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Trial by Jury

The Seventh Amendment and Anglo-American Special Juries
  • James Oldham
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2006
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About this book

While the right to be judged by one's peers in a court of law appears to be a hallmark of American law, protected in civil cases by the Seventh Amendment to the Constitution, the civil jury is actually an import from England. Legal historian James Oldham assembles a mix of his signature essays and new work on the history of jury trial, tracing how trial by jury was transplanted to America and preserved in the Constitution.
Trial by Jury begins with a rigorous examination of English civil jury practices in the late eighteenth century, including how judges determined one's right to trial by jury and who composed the jury. Oldham then considers the extensive historical use of a variety of “special juries,” such as juries of merchants for commercial cases and juries of women for claims of pregnancy. Special juries were used for centuries in both English and American law, although they are now considered antithetical to the idea that American juries should be drawn from jury pools that reflect reasonable cross-sections of their communities. An introductory overview addresses the relevance of Anglo-American legal tradition and history in understanding America's modern jury system.

Author / Editor information

Oldham James :

James Oldham is St. Thomas More Professor of Law and Legal History at Georgetown University Law Center. His books include English Common Law in the Age of Mansfield.

Reviews

This piecemeal research is interesting to the extent that the reader is interested in reconstructing the past.

Barbara A. Black,George Welwood Murray Professor of Legal History, Columbia Law School:
This first-rate work of legal history meets the high expectations of those familiar with James Oldhams scholarship, and bears those hallmarks of excellence that we associate with that scholarship: total mastery of the manuscript and other sources, lucid exposition, fresh perspective, and sound insight. Illuminating not only the history of the jury, but the contemporary significance and judicial use of that history, this book will be enlightening for the non-specialist, and a boon to the legal historian.

David J. Seipp,Professor of Law, Boston University School of Law:
Oldham wonderfully complicates our historical image of the trial jury enshrined in the Sixth and Seventh Amendments of the Bill of Rights. Early English common law summoned juries of women, foreigners, experts, tradesmen, and neighbors, all deliberately chosen to bring their particular knowledge or experience to court. More than any other scholar, Oldham has revealed the manuscript sources that illuminate the context of English trial practice at the time the Bill of Rights was drafted in the newly-independent United States.

William E. Nelson,Judge Edward Weinfeld Professor of Law, NYU School of Law:
Essential reading for anyone interested in trial by jury. Oldham speaks with authority about who the jurors were and what they decided. Surprisingly, he supports a 'complexity exception' to the Seventh Amendment's jury trial guarantee in civil cases. His carefully-documented history of both male and female juries of experts is uniquely valuable. No comparable work exists.

Thomas P. Gallanis,Professor of Law and History, Washington and Lee University:
An impressive achievement by the leading historian of eighteenth century English law. Meticulously researched and relevant both to historical and modern debates, this book deserves a wide readership.


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The Seventh Amendment, the Writ of Inquiry, and Punitive Awards
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Nineteenth-Century Usage and Reform
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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
June 1, 2006
eBook ISBN:
9780814762592
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
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