James v. Commonwealth

12 Serg. & Rawle 220, 1825 Pa. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 3, 1825
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 12 Serg. & Rawle 220 (James v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James v. Commonwealth, 12 Serg. & Rawle 220, 1825 Pa. LEXIS 2 (Pa. 1825).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Duncan, J.

The judgment was, that the defendant be placed in a ducking or cucking stool, and be plunged three times in the water.55 This sentence, we are informed, has created much ferment and excitement in the public mind. It is considered as a cruel, unusual, unnatural, and ludicrous judgment. But whatever prejudices may exist against it, still, if it be the law of the land, the court must pronounce judgment for it.

But, as it is revolting to humanity, and is of that description that only could have been invented in an age of barbarism, we ought to be well persuaded, either that it is the appropriate judgment of the common law, or is inflicted by some positive law; and that that common law or statutory provision has been adopted here, and is now in force. I have employed some time not very pleasantly, certainly not. very profitably, in tracing the punishment ad ludi-hrium to its source, and have followed this stream until it has sunk in oblivion in the general improvement of society, and the refor[226]*226mation of criminal punishment, and been dried up by Time, that great innovator.

It must strike all, as a peculiar feature of this offence, that it is of the feminine gender, that it degrades woman to a mere thing, to a nuisance, and does not consider her as a person. But this is not to be wondered at, when we reflect on the generally degraded state of woman, when this punishment was introduced. She was in some respects the servant or slave of the husband; so that he might correct her with a stick as thick as his own thumb. There is a tradition, that at the publication of Bracton’s learned work, in which the dimension of this instrument of correction was first stated, the women of the town in which he lived, seized him and ducked him in a horse pond. At the common law, women were denied the benefit of clergy, merely because their sex precluded them from holy orders, however learned they might be, while their more ignorant husbands, who eould yvith difficulty read even the neck verse, were burnt in the hand with a cold iron, for the offence for which they were doomed to die on the gallows. And female virtue, by the temporal law, stood and now stands in Eng~ land, exposed to the slanders and malignity of. falsehood; for any one in conversation, may proclaim the purest maid or chastest matron, as the most meretricious or incontinent of women, with impunity from the animadversion of the civil courts; and thus female honour, which is dearer to the sex than their lives, is left by the common law to be the sport of every malignant and abandoned calumniator. The learned Judge Blackstone seems to consider the female sex a great favourite of the law of England, yet his more just editor, Christian, in his notes, expresses a fear that there is little.cause to pay a compliment to our laws, for their favour and respect to the female sex. The right of the husband is to beat his wife, “ ex causa regiminis et castigationis.” It is true, he was only allowed — modicam castigationem adhibere, and this was never doubted until the polite reign of Charles II. Yet the lower rank of people, as Blaclcstone observes, who were always fond of, and adhered to the common law, still claim and exert their ancient.privileges; and the civil law allowed the husband a larger authority over his wife, permitting him for some misdemeanors, “ fiagellis et fustibus acriter verberare uxorem” — and if we add the present instance of partiality, that a scolding woman is to be ducked, while the most scandalously abusive and railing man goes unpunished, the iniquity and injustice will be very striking. ■ The ludicrous local customs of some of the manor courts, give us some idea of the low grade in which women were placed. The widow, to redeem her free bench, rode into the steward’s court, sitting upon a ram with the tail in her hand, repeating some ribald verses:—

f1 Here I am, riding on a black ram, &c.5’

[227]*227The punishment of the ducking, or cucking stool, is from the cuckoo, “ qui odiose jurgat et rixatur, ” as Lord Coke has it, in 3d Inst. 219; or, as Jacobs has it, in his Dictionary, the gogen stool, and by some thought to be corrupted from the choke stool; and the instrument is called in Stat. 51, Hen. 3, a trebueket, a pitfall, and in law, as Lord Coke says, signifies, a stool that falls into a pit of water; whereas the last instrument that was seen in England, as Morgan, an editor of Jacobs’ Dictionary mentions, consisted of a beam or rafter, moving on a fulcrum, and extending to the centre of a large pond, on which end the stool used to be placed; while, on the other hand, Daines Barrington, a learned antiquarian, in his observations on the Statutes, 40, says, it is a machine anciently used in the siege of towns, and the etymology is from the Celtic tre, that is, ville, and our own bucket, and signifies a town bucket. Thus, in our very outset, we are involved in doubt, and who shall decide, where there is such a difference among the learned ? The officer would not know what to do, whether to fix Nancy James on a stool or in a bucket, whether she is to be run into the river on wheels, or to be soused into a pond, from a beam or rafter. From the country from which it is suggested we have borrowed it, we could obtain no information, nor expect a model, for not a vestige of it is there to be found; unless, perhaps, along side of the Rack, (the Duke of Exeter’s daughter,) which is still shown as a curiosity by a yeoman of the King’s guard, as an instrument of punishment, which, like the trebueket, was once used in England, (Barrington, 366,) for no poor woman in that country has suffered under the edge of a law so barbarous, for the last century — like unscoured armour, it is hung up by the wall— like the law of witchcraft, it has remained unused; for no one has suffered under that law, either at the stake or on the gibbet, since the reign of Charles II.; although the law stood unrepealed on the Statute Book, until 9th Geo. 2., as our own law against the same of-fence, until several years after the revolution; or, like the act against the gypsies, which punished those with death, without the benefit of clergy, who remained one month within the realm; and Lord Hale, in his Pleas of the Crown, 671, says, “I have not known these statutes much putin execution, only about twenty years since, at the Assizes at Bury, about thirteen were condemned and executed for this offence.” On this judgment, BlacJcstone, 4th vol. 166, remarks, “but to the honour of our national humanity, there are no instances more modern.” Thus we see two bloody statutes repealed by the voice of humanity, and not by positive law; so that it seems most probable that hanging of women as witches and gypsies, and ducking them as scolds, ceased about the same time, viz. the time of the restoration, and before the charter to William Penn. Yet it is to be remarked, that the statute of 6 Jac. 1, against witchcraft was adopted in Pennsylvania, and ordered to be duly put in force and execution; and in the first address of the elder Mr. [228]*228Ptaible to the associated members of the Philadelphia

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Bluebook (online)
12 Serg. & Rawle 220, 1825 Pa. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-commonwealth-pa-1825.