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‘Mother, what did policemen do when there weren't any motors?’ The law, the police and the regulation of motor traffic in England, 1900–1939
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
Abstract
The law had always been deployed by the police to regulate traffic, but the development of motor vehicles, travelling at much greater speeds than previous road traffic, constituted a problem of a new dimension. By the early 1920s the use of the law to control motor vehicles was jamming the magistrates' courts and creating friction, hitherto unknown, between the police and the middle classes. The paper explores the way in which, and the extent to which, the criminal law was used to control the motorist in the first third of the twentieth century. It takes issue with the whiggish view of law making, which understands laws as logical remedies for readily identifiable problems; it rejects equally the idea of seeing laws as inspired by class interest. Rather the motor traffic legislation fits better with the concept of the ‘policeman state’ which, according to V. A. C. Gatrell, developed from the late nineteenth century. At the same time the paper suggests that a scapegoat – ‘the road hog’ – was created as the focus for criticism in much the same way that other criminal scapegoats have been established; the offender thus ceased to be a member of society and became an outsider, threatening respectable law-abiding citizens.
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References
1 My thanks to the ESRC for a grant which enabled me to tap the hitherto largely unknown archives of the English police forces while working on this paper. The title quotation is taken from a cartoon in Punch, 31 Aug. 1927. An earlier version of this paper is to be found in the proceedings of the conference on ‘La création de la loi et ses acteurs: l'exemple du droit pénal’, held at the International Institute for the Sociology of Law, Onati, Spain, March 1990.
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26 For example the Daily Telegraph reported on 24 May 1905 ‘what appears to have been a deliberate plan for causing damage to tyres. It has been discovered that for a considerable distance between the Great North road an d Huntingdon, a road which is much used by motorists to and from Cambridge, that the track has apparently been ‘sown’ with hobnails, such as are used for the heels of heavy boots. Several portions of three-square file have also been picked up.’
27 For example the Manchester City News, 6 April 1929, under the headline ‘Tales of a magistrates' court’ reported: ‘Mr Bell, clerk to the Manchester Justices, recalled a magistrate with an imperfect knowledge of the motor-car, who was trying a case in which a man was summonsed for not having a proper silencer fitted to his car. Having been told that the noise was caused through gas passing through the exhaust, the magistrate observed that “it was very important that Corporation gas should not be used in this way”.’ (My thanks to Dr Barbara Weinberger for this reference.) It was also possible for motoring cases to come before the civil courts as described in A. P. Herbert's ‘Haddoc k v. Thwale: what is a motor car’ in Misleading cases. Herbert's judges revive an d extend the law of deodand by ordering M r Thwale's motor-car to be destroyed. See also Spencer, J. R., ‘Motor-cars and the rule in Rylands v. Fletcher: a chapter of accidents in the history of law an d motoring’, Cambridge Law Journal, XLII (1983), 65–84CrossRefGoogle Scholar. My thanks to Dr Steve Hedley for bringing this to my notice.
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29 C.C.A., Hunts, constabulary, chief constable's letter book, 1884–1908, fo. 432. To Mr Gilliat, 22 Aug. 1905.
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31 Ibid. fo. 2. To H. Duberley, ig June 1906.
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48 Justice of the Peace, LXIII, Reports (1909), 88–90Google Scholar; however the ruling was subject to much attention an d was reversed in July 1929 by the Dresden Appeal Court which decided: ‘The defendant through his warning, did not imperil public order, but rather promoted it, in that he contributed to the removal of the disturbance of public order caused through reckless driving.’ Quoted in ibid, XCII (1929), 474. The AA responded to the Betts vs. Stevens decision by instructing their scouts not to salute motorists whose car had an AA badge when the police were about. AA members were told that they should always stop a scout who failed to salute and demand the reason for his failure. Keir and Morgan, op cit. pp. 41–4. A proposal that ‘the persecuted automobilist’ might also consider boycotting Huntingdonshire because the activity of Chichester's men, was received with satisfaction by the leader writer of the Hunts County News (14 Aug, 1909). ‘We welcome the reasonable motorist, and will be the first to admit the injustice of the abuse showered on this “tainted” county. As for the road hog, well if he decides to remove his patronage to “cleaner shires” we do not fancy it will be the people of Huntingdonshire who will complain.’.
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