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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
41 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great ... but not necessarily for the layman,
By Alan_Robinson (Westerville, OH United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Common Law (Paperback)
Several others have written covering the contents of The Common Law. I will just emphasize that most of the book focuses on how contemporary (in 1881) legal doctrines and issues had originated and developed in the cases and decisions of English courts from around 1200 AD onwards. This book is of interest primarily to people who are planning to study law and want some foundation, or to individuals with unusual historical interest in often-obscure English court decisions. I fell into the former category; the effort I put into tackling this book is worthwhile because I plan to use the knowledge later ... if I didn't, it would have been pretty much a waste of time.There is one major caveat for the average reader. If you have not already studied the law, you will pretty much need to have a legal dictionary on hand. Assumpsit, bailment, disseisin -- if you are not familiar with terms like these, you are liable to have a very tough time with Holmes. Moreover, as a rule he tends to assume that the reader (originally, listener) is aware of the current state of the law already, and then proceeds to delve into its background. So if you do not understand the role of consideration in contracts already, you will essentially be forced to deduce it. One gripe (and this is obviously not Holmes' fault) is that it is often very difficult, or at least very inconvenient, to follow up on his well-compiled footnotes, because many of the sources he frequently refers to (Glanvill, Fleta) are out of print and found only in academic or law libraries (and even then are frequently non-circulating materials), and most of the cases he cites are either from the Year Books (likewise arcane and out of print) or from unrecognizable English reports (Moody, Cox, B&S, H&C). Even a source like Blackstone, who was so fundamental to early American judges and lawmakers, is in few libraries and only 50% in print today; and Yale's online version does not appear to be volumized or paginated in accordance with whatever edition Holmes used. This may sound like quite a catalog of complaints, but in the end I am very glad I invested the time and effort to conquer this book. Don't be turned off, just be aware that a relatively (for law books) [inexpensive] price does not make this a "mass-market" paperback.
30 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Why people persist in reading this less-than-fun read:,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Common Law (Paperback)
Current 1L here. I read _The Common Law_ while an undergrad as part of the research for a paper on, inter alia, O.W. Holmes in a philosophy of law class. If you're planning on reading the book, you might want to reconsider. Large sections are well-nigh unreadable -- well, they're not really unreadable, just incredibly boring. (Then again, maybe incoming 1Ls should read a few chapters just to get an idea of what judicial writing was like 120 years ago -- though Holmes was far better than most of his contemporaries.) Probably the best part of the book is the introductory essay that explains the context and significance of Holmes's lectures (which he collected in the book). I can't remember who wrote the essay -- it's in the edition of the book that has a picture of Holmes on the cover (the one I always see in [local store]). The substance of the book is a series of lectures on the various common law subjects: criminal law, property law, contracts, consideration, torts, negligence, bailments, trespass, etc. What makes this book so important is not that the lectures were a summary of the current state of the law at the time Holmes spoke in (IIRC) 1881, but rather because Holmes explains how they got to be that way -- often rather insightfully/creatively. Let me give you an example: in ancient legal regimes, including early common law England, when a person was killed by an inanimate object, the law of deodands came into play. A deodand (again, IIRC) is an inaminate object. What would happen to this inanimate objects is that the family of the deceased would then "execute" the object as if it were a convicted felon. In explaining this, Holmes has a funny aside about an infamous case in England where a dog that killed a person was hanged "to provide an example to bad dogs everywhere." Obviously, the law of deodands has faded from the law -- or so you'd think. Holmes explains that this concept -- treating an inanimate object as a wrongdoer -- was harnessed in the law of admiralty to allow for in rem actions against ships. By this, I mean that a problem with vessels is that a ship would come into port, the vessel-owner would commit some sort of tort, then sail away. And since the ship-owner had left (or lived in a different continent and thus was never involved at all), the common law courts would never have jurisdiction over him to enforce a judgment to compensate his victims. To remedy this problem, common law courts began to allow victims of such torts to bring an action in any port into which the ship sailed -- as if the ship itself had been the one who committed the tort. (That's what an in rem action is -- a lawsuit where jurisdiction is based on a thing; as opposed to an in personam action, in which jurisddiction is based on a person.) Thus, through the legal fiction preserved in the memory of the common law from antiquity, the law of admiralty drew upon the law of deodands to fix a "modern" problem. To all you 1Ls finishing up with contracts -- Holmes is the one you can thank for the bargain theory of consideration -- and guess where he stated it for the first time? The point of reading the book, however, is not that Holmes was a great legal historian; rather, it is that he was an influential legal philosopher. Two tenets of early 20th century jurisprudence that Holmes propounded (and was influential in writing into law when he was later appointed to the Supreme Court of Massachussetts, and later of the United States) can be identified in this work: legal positivism and legal realism. But I think that I've probably written enough here to bore everyone to tears, so if you're curious, take a look at something in the library on the subject of jurisprudence.... or read this book.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Philosophical Basis For Our Legal System,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Common Law (Paperback)
This book is a little tedious for us non-lawyers, but it does illustrate some interesting points:Law emerged from the need to get away from revenge/feud dynamics. And it originated during times when most people couldn't write, so the issue of proving a case (such as in a agreement) is troublesome (especially in times when plagues and such could kill witnesses at any time). The world is a fuzzy set, and yet the law needs to set a finite set of rules in place, so exceptions constantly challenge. The needs of the state can supercede the issue of fairness, such as in the rule that "ignorance is no excuse". Judges are generally friends of the wealthy and not compatriots of the commoner. If a man has large debts, and dies, how can his children, who were not party to the agreements, be held liable via the estate? Many such questions arise and Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. tries to address the fluid basis for our legal system.
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