If you are
not yet in love with eighteenth century London, Lord Mansfield – Justice in the Age of Reason by Norman S Poser
will get you started. If, as mine did, your infatuation began with Boswell’s The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D., you
will be well prepared. But Poser’s account is so straightforward and clearly
written that there is really no threshold of preparation to be overcome.
Both Boswell
and Mansfield (born William Murray) were social climbers. Both were lawyers.
Both were Scottish. They knew each other. In April of 1772 they appeared on
opposite sides in an appeal in the House of Lords, and Murray won. Murray was
educated in England, after at age 13, and unaccompanied, he rode a horse to London from Edinburgh,
never seeing his parents again, to attend Westminster School. Johnson observed
to Boswell: “Much may be made of a Scotchman, if he be caught young.” Boswell was educated in Scotland and Holland.
As a lawyer
Murray had an appreciation of Roman law and as a judge he was inclined to be
guided by principles rather than rules, introducing what some thought was an
alarming unpredictability into the common law. Poser summarises this (p 402):
“His
study of the great philosophers of law instilled in him a belief that all law
was based on morality, reason, and human nature, which were the same
everywhere, even though customs, mores, and traditions differ from country to
country.”
Poser’s
review of the courts in Westminster Hall is extraordinarily clear, and it is
only regrettable that those who taught me legal history, and who wrote the
textbooks, were not so interesting. The times were ones of, by our standards,
corruption. Judicious payments could lead to judicial office. Judges kept for
themselves a proportion of the court fees in cases they heard. Lord Mansfield –
he insisted on being ennobled as a condition for his acceptance of the position
of Chief Justice of the court of King’s Bench – on occasion was in the House of
Lords when appeals from his own decisions were heard. His fear of exposure for
a youthful indiscretion, which could have led to accusations of treason, led
him to be unduly concerned with placating those in political power. But this
was widely known anyway, and he was occasionally subjected to harsh criticism
in print.
Murray was so able a lawyer, particularly because of his learning and his eloquence,
that he quickly became a leader of the profession. He amassed a fortune, even
before going to the bench – indeed it was probably his potential financial
sacrifice that gave him the leverage to demand the peerage. He invested in
mortgages on properties owned by aristocrats. He was incurably ambitious. As Horace
Walpole wrote, “he knew it was safer to expound laws than to be exposed to them.”
He
was an autocratic judge, although unafraid of admitting that he had been wrong. Poser
gives us this:
“when
asked why he had changed his mind on a particular point of law, he answered
that it only showed that he was wiser today than he had been the day before.”
I can’t help
but wonder whether Bramwell B was thinking of this when he said, in Andrews v Styrap (1872) 26 LT 704, at p
706: “the matter does not appear to me now as it appears to have appeared to me
then”.
Mansfield
worked extremely hard as a judge. He sat long hours and kept cases going even
after he had gone home: juries would sometimes have to visit him in Bloomsbury
Square to return their verdicts. His instructions to juries were alien to our
standards, and he had a rather flexible attitude to penal laws he didn’t like.
On one occasion he told a jury that (pp 352-353)
“...
These penal laws were not meant to be enforced except at proper seasons, when
there is a necessity for it; or, more properly speaking, they were not meant to
be enforced at all, but were merely made in
terrorem ...
“ Take notice, if you bring him in guilty the
punishment is very severe; a dreadful punishment indeed! Nothing less than
perpetual imprisonment!”
Americans
make a hero of Mansfield, and of his contemporary Blackstone, because they
inherited the common law as it then was. More realistically, he had
characteristics that are all too familiar: he was erudite, opinionated, a
bully, a climber, avaricious and ambitious, acquisitive and greedy. He ended
his years at his (then) country house, Kenwood in Hampstead, obese and
arthritic, having clung to office until his inability to write forced him into
retirement. In some ways, too, he was very kind, but he had a lot to be kind
with.
Although he had, and apparently enjoyed, a long marriage, there were no children. As a ladies' man he seems to have fitted Clive James's description of Isaiah Berlin:
"Sexually inoperative but incorrigibly flirtatious, he loved the high-born ladies, who loved him right back, although his paucity of physical response - a desert under the ocean of talk - led several of them to despair ..."
Boswell, in
his journal entry for 11 April 1773, describes a conversation with Mansfield
(who would live another 20 years, dying at age 88):
"Sexually inoperative but incorrigibly flirtatious, he loved the high-born ladies, who loved him right back, although his paucity of physical response - a desert under the ocean of talk - led several of them to despair ..."
“He
is all artificial. He affected to know little of Scotch appeals when over. I
catched him ... [showing that] he well remembered what he affected not to
remember. It is unpleasant to see so high an administrator of justice such a
man.”