Maxims of Law
Richard Anthony
Hyperlinked Table of Maxims
When Jesus spoke the Truth to his accusers, he would justify himself by quoting Law. First, he would quote God's Law, and after quoting God's Law He would often quote the accuser's law and use that against them as well. For example, Jesus would say, "Did ye never read in the scriptures..." and then quote God's Law. Then he would turn around and say, "Is it not written in your law..." and quote their own law! His accusers would have no answer, they could not overcome Him. How could anyone overcome somebody who is obeying both God's Law and man's law!? If a man made law is just, it will be in harmony with God's Law.
This is the purpose of this article. These maxims are the foundation and principles of the laws that man passes today. Unfortunately, men enforce their own will more than they enforce law. So, this is why, in addition to knowing God's Law, it is also important to know man's law, because man's law is based upon God's Law. And when you are accused of "breaking the law," you can do what Jesus did, and use both God's Law and man's law to justify your lawful acts, for this is the only thing that will excuse you.
It is important to distinguish between commercial law and maxims of law, when quoting from their law. We should never, ever quote their codes, rules, regulations, ordinances, statutes, common law, merchant law, public policies, constitutions, etc., because these are commercial in nature, and if we use their commercial law, they can presume we are engaged in commerce (which means we are of the world), which will nullify our witness (because we are not of the world). Maxims of law are not commercial law, but are mostly based upon scripture and truth.
Here is a court case which demonstrates a typical example of the fruitlessness of describing oneself in the terms of the world, as distinguished from who and what our Heavenly Father has already told us we are.
It was rendered by JOHN V. PARKER, Chief Judge:
"Petitioner's shield of the "Common Law" as an "Unenfranchised Sovereign Individual of the United States of America, a Republic," provides him with the same degreee of protection from federal income taxation as did the Ghost Dance of the Sioux warrior from the repeating rifles of the federal Calvary - ZERO." 599 F.Supp. 126, George E. McKinney, Sr. v. Donald Regan, Secretary of the Treasury, et al., Civ. A. No. 84-470-A., United States District Court, M.D. Louisiana, November 19, 1984.
Many insist on using the "common law" to defend themselves. The reason we should not is because, first and foremost, you do not see the term "common law" in scripture. Bondservants of Christ are only to use God's Law. Secondly, the common law is a commerical law today, created by merchants, influenced by Roman Law, and used for commercial purposes. The following definitions are taken from "A Dictionary of Law, by William C. Anderson, 1893."
Custom of merchants: A system of customs, originating among merchants, and allowed for the benefit of trade as part of the common law. Page 303.
Law-merchant; law of merchants: The rules applicable to commercial paper were transplanted into the common law from the law merchant. They had their origin in the customs and course of business of merchants and bankers, and are now recognized by the courts because they are demanded by the wants and conveniences of the mercantile world. Pages 670-671.
Roman Law: The common law of England has been largely influenced by the Roman law, in several respects:…Through the development of commercial law. Page 910.
All of man's laws, except for many maxims of law, are commercial in nature.
The following are the definitions of "maxims," and then the relevant maxims of law will be listed.
Maxim (Bouvier's Law Dictionary, 1856): An established principle or proposition. A principle of law universally admitted, as being just and consonant with reason.
2. Maxims in law are somewhat like axioms in geometry. 1 Bl. Com. 68. They are principles and authorities, and part of the general customs or common law of the land; and are of the same strength as acts of parliament, when the judges have determined what is a maxim; which belongs to the judges and not the jury. Terms do Ley; Doct. & Stud. Dial. 1, c. 8. Maxims of the law are holden for law, and all other cases that may be applied to them shall be taken for granted. 1 Inst. 11. 67; 4 Rep. See 1 Com. c. 68; Plowd. 27, b.
3. The application of the maxim to the case before the court, is generally the only difficulty. The true method of making the application is to ascertain how the maxim arose, and to consider whether the case to which it is applied is of the same character, or whether it is an exception to an apparently general rule.
4. The alterations of any of the maxims of the common law are dangerous. 2 Inst. 210.
Maxim (William C. Anderson's A Dictionary of Law, (1893), page 666): So called…because it's value is the highest and its authority the most reliable, and because it is accepted by all persons at the very highest.
2. The principles and axioms of law, which are general propositions flowing from abstracted reason, and not accommodated to times or men, are wisely deposited in the breasts of the judges to be applied to such facts as come properly before them.
3. When a principle has been so long practiced and so universally acknowledged as to become a maxim, it is obligatory as part of the law.
Maxim of Law (Black's Law Dictionary, 3rd Edition, (1933), page 1171): An established principle of proposition. A principle of law universally admitted as being a correct statement of the law, or as agreeable to reason. Coke defines a maxim to be "a conclusion of reason" Coke on Littleton, 11a. He says in another place, "A maxim is a proposition to be of all men confessed and granted without proof, argument, or discourse." Coke on Littleton. 67a.
Maxim (Black's Law Dictionary, 4th Edition): Maxims are but attempted general statements of rules of law and are law only to the extent of application in adjudicated cases."
These maxims are taken directly from man's law dictionaries and court cases. The following books were referenced for this article:
-
Bouvier's Law Dictionary, by John Bouvier, (1856)
-
Legal Maxims, by Broom and Bouvier, (1856)
-
A Dictionary of Law, by William C. Anderson, (1893)
-
Black's Law Dictionary, by Henry Campell Black, (3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th Editions, 1933-1990)
-
Maxims of Law, by Charles A. Weisman, (1990)
*Comments in [brackets] are added and not part of the maxim itself*
Accidents and Injury
-
No one is held to answer for the effects of a superior force, or of an accident, unless his own fault has contributed.
-
Whoever pays by mistake what he does not owe, may recover it back; but he who pays, knowing he owes nothing; is presumed to give.
-
What one has paid knowing it not to be due, with the intention of recovering it back, he cannot recover back. [If the IRS accuses you of owing them money, if you want to go to court to dispute it, you must pay them in full what they demand and then sue them to get it back. Which places the burden of proof upon the accused rather than the accuser]
-
An injury is extinguished by the forgiveness or reconcilement of the party injured. [Luke 17:3-4, 2 Corinthians 2:7-8]
Benefits and Privileges
-
What I approve I do not reject. I cannot approve and reject at the same time. I cannot take the benefit of an instrument, and at the same time repudiate it.
Commerce
-
It is settled that there is to be considered the home of each one of us where he may have his habitation and account-books, and where he has made an establishment of his business.
-
No rule of law protects a buyer who willfully closes his ears to information, or refuses to make inquiry when circumstances of grave suspicion imperatively demand it.
-
Usury is odious in law. [Exodus 22:25, Leviticus 25:36-37, Nehemiah 5:7,10, Proverbs 28:8, Ezekiel 18:8,13,17; 22:12]
Common Sense
-
No one is bound to give information about things he is ignorant of, but every one is bound to know that which he gives information about.
Consent and Contracts
-
Consent makes the law. A contract is a law between the parties, which can acquire force only by consent.
-
Consent makes the law: the terms of a contract, lawful in its purpose, constitute the law as between the parties.
-
In the agreements of the contracting parties, the rule is to regard the intention rather than the words.
-
When two persons are liable on a joint obligation, if one makes default the other must bear the whole.
-
He who contracts, knows, or ought to know, the quality of the person with whom he contracts, otherwise he is not excusable.
-
If anything is due to a corporation, it is not due to the individual members of it, nor do the members individually owe what the corporation owes.
-
Agreement takes the place of the law: the express understanding of parties supercedes such understanding as the law would imply.
Court and Pleas
-
In law none is credited unless he is sworn. All the facts must, when established by witnesses, be under oath or affirmation.
Court Appearance
[This is why we should avoid voluntarily appearing in court]
-
The presence of the body cures the error in the name; the truth of the name cures an error in the description
Crime and Punishment
-
Misconduct binds its own authors. It is a never-failing axiom that everyone is accountable only for his own offence or wrong.
-
An act does not make a person guilty, unless the intention be also guilty. This maxim applies only to criminal cases; in civil matters it is otherwise.
-
If one falsely accuses another of a crime, the punishment due to that crime should be inflicted upon the perjured informer. [Deuteronomy 19:18]
Customs and Usages
Expressions and Words
-
Multiplicity and indistinctness produce confusion; and questions, the more simple they are, the more lucid.
Fictions
Fraud and Deceit
-
A forestaller is an oppressor of the poor, and a public enemy to the whole community and the country.
God and Religion
-
If ever the law of God and man are at variance, the former are to be obeyed in derogation of the later. [Acts 5:29]
-
The truth that is not sufficiently defended is frequently overpowered; and he who does not disapprove, approves.
-
The Law of God and the law of the land are all one, and both favor and preserve the common good of the land.
Governments and Jurisdiction
-
That which seems necessary for the king and the state ought not to be said to tend to the prejudice of liberty of the [Christ's] ekklesia.
-
The power which is derived [from God] cannot be greater than that from which it is derived [God]. [Romans 13:1]
-
Jurisdiction is a power introduced for the public good, on account of the necessity of dispensing justice.
-
A minor ought not to be guardian of a minor, for he is unfit to govern others who does not know how to govern himself.
Heirs
-
Co-heirs are deemed as one body or person, by reason of the unity of right which they possess. [Romans 8:17, Ephesians 5:31-32]
-
An heir is the same person with his ancestor. [Because the ancestor, during his life, bears in his body (of law) all his heirs].
-
Several co-heirs are as one body, by reason of the unity of right which they possess. [Romans 8:17, Ephesians 5:31-32]
Judges and Judgment
-
Whoever does anything by the command of a judge is not reckoned to have done it with an evil intent, because it is necessary to obey. [Isaiah 33:22, "For the LORD is our judge…"]
-
Where a person does an act by command of one exercising judicial authority, the law will not suppose that he acted from any wrongful or improper motive, because it was his bounden duty to obey.
-
Of the credit and duty of a judge, no question can arise; but it is otherwise respecting his knowledge, whether he be mistaken as to the law or fact.
-
That law is the best which leaves the least discretion to the judge; and this is an advantage which results from certainty.
-
A judge is not to act upon his personal judgment or from a dictate of private will, but to pronounce according to law and justice.
-
A judge should have two salts: the salt of wisdom, lest he be insipid; and the salt of conscience, lest he be devilish.
Law
-
A maxim is so called because its dignity is chiefest, and its authority most certain, and because universally approved of all.
-
All law has either been derived from the consent of the people, established by necessity, confirmed by custom, or of Divine Providence.
-
Law is the safest helmet; under the shield of the law no one is deceived. [Ephesians 6:13-17, 1 Thessalonians 5:8]
-
An argument drawn from what is inconvenient is good in law, because the law will not permit any inconvenience.
-
The law which governs corporations is the same as that which governs individuals [godless entities].
-
To be able to know is the same as to know. This maxim is applied to the duty of every one to know the law.
-
In all affairs, and principally in those which concern the administration of justice, the rules of equity ought to be followed.
-
In ambiguous things, such a construction is to be made, that what is inconvenient and absurd is to be avoided.
-
When the reason, which is the soul of a law, ceases to exist, the law itself should lose its operative effect.
-
If you depart from the law you will wander without a guide and everything will be in a state of uncertainty to every one. [Joshua 1:8]
-
We are all bound to our lawgiver, regardless of our personal interpretation of reality. [Isaiah 33:22, James 4:12]
-
Many things have been introduced into the common law, with a view to the public good, which are inconsistent with sound reason. [The law of merchants was merged with the common law]
-
Those who do not preserve the law of the land, they justly incur the awesome and indelible brand of infamy.
Marriage
-
Although the property may be the wife's, the husband is the keeper of it, since he is the head of the wife.
-
Husband and wife cannot be a witness for, or against, each other, because of the union of person that exists.
-
Children are the blood of their parents, but the father and mother are not of the blood of the children.
Miscellaneous
-
He who uses the right of another [belonging to Christ] ought to use the same right [of Christ]. [In other words, don't use something new, or something outside of Christ].
-
It is lawful to repel force by force, provided it be done with the moderation of blameless defense, not for the purpose of taking revenge, but to ward off injury.
-
Error artfully colored is in many things more probable than naked truth; and frequently error conquers truth and reasoning.
Officers
-
Summonses or citations should not be granted before it is expressed under the circumstances whether the summons ought to be made.
-
An Ambassador fills the place of the king by whom he is sent, and is to be honored as he is whose place he fills.
Possession
Property and Land
-
When a man has the possession as well as the right of property, he is said to have jus duplicatum - a double right, forming a complete title.
-
Rights of dominion are transferred without title or delivery, by prescription, to wit, long and quiet possession.
-
Of whom is the land, of him is it also to the sky and to the deepest depths; he who owns the land owns all above and all below the surface.
-
Every person has exclusive dominion over the soil which he absolutely owns; hence such an owner of land has the exclusive right of hunting and fishing on his land, and the waters covering it.
-
Land comprehends any ground soil, or earth whatsoever; as meadows, pastures, woods, moors, waters, and marshes.
Right and Wrong
Scriptural
-
A legacy is confirmed by the death of the testator, in the same manner as a gift from a living person is by delivery alone. [Hebrews 9:16]
-
Women are excluded from all civil and public charges or offices. [1 Timothy 2:12, 1 Corinthians 14:34].
-
He who is in the womb, is considered as born, whenever it is for his benefit. [Job 31:15, Isaiah 49:1,5, Jeremiah 1:5]
Servants and Slaves
Wisdom and Knowledge
-
If you know not the names of things, the knowledge of things themselves perishes; and of you lose the names, the distinction of the things is certainly lost.
-
Names of things ought to be understood according to common usage, not according to the opinions of individuals.
Witnesses and Proof
-
A witness is a person who is present at and observes a transaction. [The government only has over persons, not substance. Any video tape, audio tape, computer printout, etc. that are used as witnesses
-
The testimony of one witness, unsupported, may not be enough to convict; for there may then be merely oath against oath.
-
This is a maxim of the civil law, where everything must be proved by two witnesses. [Matthew 18:16, 2 Corinthians 13:1]
-
In law, none is credited unless he is sworn. All facts must, when established by witnesses, be under oath or affirmation.
-
Proofs are to be weighed not numbered; that is, the more worthy or credible are to be believed. [It doesn't matter how many men say something, because the Word of God is superior to all. It does not matter how many people believe a lie, it's still a lie. And in a democracy, a lie is the truth].
-
What does not appear and what is not is the same; it is not the defect of law, but the want of proof.
-
No one is bound to inform about a thing he knows not, but he who gives information is bound to know what he says.
-
What is not proved and what does not exist are the same; it is not a defect of the law, but of proof.