登陆注册
5395000000256

第256章

THE LAW COURTS AND LAWYERS OF THE UNITED STATES.

I do not propose to make any attempt to explain in detail the practices and rules of the American courts of law. No one but a lawyer should trust himself with such a task, and no lawyer would be enabled to do so in the few pages which I shall here devote to the subject. My present object is to explain, as far as I may be able to do so, the existing political position of the country. As this must depend more or less upon the power vested in the hands of the judges, and upon the tenure by which those judges hold their offices, I shall endeavor to describe the circumstances of the position in which the American judges are placed; the mode in which they are appointed; the difference which exists between the National judges and the State judges, and the extent to which they are or are not held in high esteem by the general public whom they serve.

It will, I think, be acknowledged that this last matter is one of almost paramount importance to the welfare of a country. At home in England we do not realize the importance to us in a political as well as social view of the dignity and purity of our judges, because we take from them all that dignity and purity can give as a matter of course. The honesty of our bench is to us almost as the honesty of heaven. No one dreams that it can be questioned or become questionable, and therefore there are but few who are thankful for its blessings. Few Englishmen care to know much about their own courts of law, or are even aware that the judges are the protectors of their liberties and property. There are the men, honored on all sides, trusted by every one, removed above temptation, holding positions which are coveted by all lawyers. That it is so is enough for us; and as the good thence derived comes to us so easily, we forget to remember that we might possibly be without it. The law courts of the States have much in their simplicity and the general intelligence of their arrangements to recommend them. In all ordinary causes justice is done with economy, with expedition, and Ibelieve with precision. But they strike an Englishman at once as being deficient in splendor and dignity, as wanting that reverence which we think should be paid to words falling from the bench, and as being in danger as to that purity without which a judge becomes a curse among a people, a chief of thieves, and an arch-minister of the Evil One. I say as being in danger; not that I mean to hint that such want of purity has been shown, or that I wish it to be believed that judges with itching palms do sit upon the American bench; but because the present political tendency of the State arrangements threatens to produce such danger. We in England trust implicitly in our judges--not because they are Englishmen, but because they are Englishmen carefully selected for their high positions. We should soon distrust them if they were elected by universal suffrage from all the barristers and attorneys practicing in the different courts; and so elected only for a period of years, as is the case with reference to many of the State judges in America. Such a mode of appointment would, in our estimation, at once rob them of their prestige. And our distrust would not be diminished if the pay accorded to the work were so small that no lawyer in good practice could afford to accept the situation. When we look at a judge in court, venerable beneath his wig and adorned with his ermine, we do not admit to ourselves that that high officer is honest because he is placed above temptation by the magnitude of his salary. We do not suspect that he, as an individual, would accept bribes and favor suitors if he were in want of money. But, still, we know as a fact that an honest man, like any other good article, must be paid for at a high price. Judges and bishops expect those rewards which all men win who rise to the highest steps on the ladder of their profession. And the better they are paid, within measure, the better they will be as judges and bishops. Now, the judges in America are not well paid, and the best lawyers cannot afford to sit upon the bench.

With us the practice of the law and the judicature of our law courts are divided. We have chancery barristers and common law barristers;and we have chancery courts and courts of common law. In the States there is no such division. It prevails neither in the National or Federal courts of the United States, nor in the courts of any of the separate States. The code of laws used by the Americans is taken almost entirely from our English laws--or rather, I should say, the Federal code used by the nation is so taken, and also the various codes of the different States--as each State takes whatever laws it may think fit to adopt. Even the precedents of our courts are held as precedents in the American courts, unless they chance to jar against other decisions given specially in their own courts with reference to cases of their own. In this respect the founders of the American law proceedings have shown a conservation bias and a predilection for English written and traditional law which are much at variance with that general democratic passion for change by which we generally presume the Americans to have been actuated at their Revolution. But though they have kept our laws, and still respect our reading of those laws, they have greatly altered and simplified our practice. Whether a double set of courts of law and equity are or are not expedient, either in the one country or in the other, Ido not pretend to know. It is, however, the fact that there is no such division in the States.

同类推荐
  • 宋元四明六志校勘记

    宋元四明六志校勘记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 咏张諲山水

    咏张諲山水

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 诗学源流考

    诗学源流考

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Flip-A California Romance

    Flip-A California Romance

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 黄帝内经素问校义

    黄帝内经素问校义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 秘书的年关

    秘书的年关

    一切都是不经意的。县委书记在安排县政府的人事时,顺便说了句:“咱们得提一个民主党派做副县长。”县长说:“好的,你看县中的周副校长怎样?”县委书记说:“可以。”当时他们都在想,老周还有两年就得退休,干一任,好坏都问题不大。每届政府都得提一个民主党派副县长,每个民主党派副县长都做一届。县委和县府的一把手点了头,以后的组织部门考核就和走过场一样了。周副校长有菩萨的脸庞,糯米的性格。周副校长抓教育是一把好手。这两年县中高考时出尽风头,连续三年在地区名列第一,所以分管教学的周副校长名声大振。
  • 税收的逻辑

    税收的逻辑

    从过去大众普遍对税收和财政预算漠不关心、一无所知,到现在“税痛指数”成为人们关心的热门话题,可见我们已进入税感时代,财税知识的普及势在必行。本书汇集了作者近几年发表在各种报刊杂志上的财税类时评、随笔文章和接受的一些媒体访谈,延续了作者平实严谨的行文风格和人文视角。通过阅读本书,我们能感受到中国这个历史悠久的国家发生的实质性进步,了解与我们切身相关的财税制度,从而积极有力地推动社会的进步。
  • A Burlesque Autobiography

    A Burlesque Autobiography

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 逆天神珠

    逆天神珠

    神珠有二,一阴一阳,寄情传意,助人称雄,得之者坐拥美人,得之者号令天下!
  • 极度自由

    极度自由

    他只身走向前方,世界一片漆黑,魔法强大的能量砸在每一寸土地上,爆炸的亮光映出他抽剑的手。世人曾把他当做希望,如今,他看着那些照进黑暗世界里的光,说,那才是希望。
  • 一口气读懂经济学3

    一口气读懂经济学3

    “一口气读懂经济学”系列中最值得玩味的经济学新体验,成人与儿童都能读懂的经济小说。书中用小狗皮皮的视角,结合人们日常的经济行为。分析出经济学中最质朴的原理,带你轻松享受阅读之旅。
  • 青梅蜜汁竹马相随

    青梅蜜汁竹马相随

    在何雨真的一生中,有一个人总是在背后默默的帮助她,支持她,引领她……在君易翰的生命中雨真是他的一切,。他(她)们的感情越过流年,从懵懂无知到碎碎暮年………男主:年少时,我们共用一桌子,胳膊与胳膊之间相距不过10厘米;少年时,我们一南一北,时差相隔不过10小时;而立之年,梦醒的清晨,一低头眸光中便都是你;待到暮年,你我已两发鬓白,忆韶华,只余一句,还好遇见你..........
  • 化珠保命真经

    化珠保命真经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 太后难嫁

    太后难嫁

    十六为后,然后丧偶……作为九州大陆最最年轻的太后,也是唯一活着的太后,薄胭内要护着小皇上健康成长,外要拦着乱臣贼子谋权篡位,终于,在三十岁,不负众望的因心力交瘁而驾鹤西游了……重生一世,依旧为太后,必定要换个活法,最起码命要保住,乱臣贼子要扫清,然后……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 妖妃倾色,魔君太缠宠

    妖妃倾色,魔君太缠宠

    蓟羽芊芊倾城绝色,是要送给王的女子,她要魅惑王,成为他的宠妃,帮仙界度过百年一遇的浩劫......魅婆将她带到人间,将她丢到一个被锁住浑身命脉的男人面前,“如果你能让他燃起对你的欲望,你就可以去魅惑王了!”......“他不是一个普通的男人,他是——魔王!”