780 likes | 1.07k Views
Legal english. A short history. Preview. Historical development of English Language contacts in the history of English The spread of English Development of legal English. A short history of england. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VcnSsEVsrf0. Roman britain ( 43-410).
E N D
Legal english A short history
Preview • Historical development of English • Languagecontactsinthehistoryof English • Thespreadof English • Development oflegal English
A short historyofengland • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VcnSsEVsrf0
Roman rule (43-410) • 55-54 BC Julius Caesar invaded what is now England as part of the Gallic Wars, and was defeated. He wrote in De Bello Gallico that there were many tribes there, very similar to other Celtic tribes in Europe. • 43 AD, Claudius successfully invaded England, whichbecame a Roman province, Britania • 43-410 Roman Britain • 4th c. many Britons left to cross the English Channel from Wales, Cornwall and southern Britain, and settledthe western part of Gaul, where they started a new nation: Brittany. The Britons gave their new country its name and the Breton language, a sister language to Welsh and Cornish.
HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE • OLD ENGLISH (c. 450- c. 1100) • MIDDLE ENGLISH (c. 1100- c.1450) • MODERN ENGLISH (c. 1450 - )
Anglo-SaxonEngland • No continuoustraditionof Roman law • Germaniccustom + Christian influence • Littleliteracy, fewofficials, no centraladministration, no courts • Early Anglo-Saxonlaw – primitiveandharsh (privatevengeance, bloodfeuds) • Gradually, rulersofthefourkingdoms (Kent, Wessex, Mercia, Northumbria) started to interveneagainstlawlessnessand to composelaws, known as dooms, createdfromexistingcustomsandwritteninEnglish • „therecordoflegislationinEnglandis one oftheoldestin Europe”
Anglo-SaxonEngland • Theearlykingsrelied on greatlandowners to whomtheygranted wide powersofpeace-keeping: „Therecannothavebeenmuchneedofcourts…to standbetweenthewrong-doingandretribution: thepeacekeepercompelledthepaymentofthe set compensationorcutdowntheoutlawandthethiefcaughtintheact” • Christianityexpandedrapidlyafter597 (e.g. Aethelbert, kingofKent, familiarwithreligiouspracticessincehiswife, Bertha, a Frankishprincesswaspermitted to holdservicesin a church at Canterburywith a bishopshebroughtover to England)
Anglo-saxonengland • Courts – localpopularassembliesthatmetevery 4 weeks for theadministrationofcustomarylaw • Most commoncrimes: homicide, wounding,cattletheft • Whenanoffenderwascaught, therewouldbe no trial but animmediatefinror, if he waspoor, immediatedeath; if he escaped, he wouldbeoutlawed, whichsanctionedhisbeinglawfullykilled • Courts – no trial on questionsoffact; verdictfromtheAlmighty: oathhelpersortrialsbyordeal: used to determineguiltorinnocence
LATER OLD ENGLISH (c. 850 - c.1100)Language Contacts • OLD NORSE • Lexical words • Nouns:birth, bull, dirt, egg, fellow, husband, leg, sister, skin, sky, skirt, window • Adjectives: ill, low, odd, rotten, sly, weak • Verbs:call, crawl, die, get, give, lift, raise, scream, take, • Function words • Pronouns: they (their, them) • Conjunctions: though • Determiners: some, any • Auxiliaries: are • Names • Family names: -son: Johnson, Stevenson • Place names: -by 'farm, town': Derby, Rugby, Whitby; -thorp 'village': Althorp, Linthorp
Alfred thegreat (r. 871-899) • Themachineryandenforcementoflaw had brokendown • Alfred the Great – stemmedthetideofDanishinvasions; confinedtheDanes to anareainthenorthandeastofEngland – Danelaw; ChristianizedtheVikings; encouragedlearning; securedthebeginningof English civilization; laidtheground for theconceptof one unitedkingdomofEngland • Alfred andhissuccessors – thetask to revivethelaw • Alfred incorporatedintohisbooklawsofthebestdoomsofKent, MerciaandWessex, blendedwithChristian principles; no comprehensivecodes • Enacted 77 decreesintegrating English andDanishlegalsystems • Proclaimedtherewasnot to be one law for therichandanother for thepoor • Lawsuitswerebroughtin a publicassembly – „Folk-moot”
Anglo-saxonlaws: mainfeatures • Power oftheChurch • Attempt to replacetheblood feud andrevengewith a paymentofcompensation • Communalresponsibility for thepreservationoforder (courts as publicmeetings; popularassemblies – thefoundation for the future trialbyjury)
The Anglo-Saxon Period • Verbalmagic • Actsof transfer requiredcomplicatedandpreciselanguagerituals; a singlemistakecouldnullifytheact • Useofrhythmicexpressions • Alliteration – commoninmaximsandbinaryexpressions
The Anglo-Saxon Period • Inversion to strenghtentheimpact: I withmyeyessawandwithmyearsheard • Languagegraduallybecame more complexsyntactically but stillcontainedelementsofspokenlanguage
The Anglo-Saxon Period • Some Latin words • Royal legislationandspreadofChristianity • Examples: convict, admit, mediate, legitimate
Ritual andformalismoflanguage: thetraditionofverbalmagic • MiddleAges: magicalrites: parties had to recite thewordsnecessary for thecourseofthetrialwithabsoluteaccuracy, underpenaltyofforfeitingtheirrights
Repetition • triplerepetition:nullandvoidandof no effect, authorized, empoweredandentitled to • To tellthetruth, thewholetruth, andnothing but thetruth
Repetition • Binaryexpressions: wordswiththe same meaningexisted at the same time intheformof Latin-Frenchvariantsand Anglo-Saxonvariants . Repetitionsensuredthat legal messageswereunderstandablein a multilingualsociety • Acknowledgeandconfess, actanddeed, deviseandbequeath, fitandproper, goodsandchattels, willand testament
Thenormanconquest: william i • William I laidthefoundations for strongcentralizedgovernmentand a CommonLaw, but: • „TheNormanswerewithoutlearning, without literature, withoutwrittenlaw” • William enactedfewnewlaws, confirmed some oftheold Anglo-Saxonones • IntroducedfromNormandytrialbybattle to replaceordealin some situations • William retainedtheWitan but converteditinto a royalcouncil; he alsoestablished a royalcourtwhich, as theCuriaRegis, wasdestined to replacetheWitan • Juriesof 12 consideredanaccusation • Abolishedcapitalpunishment (replacedbymutilations); reintroducedby Henry I
Henry I andtheenglishlegalrenaissance (1133-1189) • Sentjudgesthroughthecounties to hearpleasoftheCrownwhilethepowerfulbroughttheirdisputes to Westminster
Henry ii andtheenglishlegalrenaissance (1133-1189) • Angevinkings – descendedfromGeoffrey, CountofAnjou, whowasHenry’sfather • Henry II - centralizedroyal power; challengedthe power oftheChurch • CuriaRegis – enlargeditsjurisdiction at theexpenseoflowercourts • Transformedthecriminallawfrom a divinelyordained system to a system based on evidence: trialbyjury • UnifyingcustomarylawandroyalcodesintoCommonLawbyestablishing a permanentbodyofprofessionaljudges • A strongshiftawayfrom Anglo-Saxonfeudsandwergild to Angevinpublicprosecution
Henry ii • Crime – notseemmerely as a wrongagainstthevictim but againsttheCrownwiththeking as symbolicvictimwho had to berevenged • Punishments for seriouscrimes – sanctionedbythestate
Commonlaw • „At a time when Continental sovereignswerelooking to thetheoryof Roman law to strenghtentheirownpretensions to power, the English rulers had alreadyachieved a highdegreeofcentralizationof power inthehandsoftheroyalgovernment. As a result, English royaljudgeswereable to administerjusticealloverthecountryandtheysoonsuspendedthelocalcourts. Wherevertheroyaljusticewent, theyusedthejury…as a meansofdeterminingfacts. Thejury system wasthereforean instrument ofroyal power, andspread as rapidlyandwidely as theroyalcourts.”
Birthofthelegalprofession (1272-1307) • TheInnsof Court wereborn • EachInn had chambeswherelawyerscouldreside • Unlikestudents at theuniversities, thestudents at theInnsof Court weretaught English lawbased on anever-increasingprecedents, not Roman orcanonlaw
latinandanglo-french • The Norman Conquest brought to England a French-speaking upper class • Latin – dominant in law • Normans – used Latin in important contexts • 11-12 c. Latin was the language of legal documents in England
Rise of Law French • 1st law promulgated in French in 1275 • End of 13th c. both Latin and French used as legislative languages • Early 14th c. French used in drafting laws (except in Church matters)
Rise ofLawFrench • 1st lawpromulgatedinFrenchin 1275 • Endof 13th c. both Latin andFrenchused as legislative languages • Early 14th c. Frenchusedindraftinglaws (exceptinChurchmatters) • Late 13th c. the Royal CourtsusedFrenchduringsessions; casereports – preparedinFrench
Rise ofLawFrench • Frenchbecamethe legal languageinEnglandfromthe late 13th c., both for legislationandthelawcourts • The use ofFrenchinEnglish legal circles – a strangephenomenonbecausein 13th c. French had alreadybegun to disappearinEngland as a languageofcommunication; yetthe rise ofFrench as languageofthelawonlystarted at that time
Rise ofLawFrench • Reasons: • A sectionoftheEnglisharistocracy – stillFrench-speaking at theendof 13th c. • French as thelanguageofculture • Centralisationofjusticesystemconsolidatedthe status ofFrench • Secularisationofthejusticesystem – clerics no longeroperated as judges
Rise ofLawFrench • Withits general disappearancefromEngland, French had becomethemarkofthetrueelites • Legal profession – monopolyoftheelites • French – guaranteethatthepeoplecouldnotmeddleinthejusticesystembecausetheywereunable to followthetrial • LawFrench – eventhen a dead language: itsexpressions had a clear legal meaning; appropriate for use as legal terms
DeclineofLaw Latin andLawFrench • 1362 Statute ofPleading – draftedinFrench! – prescribedthatjudgeswere to use English but that court minutescouldstillbepreparedin Latin • According to Sir Edward Coke, it wasbetterthattheunlearnedwerenotable to read legal materials becausetheywouldget it all wrongandharmthemselves!
DeclineofLaw Latin andLawFrench • Endof 14th c. parliamentarianswereusingspokenEnglish • Stillin 17th c. possible to hearlawFrenchintheInnsof Court, and, occasionally, inthecourts; a numberof legal works – stillwritteninlawFrench • Frenchand Latin finallyabolishedin 1731
DeclineofLaw Latin andLawFrench • Latin – declinedin 16th and 17th c.; remainedanimportant legal language: court records, writsandother legal documentswrittenin Latin until 18th c.
Dominanceof Latin, FrenchandEnglish • 1000 1200 1500 2000 • Latin supremacy • LawFrenchsupremacy • Englishsupremacy
WordinessofEnglish legal language: Influence ofcase-law • Mylward v. Weldon (1596) theplaintiffproduced a pleadingrunning to 120 pages • Examplesofwordiness: (Mattila 2006: 235-236)
OrthographyandPronunciation • Legal language – a tool of group cohesion, or team spirit • Frenchand Latin pronounced as Englishwords • Oyezpronounced as oou-yes
Influence ofotherlanguages • Legal English – a languageofinteractionbetween Old English (Anglo-Saxon, withScandinavianelements), Medieval Latin, Old French • Latin andFrenchexpressions - partofthe most basicvocabularyofEnglishlaw; foundationsofEnglish legal thinking • Calques – translationsfrom Latin andFrench (originally, commonlawwascomuneley)
Latin • Legal maxims: ubi jus, ibiremedium • Ratiodecidendi, obiterdicta • Ordinary Latin: versus; pro se (saidofanindividualrepresentingthemselvesin court, i.e. without legal representation)= inpropria persona,in forma pauperis(exemptfrompaying court costs) ex parte(‘from one partyonly, for thebenefitof one partyonly’), mens rea, scienter (‘knowingly’), animustestandi(‘intention to make a will’)
Latin • Technicalmeaning: amicuscuriae • A privateindividual, a legal person, eventhe State thatgivesthe court specific legal information
Latin • shortenedexpressions • Nisi prius(‘unlessbefore’) = a matterofproceedings at first instance with a jurypresent • Affidavit (‘he affirmed’) = ‘a written or printeddeclarationconfirmedbyanoath’ • Habeascorpus(‘youmayhavethebody’) = a judge’s order to bring a prisonerbeforethe court to clarifythelegalityofdetaininghim
Latin • legal discoursemarkers • Aforesaid < predictus; said < dictus • InmedievalEngland, when a person’s nameappeared for the 1st time precededbyquidem ‘a certain’; later, thewordspredictus, dictusor idemwereused
LawFrench • Real propertylaw: purautrevie‘for or duringthelifetimeof a third party’, terre-tenant • Most technical legal vocabularygoesback to Old French: assault, infraction, damage, action, counsel, defendant, judge, jury, party, process, verdict
LawFrench • Influence on word formation: • Old French past participle: -e or –ee (for thepersonobtainingsth or formingtheobjectofanaction • Doeroftheaction: -or/-er • Employer/employee, trustor/trustee, vendor/vendee
LawFrench • Word order • Accountspayable, attorney general, court martial, feesimple, letters patent
Lawofcontract • Thelanguageof a contractgovernedbycommonlawshouldbe general enough to covereverysituation, yetpreciseenoughtoensurethatthe legal positionoftheparties is unambiguous • Thecontractshouldshowwithcertaintywhat it includesandwhatitdoesnot (Ibid: 237)
Lawofcontract • Caselaw – fundamental • Ifthepartiesomitsthfromthecontract, theycannotrely on thecourts to insert it later on theirbehalfbywayofinterpretation • Termsof a contract – alwaysinterpretednarrowly: parolevidencerule: ifthemeaningofawrittencontract is clear, then no otherevidence is allowed as to itscontent; thecontractshouldcontain all that is needed