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Controlling the Law - Legal Politics in Early National New Hampshire (Hardcover)
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Controlling the Law - Legal Politics in Early National New Hampshire (Hardcover)
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In today's courtroom, the jurors evaluate the evidence and
pronounce the verdict while the judge has final authority in
interpreting the law-but it was not always so. In colonial America,
the jurors enjoyed a much greater say. Legal historian John Phillip
Reid recounts how the judges gained their modern authority in the
early nineteenth century by instituting courtroom practices modeled
on the English "common law" judicial system. Reid brings this
transformation, which in the days of the Early Republic spread
throughout the states and even to the federal courts, down to human
scale by focusing on the legal and judicial career of one man:
Jeremiah Smith. First as a U.S. District Attorney, later as the
Chief Justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court, Smith promoted a
series of reforms between 1797 and 1816. Intent upon placing the
law in the hands of professional lawyers, he standardized legal
procedures. While Smith made the judge lord of the courtroom at the
expense of the jurors, he simultaneously mandated the publication
of judicial reports that, by setting a series of precedents, served
both to enhance the authority of one reading of the law and to
impose limits on subsequent interpretations. As judicial decisions
became more uniform, Smith believed, the law itself would become
more certain. Not everyone supported these reforms, however.
Jeffersonians claimed that such measures threatened to take power
from the layman and feared that judges would replace democratically
elected legislators as the real lawmakers. Smith himself proved
eager to flex judicial muscle and soon found himself wrestling the
state's governor, William Plumer. Smith's questionable rulings
prolonged a trial involving Plumer's brother; and in 1805, when
Plumer failed to honor a summons, Smith ordered his arrest. Plumer
eventually exacted his revenge and removed Smith from the chief
justice's bench. This conflict between two former friends adds a
human dimension to legal history. Thanks largely to the reforms
introduced by Jeremiah Smith in New Hampshire, by 1830, legal
theory, legal practice, and the law itself were much more uniform
throughout the United States than they had been just twenty-five
years before. If the reformers had not, as Reid argues, intended to
favor any particular class, they did prepare the way for the
development of a reliable legal system able to serve merchants and
capitalists in the Industrial Age.
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