Popular Law-making by Frederic Jesup Stimson
page 46 of 492 (09%)
page 46 of 492 (09%)
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England. "Disseised of his freehold, of his liberties or his free
customs"--that is the basis of all our modern law of freedom of trade, against restraint of trade, and the basis on which our actions against the modern trusts rest; the right to freely engage in any business, to be protected against monopoly either of the state or brought about by competitors, to freely make one's own contracts, for labor or property, to work as long as one chooses, for what wages one wills, and all the other liberties of labor and trade. "Or be outlawed or exiled or otherwise destroyed"--that is a broad general phrase for any interference with a man's property, life, or liberty. "Nor will we go upon him"--that has been translated in various ways, but it means what it says; it means that the king won't descend upon a man personally or with his army; nor will we "send upon him"--a law officer after him; "but by the lawful judgment of his peers, or by the law of the land"--that means jury trial, or at least the law of the land, as it then was; and that phrase, or its later equivalent--due process of law--is discussed to-day probably in one case out of every ten that arise in our highest courts. Many books have been written upon it. To start with, it means that none of these things can be done except _under law_; that is, except under a lawsuit; except under a process in a court, having jury trial if it be a civil case, and also an indictment if it be a criminal case, with all the rights and consequences that attend a regularly conducted lawsuit. It must be done by the courts, and not by the executive, not by the mere will of the king; and, still more important to us to-day, not by legislatures, not even by Parliament. "We will sell to no man, we will deny or delay to no man, either right or justice," needs no explanation; it is equality before the law, repeated in our own Fourteenth Amendment. Lastly, we have in cap. 41: "Merchants shall have safe conduct in |
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