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ASLH
Newsletter
Winter 1999 |
Table
of Contents
NEWS OF THE
SOCIETY
From the
President's Desk
Officers
and Directors, 1999
ASLH Committees,
1999
ASLH
E-Mail and Telephone Information
1999
Annual Meeting
Donald Sutherland
Prize
Erwin
C. Surrency Prize
H-Law Notice
ANNOUNCEMENTS
New Honorary Fellows
1998
ANNUAL MEETING
<<
h-law
NEWS OF THE
SOCIETY
From
the President's Desk
Greetings! I can report that under the inspired leadership of Sally
Gordon and her superb associate, historian Allison Sneider, our able program
committee is working round the clock to mount what looks to be a fantastic
program in Toronto. If you haven't already marked your calendars, the dates
are October 21-23, l999.
In other news, the y2k program will take place at a site beloved by
all members of the Ivy League, except those who attended Brown, Columbia,
Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Penn, and Yale. Many thanks to Craig Joyce,
Stan Katz, Sally Gordon, Dirk Hartog, Don Nieman, Ray Solomon, Allison
Sneider, and the members of the standing committee on conferences and the
annual meeting for making it possible for us to gather in Princeton. Wear
your Halloween colors!
On the technological front, we thank the stalwart Chris Waldrep and
Dan Ernst (whom I will refrain from characterizing again as decanal material,
lest he hurt me) for their outstanding job in mounting abstracts of papers
given at our conferences on the ASLH web page.
On publications, I report the obvious: with the assistance of Diane
Clay and a subsidy from the American Bar Foundation, Chris Tomlins continues
to mount blockbuster issue after blockbuster. We are very grateful to Diane,
the ABF, Chris, the University of Illinois Press, and its ever-helpful
journals manager, Ann Lowry, for doing so well by us. Thanks also go to
our gifted negotiator (and unofficial parliamentarian), Les Benedict, and
members of the Publication Committee for their work in developing a new
contract that enables the Society to continue its productive and amicable
relation with the press well into the future.
We have equally good news with respect to Studies in Legal History.
Series editors Tom Green and Dirk Hartog may not yet have had anyone in
"the industry" (as we California cogniscenti say) option one of their books,
but they have edited prize-winner after prize-winner. We also salute UNC
Press's indomitable Lewis Bateman, who has just begun his third (!) decade
with the series.
By now, you should have received a letter from Lawrence Friedman with
news of our latest quest, the establishment of a Willard Hurst Memorial.
We envision a Hurst Memorial Institute, staffed by senior scholars from
the society, which will meet for two-three weeks each summer and offer
stipends to graduate students and other junior legal historians that enable
them to attend. Some substantial checks have been coming in (many thanks!),
and there is already a possibility that we could have the use of a chateau
in Brittainy that comes complete with its own golf course as a possible
site, but of course, we need more money to make this dream a reality. So
. . . please send your checks made out to the ASLH to Lawrence at Stanford,
and if you have any suggestions about the form of the institute, please
direct them to Avi Soifer (soifera@bc.edu), who is chairing our Hurst implementation
committee.
Send us your news!
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Officers
and Directors, 1999
President: Laura Kalman, University
of California, Santa Barbara
President-Elect: Thomas A. Green,
University of Michigan
Secretary-Treasurer: Donald G. Nieman,
Bowling Green State University
Board of Directors
Mary Sarah Bilder (2000), Boston College
Carol Chomsky (1999), University of Minnesota
Robert J. Cottrol (2000), George Washington
University
Cynthia Herrup (1999), Duke University
Harold M. Hyman (Immediate Past-President),
Rice University
Herber A. Johnson (2001), University of
South Carolina
Craig Joyce (1999*), University of Houston
Yasuhide Kawashima (2001), University of
Texas, El Paso
Michael de L. Landon (2000*), University
of Mississippi
Bruce Mann (2001), University of Pennsylvania
John P.S. McLaren (1999), University of
Victoria
John V. Orth (1999), University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill
David Rabban (2000), University of Texas
Aviam Soifer, Boston College (2001)
Sue Sheridan Walker (2001*), Northeastern
Illinois University
Carol Weisbrod (2000), University of Connecticut
* Executive Committee Member
() Indicates year term expires
ASLH
Committees, 1999
Nominating Committee
Victoria List (2000), Washington and Jefferson
College, Chair
Sarah Barringer Gordon (1999), University
of Pennsylvania
Mary Dudziak (2001), University of Southern
California
Michael Grossberg (2000), Indiana University
Philip Hamburger (2001), George Washington
University
() Indicates year term expires
1999 Program Committee
Sarah Barringer Gordon, University of Pennsylvania,
Chair
Constance Backhouse, University of Western Ontario
Cornelia Hughes Dayton, University of Connecticut
Christine Desan, Harvard University
Tahirih Lee, Florida State University
Pnina Lahav, Boston University
William LaPiana, New York Law School
Victoria List, Washington & Jefferson College
Kenneth Mack, Princeton University
Gregory Mark, Rutgers University, Newark
Michael Millender, University of Florida
Richard Ross, University of Chicago
Christopher Tomlins, American Bar Foundation
Howard Venable, New York University
James Whitman, Yale University
1999 Local Arrangements Committee
Peter Oliver, Osgoode Society, Chair
Susan Lewthwaite, Law Society of Upper Canada Archives
Marilyn MacFarlane, Osgoode Society
Standing Committee on Conferences and
the Annual Meeting
Craig Joyce, University of Houston (1998),
Chair
Christine A. Desan (1998), Harvard University
Dwight Jessup (1997), Taylor University
Eben Moglen (1997), Columbia University
Kenneth Murchison (1997), Louisiana State
University
William E. Nelson (1998), New York University
Frances Rudko (1993), Southern New England
School of Law
David S. Tanenhaus (1998), University of
Nevada, Las Vegas
() Indicates year appointed
Publications Committee
M. Les Benedict (1995), Ohio State University,
Chair
Thomas J. Davis (1998), Arizona State University
Hendrik Hartog (1997), Princeton University
Craig Joyce (1991), University of Houston
Tahirih V. Lee (1998), University of Minnesota
Bruce Mann (1998), University of Pennsylvania
Christopher Tomlins (1996), American Bar
Foundation
Christopher Waldrep (1997), Eastern Illinois
University
() Indicates year appointed
Committee on Documentary Preservation
Michael J. Churgin (1982), University of
Texas, Chair
Mary L. Dudziak (1988), University of Iowa
Christian G. Fritz (1985), University of
New Mexico
Michael Griffith (1990), Office of the
Clerk, U. S. District Court,
Northern District of California
DeLloyd J. Guth (1988), University of Manitoba
J. Gordon Hylton (1998), Marquette University
Harold M. Hyman (1998), Rice University
Maeva Marcus (1988), U. S. Supreme Court
Historical Society
Gregory Mark (1998), Rutgers University,
Newark
R. Michael McReynolds (1985), U. S. National
Archives
Rayman L. Solomon (1982), Rutgers University,
Camden
Marsha Trimble (1992), University of Virginia
() Indicates year appointed
Honors Committee
Herbert A. Johnson (1997), University of
South Carolina, Chair
Richard Helmholz (1997), University of
Chicago
Linda Kerber (1998), University of Iowa
() Indicates year appointed
Membership Committee
Victoria Saker Woeste (1998), American
Bar Foundation, Chair
Carol Chomsky (1998), University of Minnesota
Catherine Fisk (1998), Loyola University
Thomas Gallanis (1998), Ohio State University
Robert Goldman (1998), Virginia Union University
Sarah Barringer Gordon, ex officio (Chair,
1998 Program Committee)
Kenneth Ledford (1998), Case Western Reserve
University
Laura Kalman, ex officio (President)
Fred Konefsky (1998), SUNY-Buffalo
Randy McGowen (1998), University of Oregonb
Donald G. Nieman, ex officio (Secretary-Treasurer)
G. Edward White (1998), University of Virginia
() Indicates year appointed
Editor of LAW AND HISTORY REVIEW
Christopher Tomlins, American Bar Foundation
Managing Editor of the ASLH Newsletter
Robert S. Smith, Bowling Green State University
H-Law Moderators
Ian Mylchreest, Monash University
Christopher Waldrep, Eastern Illinois University
Co-Editors of STUDIES IN LEGAL HISTORY
Hendrik Hartog, Princeton University
Thomas A. Green, University of Michigan
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ASLH
E-Mail and Telephone Information
The Secretary-Treasurer can be contacted
either by phone, (419) 372-2030, or e-mail,
dnieman@bgnet.bgsu.edu.
Fax messages may be sent to (419) 372-7208.
1999
Annual Meeting: Toronto, October 21-23
Make plans now to attend the Society's
1999 meeting in Toronto, where we will meet at the Sheraton Centre. President
LAURA KALMAN has appointed SALLY GORDON to chair the Program Committee.
Sally's committee includes CONNIE BACKHOUSE, University of Western Ontario,
CORNELIA DAYTON, University of Connecticut, CHRIS DESAN, Harvard University,
TAHIRIH LEE, Florida State University, PNINA LAHAV, Boston University,
WILLIAM LA PIANA, New York Law School, VICTORIA LIST, Washington &
Jefferson College, KENNETH MACK, Princeton University, GREGORY MARK, Rutgers
University, MICHAEL MILLENDER, University of Florida, RICHARD ROSS, University
of Chicago, CHRISTOPHER TOMLINS, American Bar Foundation, HOWARD VENABLE,
New York University, and JAMES WHITMAN, Yale University.
While Sally and her committee work hard
to assemble an exciting and well rounded program, local arrangements are
in the hands of PETER OLIVER of the Osgoode Society,
SUSAN LEWTHWAITE of the Law Society of Upper Canada Archives, and MARILYN
MACFARLANE of the Osgoode Society. They are planning
a very special reception at the Osgoode Society (across the street from
the Sheraton Centre), and, of course, Toronto is a wonderful, cosmopolitan
city, so all ASLH members will want to make plans to attend.
Registration materials and information
on lodging will be mailed in mid-summer.
Watch the H-LAW web page (www.h-net.msu.edu/~law/)
later in the year for more information on the Annual Meeting and the program.
Sutherland
Prize Awarded
Among legal historians in North America,
Donald Sutherland set the profession's highest standard for legal scholarship
based on careful analyses of original texts. Each year, the Sutherland
Prize Committee recognizes a recently published article in the field of
English legal history that best represents Professor Sutherland's commitment
to original research and lucid analysis.
The 1997 prize was awarded to DAVID J.
IBBETSON of Magdalene College, Oxford University for his article, "Fault
and Absolute Liability in Pre-Modern Contract Law," Journal of Legal
History, 18 (1997): 1-31. The committee believed that Ibbetson's meticulous
commitment to getting the law's procedural instrumentation correct best
represents Donald Sutherland's learned approach to English law. The article
dissects the Year Book's case law on the nature of contractual remedies,
liabilities, and fault. It then creates a succinct, updated synthesis to
the forms of obligational actions that actually improves on the likes of
Maitland and Fifoot. Ibbetson's work shows the roots of the interstitial
issues that remain in modern litigation between liabilities imposed by
law and those by contracting parties. This is lawyer's legal history at
its best. It reconstructs a vital area of legal reasoning, lays it out
in clear developmental lines and, in so doing, offers just what any contracts
teacher can profitably assign to students early in the syllabus.
The committee also awarded an honorable
mention to HENRY ANSGAR KELLY, Director of the Center for Medieval and
Renaissance Studies at UCLA for his article, "Statutes of Rape and Alleged
Ravishers of Wives: A Context for the Charges Against Thomas Mallory, Knight,"
Viator,
28 (1997): 361-419. A model for interdisciplinary primary research and
expository writing, Kelly's article tells a fascinating story of sex and
the late-medieval status of parliamentary statute, centered on the writer
of the English epic Morte d'Arthur. To do so, Kelly has mastered
the law's technicalities, put them into social and literary contexts, and
effectively provided as composite a case file as the extant contemporary
evidence allows.
The committee was chaired by DE LLOYD GUTH
of the University of Manitoba Faculty of Law and included DANIEL COQUILLETTE
of the Boston College School of Law and JANET LOENGARD of Moravian College.
Surrency
Prize Winner
The society annually awards the Erwin C.
Surrency Prize for the best article published in the previous year's Law
and History Review. The 1997 Surrency Prize has been awarded to G.
EDWARD WHITE of the University of Virginia for his article, "The American
Law Institute and the Triumph of Modernist Jurisprudence," Law and History
Review, 15 (Spring 1997): 1-48. The committee concluded that in its
conceptualization, research, and writing White's article demonstrated a
high level of scholarly imagination and accomplishment. Lucidly written
and cogently argued, it showed the professional, legal, and intellectual
factors that contributed to a shift to pragmatic, modernist legal thought.
It also established the significance of the American Law Institute as a
site for the reorientation of American jurisprudence.
Members of the Committee were TAHIRIH V.
LEE of the Florida State University Law School (chair), AMY DRU STANLEY
of the University of Chicago, and W. WESLEY PUE of the University of British
Columbia Faculty of Laws.
New
Honorary Fellows Announced
Congratulations to MORRIS COHEN, HAROLD
M. HYMAN, and W. ALAN J. WATSON, who have been named Honorary Fellows of
the Society.
Well known to all legal scholars, Cohen
is Professor Emeritus and Librarian Emeritus at the Yale Law School. His
books--including How to Find the Law (now in its ninth edition),
Law:
The Art of Justice, Legal Research in a Nutshell (currently
in its sixth edition), and Guide to the Early Reports of the Supreme
Court of the United States--have proved indispensable to three generations
of researchers. Last year his magisterial Bibliography of Early American
Law (6 vols; William S. Hein & Co.) appeared, capping a truly distinguished
career as a legal bibliographer.
A former president of the Society, elected
member of the Society of American Historians, and presidential appointee
to the Oliver Wendell Holmes Trust, Harold M. Hyman is William P. Hobby
Professor of History Emeritus at Rice University. One of the most distinguished
historians of American constitutionalism, he is the author of over a dozen
books, including The Era of the Oath (winner of the American Historical
Association's Beveridge Prize), To Try Men's Souls (winner of the
Sidney Hillman Prize), A More Perfect Union,
Equal Justice Under
Law (with William Wiecek), and, most recently, Character and Craftsmanship:
A History of Houston's Vinson & Elkins Firm.
A longtime member of the Society, Alan
Watson is Ernest P. Rogers Professor of Law at the University of Georgia.
He is internationally recognized as an authority on civil law and comparative
law, as well as legal history. An honorary member of the Speculative Society
and the North American secretary of The Stair Society, he is the author
of almost 150 articles and books. His books include Slave Law in the
Americas, Joseph Story and the Comity of Errors,
Roman Law
and Comparative Law, The Spirit of Roman Law, The Trial of
Jesus, The Sources of Law, Legal Change and Ambiguity,
and, most recently, Ancient Law and Modern Understanding.
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H-LAW Notice
Members of ASLH are invited to subscribe
to H-Law, the society's electronic "list." H-Law now has over one thousand
subscribers around the world and features announcements, news of the society,
book reviews, and discussion of topics in legal history. Each week H-Law
posts a bibliography of articles of historical interest appearing in law
reviews. The volume of electronic mail produced by H-Law is not onerous,
averaging two a day. CHRISTOPHER WALDREP and IAN MYLCHREEST edit H-Law.
There is an H-Law Web site at www.h-net.msu.edu/~law/
Visitors to the H-Law Web page will find an index to Law and History
Review, back issues of the ASLH Newsletter, H-Law book reviews,
and the texts of previous H-Law discussions. Last year's ASLH conference
program and abstracts of papers appeared on the H-Law Web page, a service
that we plan to offer again this year.
Membership is limited to persons with an
interest in some aspect of legal or constitutional history. To apply for
membership, request an application form from cfcrw@eiu.edu or send this
message to listserv@h-net.msu.edu: subscribe h-law. Leave the subject line
blank.
1998
ANNUAL MEETING
The Society held its twenty-eighth annual
meeting in Seattle, October 22-24, 1998. Attendance surpassed last year's
record number, with 304 persons registering. Special thanks go to DAN ERNST
of Georgetown University Law Center and his program committee, which included
CHARLES DONAHUE, JR. of Harvard Law School, CHRISTIAN FRITZ of the University
of New Mexico School of Law, ARIELA GROSS of the University of Southern
California Law School, WILLIAM NOVAK of the University of Chicago, JOHN
HENRY SCHLEGEL of SUNY Buffalo School of Law, BARBARA WELKE of the University
of Minnesota, and ROSEMARIE ZAGARRI of George Mason University. Dan and
his committee worked hard to develop an extensive, well rounded program
that featured papers by many senior scholars and offered rich fare for
everyone. Dan's efforts, in cooperation with CHRIS WALDREP, to put the
program and paper abstracts on the ASLH Web page was a great success, setting
a precedent for future program committees.
We are also greatly indebted to ERIC CHIAPPINELLI
of the University of Seattle School of Law, chair of the Local Arrangements
committee. While he had assistance from MEGAN MCCLINTOCK of the University
of Washington, Eric assumed most of the responsibility for logistics and
even managed to arrange three days of sunshine for us. His efforts paid
off handsomely, resulting a very successful meeting that those who attended
thoroughly enjoyed.
Board of Directors Meeting
President LAURA KALMAN called the meeting
to order at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, October 22, 1998 in the Taku-Chinook Room
of the Seattle Hilton Hotel. Present were Board members MARY BILDER, CAROL
CHOMSKY, ROBERT COTTROL, CYNTHIA HERRUP, CRAIG JOYCE, MICHAEL LANDON, MAEVA
MARCUS, JOHN MCLAREN, WILLIAM NOVAK, JOHN ORTH, DAVID RABBAN, SANDRA VAN
BURKLEO, THOMAS GREEN, President-elect, and DONALD NIEMAN, the Secretary-Treasurer.
Also present were MICHAEL LES BENEDICT,
chair of the Publications Committee, DE LLOYD GUTH, chair of the Sutherland
Prize Committee, THOMAS GALLANIS representing the Membership Committee,
CHRIS WALDREP, H-Law moderator, DANIEL ERNST, the 1998 Program Committee
chair, CHRIS TOMLINS, editor of Law and History Review, ANN LOWRY
of the University of Illinois Press, DAVID SEIPP, chair of the Nominating
Committee, TAHIRIH LEE, chair of the Surrency Prize Committee, HENDRIK
HARTOG, co-editor of Studies in Legal History, ERIC CHIAPPINELLI, 1998
Local Arrangements Committee chair, ROBERT KACZOROWSKI, chair of the Murphy
Prize Committee, MICHAEL CHURGIN, chair of the Committee on Documentary
Preservation, RAY SOLOMON, and CHRISTINE COMPSTON.
President Kalman noted that the minutes
of the Board Meeting of October 16, 1997 should be amended to show that
Sandra Van Burkleo rather than STANLEY KATZ had delivered the eulogy for
PAUL L. MURPHY at the memorial service in Minneapolis in August 1997. With
that correction noted, the minutes were approved as written.
President Kalman then introduced Eric Chiappinelli
and thanked him for his hard work in making the local arrangements for
the Seattle meeting. Professor Chiappinelli welcomed everyone to Seattle,
thanking his colleague MEGAN MCCLINTOCK for her assistance and especially
for preparing the restaurant guide. President Kalman then introduced Daniel
Ernst, chair of the Program Committee, and thanked him for his tireless
work on the program, which, she noted, was one of the largest and most
diverse in the Society's history. Professor Ernst thanked members of his
committee and President Kalman, who had helped secure participation by
a significant number of well know scholars. He noted that the committee
had assembled a large program featuring 34 sessions and about 160 participants.
He also offered special thanks to CHARLES DONAHUE, who functioned as an
associate chair, assembling a significant number of high quality English
and medieval sessions, and to Christopher Waldrep, who had performed magnificently
in getting the full program and paper abstracts on the ASLH web site.
Don Nieman next briefly reported on local
arrangements for the 1999 meeting, which will be held in Toronto, with
the Sheraton Centre Hotel serving as headquarters for the meetings. He
thanked the Osgoode Society for the hospitality it had agree to provide
and SUSAN LEWTHWAITE, MARILYN MAC FARLANE, and PETER OLIVER for serving
on the local arrangements committee. President Kalman then read a report
from SARAH BARRINGER GORDON, chair of the 1999 Program Committee, who could
not be present because of a late flight. Professor Gordon has selected
CONSTANCE BACKHOUSE, CORNELIA DAYTON, CHRISTINE DESAN, TAHIRIH LEE, PNINA
LAHAV, WILLIAM LAPIANA, VICTORIA LIST, KENNETH MACK, GREGORY MARK, MICHAEL
MILLENDER, RICHARD ROSS, CHRISTOPHER TOMLINS, HOWARD VENABLE, and JAMES
WHITMAN to serve on the committee and has designated Professors List, Ross,
and Whitman as a sub-committee on England and Europe. The call for papers
went out during the summer and had appeared or would appear in a variety
of places in print and on the internet. The committee, she noted, would
meet on Saturday, October 24 to begin its work.
John McLaren reported for the Committee
on Conferences and the Annual Meeting. He noted that the committee had
explored Boston as a meeting site for 2000, but had to rule it out because
hotels were too expensive. While the committee had not settled on a site,
Professor McLaren indicated that it had agreed that Philadelphia and Washington
appeared to be the most promising East Coast locations. Because there was
no resolution of the meeting location for 2000, President Kalman suggested
that the Executive Committee investigate further and make a decision on
a site, a suggestion that met the Board's approval. She then thanked Professor
McLaren for his service--which was endorsed by applause from those present--and
announced that Craig Joyce had agreed to take over as chair.
The President then recognized Don Nieman,
who presented the secretary-treasurer's report. He explained that the Society
had weathered the transition to publication of three issues of Law and
History Review well; increased dues established to cover the cost of
the third issue, together with a modest increase in membership, assured
that the Society had sufficient income to meet its needs. He pointed out
that his predecessors, Michael Landon and Craig Joyce, had established
a strong financial base for the Society by using excess revenues to purchase
CDs that provided extra income and a financial cushion.
Michael Les Benedict then reported for
the Publications Committee on the new contract he and his colleagues had
negotiated with the University of Illinois Press for continued publication
of Law and History Review. He noted that a sub-committee consisting
of Chris Tomlins, Craig Joyce, Don Nieman, and himself had handled negotiations
and then had circulated a draft of the contract with members of the full
committee, who had raised valuable questions and suggested several important
modifications. While the Society has been very happy with the service provided
by the University of Illinois Press, the sub-committee solicited proposals
from several other presses to serve as benchmarks and to ensure that the
Society received the best possible offer. When all of the proposals were
received, however, the University of Illinois Press had made the best offer,
and that, combined with the good relations the Society and the Review
have enjoyed with the Press during the past eight years, persuaded the
committee to proceed with negotiations. Professor Benedict noted that there
were several significant changes in the contract. First, the term of the
contract is four years. Second, the share of dues the Press will receive
goes up from $25 to $30 for individual members, from $12 to $15 for student
members, and from $39 to $45 for institutional members, the first increase
in eight years. Third, the contract allows flexibility with respect to
electronic publication, permitting adaptation to a rapidly changing environment,
and limits the Press's authority to distribute electronic rights without
negotiation with the Society. Fourth, the amount of revenues the Press
is guaranteed from dues increases from $16,000 to $32,000. And finally,
the Society's royalties on net receipts from Law and History Review
in excess of $36,000 increases from 10% to 20%. Professor Benedict noted
that the committee had been concerned about the significant jump in the
revenues guaranteed to the Press. However, after examining dues income
in recent years, it was satisfied that the income has significantly exceeded
$36,000 and should continue to do so. He thanked members of the committee
for their hard work and Ann Lowry of the Press for her openness during
the negotiations and asked for questions and discussion. After brief discussion,
the Board voted unanimously to approve the new contract as written. Craig
Joyce explained that the new contract represented a significant advance,
especially in its approach to new technologies, and thanked Professor Benedict
for his careful attention to the process. This brought a hearty round of
applause for Professor Benedict's leadership on this important issue.
The Board next considered the report of
Ann Lowry of the University of Illinois Press, the publisher of Law
and History Review. Ms. Lowry called attention to the increase in the
Society's membership during the past year. By way of explanation she noted
that there were forty new law library subscriptions, which she attributed,
in part, to the Membership Committee's mailing to Association of American
Law School members. She also indicated that the Society's web site had
generated increasing numbers of new memberships, especially in the period
leading up to the annual meeting. Christopher Tomlins, editor of Law
and History Review, in elaborating on his written report, said that
he was delighted to continue the relationship with the Press. The Press
and the Review, he noted, enjoyed a very strong relationship that
enabled them to move ahead together to explore electronic publishing options
that are the key to the Review's future. At the conclusion of Dr.
Tomlins's remarks a resolution thanking the American Bar Foundation for
its very generous financial support for the Review was moved, seconded,
and unanimously passed.
Reporting for the Surrency Prize Committee,
Tahirih Lee announced that this year's winner was G. EDWARD WHITE of the
University of Virginia School of Law, for his article, "The American Law
Institute and the Triumph of Modernist Jurisprudence," published in Law
and History Review. While the task was a difficult one, Professor Lee
reported that the committee had been unanimous in its choice, citing White's
highly imaginative analysis and his compelling, provocative, and important
thesis.
De Lloyd Guth followed with the report
of the Donald Sutherland Prize Committee, announcing DAVID IBBETSON of
Oxford University the winner for his article entitled "Fault and Absolute
Liability in Pre-Modern Contract Law" which was published in the
Journal
of Legal History, 18 (1997): 1-31. Henry Ansgar Kelly of UCLA was awarded
honorable mention for his article entitled "Statutes of Rape and Alleged
Ravishers of Wives: A Context for the Charges Against Thomas Mallory, Knight,"
which appeared in Viator, 28 (1997): 361-419. In addition to considering
articles published in scholarly journals, Guth noted that the committee
had expanded its purview to include articles published in collections of
essays. He also reported that the committee had discussed two other matters:
whether only works in English rather than British legal history were eligible;
and whether a collection of the prize-winning essays (which now number
11) should be published. This was followed by a wide-ranging discussion
of these and other issues, including whether the committee should broaden
its scope to consider the work of social historians who dealt with the
law. President Kalman suggested that the committee consider all these issues
during the next year and report its recommendations to the Board at its
1999 meeting. Professor Guth summarized the issues for consideration as
follows: whether the committee should consider articles in collections
of essays as well as journals; whether articles in British as well as English
legal history were eligible; the practice of awarding an honorable mention;
the advisability of establishing a fixed but expandable list of journals
to consider in compiling the articles to be considered for the prize; and
whether a collection of Sutherland Prize essays should be published. The
final issue, the Board agreed, should be referred to the Publications Committee
well in advance of next year's Board meeting for its consideration, and
it should make a recommendation to the full Board.
In introducing their written report on
Studies in Legal History, Dirk Hartog and Tom Green noted that two recent
titles had won prestigious prizes: Thomas Morris's Southern Slavery
and the Law, 1619-1860 the Southern Historical Association's Owsley
Prize and William Novak's The People's Welfare: Law and Regulation in
19th Century America the American Historical Association's
Littleton Griswold Prize. They also reported that the future of the series
was bright: one volume appeared in 1998 (Victoria Saker Woeste's The
Farmer's Benevolent Trust: Law and Agricultural Cooperation in Industrial
America, 1865-1945), two more are scheduled for publication in 1999
(Linda Przybyszewski on John Marshal Harlan and Richard Wetzell's history
of German criminology, 1880-1945), and seven are under advance contract.
Professors Hartog and Green concluded with warm thanks to Lewis Bateman
of the University of North Carolina Press for his devotion and service
to the Society and the series during a relationship that has spanned three
decades.
Chris Waldrep, the H-Law moderator, presented
his report, commenting that his major project for the year was establishing
a web page for ASLH and placing the program and paper abstracts for the
annual meeting on it. He also noted that he worked with Victoria Woeste
of the Membership Committee to establish a graduate student discussion
feature on H-Law.
Thomas Gallanis reported for the Membership
Committee, which began its work under the direction of Victoria Woeste
in January 1998. The committee, he explained, had targeted groups that
it believed were underrepresented in the Society. It made a personal pitch
to members of the Association of American Law Schools at the Association's
annual meeting and prepared a mailing to members of the AALS section on
legal history. The committee is also working on an email directory of members
to facilitate communication among members and has initiated a graduate
student discussion feature on H-Law to make the Society more attractive
to graduate students, who represent the future. Chris Tomlins asked whether
the Committee had considered promotions to attract new members, such as
trial memberships at a reduced price. Professor Gallanis said that it hadn't
but would be willing to do so. Michael Les Benedict reminded the committee
that the new contract with the University of Illinois Press committed the
Press to support a variety of promotional activities and urged the committee
to work closely with Press staff in its efforts to expand membership.
MICHAEL CHURGIN called attention to the
written report of the Committee on Documentary Preservation, which he chairs.
He noted that the committee's major new initiative was joining an action
to open sealed grand jury files in the Alger Hiss case, an initiative that
the executive committee had approved during the summer of 1998. Other supporters
included the Organization of American Historians, the American Historical
Association, and Association of American Archivists. Professor Churgin
assured the Board that this venture did not obligate the Society financially.
In the absence of a representative of a
member of the Honors Committee, Don Nieman introduced the committee's report,
which recommended MORRIS COHEN, HAROLD M. HYMAN, and ALAN WATSON as Honorary
Fellows of the American Society for Legal History. In response to a question
concerning how nominations were made, President Laura Kalman indicated
that the committee did investigations of its own but that it was willing
to consider persons suggested by Society members. In separate motions,
all three nominations were unanimously approved.
Robert Kaczorowski gave the report for
the Murphy Prize Committee. He explained that almost $10,000 had been raised
during the past year and that an anonymous donor had agreed to supplement
the amount of interest generated by the Murphy Fund to enable the Society
to make an annual $1,000 research grant to a junior scholar in U.S. constitutional-legal
history. On behalf of the committee, Professor Kaczorowski moved that the
president appoint a three-member Paul L. Murphy Research Grant Committee
that would include one of Paul Murphy's former students to solicit applications
for the grant, select the winner, and solicit additional funds for the
endowment. A brief discussion followed. In response to questions about
solicitation of funds, it was agreed that the secretary-treasurer would
include a check-off for donations to the Murphy, Sutherland, and Smith
funds on the annual dues form. Committee members responded to questions
about the desirability of opening the competition to graduate students
by indicating that it had considered that option but had decided that beginning
scholars had an especially difficult time finding resources to support
their research. Moreover, the committee wanted to assure that the award
went to persons who had demonstrated accomplishments. The motion carried
unanimously.
Representing the Nominating Committee,
David Seipp briefly discussed his colleagues' activities during the year.
At the conclusion of his remarks, Don Nieman presented the results of the
election. New members elected to the Board of Directors were HERBERT A.
JOHNSON, YASUHIDE KAWASHIMA, BRUCE MANN, AVIAM SOIFER, and SUE SHERIDAN
WALKER. MARY DUDZIAK and PHILIP HAMBURGER will join the Nominating Committee.
With committee reports and action thereon
concluded, the Board then moved to consider old business.
The first item of old business was consideration
of a mechanism for considering and implementing dues increases. Don Nieman
indicated that the Press had to be informed of any increase in dues before
August 1 of the year preceding the year in which the increase would take
effect because that is when renewal notices are mailed to jobbers and institutional
subscribers. After discussion, John Orth moved that the executive committee
shall consider each year whether a dues increase is necessary and report
its decision to the full Board by appropriate means. The full Board shall
then make a decision on the matter no later than July 15. The motion was
seconded and carried unanimously.
Michael Landon reported on placing the
Society's old records in the University of Illinois Archives, a project
he had begun with authorization from the Board while he was secretary-treasurer.
During the past year, he had had a graduate student sift through the Society's
old records, discarding materials that were not of historical significance
and preparing the rest to be sent to Illinois. During the summer of 1998,
the records were transferred to the University of Illinois Archives, which
catalogued them, charging the Society a one-time fee of $400.
The first item of new business was a report
by CHRISTINE COMPSTON, submitted at the invitation of President Kalman,
recommending that the Society consider sponsoring a series of essays on
legal and constitutional history aimed at undergraduate audiences. Undergraduates,
she noted, often found articles taken from scholarly journals inaccessible,
making it difficult for instructors to treat many important constitutional-legal
subjects. Articles on important topics in constitutional-legal history
and written for undergraduates, she predicted, would be attractive not
only in constitutional-legal history courses, but also in survey courses,
women's history courses, labor history courses, and other courses. Dr.
Compston suggested that articles on important issues and topics be prepared
and placed on a list from which instructors could choose to create customized
volumes that fit their teaching needs. She recommended that the Society
establish a committee to recommend topics for articles, establish guidelines
for authors, explore possible collaboration with other organizations, and
make contacts with publishers. In the discussion that ensued a good deal
of support was expressed for this project, although several members noted
that it represented a major departure for the Society and needed careful
consideration. At the conclusion of the discussion, the Board agreed that
the Publications Committee should discuss whether the Society should sponsor
publication of materials on constitutional-legal history aimed at undergraduates
and report back to the Board at its 1999 meeting.
At the request of Don Nieman, Michael Landon
introduced a resolution designating Mid American National Bank and Trust
Company a designated depository of the Society:
Be it resolved that, MID AMERICAN NATIONAL
BANK AND TRUST CO.
(1) The financial institution named above
is designated as a depository for the funds of this corporation.
(2) This resolution shall continue to have
effect until express written notice of its recission or modification has
been received and recorded by this Financial Institution.
(3) All transactions, if any, with respect
to deposits, withdrawals, rediscounts and borrowings by or on behalf of
this corporation with this Financial Institution prior to the adoption
of this resolution are hereby ratified, approved, and confirmed.
(4) Any of the persons named below, so
long as they act in a representative capacity as agents of the corporation
are authorized to make any and all other contracts, agreements, stipulations,
and orders which they may deem advisable for the effective exercise of
the powers indicated below from time to time with this Financial Institution,
concerning funds deposited in this Financial Institution, moneys borrowed
from this Financial Institution or any other business transacted by and
between this corporation and this Financial Institution subject to any
restrictions stated below.
(5) Any and all prior resolutions adopted
by the Board of Directors of this corporation and certified to this Financial
Institution governing the operation of this corporation's account(s) are
in full force and effect unless supplemented or modified by this authorization.
(6) This corporation agrees to the terms
and conditions of any account agreement properly opened by any authorized
representative(s) of this corporation and authorizes the Financial Institution
named above at any time to charge this corporation for all checks, drafts,
or other orders, for the payment of money, that are drawn on this Financial
Institution, regardless of by whom or by what means the facsimile signature(s)
may have been affixed so long as they resemble the facsimile signature
specimens in section C (or the facsimile signature specimens this corporation
files with this Financial Institution from time to time) and contain the
required number of signatures for this purpose.
NAME AND TITLE
(A) Donald G. Nieman, Secretary-Treasurer
Indicate A, B, C and/or D
_____ (1) Exercises all powers listed in
(2) through (6)
__x__ (2) Open any deposit or checking
account(s) in the name of this
corporation.
__x__ (3) Endorse checks and orders for
the payment of money and withdraw
funds on deposit with this Financial Institution.
Number of authorized signatures required
for this purpose ___1__
_____ (4) Borrow money on behalf and in
the name of this corporation, sign,
execute and deliver promissory notes or
other evidence of
indebtedness.
Number of authorized signatures for this
purpose _____
_____ (5) Endorse, assign, transfer, mortgage
or pledge bills receivable,
warehouse receipts, bills of lading, stocks,
bonds, real estate,
or other property now owned or hereafter
acquired by this corporation
as security for sums borrowed, and to discount
the same,
unconditionally guarantee payment of all
bills received, negotiated
or discounted and to waive demand, presentment,
notice of protest, and
notice of non-payment.
Number of authorized signatures for this
purpose _____
__x__ (6) Enter into written leases for
the purpose of renting and maintaining a
Safe Deposit Box in this Financial Institution.
Number of authorized signatures for this
purpose ___1__
D. I further certify that the Board of
Directors of this corporation has, and at the time of the adoption of this
resolution had the full power and lawful authority to adopt the foregoing
resolutions and to confer the powers granted to the persons named who have
full power and lawful authority to exercise the same.
The resolution passed unanimously.
Dirk Hartog, representing the Willard Hurst
Memorial Committee, presented the report from committee chair Stanley Katz,
who was unable to attend. He explained that the committee hoped to raise
sufficient funds, perhaps in collaboration with the Law and Society Association,
to create a Willard Hurst Memorial Fund that would generate sufficient
income to support an annual summer institute in legal history to be taught
by a small group of senior scholars and attended by junior scholars who
were beginning work in the field. The committee believed that this was
an appropriate way to honor Willard Hurst's memory and to keep his ideas
and approaches to legal history alive. The discussion that followed was
wide-ranging, including consideration of the financial resources needed,
the nature of the institute, and whether to make a formal announcement
that monies were being solicited to establish an endowment to support an
institute. It was agreed that it was too early to make such an announcement
because the committee wished to consider further the particulars of the
institute. However, there was general agreement that the Society should
move forward with solicitation of funds for a Hurst Memorial. Professor
Hartog moved and Michael Landon seconded a motion authorizing the establishment
of a Willard Hurst Memorial Fund for the purpose of collecting monies to
honor Willard Hurst and directing the Hurst Committee to make a formal
recommendation to the Board at its 1999 meeting concerning the purposes
to which the endowment will be put. The motion carried unanimously.
President Kalman asked if there was further
new business. Hearing none, at 10:00 p.m. she announced the meeting adjourned
and invited everyone to a reception in her suite.
Annual Meeting Sessions
The 1998 Annual Meeting consisted of 34
sessions. Panel titles ranged from "Courts Outside the Orbit of the Common
Law" to "Postmodern Constitutional History." Eight panel chairpersons submitted
reports on their sessions, which are reprinted below. Their remarks offer
a glimpse of the exciting and important work being done in the field of
legal and constitutional history.
Courts and Society in Tudor-Stuart England
Panel chairperson, CYNTHIA HERRUP (Duke University), reports:
This was an extremely successful session [standing room only!] that
showed off new work in the field and highlighted areas in need of reappraisal.
CATHERINE PATTERSON of the University of Houston ("Borough Corporations
and Quo Warranto, 1590 to 1640: Keeping Local Order in the Central Courts")
and PAUL HALLIDAY of Union College ("Quo Warranto, 1660-1750: Whose Prerogative?")
each offered papers showing how the conventional understanding of quo warranto
as primarily a tool of Stuart absolutism misrepresents the contemporary
understanding of the information (as it had by then become). Patterson,
drawing from her study of cases drawn from 1590-1640 made a convincing
case that the device was (and was considered by both corporations and crown
to be) an efficient and flexible mechanism of conflict resolution. Most
quo warranto proceedings arose from local rather than central initiative;
most spoke to local rather than central issues. Until the 1630s, quo warranto
connoted legitimacy not authoritarianism. Halliday, working from similar
records in a later period, illustrated a similar pattern that endured into
and even beyond the notorious abuses of the device in the early 1680s.
The gravest fear for contemporaries, he explained, was local partisanship
not royal intervention. Because quo warranto allowed users to secure all
sorts of franchises, in effect, the information was a "public" rather than
a royal prerogative, one valued enough to be reformed rather than rejected
in 1688.
In a paper entitled "The Decline of English Witchcraft Prosecutions
1606-1717," BRIAN LEVACK of the University of Teaxs, Austin argued that
England, despite greater lay participation in its legal structure, was
a part of, not an exception to, broader European patterns which led to
a decline in witchcraft prosecutions over the seventeenth century. Instructions
to juries, uses of process, and supporting suits against malicious prosecution,
Levack explained, were the most visible signs of a judicial activism that
made it tougher and tougher to convict a witch. Judicial discretion was
a powerful didactic tool and seventeenth-century jurists were not shy in
using it. Popular belief in witchcraft persisted, but by the early eighteenth
century, judicial skepticism had prevailed.
In a brief comment, I congratulated the authors for looking beyond a
judgment-based view of the law to one that more properly captured the dynamism
of early modern process. Noting the complementarity between these papers
and earlier ones by Professors Barnes and Langbein, I pointed to a renewed
appreciation for the influence of crown officers, particularly the attorney-general,
that I hoped would inspire new research on these offices. The rest of the
time was left to questions and comments from the audience, all of which
were appreciative of and engaged with the insights of the panel.
Citizenship and Marriage in the Nineteenth-Century
United States
CHRISTINE COMPSTON (Independent Scholar)
remarks:
POLLY PRICE (Emory University School of
Law) examined early nineteenth-century judicial decisions involving ownership
of land by aliens. In her presentation, "Judicial Pragmatism in Nineteenth-Century
Alien Land Law," she argued that judges adopted a pragmatic approach to
accommodate social changes--the presence of large numbers of immigrants
and extensive land speculation--and, in the process, played a major role
in defining citizenship in the period before ratification of the
Fourteenth Amendment. Their decisions distinguished between property rights
and political rights, reflecting the fact that "citizenship for land-holding
and for political rights operated quite independently in nineteenth-century
legal thought." That distinction made it possible for a woman to be granted
the right as a "citizen" to own land and for a male immigrant, not yet
naturalized, to be denied the same right.
SANDRA VAN BURKLEO (Wayne State University)
drew the title for her paper, "'A Double Head in Nature Is a Monstrosity':
Re-Covering the Married Woman in Frontier Washington, 1879-1892," from
the case of Rosencrantz v. Territory of Washington (1884) contesting
the right of women to serve on juries. The question, raised in local newspapers
as well as in territorial courtrooms, was whether citizenship carried with
it "unlimited political privileges which may, and oftentimes do, seriously
and very arbitrarily affect the inherent rights of others?" The debates
regarding the status of women in Washington, as Van Burkleo successfully
demonstrated, did not focus on suffrage but on the "exercise of ancillary
rights, notably the obligation to serve on grand and petit juries." Women
lost the right to vote in most elections as a result of judicial decisions
based on common law relating to these "ancillary" rights. Attempts to restore
woman's suffrage through democratic procedures met with limited success.
Civil War pension records served as the
basis for the presentation by MEGAN MCCLINTOCK (University of Washington)
and JULIE SHAPIRO (Seattle University School of Law) entitled "Federal
Definition and Regulation of Marriage in Late Nineteenth-Century America."
In 1862 the federal government established its own definition of marriage
in order to decide who qualified for widows' pensions. These guidelines,
the authors pointed out, recognized both informal, private practice of
nuptials and conventional documentation as adequate proof of marriage relationships.
Twenty years later, Congress revised the rules. Federal legislation adopted
in 1882 required that, for a pension claim to be honored, marriage had
to be proven according to the law of the state in which the marriage had
taken place. In practice, reliance on state law coincided with a late nineteenth-century
reform movement intended to formalize monogamous unions.
PEGGY PASCOE (University of Oregon) observed
that each of these papers demonstrates the need to ground our study of
citizenship on issues of economic and property rights. Reiterating, refining,
and synthesizing the central arguments proffered by each of the presenters,
Pascoe developed the theme that citizenship, insofar as nineteenth-century
women were concerned, was not merely a matter of political status and the
exercise of rights associated with democratic processes. As the panelists
illustrated, the term citizenship had multiple definitions and applications,
and these changed over time - not always in ways that gave women more rights.
In the case of women, Pascoe contended, the rights of citizenship often
related to marital status and racial considerations. As a result, historians
need to pay more attention to the relations that exist between marriage
and the state or nation.
Rediscovering State Constitutional History
G. ALAN TARR (Rutgers University), who
chaired the panel, reports:
Almost a century ago, James Bryce observed
that American state constitutions are "a mine of instruction for the natural
history of democratic communities." The panel "Rediscovering State Constitutional
History" built on Bryce's insight, bringing together scholars from history,
political science, and legal studies to discuss the insights that can be
derived from a study of American state constitutionalism.
WILLI PAUL ADAMS (JFK Institute for North American Studies, Free University
of Berlin) presented a paper entitled "The Liberal and Democratic Republicanism
of the First State Constitutions, 1776-1780." His paper examined the liberalism/civic
republicanism debate in the light of the political theory underlying state
constitutions of the Founding era. DAVID A. JOHNSON (Portland State University)
presented a paper entitled "Constitutions and Constitution-Making in the
Mid-Nineteenth Century Far West: Understanding Institutions Historically."
His paper demonstrated the insights into the California Constitution that
could be derived from an examination of the periodical and other literature
contemporaneous with its adoption. ROBERT F. WILLIAMS (Rutgers University--Camden
School of Law) presented a paper entitled "Reclaiming Newspaper Coverage
of State Constitutional History: Lawyers, Courts, and Scholars." His study
emphasized the usefulness of state constitutional history for attorneys
and state judges, utilizing a case study of the newspaper coverage of a
series of amendments in 1875 to the New Jersey Constitution to demonstrate
his point. JOHN ORTH (University of North Carolina School of Law) provided
commentary on the three papers.
Reticence, Overconfidence, and the Construction
of Expertise in the Anglo-American Courtroom
Panel chair JAMES MOHR (University of Oregon)
reports:
The session on "Reticence, Overconfidence,
and the Construction of Expertise in the Anglo-American Courtroom" featured
three papers that fitted together extremely well. STEPHAN LANDSMAN (DePaul
University School of Law) used Old Bailey records from 1717 to 1817 to
argue that the rise of expert medical evidence was by no means pushed upon
the courts by an aggressive or aggrandizing medical profession; it was
more nearly extracted from the medical profession by confused judges and
increasingly partisan lawyers. Testimony about handwriting in American
courts from 1836 to 1936 allowed JENNIFER MNOOKIN (University of Virginia
School of Law) to explore the tensions between expert evidence based upon
an ability to persuade layperson jurors and expert evidence based upon
externally established positions of authority or deference. STEPHEN ROBERTSON
(American Bar Foundation) recounted the reluctance of most well established
psychiatrists to involve themselves as experts in the wave of sexual psychopath
laws put upon the books by panicky lay lawmakers in the United States between
1930 and 1970. RANDALL MCGOWEN (University of Oregon), in his comments,
and JAMES MOHR, from the chair, both pointed out how far these papers collectively
had swung the interpretive pendulum away from the notion that experts have
historically used the courts as vehicles of power. The realities were far
more complex. Courts often hoped for degrees of expertise that the supposed
experts could not deliver, and experts often regarded the adversarial legal
system as a threat to their external authority rather than a way of augmenting
it.
Substance and Procedure in the Premodern English Trial
THOMAS GALLANIS (Ohio State University) reports:
The panel on "Substance and Procedure in the Premodern English Trial"
brought together two provocative papers and sparked a lively discussion.
The first paper was presented by DAVID SEIPP (Boston University), who spoke
about "Judge Scarcity, Jury Discretion, and the Rules of Law." Emphasizing
the small number of common-law judges and the correspondingly large role
played by the jury, he argued that jurors possessed broad discretion but
did not enjoy it; instead, they hungered for fixed rules of substantive
law that
would enable them to decide the case without taking responsibility for
the verdict. The second paper was presented by RICHARD FRIEDMAN (University
of Michigan) and MICHAEL MACNAIR (Lancaster University), who discussed
"The Emergence of the Confrontation Right and the Rule Against Hearsay."
They argued that modern hearsay law should be seen as the product of two
distinct strands of doctrine--one procedural, one
evidentiary--that merged in the early nineteenth century but that had
experienced substantial development much earlier. Constructive comments
on both papers were offered by JAMES OLDHAM (Georgetown University), followed
by a series of spirited questions from the chair and from the audience.
Liberal Constitutionalism in the United
States
MAXWELL BLOOMFIELD reports:
Each paper explored the interplay between
constitutional law, politics, and ideology in one period of early New York
history. CHRISTINE DESAN (Harvard Law School) examined "The Defensive Constitutionalism
of American Colonialism." American Constitutionalism, she noted, remains
divided between a strong anti-governmental or libertarian bias, on the
one hand, and an equally powerful commitment to the rule of law and judicial
adjudication on the other. She traced this polarity to the conditions of
imperial rule, which denied legitimacy to the acts of provincial legislatures
while acknowledging the claims of courts to resolve local disputes. Much
of her paper centered on the struggle between Crown officials and the New
York assembly from 1710 to 1717 over the control of public expenditures.
Frustrated in their efforts to control prospective spending, legislators
worked out an arrangement whereby the governor acknowledged their right
to determine which existing debts were meritorious and should be paid.
In time this compromise enabled the assembly to assume de facto control
of all public expenditures, while purporting merely to defend constituents
against the excesses of imperial administrators. Such a protective and
anti-governmental strategy enhanced the political power of colonial legislators,
even as it reduced the stature of the political process and the legitimacy
of political institutions. By contrast, Americans found that their legal
authorities had a role recognized as essential by imperial and provincial
actors alike. While both the assemblies and the courts became sites for
local struggle against royal governance, legislative strategies reinforced
distrust of affirmative political power, while judicial strategies sanctified
the adjudicative power of law.
CHARLES W. McCURDY (University of Virginia) used the Anti-Rent movement
as a frame of reference for investigating "Property, Contract and the Public
Purpose: Land Reform in the New York Constitution of 1846." He briefly
described both the extraordinary magnitude and duration of the rent strike
and the pattern of Anti-Rent violence, then took up the resulting attempts
to extinguish manorial tenures by force of law. When Governor William H.
Seward pronounced the "feudal" landlord-tenant relation as "oppressive,
anti-republican and degrading" in 1840, the search for a legal resolution
began. It continued until every possible option had been exhausted. McCurdy
accounted for the rise and fall of proposed solutions under the police
power, the taxing power, the eminent domain power, the regulation of inheritance,
legislative control over landlord remedies, the power to contest the validity
of land titles, and the judicial power to decline enforcement of contracts
against public policy. He linked the failure of those options to larger
transformations in legal and political thought. While the constitution
of 1846 did prohibit the incidents of manorial tenure at least prospectively,
the idea of public responsibility for relieving such oppressive legal relations,
he observed, had weakened since the Anti-Rent movement began in 1839.
The commentators praised both presenters for their challenging and insightful
papers. GREGORY S. ALEXANDER (Cornell Law School) pointed out that both
papers dealt with oppositional politics and its relation to law. Colonial
New Yorkers used oppositional politics successfully to undermine the central
authority of the state; the Anti-Rent movement, on the other hand, failed.
A possible explanation for these disparate outcomes, he suggested, may
lie in the fact that neither the legislature nor the courts supported the
Anti-Rent position, which threatened the vested rights of entrenched social
and political hierarchies.
WILLIAM J. NOVAK (University of Chicago)
urged the presenters to consider recasting their arguments along more revisionist
lines. He suggested, for example, that Professor Desan omit references
to "negative liberty" in assessing the long-range significance of legislative
adjudication.
New Approaches to Old Institutions
SUE SHERIDAN WALKER reports:
This session, well planned by Charles Donahue, offered new approaches
to themes in medieval history. In two cases this involved a rereading of
texts long in print and in another a computer analysis of English legal
manuscripts. In "Hostages as Personal Surety in Carolingian Europe," ADAM
J. KOSTO (Columbia University) provided a new approach to an old institution.
His study of hostages explored how the familial and political ties of the
parties to these transactions indicated wider networks of power. The broader
focus reveals new dimensions of personal surety.
ROBERT F. BERKHOFER (Western Kentucky University) discussed "Seigneurial
Consent to Marriage of the Unfree in Twelfth-Century France" in terms of
monastic estates and the laymen, called mayors, who ran them. In the Carolingian
period these men had almost all been of servile status. While still technically
"serfs" in the twelfth-century, the mayors were not peasants but substantial
landlords who collected taxes and had the power to do justice. Recognizing
that the mayors had gotten out of hand, the abbots asserted the servile
status of mayors in a variety of ways. One of the most important was abbatial
insistence on seigneurial consent to the mayor's marriage. The evidence
is principally in the form of charters and in the active debate among lawyers
and theologians.
DANIEL M. KLERMAN (University of Southern
California School of Law) spoke on the subject of "Settlement and Decline
of Private Prosecution in Thirteenth-Century England," where he offered
quantitative evidence from the manuscript plea rolls using "regression."
His handout summarized his research on Common Law process and the settlement
procedures chosen by female litigants to explain significant legal change.
The three speakers were followed by an able comment by ROBIN STACEY (University
of Washington) in which she strengthened the broad theme of the session
with some Celtic examples. Her questions and comments were interesting
to the audience and undoubtedly useful to the speakers. All this was done
within the time for the session and discussion, as in all successful sessions,
continued later. The chair, while holding a stopwatch, expressed gratitude
for the learning and cooperation of the group.
^
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
David Yale Prize Announced
The Council of the Selden Society have
established a prize in honor of David Yale, Literary Director and Honorary
President of the Society.
The prize will be awarded for an outstanding
contribution to the study of the history of the law and legal institutions
of England and Wales, by a scholar under the age of 35. It is proposed
to award the prize in alternate years, commencing in 1999. The sum awarded
will be A31,000 [Pounds Sterling]. The full regulations for the prize and
further information may be obtained from the Secretary of the Society at
the following address:
Victor Tunkel Esq
Secretary, The Selden Society
Faculty of Laws
Queen Mary and Westfield College
Mile End Road
London E1 4NS
England
Fax: 0181 981 8733
e-m: <Selden-Society@qmw.ac.uk>
The Selden Society was founded in 1887,
its purpose "To encourage the study and advance the knowledge of the History
of English Law."
Directory of Manuscript Collections
Related to Federal Judges
The Federal Judicial Center announces the
publication of the Directory of Manuscript Collections Related to Federal
Judges. The directory, compiled by the Center's Federal Judicial History
Office, contains entries for more than 900 federal judges, including justices
of the Supreme Court. The directory includes citations to more than 5,000
collections at 385 repositories throughout the United States.
A PDF version of the directory is available
on the Federal Judicial Center home page (www.fjc.gov). To request a printed
copy of the directory, please send an e-mail to msarago@fjc.gov or fax
the Information Services Office at (202) 273-4025. E-mail requests should
include "Manuscript Directory" in the subject field and the name and full
mailing address in the body of the message. You may also write to the Information
Services Office, Federal Judicial Center, One Columbus Circle NE, Suite
6-310, Washington, DC 20002-8003. Other questions or comments may be directed
to the Federal Judicial History Office at (202) 273-4182 or
pwonders@fjc.gov.
"A Century of
Lawmaking" On-Line
In celebration of the 209th anniversary
of the Constitution, the Law Library of Congress and the National Digital
Library program have released the second series of historical congressional
documents and debates dating from 1774.
"A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S.
Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774-1873" is part of the American
Memory collections, available at www.loc.gov/.
The Journals of the Continental Congress, the
Records of the Federal Convention of 1787 and the Debates in the Several
State Conventions on the Adoption of the Federal Constitution have been
added to "A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation."
Beginning with the Continental Congress in 1774,
America's national legislative bodies have kept records of their proceedings.
The records of the Continental Congress, the Constitutional Convention
and the U.S. Congress comprise a rich documentary history of the development
of the federal government and its role in the national life in the words
of those who built it.
Books on the law formed a major part of the holdings
of the Library of Congress from its beginning. In 1832 Congress established
the Law Library of Congress as a separate department of the Library. It
houses one of the most complete collections of U.S. congressional documents
in their original format. To make these records more easily accessible
to students, scholars and interested citizens, "A Century of Lawmaking
for a New Nation" will bring together on-line the records and acts of Congress
from the
Journals of the Continental Congress through The
Congressional Globe, which ceased publication with the 42nd
Congress in 1873.
Sir Edward Coke's Churches Seek Assistance
of Legal Historians
Allen D. Boyer, an ASLH member and student of
Coke, writes:
Two English country
churches closely connected with Sir Edward Coke, where he worshipped and
where he and members of his family are buried would welcome the interest
and assistance of American lawyers and legal historians.
In Tittleshall, Norfolk, in countryside Coke knew
all his life, and where he was buried beside "his first and best wife"
Bridget, St. Mary's Church has begun a fund-raising campaign. The object
is to restore the church fabric and preserve the Coke family monuments.
These include splendid marble statues, badly restored in the past. Other
Coke relics include bells installed by the Chief Justice, possibly to mark
his 70th birthday.
Huntingfield, Suffolk - where the church, coincidentally,
is also named St. Mary's - is where Coke, Bridget, and their children lived
in the 1580's, while Coke was one of the common law's most eminent practitioners.
Buried in the chancel are one of Coke's children and his mother-in-law,
redoubtable landholder Anne Bedingfield. His favorite nephews, although
Puritan ministers, preserved the hammerbeam roof and some medieval decorations.
Despite the hard times facing rural churches in
England, both churches are open and maintain regular services. For either,
donations may be made by checks made payable to the church. All are also
welcome to visit or worship.
For information on or to give to St. Mary's, Tittleshall,
please contact Nicholas Hills, churchwarden and architect, at The Old Rectory,
Tittleshall, King's Lynn, Norfolk PE32-2PN (fax 01328-700-030).
For information on or to donate to St. Mary's,
Huntingfield, please contact Felicity Griffin, either c/o St. Mary's Church,
Huntingfield, or at 1 Crombie House, The Common, Southwold, Suffolk IP18-6AL.
British Legal
History Conference, July 14-17, 1999
The Fourteenth British
Legal History Conference will take place in Edinburgh from July 14-17,
1999. Accommodation will be in Pollock Halls of Residence near Arthur's
Seat and the sessions of the Conference will be in the premises of the
Faculty of Law in historic Old College on South Bridge. Luncheons will
be served in the fine Dining Room of the Students' Union and evening meals
will be available at Pollock Halls. The Conference Dinner on 16th July
will be in the Playfair (Upper) Library, a masterpiece of the Scottish
neo-Grecian style.
The Conference will
be hosted by the Centre for Legal History in the Faculty of Law; the convenors
are Dr. John W. Cairns (Director of the Centre, John.Cairns@ed.ac.uk),
Ms. Andrea Loux (Deputy Director, ALOUX@ed.ac.uk), and Professor Hector
L. MacQueen.
As agreed at Cambridge,
the theme of the Conference will be "The Jury," but broadened to include
the topic of "Parliaments," since 1999 sees the election of the first Parliament
to sit in Edinburgh since the Union of Scotland and England. Facilities
will be available for those wishing to present a paper off the topic of
the conference. Such papers will have to be distributed in advance, and
times set aside for their discussion with interested parties.
For further information,
please contact Dr. John W. Cairns by Email (John.Cairns@ed.ac.uk)
Fax (0131-662-4902), or mail (Centre for Legal History, The University
of Edinburgh, Old College, South Bridge, Edinburgh EH8 9YL).
ASLH/H-LAW Mentoring
Program
The H-LAW Graduate
Student Coordinators, Deb Baumgarten and Cheri Wilson, are seeking mentors
for graduate students and junior faculty. The purpose of the mentoring
program is to establish contacts between graduate students, junior faculty,
and faculty members with similar research interests as well as to foster
their professional development.
If you wish to add
your name to the mentoring list, please e-mail the following information
to: Cheri Wilson wils0141@tc.umn.edu:
your name, mailing address, telephone number, fax number, email address,
and research interests.
Land and Freedom:
ANZLHS Conference
The web-site for
"Land and Freedom: The 18th Annual Conference of the Australian and New
Zealand Law and History Society" to be held in Newcastle, Australia, 9-11
July 1999, is now available at: http://econ-www.newcastle.edu.au/conferences/land/
Announcing a Web
Site on Law and Popular Culture
Picturing Justice
is a web site on-line journal which focuses on law and popular culture.
The site features short (1000-2000 word) reviews and essays. Many of the
articles are written by law professors and lawyers but others come from
professors in non-law fields, law students, and others. PJ intends the
site to be a place where both lawyers and non-lawyers can share their views
and the editors actively solicit articles from a broad cross section of
people. Articles are welcome on any aspect of law and popular culture.
Although most focus on film and television, authors are invited to be creative.
For example, one article examined the "laws" of player killing in a popular
virtual reality environment. News about law and popular culture topics
is often included as well as a listing of recently published books on the
topic and links to other sites. The site is constantly updated to be more
comprehensive and user friendly. Articles are often accompanied by graphics
and links to other relevant sites. Readers can post comments. The entire
current issue can be downloaded easily and older articles are retained
in the archive. The site has been recognized by the Scout Report and by
Yahoo! Magazine. Submission guidelines are available on the site. The site
is managed by John Denvir, Rob Waring, and Paul Joseph and may be found
at http://www.usfca.edu/pj
Call for Papers:
Third National Policy History Conference
The Graduate Program in Policy History of Bowling
Green State University invites proposals for panels and papers for the
Third National Policy History Conference to be held at the University on
June 1-3, 2000. The Program Committee invites proposals that are germane
to the interests of all who study policy from historical perspectives.
We recognize that disciplines other than history will also offer essential
viewpoints and proposals from other disciplines are therefore welcome.
The Conference will focus on two main themes. While proposals addressing
these themes or their interrelations are especially welcome, we also encourage
the submission of proposals in other areas of Policy History.
Theme I: we invite proposals dealing with the
historical roots and policy aspects of personal, cultural and political
inequality. While scholars recognize that inequality is primarily an economic
problem, they also note that economics are distilled through political
perception: raw economics rarely make public policy. Thus, in order to
enhance understanding of the complexity of contemporary inequalities, we
wish to stimulate discussion of the empirical origins and representations
of inequality as well as the ideological perpetuation of systemic inequality.
Theme II: we invite proposals dealing with policy
aspects of borders. In connection with this theme, we hope to stimulate
proposals from scholars who have interests in such areas as: the meaning
of "border" in political, cultural and economic contexts; the meaning of
"state" and "community" as border-making authorities; techniques and historical
processes of border formation (including such phenomena as cultural activism,
migration, commercial structures, and inter-ethic violence); the future
of borders in the light of commercial and technological internationalism
and the activity of international organizations.
The Committee recognizes that these themes are
potentially interrelated. Historically, borders have been among the most
potent devices available to authorities wishing to preserve aspects of
inequality. It is therefore anticipated that some proposals will include
elements of both themes.
While the Committee's principal interest is in
proposals that focus on the provenance of policies, policy implementation,
and policy outcomes, we seek to encourage proposals that address either
of the Conference's principal themes from a broad range of disciplines
and research interests. Proposals for individual papers are welcome, but
proposals for entire panels--consisting of a chair, two, or three, papers
and a discussant--are preferred.
Proposals should include a brief resume for each
participant. They must be received by October 15, 1999 at the following
address:
Chair, Program Committee
National Conference on Policy History
Department of History
Bowling Green State University
Bowling Green, OH 43403
drowney@bgnet.bgsu.edu
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