Theodore F. T. Plucknett

A Concise History of the Common Law


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will discuss the darker side of this picture, and the emergency measures which the prerogative courts resorted to in restoring tranquillity after the Wars of the Roses. But although (as that chapter will show) the great contribution of the Tudors lay in the field of prerogative courts, nevertheless they did carry out some notable reforms in the common law courts as well.

      The same inadequate concession was made in respect of the other Exchequer chamber body to hear errors from the Exchequer of Pleas,1 and with the same disappointing results.

      The fact that these special arrangements had to be made for the review of judgments given in the King’s Bench will show that that court was enjoying unusually good business during the sixteenth century. The preamble to the earlier of the two statutes cited explains that the new court shall hear writs of error brought on “actions or suits of debt, detinue, covenant, account, action on the case, ejectione firmæ, and trespass” in the King’s Bench. These seven actions properly belonged to the Court of Common Pleas. Trespass (and ejectione firmæ resembled trespass) seems also to have been part of the original jurisdiction of the King’s Bench, but during the middle ages the only trespasses usually brought in the King’s Bench were those of unusual violence or importance.2 Most of this jurisdiction, therefore, had been acquired at a later period, and by somewhat devious means.

      There is another aspect of the King’s Bench during this period which deserves attention, and that is the growth of the “prerogative” writs. The history of mandamus, certiorari, prohibition and some other similar writs is still unwritten,2 but it is clear that they first become important during the Tudor period, and that they were a proper development of the jurisdiction of the King’s Bench, for that court had long been close to the Council in the exercise of royal discretion in judicial matters. The writs themselves seem to have been originally mere administrative orders from superior officials to their subordinates telling them to do something, to give some information, or the like. Clearly, the King’s Bench was making a great contribution to public law when it adapted these writs to legal purposes, and assumed the task of directing them as occasion required to various departments of central and local government. When one considers the enormous activity of the King’s Council under the Tudors, it is a little surprising that the Council should have allowed the court to handle the prerogative writs, for it seems just as likely that the Council itself should have undertaken to supervise local officers by its own purely administrative machinery. If it had done so it is clear that our constitutional law would have been very different.