Audiobook: Essay on the Trial by Jury
- Download 00 β Notes audio
- Download 01 β Ch 1 β The Right of Juries to Judge the Justice of Laws audio
- Download 02 β Ch 2 β Part 1 β Trial by Jury Defined by Magna Carta audio
- Download 03 β Ch 2 β Part 2 β Language of Magna Carta audio
- Download 04 β Ch 3 β Part 1 β Additionnal Proofs of the Rights and Duties of Jurors audio
- Download 05 β Ch 3 β Part 2 β Ancient Common Law Juries were Mere Courts of Conscience audio
- Download 06 β Ch 3 β Part 3 β Ancient Common Law Juries were Mere Courts of Conscience audio
- Download 07 β Ch 3 β Part 4 β Oaths of Jurors audio
- Download 08 β Ch 3 β Part 5 β Right of Jurors to fix the Sentence audio
- Download 09 β Ch 3 β Part 6 β The Coronation Oath audio
- Download 10 β Ch 4 β The Rights and Duties of Juries in Civil Suits audio
- Download 11 β Ch 5 β Part 1 β Objections Answered audio
- Download 12 β Ch 5 β Part 2 β Objections Answered audio
- Download 13 β Ch 6 β Juries of the Present Day Illegal audio
- Download 14 β Ch 7 β Part 1 β Illegal Judges audio
- Download 15 β Ch 7 β Part 2 β Illegal Judges audio
- Download 16 β Ch 8 β Free Administration of Justice audio
- Download 17 β Ch 9 β The Criminal Intent audio
- Download 18 β Ch 10 β Moral Considerations for Jurors audio
- Download 19 β Ch 11 β Authority of Magna Carta audio
- Download 20 β Ch 12 β Limitations Imposed Upon the Majority by the Trial by Jury audio
- Download 21 β Appendix audio
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FOR more than six hundred years that is, since Magna Carta, in 1215 there has been no clearer principle of English or American constitutional law, than that, in criminal cases, it is not only the right and duty of juries to judge what are the facts, what is the law, and what was the moral intent of the accused; but that it is also their right, and their primary and paramount duty, to judge of the justice of the law, and to hold all laws invalid, that are, in their opinion, unjust or oppressive, and all persons guiltless in violating, or resisting the execution of, such laws.
So begins Spoonerβs epic on the jury, its origins and history. Spooner examines the history and powers of a jury, from the magna carta in King Johnβs time, to the practices in the 18th century. A classic work on law, Spooner argues that the decision of the jury is sovereign over the kingβs law.
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