Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 October 2011
One of the great, unrecognized ironies in Anglo-American constitutional history is that Sir Edward Coke, the seventeenth-century mythologist of the “ancient constitution” and the English jurist most celebrated in early America, did not believe that subjects enjoyed the common law and many related rights of Englishmen while overseas. “The common law,” Coke declared in Parliament in 1628, “meddles with nothing that is done beyond the seas.” The ancient constitution was an English constitution and, though non-English subjects of the English king could enjoy its liberties and privileges while in England, it did not apply to anyone outside that realm. The jurisprudence that gave intellectual shape to colonial resistance before, and to notions of the rule of law after, the American Revolution was not intended by its primary author to benefit Americans. Whether or not the ancient constitution existed time out of mind, it did not extend to land out of sight.
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63. Bowen, Lion and the Throne, 370–90.
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80. Two justices, Walmsley and Foster, dissented. See State Papers 14/34 (microfilm), Public Record Office, Kew Gardens, London.
81. Lord Chancellor Ellesmere published his opinion: The Speech of the Lord Chancellor of England, in the Exchequer Chamber, Touching the Post-Nati (London, 1609).
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86. Ligeance was spatial, temporal, and genetic. First, the parents of the person had to be “under the actual obedience of the king” at the time of birth. Second, the person had to be born “within the king's dominion.” (There was an exception for those born to Englishmen, such as military and diplomatic personnel, serving abroad.) Third, time distinguished antenati from postnati: “for he cannot be a subject born of one kingdom that was born under the ligeance of a king of another.” State Trials, 2:639–40, 77 Eng. Rep. at 408. In his Institutes, Coke noted an exception for constitutional changes in the monarchy. Jones, D. M., “Sir Edward Coke and the Interpretation of Lawful Allegiance in Seventeenth-Century England,” History of Political Thought 7 (1986): 331.Google Scholar
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88. The exception was Ireland: writs of error ran from the Irish courts to the English court of King's Bench, though this was controverted in Ireland. Flaherty, Martin S., “The Empire Strikes Back: Annesley v. Sherlock and the Triumph of Imperial Parliamentary Supremacy,” Columbia Law Review 87 (1987): 593–622.CrossRefGoogle Scholar See also note 129, below.
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90. The example Coke used was “the kings' writ to command any of his subjects, residing in any foreign country, to return into any of the king's own dominions.” State Trials, 2:643, 77 Eng. Rep. at 401. Chief Justice John Vaughan later clarified the distinction by defining the remedial writs as those vindicating “the particular rights and properties of the subject” and that did not issue to dominions beyond England because “they have their particular laws, [and] consequently they must have their particular mandates or writs to order them.” John Vaughan, Process into Wales. 124 Eng. Rep. 1130. 1132 (1706). See also Radin, Max, “The Rivalry of Common-Law and Civil Law Ideas in the American Colonies,” in Law: A Century of Progress, 1835–1935 (New York: New York University Press, 1937), 2:410.Google Scholar
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92. See, e.g., The Princeton Principles on Universal Jurisdiction (2001), www.princeton.edu/~lapa/unive_jur.pdf
93. Though Coke claimed that he provided “the right understanding” of the holding and that there was little “variety of opinions” among the judges. State Trials, 2:613, 658, 77 Eng. Rep. at 381, 410. But see note 80, above.
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96. [Robert Johnson,] Nova Britannia: Offering Most Excellent Fruites by Planting in Virginia (London, 1609).
97. Beckett, The Making of Modern Ireland, 45–48.
98. Coke, then a judge on Common Pleas, did not draft the new charter.
99. The code was entitled the “Lawes Divine, Morall, and Martial” — “Mostly martial,” quipped historian Edmund S. Morgan. Morgan, American Slavery/American Freedom, 79. See also Craven, Wesley F., The Southern Colonies in the Seventeenth Century, 1607–1689 (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1949), 81, 85–87Google Scholar; Williams, Robert A. Jr, “The English Conquest of Virginia,” in The American Indian in Western Legal Thought: The Discourses of Conquest (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990), 208–12.Google Scholar See also Konig, David T., “‘Dale's Law’ and the Non-Common Law Origins of Criminal Justice in Virginia,” American Journal of Legal History 26 (1982): 354–75CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and generally Webb, Stephen S., The Governors General: The English Army and the Definition of the Empire, 1569–1681 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1979).Google Scholar
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103. It remained the starting point for conceptualizing the empire into the twentieth century. See, e.g., Keith, Arthur B., Dominions as Sovereign States: Their Constitutions and Governments (London: Macmillan, 1938), 111.Google Scholar
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106. State Trials, 2:641. See also State Trials, 2:612, 77 Eng. Rep. at 400 (claiming that the advocates “told no strange histories, cited no foreign laws, produced no alien precedents”).
107. See Madden, A. F. McC., “1066, 1776, and All That: The Relevance of the English Medieval Experience of ‘Empire’ to Later Constitutional Issues,” in Perspectives of Empire: Essays Presented to Gerald S. Graham, ed. Flint, John E. and Williams, Glyndwr (London: Longman, 1973), 9–26Google Scholar; Goebel, Julius Jr, “The Matrix of Empire,” introduction to Smith, Joseph H., Appeals to the Privy Council from the American Plantations (New York: Columbia University Press, 1950), xii–lxi.Google Scholar
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109. Lord Chancellor Ellesmere criticized Coke's reasoning in his own opinion. State Trials, 2:659–96.
110. State Trials, 2:612, 77 Eng. Rep. at 381 (paraphrasing Chaucer's Parliament of Fowls). Suggestive here is J. C. Holt's discussion of the mythology of the Magna Carta, to which Coke substantially contributed. Holt, , Magna Carta, 2d ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992), 1–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
111. The doctrine of conquest was “among the accepted leading ideas of European civilization.” Sutherland, Donald, “Conquest and Law,” Studia Gratiana 15 (1972): 33–51.Google Scholar See also Pawlisch, Hans S., “Sir John Davies, the Ancient Constitution and Civil Law,” Historical Journal 23 (1980): 689–702.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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113. State Trials, 638; 77 Eng. Rep. at 398. Coke adhered to a harsher version of dispossession than advocated by the Spanish theologian Francisco de Vitoria. For the latter, see Pagden, Anthony, “Dispossessing the Barbarian: The Language of Spanish Thomism and the Debate over Property Rights of the American Indians,” in The Languages of Political Theory in Early-Modern Europe, ed. Pagden, Anthony (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1987), 79–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
114. State Trials, 2: 639, 77 Eng. Rep. at 398.
115. See, e.g., Wilson, James, “Considerations on the Nature and Extent of the Legislative Authority of the British Parliament,” in The Collected Works of James Wilson, ed. McCloskey, Robert G. (Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1967), 2:721–46Google Scholar; Adams, John, “Novanglus,” 27 March 1775, in Novanglus and Massachusettensis (Boston: Hews and Goss, 1819), 111–12.Google Scholar See also Kettner, Development of American Citizenship, 131–72.
116. See Schuyler, Parliament and the British Empire, 1–39; Goebel, Julius Jr, “Book Review: Parliament and the British Empire, by Robert L. Schuyler,” Columbia Law Review 30 (1930): 273–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
117. Black, “The Case for the Colonies”; Mcllwain, The American Revolution: A Constitutional Interpretation.
118. Black, “The Case for the Colonies,” 1181. See also Greene, Jack P., Peripheries and Center: An Interpretation of British-American Constitutional Development, 1607–1788 (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1986), 23–24.Google Scholar
119. Between 1494 and 1782, Irish parliamentary legislation had to be preapproved by the king under Poynings' law, an institution unique to Ireland. Poynings' Law, 10 Hen. VII, c. 4 (1485); repealed 21 & 22 Geo. Ill, c. 47 (1781). See Beckett, The Making of Modern Ireland, 51, 225. The “naming” doctrine was generally accepted, especially in the metropole, but occasionally rejected by Irish legal thinkers. See Jacqueline Hill, “Ireland without Union: Molyneux and His Legacy,” in A Union for Empire, 271–96; Flaherty, “The Empire Strikes Back.”
120. State Trials, 2:640–47, 77 Eng. Rep. at 399–104.
121. Barbara Black describes the position well in “The Case for the Colonies,” 1168–74. On the transformation of Parliament, see Notestein, Wallace, The Winning of the Initiative by the House of Commons (London: Oxford University Press, [1924])Google Scholar; Russell, Conrad, Parliaments and English Politics, 1621–1629 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1979), 45–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar In addition, the two sides of the historiographical debate disagree in their interpretation of the Glorious Revolution. Mcllwain believed that the principle of parliamentary supremacy, which emerged after 1688, was a metropolitan doctrine only, while Schuyler maintained that it extended throughout the empire. Mcllwain, American Revolution, 107–11; Schuyler, Parliament and the British Empire, 25–26.
122. Consensus among historians now is that Parliament could legislate upon external, but not internal, aspects of the overseas territories, and there is nothing in Coke to dispute this—though not enough to support it fully either. Reid, John P., The Constitutional History of the American Revolution: The Authority to Legislate (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1991), 32Google Scholar; Reid, , The Constitutional History of the American Revolution: The Authority to Tax (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1987), 42Google Scholar; Bailyn, Bernard, The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1967), 213 n. 55Google Scholar; Greene, Jack P., Peripheries and Center: Constitutional Developments in the Extended Polities of the British Empire and America, 1607–1788 (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1986), 88.Google Scholar
123. Wheeler, Harvey, “Calvin's Case (1608) and the Mcllwain Schuyler Debate,” American Historical Review 61 (1955–1956): 597.Google Scholar
124. For these domestic struggles in the years preceding the American Revolution, see Spector, Margaret M., The American Department of the British Government, 1768–1782 (New York: Columbia University Press, 1940).Google Scholar
125. Cf. Wheeler, “Calvin's Case,” 589 (noting that Coke ruled in favor of the Crown but did not hold that “the union of crowns caused a resulting degree of union between the laws and institutions of England and Scotland, thus giving judgment for James without actually awarding defeat to the Commons”).
126. See generally Pocock, Ancient Constitution.
127. Coke, , preface to Le Tierce Part des Reportes del Edward Coke (London, 1602)Google Scholar, unpaginated. This analysis also suggests why Coke silently borrowed the Continental distinction between conquered lands belonging to Christians on the one hand and infidels on the other: Christians, such as the eleventh-century Anglo-Saxons, retained their law; infidels did not. In the eighteenth century Lord Mansfield rejected the distinction as “absurd” and a product of “the mad enthusiasm of the crusades.” Campbell v. Hall, 98 Eng. Rep. 1045, State Trials, 20:323 (K.B. 1774). For the Continental distinction, see Pagden, Anthony, Lords of All the World: Ideologies of Empire in Spain, Britain and France, c. 1500-c. 1800 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995), 91–94.Google Scholar
128. Compare Maitland, English Law and the Renaissance, with J. H. Baker, “English Law and the Renaissance.”
129. See Smith, Appeals to the Privy Council, 10–11. The exception was the controversial practice whereby the English King's Bench took writs of error from Ireland until such jurisdiction was abolished in 1783. State Trials, 2:639, 77 Eng. Rep., at 398; Schuyler, Parliament and the British Empire, 64–61, 82–83, 87, 99–100.
130. The first were Barbadian royalists during the Civil War. Schuyler, Parliament and the British Empire, 106–16.
131. State Trials, 2:639, 77 Eng. Rep. at 398.
132. State Trials, 2:643, 77 Eng. Rep. at 401. Note that, according to Coke, only emigrants to conquered “Christian kingdom[s]” would enjoy these property rights. State Trials, 2:639, 77 Eng. Rep. at 398. But the logic could extend to other dominions too.
133. For this process, see Smith, Appeals to the Privy Council.
134. See Murrin, John M., “The Legal Transformation: The Bench and Bar of Eighteenth-Century Massachusetts,” in Colonial America: Essays in Politics and Social Development, ed. Katz, Stanley N. and Murrin, John M., 3d ed. (New York: Knopf, 1983)Google Scholar; Eben Moglen, Settling the Law: Legal Development in Provincial New York, 1664–1776 (forthcoming).
135. See also Hulsebosch, Daniel J., “Writs to Rights: ‘Navigability’ and the Transformation of the Common Law in the Nineteenth Century,” Cardozo Law Review 23 (2002): 1049–1106Google Scholar; Milsom, S. F. C., “The Nature of Blackstone's Achievement,” Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 1 (1981): 4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
136. On the 1618 reforms, see Craven, Dissolution of the Virginia Company, 47–80.
137. State Trials, 2:638. Coke's proposed compromise between domestic liberties and native law suggests both similarities and differences between the role of Calvin's Case in the British empire and the Insular Cases in the overseas territories of the United States. See Foreign in a Domestic Sense: Puerto Rico, American Expansion, and the Constitution, ed. Nurnett, Christina Duffy and Marshall, Burke (Durham: Duke University Press, 2001).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
138. See Washbrook, D. A., “India, 1818–1860: The Two Faces of Colonialism,” in The Oxford History of the British Empire, ed. Porter, Andrew (New York, 1998), 3:398, 407, 415Google Scholar; Hulsebosch, Daniel J., “Imperia in Imperio: The Multiple Constitutions of Empire in New York, 1750–1777,” Law and History Review 16 (1998): 366–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
139. On advowson, see Blackstone, Commentaries, 2:21–22.
140. On the emergence of an heir's right, see Milsom, Historical Foundations, 2–3, 119–22. Cf. McCaffrey, Edward J., “The Uneasy Case for Wealth Transfer Taxation,” Yale Law Journal 104 (1994): 283–365CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Epstein, Richard A., Takings: Private Property and the Power of Eminent Domain (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1985).Google Scholar
141. Baker, J. H., “Personal Liberty under the Common Law of England,” in The Origins of Modem Freedom in the West, ed. Davis, R. W. (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1995), 178–202.Google Scholar A franchise, wrote F. W. Maitland, was “a portion of royal power in the hands of a subject,” granting him immunity from some royally imposed burden or the power to exercise some aspect of royal power. Pollock, Frederick and Maitland, Frederic W., The History of English Law before Edward I, 2d ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1952), 1:384.Google Scholar See also [Rastall, John,] Les Termes de la Ley: or, Certain Difficult and Obscure Words and Terms of the Common and Statute Law of England (London, 1721), 232, 280Google Scholar (defining franchise and liberty in jurisdictional terms). S. F. C. Milsom expressed an idea similar to Baker's in the tone of legal realism when he declared that “[t]he life of the common law has been in the abuse of its elementary ideas.” Milsom, Historical Foundations, 6.
142. An excellent example is the abstraction of Darcy v. Allen, which merely held that the common law courts had no jurisdiction over the interpretation of royal monopolies but was later expanded to stand for the proposition that the common law abhorred monopoly and even that monopolies were illegal under English law. Coke's report of the decision abetted the more abstract interpretation. Corre, Jacob I., “The Argument, Decision, and Reports of Darcy v. Allen,” Emory Law Journal 45 (1996): 1261–1327.Google Scholar
143. For this way of understanding the history of ideas, see Skinner, Quentin, “Meaning and Understanding in the History of Ideas,” History and Theory 8 (1969): 1–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar On the connection between colonization and rigid substantive law, including reported precedents and treatises, see Pawlisch, Sir John Davies and the Conquest of Ireland, 42–45; Hulsebosch, “Writs to Rights”.
144. See Plucknett, “The Genesis of Coke's Reports” (concluding that Coke was less interested than previous reporters in pleadings and more in judicial “statements of general principle, making little distinction between those which were the basis of the decision and those which were only obiter”).
145. Coke, preface, 5 Coke's Reports v.
146. Commons Debates, 1628, 2:357–58.
147. On the equation of liberty with property in early America, see Reid, John P., The Constitution History of the American Revolution: The Authority of Rights (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1986), 103–13Google Scholar; Rakove, Jack N., Declaring Rights: A Brief History with Documents (Boston: Bedford Books, 1998), 20.Google Scholar
148. See Williams, “English Conquest of Virginia,” 193–225. See generally Jennings, Francis, The Invasion of America: Indians, Colonialism, and the Cant of Conquest (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1975).Google Scholar
149. See Pagden, Lords of All the World, 93–94.
150. “A thing with no owner belongs to the first finder.” Anthony Pagden notes that the European empires rarely employed this concept to legitimize their colonies because it was too fictitious as applied to the Americas. Pagden, Lords of All the World, 89–94. Cf. Seed, Patricia, Ceremonies of Possession in Europe's Conquest of the New World, 1492–1640 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995)Google Scholar (arguing that most Britons preferred to view the American colonists as settlers rather than conquerors). For a classical statement of the three ways to obtain property—settlement, conquest, and the due process of law— see Cicero, , De officiis, trans. Miller, Walter (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1968), 23 (Book I, viii).Google Scholar
151. Locke, John, Two Treatises of Government, ed. Laslett, Peter, rev. ed. (New York: Mentor, 1963), 343, 336.Google Scholar Laslett notes that Locke drafted the Second Treatise during 1679–80, and it circulated at least among a few readers soon after. Laslett, introduction to Two Treatises, 58–79. James Tully notes that reports about the Amerindians influenced Locke's theory of property. Tully, , An Approach to Political Philosophy: Locke in Contexts (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 137–76CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Pagden, Lords of All the World, 77. The point here is that Locke's theory may, in turn, have influenced how colonists viewed the process of settlement.
152. As Barbara A. Black points out, “the doctrine of settlement cannot be deduced from Calvin's Case. It is a creative extension, by way of judicial legislation, of the principles behind Coke's own bit of judicial law-making in Calvin's Case.” Black, “The Case for the Colonies,” 1206 (emphasis in the original).
153. The editors of an influential sourcebook of the British Empire, for example, assume that the colonies were settlements rather than conquered provinces. “[W]hile the principle that English law applied in English colonies was accepted in general, its specific application was not at all clear.” Madden, Frederick with Fieldhouse, David, eds., Select Documents on the Constitutional History of the British Empire and Commonwealth System (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1985), 2:190.Google Scholar
154. 124 Eng. Rep. 1072, 1073 (K.B. 1681). See also Baker, J. H., “United and Knit to the Imperial Crown': An English View of the Anglo-Hibernian Constitution in 1670,” in Mysteries and Solutions in Irish Legal History, ed. Greer, D. S. and Dawson, N. M. (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2001), 73–95.Google Scholar
155. 124 Eng. Rep. at 1084.
156. Ibid.
157. Ibid., 1076.
158. Ibid., 1074 (emphasis added).
159. Blankard v. Galdy, 87 Eng. Rep. 356 (1691) (holding that an English statute forbidding the sale of offices did not apply to Jamaica).
160. 87 Eng. Rep. at 361–62.
161. Ibid., 361.
162. Dutton v. Howell, 1 Eng. Rep. 17, 19 (House of Lords, 1694) (emphasis in the original).
163. 1 Eng. Rep. at 21, 22 (emphasis in the original).
164. Smith v. Brown and Cooper, 91 Eng. Rep. 566 (1702). For the use of this dictum in Somersett's Case, see Oldham, James, The Mansfield Manuscripts and the Growth of English Law in the Eighteenth Century (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1992), 2:1221–40.Google Scholar
165. 91 Eng. Rep. at 566–67.
166. Mr West's Opinion, Opinions of Eminent Lawyers on Various Points of English Jurisprudence (London: Reed and Hunter, 1814), 1:194–95.
167. Dutton v. Howell, 1 Eng. Rep. 17 (1694). The case is discussed above in the text after note 161.
168. 2 Peere Williams 75 (1740–49). The industrious Smith reported that “we have found no clue as to the appeal upon which this determination was made.” Smith, Appeals to the Privy Council, 482–83.
169. A sober review of these opinion letters and case dicta is Smith, Appeals to the Privy Council, 465–87. cf. Reid, Authority of Rights, 114–31.
170. Peere Williams Reports, 3 vols. (1740–49); Smith, Appeals to the Privy Council, 483.
171. See, e.g., Madden and Fieldhouse, Select Documents on the Empire, 1:192 n.1.
172. Blackstone, William, Commentaries on the Laws of England, 4 vols. (1765–69; Oxford: Printed for John Hatchard and Son, 1822), 1:105–6.Google Scholar
173. Rex v. Vaughan, 98 Eng. Rep. 308, 311 (1769).
174. Campbell v. Hall, 98 Eng. Rep. 1045, 1049–50. See also Kettner, Development of American Citizenship, 59, 131–72. For Mansfield's support of parliamentary regulation of the colonies, see House of Lords Debate, 7 Feb. 1775, in The Parliamentary History of England, from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, comp. T. C. Hansard, vol. 18 (London, 1813), col. 269.
175. This conclusion discounts the undocumented decision in 2 Peere Williams 75.
176. First Charter to Virginia (1606), in The Federal and State Constitutions, Colonial Charters, and Other Organic Laws of … the United States of America, ed. Thorpe, Francis N. (Washington, D.C., 1909), 7:3788.Google Scholar Gilbert's charter is most explicit: settlers and their children shall “enjoy all the priveleges [sic] of free denizens and persons native of England, and within our allegiance.” Letters Patent to Sir Humfrey Gylberte(1578), in ibid., 1:51. A similar formulation was repeated in most charters that followed. All are available in Thorpe's collection.
177. See, e.g., Duane, James, “Address before the Committee to State the Rights of the Colonies” [9/8/1774], Letters of Members of the Continental Congress, ed. Burnett, Edmund C. (Eashington, D.C.: The Carnegie Foundation of Washington, 1921), 1:24–25.Google Scholar Some historians make a similar mistake. See, e.g., Draper, Theodore, A Struggle for Power: The American Revolution (New York: Times Books, Random House, 1996), 33Google Scholar; Chafee, Zachariah Jr, “Colonial Courts and the Common Law,” in Essays in the History of Early American Law, ed. Flaherty, David H. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1969), 56Google Scholar; Andrews, Charles M., Colonial Period of American History (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1934), 1:85–86.Google Scholar
178. For the right to travel among and settle within the states without discrimination, see Saenz v. Roe, 526 U.S. 489 (1999).
179. For the British Empire, this was the issue in Somersett's Case. See Oldham, The Mansfield Manuscripts, 1221–25, 1229–38. For the same problem in the early United States, see Finkelman, Paul, An Imperfect Union: Slavery, Federalism, and Comity (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1981).Google Scholar
180. This clause became standard for trading companies in the sixteenth century. Under the Virginia Company's 1609 charter, for example, the governing council was to make law “as near as conveniently may be,… agreeable to the laws, statutes, government, and policy of … England.” Goebel, Julius Jr and Raymond Naughton, T., Law Enforcement in Colonial New York: A Study in Criminal Procedure (1664–1776) (1944; reprint, Montclair, N.J.: Patterson Smith, 1970), xxi–xxii, 3–6, 13.Google Scholar
181. See, e.g., Chafee, “Colonial Courts and the Common Law,” 56–57.
182. Again, colonial statutes upholding slavery are good examples.
183. See Smith, Appeals to the Privy Council, 464–65, 523–31.
184. White, Grievances of the Commonwealth, 216. White notes that Coke, then seventy-six, was not the “principal proponent” of the Petition, but “still played an active role in every stage of the Commons's proceedings on the petition.” Ibid., 224–25.
185. White, Grievances of the Commonwealth, 213–74.
186. See Morgan, American Slavery/American Freedom, 79; Craven, Southern Colonies in the Seventeenth Century, 81, 85–87.
187. Commons Debates, 1628, 3:487. For other seventeenth-century parliamentarians (including John Pym) who denied that the colonists enjoyed English rights, see Kupperman, Karen O., “The Beehive as a Model for Colonial Design,” in America in European Consciousness, 1493–1750, ed. Kupperman, Karen O. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1995), 285–86.Google Scholar
188. It was in no one's interest to do so, till some colonies sought to shield themselves from unwanted parliamentary legislation during the Civil War, then during the Restoration, and again in the 1760s and 1770s.
189. See Russell, Causes of the English Civil War, 26–57; Sommerville, Royalists and Patriots, 134–75.
190. Colley, Britons.
191. For the concept of a “Greater Britain” of white settler colonies, see Seeley, J. R., The Expansion of England (1833; reprint, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1971), 8.Google Scholar See also Armitage, David, “Greater Britain: A Useful Category of Historical Analysis?” American Historical Review 104 (1999): 427–45CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Gould, Eliga H., “A Virtual Nation: Greater Britain and the Imperial Legacy of the American Revolution,” American Historical Review 104 (1999): 476–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar See generally Pocock, J. G. A., “British History: APlea for a New Subject,” Journal of Modern History 47 (1975): 601–21CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Pocock, , “The Limits and Divisions of British History: In Search of an Unknown Subject,” American Historical Review 87 (1982): 311–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar Ireland occupied an uncertain middle ground between Britain and the colonies, though the Act of Irish Union was designed to make it part of Great Britain.
192. Coke noted that, upon the fall of the Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy “all the other kings melted … the crowns to make one imperial diadem, for the king of the West Saxons over all.” State Trials, 2:650. See also Madden, “The Relevance of the English Medieval Experience of ‘Empire’ to Later Constitutional Issues”; Goebel, “Matrix of Empire”; Armitage, Ideological Origins of the British Empire, 22–23.
193. Hulsebosch, Constituting Empire, chaps. 7–8.
194. See Black, “The Case for the Colonies,” 1172 (commenting on Mcllwain's thesis that the colonists correctly interpreted the English constitution).
195. James Otis invoked Coke's report of Bonham's Case when opposing royal writs of assistance in the 1760s, and several lawyers cited the same case two decades later in the state antiloyalist cases that foreshadowed judicial review. Bailyn, Ideological Origins, 176–78 (analyzing Otis's use of Coke); Geobel, Julius Jr et al., eds., The Law Practice of Alexander Hamilton: Documents and Commentary, 5 vols. (New York: Columbia University Press, 1969–1981), 1:357, 358Google Scholar (documenting Hamilton's citation of Coke in Rutgers v. Waddington). And Thomas Jefferson remembered that during his apprenticeship Coke's First Institutes “was the universal law book of students, and a sounder Whig never wrote, nor a profounder learning and judgment in the orthodox doctrines of the British Constitution, or in what is called British liberties.” Lipscomb, Andrew A., ed., The Writings of Thomas Jefferson (Washington, D.C.: Thomas Jefferson Memorial Association of the United States, 1903–1914), 12:iv.Google Scholar
196. See, e.g., Kermit Hall, William Wiecek, and Finkelman, Paul, American Legal History: Cases and Materials (New York: Oxford University Press, 1991), 23Google Scholar; Presser, Stephen and Zainaldin, Jamil, Law and Jurisprudence in American History: Cases and Materials, 4th ed. (St. Paul, Minn.: West Publishing Company, 2000), 28–29.Google Scholar Cf. Katz, “The Problem of a Colonial Legal History,” 476–77.
197. Good examples are Moglen, Settling the Law; Murrin, John M., “Anglicizing an American Colony: The Transformation of Massachusetts” (Ph.D. diss., Yale University, 1966).Google Scholar
198. The book went through many editions in London, Dublin, and, after the Revolution, the United States, between 1628 and 1836. See W. Harold Maxwell and Maxwell, Leslie F., eds., A Legal Bibliography of the British Commonwealth of Nations (London: Sweet and Maxwell, 1955), 1:449–52.Google Scholar See also Sheppard, Steve, History of Legal Education in the United States: Commentators and Primary Sources (Pasadena: Salem Press, 1999), 1:10–11Google Scholar (observing that Coke's First Institute “held first position as the textbook of the common law” into the early nineteenth century).
199. For postcolonial struggle within and against imperial resources, see Bhabha, Horai K., “Of Mimicry and Man: The Ambivalence of Discourse,” in his The Location of Culture (New York: Routledge, 1994), 85–92.Google Scholar See also Buell, Lawrence, “Postcolonial Anxiety in Classic U.S. Literature,” in Postcolonial Theory and the United States: Race, Ethnicity, and Literature, ed. Singh, Amritjit and Schmidt, Peter (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2000), 196–219.Google Scholar
200. There are many strands to postcolonial studies. I have in mind here examinations of white settler colony cultures, or what Alan Lawson calls the empire's “second world” relative to the first world of Great Britain and the third of the nonwhite colonies. Lawson, Alan, “Comparative Studies and Post-Colonial Settler Cultures,” Australian-Canadian Studies 10 (1992): 153–59Google Scholar; Lawson, , “A Cultural Paradigm for the Second World,” Australian-Canadian Studies 9 (1991), 68.Google Scholar See also Ashcroft, Bill, Griffiths, Gareth, and Tiffin, Helen, eds., The Post-Colonial Studies Reader (New York: Routledge, 1995).Google Scholar
201. Harold A. Innis's thesis that printed media travel well across space but lose integrity through time is suggestive here. Innis, , Empire and Communications, rev. Innis, Mary Q. (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1972).Google Scholar On transatlantic commercial exchange, see Hancock, David, Citizens of the World: London Merchants and the Integration of the British American Community, 1735–1785 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995).Google Scholar
202. See Hulsebosch, “Imperia in Imperio”; Morgan, American Slavery/American Freedom.