Short Stuff: Outlawry - podcast episode cover

Short Stuff: Outlawry

Mar 05, 202512 min
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Episode description

A request by our producer Dave C, we explore how totally on your own you were in Medieval England when the court declared you an outlaw.  

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Hey, and welcome to the short stuff. I'm Josh, and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too, sitting in for Dave. And this is a very special short stuff Chuck, because Dave requested this topic so long ago that I don't even remember when he did.

Speaker 2

Yeah. Every once in a while a colleague will drum up the nerve to approach us very sheepishly with head bowed, to say what do you guys think about this idea? And Josh will wave them away and say it shall be on the list in seven years time.

Speaker 1

Yes, hey, or so right, give or take seven more years.

Speaker 2

We shall do outlawry.

Speaker 1

And we are finally. So this one's for you, Dave. And it's a good idea too, because most people think of outlaws as a specific you know, like.

Speaker 2

Like a cat.

Speaker 1

Yes, exactly. A lot of people think of Johnny Cash when they think outlaw, don't.

Speaker 2

They, Yeah, outlaw country music. It's a thing.

Speaker 1

But this turns out to have been an actual legal standing, Yes, that could be applied to people. That was not a pleasant thing to have applied to you, and it basically meant that, but you're on your own. It was applied at least in a lot of cases to fugitives, but like we think of fugitives today is like people who

the US Marshal Service goes and gets. Like we talked about an Operation Flagship that kind of falls under the same rubric, but this was a fugitive and that like they were summoned to court, they decided not to come to court and after a certain procedure they were declared outlaws, and that that meant like the law no longer applies to them, all the protections that are afforded to you are gone. And it does seem a little harsh, I have to say, for just failing to appear in court.

Speaker 2

Yeah, it was a long time ago though, so who knows what was going on back then. Sure, mainly medieval England is what we're talking about. But the earliest kind of this outlaw status became a law in sixth century Frankish law called the Lex Salica. This was under King Clovis early five hundreds, So this is a long long time ago, and this is basically like yet, if you don't respond to a summons, then you're outside of the King's protection. This kind of started the legal basis for that.

But medieval England is where it's sort of most known if you were over the age of fourteen and you were a man. If you were a woman, you were said to be waived, even though it was basically the same thing. But if you were over fourteen and you were a male, you could be outlawed and basically say like like you said, like hey, anything you do or anything anyone does to you, rather like we're not even

going to prosecute him. Somebody could break into your house and steal your stuff and you're an outlaw, so sorry ts for you.

Speaker 1

Yeah, And so like today, our conception of outlaw or modern conceptions like say, applying to Johnny Cash like you said, or Jesse James or even Robin Hood, they're not types to show up to a legal summon, so they definitely

do kind of fall into that same category. But we kind of have it backwards and that we think of those people as like they chose a life of crime outside the law right their outlaws, But in reality, with outlawry, the law itself has withdrawn itself from you and left you outside the law kind of in a really caddy turn. The law is like, oh, you don't recognize my jurisdiction over you're not going to come to court when we ask you to. Well, then fine, I guess you don't

need my protections anymore either. Hence you're an outlaw exactly.

Speaker 2

And you mentioned a process, there was a problems. It wasn't immediate, It was a pretty slow process even. But what would happen is the sheriff of wherever you were would locate these fugitives. They would do some investigating see if they owned any property that they could get to basically say like, hey, we've got your you know, your stash of chickens. Come to court, maybe you'll get those

chickens back. If that never happens and they can't get them to come to court or whatever, then the sheriff has to sit through this five different times in court, calling you know, the fugitive to come forward, and after the fifth non appearance, then they hit the gavel or drop the glove or whatever the heck they did back then and said, you, sir, are an outlaw.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and it was a big deal to be declared outlaws. We'll see, I say, we take our little break to come back and talk about outlawry a little more. How about that.

Speaker 2

Let's do it. Shot shot.

Speaker 1

Okay. So when you were declared an outlaw, essentially, the way I saw it written was that it's uh, it amounted to a conviction as well as an extinction of civil rights. So there were different kinds of outlawry. Just failing to appear in court seemed like outlaw light spelled l I t E. But there was also major outlawry, in which case you were really in trouble, uh, like big felonies, treason, rebellion, like big deal stuff could have you labeled a major outlaw. And again like if they

did find your cash of chickens, those were theirs. Now they could take them any like real property, you had anything that was yours, they could seize and keep. And that's pretty standard stuff even still today. Like if you get caught with suspected drug money, the sheriff just keeps your money and says, prove it's not drug money. That's

not like completely out of the norm. The thing that really makes outlawry very surprising to us today is anybody could come and take your property, anybody could come and beat you up and kill you. And because the law no longer applied to you, there was no law that was broken when they murdered you. They weren't breaking a law. You had no protection any longer. And that's the thing that makes it really kind of shocking as far as like a legal formality is concerned to us today.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and even if if someone you know, your neighbor didn't come and rob your house or try and kill you or something, if you had outlaw status, you were definitely not a part of the community anymore. You were totally ostracized and shunned. Sometimes it was just sort of the way that everyone shunned somebody, which is very quietly and passive aggressively. Sometimes it was very much official though. If they had an outlaw they captured, they could say like, hey,

we're going to really ostracize you. We're going to send you to Australia have fun over there.

Speaker 1

Yeah, or America. Yeah, and you would end up being an indentured servant. And one of the other things I read about that that was kind of interesting, that really drove the point home. It's not just like I'm an indentured servant over here now I wish I wasn't. Like, maybe around your area you might have some sympathetic friends that might hide you or bring you food out in the woods or something like that. In America or Australia, you probably knew no one, so you had no help whatsoever,

and you truly were ostracized. So that in and of itself was a big deal. Another thing that could happen to you too, is if the sheriff did catch up with you, and like there was a very high chance you were just killed on site, because you it was a death sentence for you as well, Like they had no obligation to bring you in. If they wanted to just kill you and get over with it, the sheriff could do that too.

Speaker 2

You were so close to saying oz ostracized.

Speaker 1

Oh, I walked right past that on purpose. Okay, I didn't chuck because it's a good one. I'm glad you pointed it out.

Speaker 2

Uh. So this was, you know, usually like real outlaws, like real criminals, even if it was something like not appearing in court. You said, it was oftentimes a lot worse. But it wasn't always that in some countries. I know, we talked about it in our I think we had a leprosy episode many years ago. Right. Yeah, in India, if you had leprosy, you could be banned and ostracized and essentially get something akin to an outlaw status by being sent to leper colony where you had where you

didn't have the same rights as everyone else. I think they call leprosy Hanson's disease, now, is that right? M Yeah, but no one would know what we meant if we.

Speaker 1

Just said that, so probably not a few people would, and those people were very satisfied that you just said that.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and I knew the leper was not something that people say anymore.

Speaker 1

No, Yeah, but yeah, I can't remember who Hanson was. I think we talked about them in the episode two. But yeah, that was a long time ago, but it's a good episode. I haven't heard it in a while. There were some ways to have your outlaws thats revoked. One of them was just showing up the court. Yeah, there was a specific court you had to go to. It was the King's Bench in London, so you had to make your way to London and you basically pled

to have it removed. And I think that that was part of the procedure because again, if you showed up to the court that had called you in the first place, you might be murdered, and that would be that Yeah, so that was I think the initial part of the process, and there does seem to be like a a pretty generous amount of forgiveness for you know, lesser crimes I think like that where you just hadn't shown up, especially if you're like, I'm sorry my foot, I twisted my

ankle jogging and I just couldn't make it to court, or you know, my stupid cousin was supposed to take me but his cart broke down, that kind of thing. The court would probably take pity on you and remove your outlaw status because now you were playing ball with them, which is the whole point of them conferring you an outlaw,

is that you hadn't in the first place. What was really shocking to me is that this same stuff could be applied to somebody in a civil case, like somebody's like this guy stole my chickens, I'm gonna sue you and you didn't show up. You could also be considered an outlaw for that too. That's just nuts.

Speaker 2

Yeah, that is remarkable to hear.

Speaker 1

And it wasn't until eighteen seventy nine that England revoked that part of their outlaw statute that it couldn't be used in civil cases anymore. But as far as I know, and I looked high and low for definitive proof of this, but just from references I saw, it seems like there's still outlaw books or outlaw statutes on the books for criminal acts.

Speaker 2

Wow. Yeah, let's get rid of.

Speaker 1

Those, sir. Do it? You got anything else?

Speaker 2

I got nothing else?

Speaker 1

Well, Dave, this was a great idea. Thanks for it. Short Stuff Is that.

Speaker 2

Stuff you Should Know? Is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts

Speaker 1

Or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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