28.28. 28. Of the Appeal of Default of Justice.
The appeal of default of
justice was, when the court of a particular lord deferred, evaded, or
refused to do justice to the parties.
During the time of our princes of the second race, though the count
had several officers under him, their person was subordinate, but not
their jurisdiction. These officers in their court days, assizes, or
placita, gave judgment in the last resort as the count himself; all the
difference consisted in the division of the jurisdiction. For instance,
the count had the power of condemning to death, of judging of liberty,
and of the restitution of goods, which the centenarii had not.
[195]
For the same reason there were greater cases which were reserved to
the king; namely, those which directly concerned the political order of
the state.
[196]
Such were the disputes between bishops, abbots, counts,
and other grandees, which were determined by the king together with the
great vassals.
[197]
What some authors have advanced, namely, that an appeal lay from the
count to the king's commissary, or Missus Dominicus, is not
well-grounded. The count and the Missus had an equal jurisdiction,
independent of each other.
[198]
The whole difference was that the Missus
held his Placita, or assizes, four months in the year,
[199]
and the count the other eight.
If a person, who had been condemned at an assize, demanded to have
his cause tried over again, and was afterwards cast, he paid a fine of
fifteen sous, or received fifteen blows from the judges who had decided
the affair.
[200]
When the counts, or the king's commissaries did not find themselves
able to bring the great lords to reason, they made them give bail or
security
[201]
that they would appear in the king's court: this was to
try the cause, and not to rejudge it. I find in the capitulary of
Metz
[202]
a law by which the appeal of false judgment to the king's
court is established, and all other kinds of appeal are proscribed and
punished.
If they refused to submit to the judgment of the sheriffs
[203]
and
made no complaint, they were imprisoned till they had submitted, but if
they complained, they were conducted under a proper guard before the
king, and the affair was examined in his court.
There could be hardly any room then for an appeal of default of
justice. For instead of its being usual in those days to complain that
the counts and others who had a right of holding assizes were not exact
in discharging this duty,
[204]
it was a general complaint that they were
too exact. Hence we find such numbers of ordinances, by which the counts
and all other officers of justice are forbidden to hold their assizes
above thrice a year. It was not so necessary to chastise their
indolence, as to check their activity.
But, after an infinite number of petty lordships had been formed,
and different degrees of vassalage established, the neglect of certain
vassals in holding their courts gave rise to this kind of appeal;
[205]
especially as very considerable profits accrued to the lord paramount
from the several fines.
As the custom of judicial combats gained every day more ground,
there were places, cases, and times, in which it was difficult to
assemble the peers, and consequently in which justice was delayed. The
appeal of default of justice was therefore introduced, an appeal that
has been often a remarkable era in our history; because most of the wars
of those days were imputed to a violation of the political law; as the
cause, or at least the pretence, of our modern wars is the infringement
of the laws of nations.
Beaumanoir says
[206]
that, in case of default of justice, battle was
not allowed: the reasons are these: 1. They could not challenge the lord
himself, because of the respect due to his person; neither could they
challenge the lord's peers, because the case was clear, and they had
only to reckon the days of the summons, or of the other delays; there
had been no judgment passed, consequently there could be no appeal of
false judgment: in fine, the crime of the peers offended the lord as
well as the party, and it was against rule that there should be battle
between the lord and his peers.
But as the default was proved by witnesses before the superior
court,
[207]
the witnesses might be challenged, and then neither the lord
nor his court were offended.
In case the default was owing to the lord's tenants or peers, who
had delayed to administer justice, or had avoided giving judgment after
past delays, then these peers were appealed of default of justice before
the paramount; and if they were cast, they paid a fine to their
lord.
[208]
The latter could not give them any assistance; on the
contrary, he seized their fief, till they had each paid a fine of sixty
livres.
2. When the default was owing to the lord, which was the case
whenever there happened not to be a sufficient number of peers in his
court to pass judgment, or when he had not assembled his tenants or
appointed somebody in his place to assemble them, an appeal might be
made of the default before the lord paramount; but then the party and
not the lord was summoned, because of the respect due to the
latter.
[209]
The lord demanded to be tried before the paramount, and if he was
acquitted of the default, the cause was remanded to him, and he was
likewise paid a fine of sixty livres.
[210]
But if the default was
proved, the penalty inflicted on him was to lose the trial of the
cause,
[211]
which was to be then determined in the superior court. And,
indeed, the complaint of default was made with no other view.
3. If the lord was sued in his own court,
[212]
which never happened
but upon disputes in relation to the fief, after letting all the delays
pass, the lord himself was summoned before the peers in the sovereign's
name,
[213]
whose permission was necessary on that occasion. The peers
did not make the summons in their own name, because they could not
summon their lord, but they could summon for their lord.
[214]
Sometimes the appeal of default of justice was followed by an appeal
of false judgment, when the lord had caused judgment to be passed,
notwithstanding the default.
[215]
The vassal who had wrongfully challenged his lord of default of
justice was sentenced to pay a fine according to his lord's
pleasure.
[216]
The inhabitants of Gaunt had challenged the Earl of Flanders of
default of justice before the king, for having delayed to give judgment
in his own court.
[217]
Upon examination it was found that he had used
fewer delays than even the custom of the country allowed. They were
therefore remanded to him; upon which their effects to the value of
sixty thousand livres were seized. They returned to the king's court in
order to have the fine moderated; but it was decided that the earl might
insist upon the fine, and even upon more if he pleased. Beaumanoir was
present at those judgments.
4. In other disputes which the lord might have with his vassal, in
respect to the person or honour of the latter, or to property that did
not belong to the fief, there was no room for a challenge of default of
justice; because the cause was not tried in the lord's court, but in
that of the paramount: vassals, says Dfontaines,
[218]
having no power to
give judgment on the person of their lord.
I have been at some trouble to give a clear idea of those things,
which are so obscure and confused in ancient authors that to disentangle
them from the chaos in which they were involved may be reckoned a new
discovery.
Footnotes
[195]
Third capitulary of the year 812, art. 3, edition of Baluzius,
p. 497, and of Charles the Bald, added to the "Law of the Lombards," book ii,
art. 3.
[196]
Third capitulary of the year 812, art. 2, edition of Baluzius,
p. 497.
[197]
"Capitulary of Louis the Debonnaire," edition of Baluzius, p.
667.
[198]
See the "Capitulary of Charles the Bald," added to the "Law of the
Lombards,"book ii, art. 3.
[199]
Third capitulary of the year 812, art. 8.
[201]
This appears by the formulas, charters, and the capitularies.
[202]
In the year 757, edition of Baluzius, p. 180, arts. 9 and 10,
and the "Synod and Vernas," in the year 755, art. 29, edition of
Baluzius, p. 175. These two capitularies were made under King Pepin.
[203]
The officers under the count, Scabini.
[204]
See the "Law of the Lombards," book ii, tit. 52, art. 22.
[205]
There are instances of appeals of default of justice as early
as the time of Philip Augustus.
[206]
Chapter 61, p. 315.
[208]
Defontaines, chap. 21, art. 24.
[210]
Beaumanoir, chap. 61, p. 312.
[211]
Defontaines, chap. 21, art. 29.
[212]
This was the case in the famous difference between the Lord of
Nesle and Joan, Countess of Flanders, during the reign of Louis VIII. He
called upon her to have it tried within forty days, and thereupon
challenged her at the king's court with default of justice. She answered
that she would have it tried by her peers in Flanders. The king's court
determined that it should not be sent there and that the countess should
be cited.
[213]
Defontaines, chap. 21, art. 34.
[215]
Beaumanoir, chap. 61, p. 311.
[216]
Ibid., chap. 61, p. 312. But he that was neither tenant nor vassal to
the lord paid only a fine of sixty livres. — Ibid.
[218]
Chapter 21, art. 35.