Dr. Shahdeen Malik
Dr. Shahdeen Malik
Dr. Shahdeen Malik
PERCEIVING ‘FACTS’
In the official deliberations on law making of the period, the contours of
an empiricist rationality are clearly marked. Relevant facts were collected,
collated and analysed. The central feature of this process of collection and
analysis of facts was the frequent circulation of sets of questionnaires
among judicial officials. 2 The responses were minutely detailed in official
proceedings. In addition, other occasional comments and impressions of
concerned officials were also recorded and assessed. Regulations were,
then, issued - ostensibly based on these facts, responses and assessments.
Such a procedure was seen, not only by the Company's officials but also by
later commentators, as the embodiment of a rational-modern law making
process.
However, by locating and scrutinising this discourse of law making
within the official facts - the empirical evidence around which it was
1
See Shahdeen Malik, “Historical Discourse on Colonial Criminal Law, 44:1
(1999) Journal of the Aisiatic Society of Bangladesh, Humanities, pp15-41.
2
Governor General Cornwallis's minute and the responses of his 25 Magistrates to
the questionnaire circulated among them. This questionnaire and the responses
are contained in over 900 pages in MSS Eur D 231 in the India Office Library and
Records. These queries were sent out to the Magistrates in 1789 and were
returned and compiled in 1790. For various treatments of these records see,
Firminger W K (ed), Fifth Report of the Select Committee, Calcutta 1917, vol 2,
at pp 566-91; Majumdar N, Justice and Police in Bengal, 1765-93: A Study of the
Nizamut in Decline, Calcutta 1960, at pp 250-66; Aspinall A, Cornwallis in
Bengal: The Administrative and Judicial Reforms of Lord Cornwallis in Bengal,
London 1931, at pp 46-52, and pp 63-73; and Fisch J, Cheap Lives and Dear
Limbs: The British Transformation of the Bengal Criminal Law, Wiesbaden
1983, at pp 38-42.
See also Selection of Papers from the Records at the East India House, Relating
to the Revenue, Police, and Civil and Criminal Justice under the Company's
Government in India, 2 vols, London 1820, for similar questionnaire circulated in
1813.
Erratic Law Making in the Early 19th Century Bengal 61
5
For example, commenting upon the official discussion on sati, Radhika Singha
writes, ibid, at p 207, - "The issue of the woman's consent figured prominently in
the debate over further measures against the rite" - to essentialise the negotiatory
aspects of the official discourse.
6
T Asad has impressed the influence of the Durkheimian legacy of collective
conscious/consciousness and collective representation in presenting consensualist
accounts of belief/religions on the British Anthropology in his "Anthropology and
the Analysis of Ideology", (1979) 14 Man, (New Series) p 607.
The frequent deployment of ‘negotiatory’ constructions of the law making process
in the literature, eg R Singha's, may suggest that the influence of the Durkheimian
paradigm was not limited to anthropology alone, particularly in view of the fact
that most of the recent writings on the history of colonial law and law's influence
on the society have come from the labours of anthropologists and sociologists.
7
In this context it is important to note the central premise of the essay, above n 2, at
p 184: "This article examines the conceptual tensions which arose within colonial
law from the effort to tap sources of ‘tradition’' to make the new terms of public
authority both intelligible and acceptable to the subject population."
8
K N Chaudhuri has cited examples from trials in the English law courts to
highlight those aspects of the 18th century common law which were not
‘sensitive’ to negotiatory compromises. See Chaudhuri K N, "From the barbarian
and the civilized to the dialectics of colour: an archaeology of self-identities" in
Robb P. (ed), Society and Ideology: Essays in South Asian History, Delhi 1993,
at pp 31-2.
Erratic Law Making in the Early 19th Century Bengal 63
legal system, the state is presumed to act within the legal system. Such
precondition for the validity of the Kelsonian analysis of law was certainly
absent in colonial Bengal. Locating issues of authority, however, by itself is
not enough for a Kelsonian analysis of the whole process of law making
and law enforcement. 9
We do not imply that the law making process did not strive to attain
specific goals, but emphasise that the achievements of the rational ends do
not, by themselves, imply consistency and congruence of articulated
concerns and principles in the enacted norms. We also do not imply that
‘deliberations and discussions’ were not important to the processes of
criminal law, but suggest that in these dialogues within the official circles a
particular construction of persons, their habits, traits and fears, rather than
the emerging notions of crime, causation, and punishment, were more
important to the law making and law enforcing processes.
The peripheral nature of the rational edifice of the law making process
can be ascertained by looking into its different constituents. Our scrutiny
will show that the relevant facts, despite the empiricist underpinning of
those facts in the official deliberations, did not constitute the core of
criminal justice policy and the norms often did not relate to these factual
situations. 10 The disjunction and even, at times, the dichotomy between
the official facts and the promulgated norms will sustain our thesis of the
centrality of perceptions in the legal processes.
Various aspects of these disjunctions can be elaborated by (a) focusing
on the inter-relationship between the official notions of the deterrent
impact of punishment and the actual infliction of punishment, and (b)
highlighting the dichotomy between empirical evidence and norms
purporting to be based on such evidence. This article is, therefore,
organised around these facets of the disjunction to indicate the erratic and
random nature of law making in the early colonial Bengal.
Punishment as deterrence
Experience and observation as the principal determinants of actions are the
cornerstones of the post-Enlightenment construction of crime and
9
See the assessment of Poulantzas's treatment of Kelson's theory in Jessop B, Nicos
Poulantzas: Marxist Theory and Political Strategy, London 1985, particularly
chapter 2: "Existentialism, Marxism and Law", pp 26-50.
10
‘Facts’, ‘factual situations’ and similar expressions are used to reflect the official
statements concerning the situations -- we do not inquire in to the reality of the
facts and situations.
64 6:1&2 (2002) Bangladesh Journal of Law
11
Beccaria C., On Crimes and Punishments, 1764, translation by Paolucci,
Indianapolis 1963.
The impact of Beccaria's thesis in Fort William can be gauged from, for example,
Charles Poole's Report on his Examination of Doctrines of Mohamed as
applicable to the Crimes of Murder with a view to the formulation of a just scale
of punishment, in HMS vol 419, pp 3-79. In this Report, Charles Poole clearly
deployed the expressions of Beccaria (scale of punishment) and attempted to
refute Becaria's stance on the death sentence. In doing so, he quotes Beccaria at
length, at pp 24-5.
It is worth noting that the Report C Poole inferred that in Mohammedan Law
practically murder was the only crime which is punished by a sentence of death,
"whilst in England" he pointed out, ibid, at p 16, "from the high state of
civilization, nearly 170 offences have been enumerated for which a man is liable
to suffer death."
Home Miscellaneous Series above and below is referred to as HMS below, with
appropriate volume and page numbers
Erratic Law Making in the Early 19th Century Bengal 65
12
Firminger, W. K. (ed), The Fifth Report from the Select Committee of the House
of Commons on the Affairs of the East India Company, Calcutta 1917, vol 2,
Appendix No 11, at p 645.
13
Clearly emphasising the primary deterrent rationale of punishment. The
parenthesis is in the original.
14
"Minute by the Governor General on the Judicial Administration of the Presidency
of Fort Williams, dated 2 October 1815" in Modification of the Judicial system in
the Bengal Provinces, Fort William 1815, IOLR/W/1763, at p 65.
15
For example, the Resident at Delhi, C T Metcalfe wrote:
For my own part, I confess that the benefit of the community was the sole object
of all the punishments that I ever inflicted: which object was to be gained by
double means -- the actual removal of the individual from society by confinement,
and the operation of example to deter others from crime.
in Minutes of C T Metcalfe in Modification, above n 13, at p 56.
Similarly, Judge and Magistrate E Colebrook wrote on 17 September 1801: "The
proper aim of human punishment is the prevention of crime ..." in his "Report of
the Moorshedabad Court of Circuit on the Completion of the Jail Deliveries of
that Division for the first session of 1801" in Board's Collection, IOLR
F/4/128/2391 at p 17.
66 6:1&2 (2002) Bangladesh Journal of Law
Each volume in the series titled Board's Collection at the India Office Library and
Records is made up of several loosely connected documents such as extracts of
several letters received by the Board of Directors of the East India Company from
the Political Department at Fort William over a number of years. Some of these
volumes are paginated while others are not. This particular volume, i.e., 128,
contains tracts 2370 to 2393 and were recorded as received in London during
1802 to 1803.
Further reference to the Board's Collection will be in the form of BC, followed by
relevant volume, tract number and page number where tracts were paginated,
otherwise we shall refer to paragraph number.
16
William F P and McShane M D., Criminological Theory, New Jersey 1988,
particularly chapter 2: "Classical School".
17
The responses were signed by two judges each for the Courts of Appeal and
Circuit of Murshidabad (T Pattle & R Rocke), Patna (C Keating & A Seton) and
Benares (J Neave & P Treeves) divisions while the response from Calcutta
Circuit Court was signed by three judges (W A Brooke, H Ramus & C A Bruce)
and there were four signatories to the response from Dacca Division's Court of
Circuit (C F Martyn, W C Blaquiere, A Macklar & E Thorton). Judge and
Magistrates of 30 Zillahs also responded, making a total of 35 responses.
The questionnaire with the returned responses are in Bengal Civil Judicial
Proceedings of 8 July 1802 in IOLR P/147/55-57 and also printed as Papers
Relating to the East India Company, (Parliamentary Papers) London 1813, Part I
Erratic Law Making in the Early 19th Century Bengal 67
with the full title of "Copy of Interrogatories proposed by the Governor General
in Council in the Year 1801, to the Judges of Circuit and Zillah Judges in Bengal;
respecting the effects of the New System of Revenue and of Judicial
Administration established by the British Government in that Country; with the
Answers at large of those Judges, and of other official person to whom those
Interrogatories were sent".
I have used the printed version containing 290 pages. Subsequent references to
this document are in the form of PP, 1813, with appropriate page numbers.
It needs mentioning that the questionnaire sent to the Circuit Court was a little
different from the one sent to the Zillah Judges. However, the queries we have
analysed are same for both sets of questionnaire. See also, Fisch J, Cheap Lives
and Dear Limbs: The British Transformation of the Bengal Criminal Law,
Wiesbaden 1983, fn 155 at p 58.
18
PP, 1813, at p 110.
19
PP, 1813, at p 169. Judge and Magistrate of Zillah Moorshidabad also suggested,
at p 205, that the inhabitants of the Zillah were familiar with the norms of Koran
and Shastra, but not with the Company's Regulation.
20
C Keating and A Seton of the Patna of Court of Appeal and Circuit wrote:
As far as we can judge, the principal inhabitants within our jurisdiction have but
very faint and imperfect notions, either of principles of British jurisprudence or of
the laws of the country as they now stand...
in PP, 1813, at p 219. Similarly E Roberts, Judge & Magistrate of Sylhet
responded, albeit very precisely, at p 128: "By no means."
68 6:1&2 (2002) Bangladesh Journal of Law
Table 2:
YEAR PERSON
1783-94 1,671
1794-95 1,593
1795-96 1,885
1796-97 1,578
1797-98 2,170
1798-99 2,422
1799-1800 2,023
1800-01 2,120
in PP, 1813, at p 171.
30
PP, 1813, at p 171.
31
PP, 1813, at p 42. And the short assertion of the Judge and Magistrate of Nuddea,
at p 51: "In my opinion they are."
32
PP, 1813, at p 87.
33
PP, 1813, at p 238. Underline added.
Erratic Law Making in the Early 19th Century Bengal 71
"the natives, not capable of deciding right from wrong, take up arms in
his 34 defence; the country is thrown into a state of rebellion, and the
innocent suffers for the guilty." 35 Such a depiction of the people or the
understanding of the basis of their actions, not only casts doubt on the
formal rationality of underlying discourse in law making that is essential for
the enacted rules to be adjudged ‘modern and systematic’. It also negates
one other fundamental proposition of the modern law - the rationality and
free will of the individuals. If the individuals are denied the capacity to
balance the pain and pleasure of punishment and crime respectively, then
the edifice of the criminal rules as rational-modern measures against crimes
becomes superfluous. Rules enacted in the backdrop of such confusion
and denial can only be random and erratic.
We have indicated that some of the judges and magistrates ascribed
knowledge of rules and regulations to the ‘natives’. But we have also
pointed out how such knowledge is described as a cause of crime. J
Paterson, the Judge and Magistrate of Dacca Jelalpore thought that the
‘gomastas and certain natives’ of his jurisdiction were 'sufficiently
acquainted' with the Regulation "to make the law a stalking horse for the
purpose of fraud and oppression." 36 Thus, the opposite of the proposition
of 'no knowledge regarding laws' is also frequently seen as the cause of
facilitating or increasing crimes.
Such confusing and contradictory tenors of official discussion,
deliberation, and assessment cannot justify an analysis of these rules in
terms of their being conditioned and/or influenced by an inconsistent
approach or consideration. Consequently, the rules were often enacted
randomly.
34
W T Smith is referring to the superior/leader of the 'native gang' in whose defence
the followers will resort to arms.
35
PP, 1813, at p 261.
36
PP, 1813, at p 151.
37
The Court of Appeal and Circuit of Patna Division, for example, wrote on 19
November 1801 that the official records before 1796 "does not admit of our
72 6:1&2 (2002) Bangladesh Journal of Law
It needs mentioning that we have omitted the numbers for some other
crimes such as adultery, arson, fornication, forgery, rape, homicide etc
from the above table as the numbers of conviction for these crimes were
insignificant. For example, there were only 2 convictions for adultery in
each of the years 1797 and 1798, and none for the other years. Similarly for
forgery and rape there was only 1 conviction each during these 5 years.
There were only 4 convictions for homicide in 1797 and 5 for 1798 and
none for other years. The 'TOTAL' row in the above table, however,
included the number for all different categories of crimes omitted as a
separate entry. Another important point is that these are the figures for
those crimes, as the Report emphasised, for which an increase was noticed,
44
Compiled from PP, 1813, at p 227. The Judges, however, also mention, at p 221,
that "As it specifies the number of crimes of each class, as also the number of
delinquents convicted in each year at each station, our superiors will, we presume,
derive more information from a reference to it, than from general observations
submitted in any forms." Underline added for emphasis.
It is, thus, not clear whether the numbers are of convicts or crimes. A co-relation
between the number of crimes and conviction is possible. Despite the confusion,
it is important to note that these figures were central to the deliberations as the
Court pointed out that much more relevant information can be derived from these
than 'general observations submitted in any form.'
45
The row totals 592, but it does not reflect the column total as certain categories of
crimes, as explained in the text, have been omitted.
Erratic Law Making in the Early 19th Century Bengal 75
"since those offences in which a decrease has taken place are omitted, as
being less immediately connected with the question." 46
A later report from the Court of Appeal and Circuit of Patna also
provides figures of prisoners committed and tried for different districts of Patna
Division during 1808-1813. From this statement we can arrive at the
following table for the zillah of Behar: 47
Table 4: Prisoners committed and tried in Behar
Crime 1808 1809 1810 1811 1812 1813
Murder, Homicide 16 14 13 10 9 18
Robbery, Dacoity 14 8 14 23 13 7
Forgery, Coining 1 1 - 4 5 1
Burglary, theft 9 7 8 30 35 32
Boundary frays 2 6 6 6 7 -
Perjury 5 5 6 4 3 -
Miscellaneous 23 32 26 41 43 92
TOTAL 70 73 73 118 117 153
TOTAL OF ALL PERSONS COMMITTED FOR TRIALS IN BEHAR DURING
1808 - 13 = 604
46
PP, 1813, at p 222.
47
HMS, vol 775, at pp 20-21.
76 6:1&2 (2002) Bangladesh Journal of Law
Robbery 12 255 1 20 - -
Affray Assault 5 64 2 40 4 95
48
For stealing cattle, there was a total of 4 convictions during the 5 years from 1796
to 1800 in Behar. HMS, vol 775, at p 227.
49
As the table above indicates, the numbers for burglary was fairly constant over the
five year period.
50
PP, 1813, at p 249.
Erratic Law Making in the Early 19th Century Bengal 77
confirm them in their bad habits." 51 He also suggests that the "criminals
seldom or never reform in this country, [therefore] temporary
imprisonment is almost always insufficient." 52
Such perceptions of criminals and the proposed punishments can hardly
be seen to be based on the figures and statistics carefully and laboriously
compiled. This disjunction between the empirical evidence and suggestions
or proposals purported to be linked to such evidence is noticeable in
responses of other officials as well. The Judge and Magistrate of Patna, J S
Douglas also concluded that the number of crimes in his jurisdiction had
increased and particularly thefts were very frequent while housebreaking
and robbery "happens now and then." 53 The relevant figures for this zillah,
however, cannot be related to his proposition:
Table 6: selected numbers of conviction for the zillah of Patna: 54
CRIME 1796 1797 1798 1799 1800 TOTAL
Assault, Battery 8 26 19 -- 21 74
Burglary 3 3 9 4 -- 19
Robbery, Dacoity - 1 4 20 5 30
Murder, Accessory 1 1 5 1 1 9
Theft 90 28 31 41 40 230
TOTAL 119 63 88 82 83 435 55
The figures for 1798, 1799, 1800 are almost identical and can hardly
51
PP, 1813, at p 246.
52
PP, 1813, at p 249.
53
PP, 1813, at p 230.
54
Derived from PP, 1813, at p 226. Similarly, the figures of prisoners committed
for trial in the zillah of Patna during the later years of 1808-13 also do not
indicate any substantial increase in crimes. The following table for zillah of Patna
is also derived from HMS, vol 775, at p 20-21.
Table 6A: selected numbers of conviction for the zillah of Patna:
CRIME 1796 1797 1798 1799 1800 TOTAL
Assault, Battery 8 26 19 -- 21 74
Burglary 3 3 9 4 -- 19
Robbery, Dacoity - 1 4 20 5 30
Murder, Accessory 1 1 5 1 1 9
Theft 90 28 31 41 40 230
TOTAL 119 63 88 82 83 43554
55
See above n 44, for the discrepancy between and row and column totals.
78 6:1&2 (2002) Bangladesh Journal of Law
justify the image of rampant crime and lawlessness portrayed in the report
of the Magistrate.
Outside the Division of Patna, reports from zillahs of Backergunge
(Dacca Division), Nuddea (Calcutta Division), and Bhaugulpore
(Moorshedabad Division) included detailed statistics. J Wintle, Judge and
Magistrate of Backergunj had supplied the following table of number of
crimes committed in his jurisdiction during 1797 to 1800 and the first half of
1801.
Table 7: Figures of crimes for the zillah of Backergunj 56
CRIMES 1797 1798 1799 1800 1801
Murder 2 19 22 22 21
Dacoity 11 15 17 19 39
Dacoity and Murder 1 7 9 8 5
Theft 2 13 8 5 4
Perjury 2 1 8 -- 12
TOTAL OF ALL CRIMES 57 21 59 67 57 95
56
PP, 1813, at p 112.
57
We have lumped the insignificant numbers for other categories of crimes such as
receiving stolen goods, bribery, forgery, wounding and resistance of court's
authority together in the TOTAL OF ALL CRIMES.
58
PP, 1813, at pp 111-2.
Erratic Law Making in the Early 19th Century Bengal 79
CRIMES 1793 1794 179 1796 1797 1798 1799 1800 1801
Murder 6 10 5 7 4 6 9 6 3
Wounding 2 4 -- -- -- 6 3 3 --
Robbery 1 -- 1 -- -- -- -- -- --
Theft 30 51 25 65 21 40 22 35 48
Dacoity -- -- 2 1 1 4 3 11 7
TOTAL 39 70 47 98 36 63 39 57 60 60
At issue is not the fact that some of the reports did reflect their own
evidence. This congruence between the evidence and suggestion in some
of the reports do not detract from our proposition that these statistics,
figures and number were not pivotal to the law making process. Moreover,
the disjunction between ‘facts’ and proposals becomes more stark when we
look at suggestions by the judicial officials for future measures.
Assessing these suggestions for future measures (in response to the
second part of the query: to what cause do you ascribe the increase or
diminution), Fisch has drawn our attention to the fact that:
"[w]hether [sic] causes for the success or failure were given or proposals for the
future made, their tendency was always the same: to render the law more
severe, to improve the efficiency of the administration of justice and of the
police. 61
It could hardly be otherwise -- particularly if we scrutinise the
comments of the responding officials. As we have mentioned in the
previous chapter, the central tenets of the official deliberations often
59
PP, 1813, at p 190. The ‘total’' also includes numbers for other crimes such as
perjury, causing of abortion, setting fire to houses (28, 8, and 11 respectively over
the 9 years), as well those such as bribery, and ‘entertaining a thief in his service’
etc each of which are recorded to have been committed only once during these 9
years.
60
PP, 1813, at p 190. The #total$' also includes numbers for other crimes such as
perjury, causing of abortion, setting fire to houses (28, 8, and 11 respectively over
the 9 years), as well those such as bribery, and #entertaining a thief in his service$
etc each of which are recorded to have been committed only once during these 9
years.
61
Fisch J, above n 17, at pp 59-60.
80 6:1&2 (2002) Bangladesh Journal of Law
62
PP, 1813, at p 52.
63
PP, 1813, at p 52.
64
PP, 1813, at p 80.
65
PP, 1813, at p 80.
66
PP, 1813, at p 69.
67
PP, 1813, at p 73.
Erratic Law Making in the Early 19th Century Bengal 81
This above suggestion is forwarded, despite the fact that the same Judge
also claimed that "the capital crimes of all descriptions, and that of dacoity
in particular, have decreased considerably during the last two years". 68
The perceived need for more and more severe punishment often
obliterated the distinction between grades or categories of crimes, or
between different participants. The Judge and Magistrate of Backerganj
suggested C ".. all accomplices as well as principals in murder ... should be
sentenced to suffer death." 69 Similarly, different categories of crimes are
also not distinguished C same punishment may encompass different types
of crimes. S Middleton, the Judge and Magistrate of Jessore suggested:
... upon a robber or nightly theft being proved, the sentence should be never
less than seven years, and transportation for the term. People convicted of
murder, burning or other acts of inhuman cruelty, should be punished with
death; and this not to be inflicted solely on the person committing the act, but
the gang present and aiding ... 70
It was not only in responses to the official inquiries such as that of
Governor General Wellesely, but also on numerous other occasions
various judicial officials proposed various measures and offered suggestion
on some pretext or other. Many of these suggestions are so replete with
contradictions and disjunctions that the process of law making clearly
becomes whimsical, erratic and random. Judge E Colebrooke, on his report
of 17.9.1801 (on completion of the Moorshedabad Court of Appeal and
Circuit's tour of the zillah courts of the division) suggested far reaching
changes/amendments in the law to deal with dacoity. He apparently bases
his suggestion on the ‘fact’ of "undiminished prevalence of dacoity". His
‘fact’ of prevalence of dacoity is surmised in the following table. 71
68
PP, 1813, at p 69.
69
PP, 1813, at p 80.
70
PP, 1813, at p 13. Underline added for emphasis.
71
Compiled from BC, vol 128, tract 2391, p 4-5.
82 6:1&2 (2002) Bangladesh Journal of Law
Bhauglepore 3 5
Purneah 6 3
Dinajpore 16 11
Ramhur 6 14
Rajshahi 10 17
Moorshedabad 18 13
TOTAL 59 63
No of Prisoner held 371 293
The 'fact' in the above table hardly justifies the rhetoric of punishment
deployed by Judge E Colebrooke. From the above table, a nominal
increase in dacoity in 3 of the 6 zillahs under the Moorshidabad Division is
noticeable. It was not so much the increase in number of dacoity but the
mere 'prevalence' of it (only 3 in Bhauglepore and 6 in Purneah during the
year 1800, for example) seems to justify any measure against the crime.
These crimes, to Judge Colebrooke, seemed to justify any measure,
however unorthodox, as he proposes:
Crimes are not to be punished in proportion to their moral guilt but in
proportion to the necessity and difficulty of preventing them ... on the
principle that equal crime may undergo unequal punishments, or the lesser
crimes the greater punishment and on this principle the facility with which
any species of crimes is perpetuated and the difficulty of detecting the
offender, are reasons for aggravating the punishment. 72
Having, thus, established that the ease with which crime can be
committed and the difficulty regarding conviction should determine the
quantum of punishment, he proceeds to suggest: "... one more expedient,
the ultimato. Ratio Legum, the punishment of death" 73 not only for the
principals responsible for the crime, but the "whole gang in one
indiscriminate sentence of death." 74 Elsewhere in the report he reiterates
this suggestion by asserting that the sentence of death should be imposed
72
BC, at pp 21-21.
73
BC, at p 23.
74
BC, at p 28.
Erratic Law Making in the Early 19th Century Bengal 83
75
BC, at p 45.
76
HMS, vol 584, p 227, at p 228. Pages 227-251 of this volume contain the
Proceedings of the Judicial Department of 10.12.1800 on the trial and sentence of
Shams ul Dowla.
84 6:1&2 (2002) Bangladesh Journal of Law
77
HMS vol 584, at pp 228-29.
78
HMS, vol 584, at p 230.
79
HMS, vol 584, at p 231.
80
The records do not indicate the relationship between the two or the specific role
of Mirza Jaun Tuppish.
81
BC, vol 128, tract 2371, para 14.
82
Schacht J, An Introduction to Islamic Law, Oxford 1964, at p 187.
83
Fisch had pointed out that the absence of a death sentence did not mean that
Muslim rulers of Mughal India refrained from summarily executing their political
enemies. See, Fisch J, above n 17, at p 80.
Erratic Law Making in the Early 19th Century Bengal 85
89
HMS, vol 584, pp 46-7.
90
HMS, vol 584, p 243.
91
HMS, vol 584, at p 250.
92
HMS, vol 584, at p 251.
93
Id. Chatterjii N, "Shamsuddaulah's intrigues against the English", (1937) 53
Bengal Past and Present, p 31 provides some further details of what he terms as ‘a
dangerous conspiracy’. From this account we find that Zauman Shah, the ruler of
Kabul and Shaik Khulfaun, the Viceroy of Muscat, and some zamindars of Bihar
did undertake certain preparations to respond to Shams ul Dawla's appeal.
For the spelling of names, I have followed the BC and HMS, and not Chatterjii's
version which do not mention the trial and sentence.
Erratic Law Making in the Early 19th Century Bengal 87
94
Field C D, above n 84, at p 364.
95
Hay D, "Law and Property in Nineteenth century England” at p. 11, in Hay D,
Linebaugh R, Rule J G, Thompson E P and Winslaw (eds), Albion's Fatal Tree:
Crime and Society in Eighteenth Century England, London 1975.
88 6:1&2 (2002) Bangladesh Journal of Law
96
Bengal Judicial Consultation: Criminal, IOLR P/128/28, letter dated 21.5.1796,
at pp 46.
97
Ibid, at p 648.
98
Ibid, at pp 648-9.
99
Ibid, at pp 652-57, 662. Section 4 of this Regulation regarding pardon was
amended by Regulation XIV of 1810 -- A Regulation for defining the powers of
the Court of Nizamut Adawlut in cases of pardon and mitigation of punishment;
and for declaring the competency of the Courts of Circuit to admit prisoners to
bail in certain cases during a reference of their trials to Nizamat Adalat. Later,
Regulation X of 1824 -- A Regulation for modifying and amending the rules at
present in force in regard to the pardon of persons charged with or suspected of
criminal offences -- further amended the rules and this Regulation stayed in force
until the Repealing Act XVII of 1862. See Field C D, above n 84, at p 33, p 82
and p 122.
Erratic Law Making in the Early 19th Century Bengal 89
100
Such a theme is not necessarily confined to history of colonial law only. Laws
from outside were also imposed on many European countries -- ".. state law is an
imposition, but a progressively more powerful one, that cannibalises custom,
remaking it and redefining it (when not obliterating it) in the process" is Douglas
Hay's summation of this process in the context of English criminal law in his "The
Criminal Prosecuting in England and its Historians", (1984) 47 Modern Law
Review, p 1 at p 6, citing Gatrell V A C, Lenman B and Parker G (eds), Crime
and the Law: the Social History of Crime in Western Europe since 1500, London
1980.