial importance of the expression.Footnote 112
Mansfield's quickly iconic description of the common law working itself pure is all the more interesting because of its utterance before the Lord Chancellor in a court of equity. There, not only was his opinion shared, but the idea would be pushed even further by his senior colleague, John Willes, the Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. Willes argued more persuasively than Mansfield that the common law had to purge its impurities in order to make Christian toleration compatible with undiscriminatingly free trade. Not only bad statutes, but bad dicta too, had to be discarded in the process. Obstructing infidels from maintaining an action in English courts was “contrary not only to the scripture but to common sense and common humanity . . . and besides the irreligion of it, it is a most impolitic notion and would at once destroy all that trade and commerce from which this nation reaps such great benefits.”Footnote 113 Now in a new Christian spirit of commerce, Hindu men were allowed to present depositions in the courts. Tradition could not entirely be abandoned in the process, however: it was clarified that Hindu testimony was permissible only because Hindus believed in their own deity.Footnote 114
Part of the magic of the English common law, from the old Year Books through to the present, is the motivation it gives to its practitioners to engage with old contexts for the purpose of evaluating the reiteration of dicta and ratio in changing political and economic circumstances. In one sense, the common lawyers of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries worked more as intellectual historians than their Continental colleagues did, if only by the antiquity of the actions, the formality of the pleadings and the encouragement they received to recall precedents in context. In another sense, however much they hoped to avoid reliving the mistakes of their ancestors, the deliberate and self-preservationist insularity of their profession instilled in its practitioners a need to keep a little distance from debates in the Commons, coffeehouse gossip and the writings of men like Bacon, Hobbes, Child, Locke, Hume, Smith and Burke. Sometimes, undoubtedly, counsel and judges translated many of these externalities into the bespoke vocabulary of the common law. But at other times, they were clearly ahead of the curve, anticipating rather than responding to broader political changes.
Following infidels through this common law world reveals, first, a willingness to adapt old rules for new circumstances, coupled, second, with a fear of moving too far from the precedents of old case law. Now, both of these characteristics are still attributable to common lawyers today, well after the globalization of their enterprise (a development, it needs only be added, that might not have occurred if its strong intolerance towards non-Christians had not been expunged).