The Country Justice

The Country Justice was written by Michael Dalton and first published in 1618. The subtext reads: Conteyning the Practise of the Justices of the Peace Out of Their Sessions, Gathered for the Better Helpe of Such Justices of Peace as Have Not Beene Much Conversant in the Studie of the Lawes of this Realme.[1]

The Country Justice
AuthorMichael Dalton
Original titleThe Countrey Justice: Conteyning the Practise of the Justices of the Peace Out of Their Sessions, Gathered for the Better Helpe of Such Justices of Peace as Have Not Beene Much Conversant in the Studie of the Lawes of this Realme
Published1618

The book is a manual which was used by English justices of the peace. It went through about 20 editions between its first edition in 1618 and the last in 1746. With its roots in Crompton, Fitzherbert and Lambard, the book offers advice on a wide range of issues including levying customs, highways, prisons, riots, soldiers, murder, felonies, rogues, vagabonds, wool and high treason. The alphabetical listing of topics was groundbreaking and was a model for the structure of other books that came later.[2]

The Country Justice was one of many, but perhaps the most influential, of legal handbooks through which English common law entered into the legal system of early settlement in New England. Dalton was a justice of the peace in Cambridge and wrote this handbook to guide local justices of the peace who had no formal legal training. The simple, direct writing style contributed to the book's popularity in England and the colonies. There was an earlier handbook, also alphabetized, written by William Lambarde, called the Eirenarcha. By 1619 Lambarde’s book had already seen 13 editions.

Included among the many issues in The Country Justice were guidelines for witchcraft and witches. Dalton emphasized the need for body searches to find evidence of demonic contacts.[3]

References

  1. Dalton, Michael (2003). The Countrey Justice. ISBN 9781584772996. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  2. "The Country Justice". The Lawbook Exchange. Retrieved 8 June 2014. Rooted in Crompton, Fitzherbert and Lambard, The Countrey Justice offers advice on such matters as customs, highways, prisons, riots, soldiers, murder, felonies, rogues and vagabonds, wool, and high treason.
  3. McManus, Edgar J. (1993). Law and Liberty in Early New England: Criminal Justice and Due Process. The University of Massachusetts Press. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-55-849-772-6. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
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