The following
translation, by Dennis Nattkemper (edited by David Mirhady), completes the
translation of Harald Meyer-Laurin, Gesetz und Billigkeit im attischen
Process. The
translation of the first part of the work, by David Mirhady (corrected by
Dennis Nattkemper), is published in The Attic Orators,
edited by Edwin Carawan, in the Oxford Readings series
(forthcoming).[1]
V.
The Principle of Law and Equity in Legal Discourse
1. Dikaiotate Gnome
The Athenian dikasts swore, before the trial they were selected for by
lot, an oath concerning their performance as judges. The wording of the oath
included the duty to judge according to the laws [p. 29] and decrees of the
polis and, in cases when legal direction was not available, to decide according
to dikaiotate gnome
(Dem. 20.118 having sworn to judge according to the laws . . . and
concerning those things about which there were no laws to determine by the
dikaiotate gnome).[2]
In the literature, it has been repeatedly claimed that the judges were
in this way allowed to rule according to the dikaiotate gnome not only when a law was lacking but also
when the law allowed them no just decision. In truth, however, the oath will
have had the goal of subordinating the activity of the judges, like that of
every other office to which an Athenian citizen was chosen, to the rule of law.
As Wolff has said, the dikaiotate gnome was only Òa subsidiary means of jurisprudence, which
might be used when legal ordinances were lackingÓ (1962, 18).[3]
Such a regulation became necessary when there were no longer mandatory
rules of evidence, according to which the dikasts had to decide, and free
evaluation of evidence came to prevail. Since the laws, like witness
statements, documents, statements of slaves under torture, and oaths, procedurally
belonged to the atechnoi pisteis, there was a need for an explicit limitation of the
free evaluation of evidence in order to bind the judges to the laws. The oath
was consequently to uphold the otherwise superseded formal theory of evidence
with regard to the nomoi.
That the formulation of the oath was in fact related to the evaluation
of evidence becomes clear from the way it is mentioned [p. 30] in the sources.
It is significant that the sharp distinction between dikazein and krinein (ÔjudgeÕ and ÔdetermineÕ), which was once a
significant part of the formal evidentiary system, is still maintained in Dem.
20.118. It is the same distinction as that indicated, in the law of Gortyn,
when the judge had to make a judgement (dikadden) on the basis of a formal proof and when he could
determine (krinen)
without restriction according to his own assessment. In HerodasÕ Second Mime, a
decision according to gnome dikaia is compared to a judgement that does not rest on
witness statements (2.85 there being no witnesses, arbitrate the judgment by
just gnome). Moreover, in
the oath of the arbitrators of Knidos, it stood written on the stone of
Kalymna—if the restoration is correct—in one breath, that the judge
should decide according to dikaiotate gnome and not feel himself bound to a witness statement if
it seemed to him not to correspond to the truth: ÒI shall judge concerning the
things about which the litigants counter-swear according to the most just gnome and I will not judge according to a
witness if he does not appear to give true testimony.Ó[4]
The applications of law and of dikaiotate gnome were precisely set out through the oath
and separated one from another. The principle of the rule of law was not
limited by the dikaiotate gnome but complemented by it. Otherwise, any circumstances not foreseen in
the laws would not have been judiciable. An example of such a dispute, which
was conducted without a basis in law but according to dikaiotate gnome, is that of Mantitheus against Boiotus On
the Name (Dem. 39). It
probably involved simply a diadikasia over the rights to a name.[5]
[p. 31] There was apparently no law that regulated such rights. Before the
Heliasts, the speaker appeals therefore to the logos tou dikaiou (29) and requests a decision according to dikaiotate
gnome (40-1).
2. Arbitrariness
Despite the oath binding the judges to the laws, the sources often
characterize the actual exercise of judicial power as arbitrary and
unpredictable.[6] In view of
the frequency [p.32] of the accusations, there is probably no doubting that
there was a certain arbitrariness in the dispensation of justice.
Deliberate perversions of justice probably occurred primarily in the
increasingly frequent political trials. One of the few known examples in which
the dikasts allowed themselves to be guided by their passions is the trial
against Ctesiphon (Aesch. 3, Dem. 18). Aeschines, who acted as prosecutor, had
the letter of the law on his side. Nonetheless, he failed to convince the
judges and lost against Demosthenes, who argued for Ctesiphon. Because of its
high political importance, the outcome of the trial depended less on the
question of the legality of CtesiphonÕs decree. Rather, after the defeat at
Chaeronea, it was a political statement by the Athenians in support of the
anti-Macedonian party, of which Demosthenes was the leader, and against
PhilipÕs supporters, one of whom was Aeschines.
The infamous assembly in which the victorious admirals of the Battle of
Arginusae were summarily tried for neglecting to recover and bury the dead does
not really fall into this category.[7]
In this case, the trial itself was already illegal because the assembly did not
have a judicial function. Socrates, who happened to chair the proceedings,
unsuccessfully cautioned the Athenian citizens not to give in to arbitrariness
and political passion.[8]
On the
other hand, there are also cases in which the Athenians maintained a remarkable
loyalty to the laws. This is shown by the outcome of the eisangelia by Lycurgus against Leocrates. Leocrates
learned of the Athenian defeat at Chaeronea ahead of time and consequently fled
from Athens with his family and part of his wealth. When he returned after
eight years, Lycurgus had him arrested and tried, because, after the defeat
became public, legal decrees [p. 33] forbidding people to leave the city were
passed (Lyc. 1.16, see also 52-3). Despite the oratorÕs high renown, the suit
was dismissed because Leocrates had already left Athens when the decrees were
passed. Since the law was evidently not retroactive, the prohibition did not
apply to him.
The judges in DemosthenesÕ suit against Aeschines On the False
Embassy (Dem. 19, Aesch.
2) acted just as objectively. In the end, Demosthenes could not present any
concrete evidence for his accusations. However, the Athenians strongly
suspected Aeschines of being guilty, as shown by the blemish that followed him
afterwards and hindered his further political ascent. Nevertheless, he was
acquitted. Interestingly, Hyperides had previously sued Philocrates over the
same matter. The latter did not dare face the judges and avoided the trial by
fleeing.
From the cited examples, a certain tendency seems to emerge. The
possibility that a trial is judged according to extra-legal considerations is
especially considerable in cases that came to trial immediately following a
political event connected to the case. When the excitement had passed, on the
other hand, judgments were again made strictly in accordance with the laws.
This is also indicated by the speech by Isocrates Against
Kallimachos (Isocr. 18).
The orator feared political bias from the judges. At the same time, we learn
that no one before Kallimachos had brought a suit on the basis of incidents
from the time of the civil war (38: of whom no other has dared to bring such
a suit) and that it was
the first suit after the decree of the law of Archinos (1-2). On the other
hand, Lysias, after his return, but likewise still in the year 403 BC, had
unsuccessfully sued the informer against his brother Polemarchos, who was
executed by the Thirty.
Whether arbitrary decisions also extended to civil suits, in which the
public sympathies and the interests of the [p. 34] heliasts as citizens of the
city were far less touched upon[9],
cannot be investigated, as the outcome of private lawsuits is almost never
passed down. The proverbial Athenian penchant for trials[10]
expresses rather a certain trust into the dispensation of justice. Apart from
the undifferentiated statements of poets and thinkers, the orators only raised
such accusations in matters of state or criminal trials.[11]
The only exception, Isocr. 18.9-10, is from a case that has an obvious
political background, despite the emphasis on its private character.
Even assuming that the laws were occasionally deliberately not applied,
this says nothing about a dispensation of justice based on equity. On the
contrary, the more arbitrary judgments were made, the less room remained for
equity considerations.
3. Interpretation
Because the wording of the laws was archaic and kept partially unclear
deliberately by the lawgiver, as Aristotle reports, misunderstandings and
disagreements resulted that sometimes required an interpretation (Ath. Pol. 9.2). Some authors have concluded from
this that the Athenian courts reached a dispensation of justice based on equity
through an extremely free interpretation and application of the laws. The
generous handling of legal prescriptions is said to be especially noticeable in
regards to wills and contracts [p.35].
a) Wills
It has
been repeatedly assumed that the Athenian dikasts gave precedence to the claims
of the next of kin over heirs included in a will for reasons of equity. In this
argument, one of the Aristotelian Problems is wrongly brought in.[12] It reflects rather the judgesÕ fear of
being led to a wrong verdict by deception, rather than the principle of
annulling a will on grounds of equity in favour of the heirs not included in
the will: (Why is it that in some courts votes are given to birth rather
than to wills? Because itÕs impossible to lie about birth but only to reveal
what is true, but many wills have been proved to be false. Prob. 29.3 950b5ff)
As the only example from practical experience, Vinogradoff (1922 20ff)
cites the speech of Isaeus On the Estate of Cleonymus (Is. 1). However, analysis of the speech has shown
that the orator did not appeal to blood relation, but, as in all other cases of
the contestation of a will, to the volition clause in the law of wills. The
close kinship to and the friendship with the bequeather was probably only
mentioned as proof of the insanity of the testator.[13]
b) Contracts
The speech
of Hyperides Against Athenogenes is cited several times as a clear attempt to persuade
the judges to an equitable interpretation of contracts. The incorrectness of
this assumption is apparent in its toilsome use of analogies. The
interpretation of a contract clause is also treated in the pseudo-Demosthenic
speech Against Dionysodorus (Dem. 56). As the analysis has shown, a free interpretation was also
not demanded here; rather, the parties intended to outdo each other in terms of
the literal interpretation of the contractÕs text [p.36].
Both
speeches have an Òoverly fearful, formalistic clinging to the letter of the
lawÓ[14]
in common, which can also be observed elsewhere. It can only be explained with
the assumption that the courts tended to support whoever could most clearly
appeal to the laws. A clear proof of this is the defence of Theomnestos against
the dike kakegorias brought by LysiasÕ client Lysitheos (Lys.
10/11).
The
defendant admitted to accusing the prosecutor of killing his own father (Lys.
10.6, 21: (to have killed)).
However, he pleaded that in the law only very certain terms (aporrheta), in this case only the use of the word
ÒmurdererÓ (androphonos),
carry a penalty, none of which he used (Lys. 10.6).
This case
was jurisdictionally first assigned to a public diaitetes, who indeed agreed with the legal position
of Theomnestos and dismissed the suit. Upon the ephesis of the prosecutor, the suit came before
the court of heliasts. In his speech, the prosecutor points out that the
defendant would primarily call upon the letter of the law in his defence. In
response, he proposes ÒFor my part, gentlemen, I hold that your concern is not
with mere words but with their meaning, and that you are all aware that those
who have killed someone are murderers, and that those who are murderers have
killed someone. For it was too much of a task for the lawgiver to write all the
words that have the same effect; but by mentioning one he showed his meaning in
regard to them allÓ (Lys. 10.7).
One should
expect that this advice should sufficiently weaken the argument of the defence.
If, however, the orator still considers it necessary to refute repeatedly the
opposing view of the law and to use outdated formulations in old laws to show
the still valid meaning independent of wording (Lys. 10.15-20), then the only
logical conclusion is that the defence [p. 37] of Theomnestos must have been
well-founded and – significantly – that Lysias expected the dikasts,
as the diaitetes
already had, to rely in a positivistic way only on the terms indicated in the
laws.
Believing
in a far-reaching interpretation of the laws by the judges, some scholars have
believe that there is a considerable degree of jurisprudence among the Athenian
dikasts.[15] This was
convincingly opposed by the argument that the Athenian public courts consisted
of laymen who were chosen by lot from among the citizenship without any
professional qualifications. Their qualification merely depended on three conditions:
that they possessed the full rights of a citizen, had a minimum age of thirty,
and were free from state debt.[16]
Even if it is correct that some judges possessed sufficient knowledge of the
law and the ability to grasp legal problems, the possibility was low that a
unitary, much less progressive, notion of law could have formed within dikasteria consisting of up to several hundred men.
That possibility was further lowered, or made utterly impossible, because the
heliasts cast their votes without discussion.[17]
The question whether it is beneficial [p. 38] to trust so many citizens with
the role of judge in the dikasteria was already raised by contemporaries.[18]
The speech
of Demosthenes Against Aristocrates (Dem. 23) gives some insight into the development of
verdicts. The speaker had initiated a graphe paranomon and wanted to show with his speech that a psephisma brought by the defendant stood in conflict
with the laws of the polis. In order to weaken the anticipated defence of
Aristocrates, that many men already were accused of this but acquitted, he
cited that (95): that is no indication of the legality of his proposal;
there are (only his) many pretences, through which you have often been deceived. Demosthenes speaks about a deception of
the judges, because of which the accused in earlier trials were acquitted. What
the orator wanted to express with this has been cleared up by Wolff (1962 13).
It is not so much about Òthe previously accused gaining their acquittals via
fraudulent misrepresentations, but rather about how they managed to convince
the assembled court of the agreement of their proposed laws with the general
legal order of the city.Ó The Athenian dikasts received information not only
about the quaestio facti
but also about the [p. 39] quaestio iuris exclusively from the speakers.[19]
The prosecutor presented the laws in question. The defendant could at best
present opposing laws or use interpretation to prove the agreement of his
proposal with the laws of the polis. In contrast, there was no room left for an
interpretation of the laws by the judges.
4. Timema
With their
verdict, the dikasts only had the option of fully supporting the claim of one
of the two parties. If the trial was atimetos, there was only the possibility either to convict the
accused with the fine set down in the law or to acquit him fully. In an agon
timetos the judges could
only choose between the partiesÕ proposals. To seek the just verdict for the
specific case was a prerogative of the speakers in the litis aestimatio. As Paoli (1933 68) accurately remarked,
this resulted in the paradoxical situation in which the accused was obliged to
move for a fine against himself that was not too low, while the prosecutor
didnÕt dare to make excessive demands, so that the dikasts wouldnÕt support the
opposing timema rather
than the one that was too removed from the just middle.
In the
speech Against Nicostratos
(Dem. 53.15-8), Apollodorus mentions a case in which the judges wanted to
convince him to ask for the death penalty, which seemed to be unavailable to
them. He, however, had gone along with the defendantÕs motion for a fine of one
talent, so that the judges could only sentence him to that (18: and in the
assessment of penalty, while the dikasts were deliberating about imposing the
death penalty on him, I asked the dikasts not to do such a thing through me,
but I agreed to one talent, which is what they then imposed). In spite of the scepticism about the
details of ApollodorusÕ exposition, it can be seen that the judges, even when
the timema appeared
inadequate to them and they would have liked to deviate from it, nonetheless
were bound to it, unless one party adjusted its timema according to the judgesÕ wishes [p. 40].
The
commitment to the timema
was closely related to the principle of law. Famously, Aristotle rejected the
proposal of Hippodamas of Miletus to provide every member of the dikasterion with a writing tablet instead of a voting
stone, so that the dikasts could also partially sentence or acquit the accused
according to their interpretation (Pol. 2.5.8 1268b6-7). Aristotle argued that such judges
would no longer be dikasts, but rather diaitetai (arbitrators), of whom he says elsewhere that they
judge according to equity, unlike dikasts (Rhet. 1.13 1374b19ff.).[20]
Still in
the second century BC, the principle of law as a basis is clearly demonstrated
in the example of the standardization of discretionary decisions in the war
resolution law of Ephesus.[21]
After the end of a two-year war, this law regulated the liabilities of mortgage
debtors, who were granted a general deferment of payments at the onset of the
war, under consideration of the devaluation of their properties. It did not
intend, as Partsch (1909 263-4) showed, to reduce the rights of lenders.
Instead of the still common private embateusis, a regulated adjustment process conducted by state
judges, who had to take property devaluations into account, was mandated. They
were to address the creditorsÕ demands by considering not the current value of
the properties but rather the value at the onset of the war, and divide the
properties between creditor and debtor according to this measurement. Both
parties were to estimate the former value of the property independently of each
other and the judges were to support one of the two valuations. If the debtor
valued it too highly and the creditor too low, the judges were to conduct their
own valuation. This equitable and just valuation, Òwhich is not based [p. 41]
on positive law, but in the free and ÔbeautifulÕ discretion of the judges, is
granted them twice through the law, the second time through the resumption of
the first words, especially as something obviously exceeding their regular
mandateÓ (Pringsheim 1961 90-1).
The
inscription begins: The dikastai may, if the matter appears judiciable to
them but the farmer assesses
more and the lender less, assess as much as seems fair to them. The publishers of Recueil (1.30, ¤1) translate accurately: ÒIf the
judges believe that the case is not of a nature that would have to be decided
according to strict law, that the evaluation of the debtor is too high and that
of the creditor too low, they could estimate the amount themselves according to
equityÓ (trans. from French).
With the
permission of this free valuation, the possibility of decisions according to
equitable discretion was created for the first time, according to our sources.
Significantly, it required an express legal regulation that allowed the judges
to decide according to equity in one particularly set case, exceptionally under
disregard of the principle of law.
VI. Equity
Decisions of the Private Diaitetai
Aristotle
reports that the Athenians would have preferred to settle their legal disputes
in a court of arbitration, instead of turning to a dikasterion (Rhet. 1.13 1374b19ff: to prefer to go to arbitration rather than the law
court, for the arbitrator keeps equity in view, whereas the dicast looks to the
law, and the reason why an arbitrator is appointed is that equity might prevail. The sentence confirms our thesis that the Athenian
dikasts were subject to the principle of law. Beyond that, it contains a
reference to the dikastsÕ authority for free decisions.
By diaitetes Aristotle does not mean, as Steinwenter (1925 106) has
convincingly shown, the diaitetes klerotos, who was obligatory for private suits in the 4th
century BC [p. 42], with exception of the Òmonth-suitsÓ and inheritance diadikasiai, which according to general assumption
served mainly to relieve the dikasteria.[22]
The verdict of a public arbitrator was therefore not suitable for
circumventing a trial before the dikasts, because the dispute could be referred
to a dikasterion upon
the ephesis of the
losing party. In contrast, the decisions of the private arbitrators, regardless
of whether the parties agreed on a single arbitrator or on a council, were not
subject to the scrutiny of a dikasterion.[23]
The private arbitration courts were composed of relatives, friends, and trusted
representatives of both parties. Consequently, their very composition
predestined them to address both partiesÕ interests justly. Above all, they
could digress from the Timema of the parties and propose their own solutions
and compromises.[24]
Insight
into the creation of a diaita is mainly provided by IsaeusÕ speech for MeneklesÕ inheritance (Is.
2.30). There, he says about the members of the council of arbitrators: those people told us that, if we were to entrust them to
decide the rights of the case, they would refuse to act as arbitrators, for
they did not wish to quarrel with either party; if, however, we would allow them to decide what was in the
interest of all, they said they would arbitrate. Correspondingly,
this passage can only mean: Before taking on the mandate, they asked the
parties whether a dutiful decision strictly following the law would be required
of them. In this case, they would refuse to act as arbitrators because they
would not want to antagonize one of the contesting parties. If, however, they
were allowed to propose a solution agreeable for everyone involved, they would
agree to accept the mandate [p.43].
Such a
solution according to the sumpheron (beneficial) would mean nothing less than leaving
aside strict law.[25]
However, despite their far-reaching freedom in terms of the form of the trial,
the private diaitetai,
just like the state judges, apparently adhered strictly to law, unless the
parties expressly allowed them to make a decision according to equity.[26]
Whether
the arbitrators always acted as in the case mentioned above, maybe even because
of a legal prescription, cannot be determined. It seems, however, that the law
was dominant when they had to decide strictly by law. This is also shown in ¤58
of the third speech against Aphobos (Dem. 29). Before the arbitrators made a
decision, they indicated that, if they had to decide under oath, they would
have to convict the accused for neglectful custodianship. Analogously, ¤21 of
the speech against Phormion (Dem. 34) mentions that the arbitrator wanted to
vote for the accused, who could not present any evidence, however. On the other
hand, the prosecutor could invoke the syngraphe. Since the diaitetes therefore would have had to
accede to the suit, he refused to decide and referred the parties to the
courts.
In this
manner, the refusal of Dionysodorus to agree to a private court of arbitration
can finally be explained [p. 44] (Dem. 56.18). One would have expected him
especially, because he was in opposition to the letter of the syngraphe, to want to pay interest only until Rhodes
rather than until Athens and so, according to the speakerÕs words, did not
trust in to dikaion but
wanted diapeiran lambanein, to have preferred an arbitrator to an appearance before court. In
truth, however, the prosecutors appeared to favor an arbitral decision, which
is understandable when they could trust that the diaitetes would sentence the defendant to pay as
long as they insisted on strict compliance with the contract and consequently
with strict law (Dem. 56.18: who would most
certainly condemn him to pay the money.)
The
categorical duty of the diaitetai to rule according to strict law, and their merely
exceptional authority to decide according to equity with the permission of the
parties, can be traced into the Hellenistic period.
On the
stone of Kalymna from the end of the 4th century BC, which includes an
honorary decree for judges from Iasos, three types of activities of the judges
were emphasized. It is said that they resolved (the dispute) after
persuading the opposing parties, arbitrated to the benefit of both parties,
(or) judged by vote according to the decree of the king and the laws.
The first
and third activity obviously signify the proposal of a settlement and the
decision by strict law. Here, only the meaning of ÒarbitratedÓ (diaitan) is interesting. Steinwenter made it
probable that here there has to be seen a function of the guest judges that
lies between the other two. He considers it to be an acting of the judges as
diaitetai according to equitable discretion. If this is correct, there must
have been very clearly defined criteria for when the arbitral decision is a diaitan and when a krinein (to judge). The inscription itself says
nothing about this, but an obvious explanation is that the diaitan depended on the agreement of the parties.
If there was no agreement, the guest judges had to rule according to strict
law: judged by vote according
to the decree of the king and the laws [p.45].
This
assumption appears to be confirmed in the text of the honorary decree of Keos
from the 3rd century BC.[27]
It is said about the judges sent by the Ptolemaic governor Philokles that they,
apart from the diakrinai
and dialusai, attempted
to resolve most of these disputes well and beneficially by a preliminary
referral (to arbitration) for those who made a referral both privately and
publicly, through the polis, but those [transactions] (?) that they were
compelled to judge without a preliminary referral, for many [theymade just
judgements] (?) concerning most things. Despite the serious damage to the text, it can still
be seen that the guest judges, in those cases in which they were empowered
through a ÒreferralÓ (epitrope) by the appellants, could make an equitable decision, but were
otherwise forced to rule according to strict law: they were compelled to
judge.
VII.
Influences of Theory on Forensic Practice
The
results of this analysis are also supported in the other literary legal
sources. An influence of philosophical equity-theory on positive law is not
visible. Rather, the analysis of the sources shows that the poets and
philosophers always insisted on unconditional adherence to the laws. At the
same time, the notion of equity appeared to be completely unknown to them until
Plato. If that is the case, the notion is even less likely to occur among the
people and hence in the legal assemblies.
Insofar as
the works of tragedians of the 5th century BC show the potential
clash between two conflicting laws, they are only concerned with which one has
the higher moral weight. As Wolf (1950 254-5) has shown, even SophoclesÕ Antigone is not about the conflict between ius
strictum and ius aequum; the problem lies rather in the dialectic
[p.46], in the inner divergence of the nomos agraphos that Antigone and Creon appeal to. Here,
as towards the end of AeschylusÕ Seven against Thebes (1032ff.), Antigone does not resort to
equity reasons to excuse her behavior, but insists on her inviolable sacral
right to the burial of the dead.
The
different philosophical schools also did not develop a doctrine of equity. For
the Pythagoreans, justice consisted of pure retribution.[28]
The Stoics demanded strictest adherence to the laws, and for the Socratics, dikaion was also identical to nomimon.
Socrates sacrificed his life to this ideal, because he felt obligated to
accept the sentence that was felt to be wrong, but that was the result of a
lawful trial. During his defence at court and after the sentencing, when
talking to friends who wanted to convince him to flee from jail, he repeatedly
emphasized that the nomos
had to be obeyed.[29]
How close
the Socratics came to the notion of equity, without recognizing it as a legal
problem, shows the well-known assignment given to young Cyrus[30]:
A big boy with a coat that is too small takes away a little boyÕs oversized
coat and instead gives the boy his own, smaller one. When Cyrus found that the
result was just, he was told that as a judge he had to decide the legal
question, not which coat fits which boy. The instruction culminates in the
phrase that dikaion
corresponds to nomimon
and therefore judgement has to made according to nomos [p. 47].
ÒFor the
first time in western legal philosophyÓ (Wolf 1950/56 2 65), the nomou
akribeia (strictness of
law) was put in contrast with the logon orthotes (correctness of words) by Gorgias. It is telling that
such considerations found their beginning among the sophists. They questioned
and qualified all outdated beliefs and values. Since the early sophists already
saw one of their primary tasks as the education of students in rhetoric,
especially in forensic eristic, it made sense that they also submitted the essence
and continuance of the law to their critical examination (Gorgias 482C ff.). Already Protagoras promised to
make the lesser argument the greater and Gorgias allegedly advertised his ability to make
the worse claim appear as the better claim before a court (Gorgias 453A – 455A).
The fact
that the sophists, for the first time, put epieikeia in relation to the law, also has to be
understood under this aspect. Again it was Gorgias, who in the Epitaphios, the memorial speech for the Athenians who
died in the Peloponnesian war, contrasted the epieikes with the dikaion.[31] He praised the Athenians for having
preferred merciful indulgence to complacent justice, to praon epieikes to authades dikaion. Through logon orthotes they overcame nomou akrikeia and helped theiotetos kai koinotatos
nomos to victory. In this,
scholars have seen the anticipation of the evidence pairs of aequitas
– ius and verba
– voluntas. By doing
this, the sophist, as Wolf claimed, Òanticipated AristotleÕs notion that the
distributive, normative dike of the laws still needed to be amended by a retributive dike, because otherwise the unique, special,
unexpected case wouldnÕt be done true justiceÓ (1950/56 2 67).
However,
the method with which Gorgias wanted to reach this result already has nothing
in common with the Aristotelian tenet of epieikeia. The sophist reached it through the logou
orthotes: the parties, who
initially relentlessly insisted on the right afforded to them by the nomou
akrikeia, had to be
persuaded by a skilled orator [p. 48] that they were wrong. Thus they would be
ready to compromise and reconcile, and the epieikeia is realized through the art of the orator.
So
understood, epieikeia
is founded only on appearance; it is not the result of justice, but of
rhetorical persuasion. It becomes exclusively the goal and purpose of the
successful orator. Hence, the sophists also had not yet developed a notion of
equity per se. Even if they already made rudimentary steps towards it, the
unanimous refusal that met their views of the law shows that their environment
reacted with an utter lack of understanding. They were consistently accused of
using their teachings to replace the strict validity of the laws with
rhetorical skill. The criticism ranged from Euripides (Bac. 890ff.) to Aristotle.[32]
It was an especially recurring and popular theme in comedy.[33]
The
contrast between abstract legal rules and concrete cases as a problem of
justice is first seen in Plato. However, although he clearly recognized that
the law could not regulate everything, Plato nevertheless put unmitigated
adherence to the laws in the foreground of his legal doctrine.[34]
Finally,
Aristotle also adhered to this principle in his doctrine of justice, developed
in the 5th book of the Nicomachean Ethics.[35] Alongside his strongly positivistic
perception of law, he put the doctrine of epieikeia. As the following analysis will show, he
did not intend with this an improvement on [p. 49] positive law but only a
purely ethical education of the individual toward good. In the 5th
book of the Nicomachean Ethics, he distinguishes between two kinds of justice, the universal (to
katholou dikaion) and the
particular (to en merei dikaion). The former includes all
state laws that are generally binding for the people, the latter the rules that
concern the relationships among individuals. This latter group is further
divided into distributive (dianemetikon) and corrective (diorthotikon) justice, both of which still remain in
the sphere of law. After Aristotle defines the just as the legal in this way,
he concludes his investigation of the essence of justice and injustice (Nic.
Eth. 5 1133b29ff.).
Subsequently,
he becomes concerned with Òthe relatively irrelevant problem, compared to the
gargantuan issue of the aequitas, of whether one could do injustice to oneselfÓ
(Dirlmeier 1956 434 n. 118, 2). In this context, he uses the word epieikes to label someone who is willing to demand
less than he is entitled to (Nic. Eth. 5 1136b 20: for the equitable man takes less).[36]
Then he follows with an investigation of the essence of epieikeia.[37]
Starting
with the problem that the written law, because of its generalized wording,
could not achieve a correct ruling for some individual cases, the philosopher
gives the following definition in Nic. Eth. 5 1137b26: and this is the nature of the
equitable: a correction of law where it is lacking because of its universality; so epieikeia is superior to some forms of dikaion but not to dikaion per se.
In this
respect, the words of Aristotle represent exactly what we understand by equity
today. However, his conclusion [p. 50] cannot be seen independently of the
context he puts it in. While the modern term ÒequityÓ is connected to legal
practice, the Aristotelian epieikeia is
related to the epieikes anthropos, about whom the philosopher wants to explore whether
he inflicts injustice on himself through his placableness. Consequently, the
conclusion mentioned above did not result from a specifically juristic
discussion, but rather as the name for the behaviour of the Ògenerous manÓ, of
whom it is said in conclusion that his yielding behaviour is in accordance with
justice (Nic. Eth. 5
1137b34-38a3 It is plain from this who the equitable man is, for he chooses
and does such things; he is not exacting in a bad sense, but takes less, although
he has law as an aid; he is equitable and the state of mind is equity, being a
kind of justness and not a different state of mind.).
This epieikeia
is certainly not meant as
a legal term, but shows itself as a virtue, as the inclination to waive a right
that someone is formally entitled to, but that one, if one were to act as an
objective lawgiver, would not sanction and thus also should not lay claim to if
accidentally accorded it by the law because of the lawÕs necessary
generalization and imperfection.[38]
Aristotle
again treats the epieikes in detail in the first book of the Rhetoric. It has been claimed that he there gave it
the special meaning of equity in the juristic sense, unlike in the Ethics. This assumption is already weakened by
the fact that it is not clear why the philosopher, when looking for a word to
denote the correction of the legal rights, should have chosen a word that he
himself had already given another meaning and that otherwise was not used in
this sense either before or after him. More recent work has clearly shown that
the meaning of epieikes
always remained in [p. 51] the area of the moral, the virtuous, and the
placable.[39]
Because of
the completely consistent usage of epieikes, a double meaning that only appears in Aristotle is
unlikely. In addition, the double meaning is also factually not justified
because of the unmistakable similarity of his elaborations on the essence of epieikeia
in the fifth book of the Nicomachean
Ethics and in the chapter
13 of the Rhetoric.
In both sources,
it is assumed that the law could not do justice to every individual case
because of its generalized formulation, regardless of whether it was left vague
intentionally or unintentionally by the lawgiver, or whether an exhaustive
regulation was not possible because of the multitude of nuances (Nic. Eth. 5 1137b13ff. and Rhet. 1.13 1374a13-4). Both passages concern the
question, which is affirmed, of whether a trial that goes beyond the purely
legal can even be just. Such behavior is called epieikes.
However,
the concordance of thoughts reaches even further. In the Rhetoric, as in the Nicomachean Ethics, the recognition of epieikes leads to the epieikes
anthropos (Rhet. 1.13 1374b15 If
then our definition of equity is correct, it is easy to see what things and
persons are equitable or not.) This is followed by the known
examples of what epieikes is
and how to recognize the epieikes anthropos.
From a
perspective of legal history, it has already been stressed that the examples
represent a continuous chain of thoughts. However, the driving thought cannot
be what we understand under juristic equity, as can already be seen in
AristotleÕs [p. 52] use of the term epieikes to denote behaviors that are unrelated to the sphere
of law. The only thing they have in common is the conduct of a decent man. Only
thus can the example that the epieikes would rather turn to an arbitrator than to a court,
since the arbitrator considered to epieikes (Rhet. I.13; 1374b19) be included, which is often noted as
falling outside the schema.[40]
If the private diaitetai
only were allowed to deviate from strict law when they were expressly allowed
to, this example indeed indicates the epieikes anthropos. The passage primarily addresses the conflicting
parties with the challenge to allow epieikes to be applied and thus appeal to an arbitrator rather
than to a court, where it was excluded.
The
Aristotelian notion of epieikeia confirms the insight that Òliterary documents such
asÉthe fifth book of AristotleÕs Nicomachean Ethics or chapter 13 through 15 of the first book
of his RhetoricÉrepresent
nothing more than a casual interest in such matters of the lawÓ (Wolff 1945
101-2). There is also no proof elsewhere that the Greeks ever attempted to
comment on especially legal problems with scientific treatises.[41]
This proves that it was not the intention of the philosophers to work towards
an improvement of the legal institutions of the polis. Rather, they were
concerned with the ethical upbringing of men to a virtuous life, even when they
talked about legal matters and thereby intended not just to educate their
students in the art of forensic rhetoric. Aristotle expressly confirms this
assumption at the end of the 5th book of the Nicomachean Ethics (Nic. Eth. 5.11 1138b14-5): let this be the account of justice and the other moral
virtues. Even the mere possibility that a legal
notion of equity developed by the Greek thinkers influenced the positive law
can therefore be largely dismissed [p. 53].
The first
traces of a consideration of equity perspectives in the decision of legal
matters can be found in the law of Ptolemaic Egypt. However, they
characteristically occur outside the sphere of the dikasteria, and whether a philosophical influence
affected them is not only not evident, but even unlikely.
The most important proof is the royal
Prostagma Mich. I 70 (SB 4.7447), decreed upon a
petition by Zenon in the year 237 BC. There, it says (ll. 6ff): If he [Zenon] has become
guarantor for the appearance of Kallias against Eukles, once he has produced
the person, let him be released from the (penalty of) lateness; according to
the same (provisions), also let
whosoever guarantees (a personÕs) appearance, having produced the person, be
released from the guarantee
and not be barred (as a result) of the lateness.[42]
With this
ruling, the king determined that, in the concrete case, Zenon could free
himself of the already due duty of accountability for a paramone bond, if he could still present the
principal debtor, even belatedly. At the same time, the monarch ordered the
ruling to likewise apply to future, identical cases.
Tellingly,
Zenon had not applied to a dikasterion for this ruling, but directly to the king, who didnÕt
present his decree in the form of a sentence in a concrete legal dispute, but
as a generally binding royal order.
Justifiably,
Wolff sees this as an equitable decision, Òthat could not have been easily made
by a court, which would have had to decide based on the clause, containing a
set deadline, of a mortgage documentÓ (1962 11).
P Ent 54 (M. Chr. 130) from the year 218 BC offers another hint of a
potentially equitable decision. The motion is based on the following case: The
petitioner, an Egyptian priest called Petoys, had leased the kleroi of the apparently Greek defendants Lacharas and his son Alexander.
A syngraphe about this, which was signed by
witnesses and the parties, was placed with the Monograph. [p.54] Only the
sealing of the document was postponed because of the late hour. Subsequently,
the lessee also received a so-called seed loan from the lessors and farmed the
land. When he then demanded that they make good for the inadvertently omitted
seal, they refused and evicted him from the kleroi, claiming that the leasing contract was void because of the missing
seal. The petitioner opposed this and appealed to the king (ll. 9ff.): direct
Diophanes the general to write to Stratios, the epistates, to send [Lachares
and son] to Diophanes to be judged on my claims, and if true, not to permit
them to eject me from the farm or to harvest [the fields Petoys sowed] until
the matter is resolved
For us,
the subscription by the strategos, which was first deciphered by GuŽraud (1930 132), is
of particular importance (l. 14): To Stratios. Certainly, reconcile them; but if not, send them to me so
that they may be judged by the proper tribunal.
Before the
koinodikion,[43] normally appropriate for the parties, the
petitioner obviously had little hope to succeed with his claim, since the court
was bound to strict law and therefore would have had to decide based on the
obvious formal voidness of the contract. In order to help the lessee, the strategos ruled that the decision of the case, even
if he himself didnÕt want to make it, should at least be reached not by the koinodikion, but by kriterion (tribunal). This could mean either the
Chrematists or the court of strategoi. In any case, in order for the subscription of the strategos
to make sense, it would
have needed to refer to a court with greater freedom of decision than a dikasterion.
In both of
the cited cases, reasons of equity are not indicated by a single word. Against
the possibility that the influence of a philosophical notion of equity
nevertheless took hold [p. 55] here speaks above all the special form in which
the decisions were made. In the first case, the decision was made by an
authoritarian order and in the second case it was expressly taken away from the
responsible dikasterion
and referred to a royal authority. This striking consistency indicates that a
Òroyal word of authorityÓ (Wolff, 1946, p. 11) was required, which was based on
the absolute ruling power of the Hellenistic monarch and only accorded to the
king or a royal authority.
The
Aristotelian epieikeia
appears to enter the courts only much later. PringsheimÕs research (1921 643ff,
1931 185ff, 1932 78ff) shows us that it was taken up by Byzantine jurists and
began its triumphal procession onto the area of the law as aequitas.
[1] Meyer-Laurin gives copious references to previous scholarship. These have been omitted, except where he makes specific references to them in the text or where there is discussion of their positions in the footnotes.
[2] [=99] See also Is. 11.6; Isoc. 18.34; Hyp., Eux. 40; Dem. 24.149ff., 39.40, 57.63, 58.36; the Delphic Amphictionies IG 2.545; Collitz-Bechtel II/2501; Syll. 145.
[3] [=101] On the other hand, Ruschenbach (1957 266) believes that the wording of the judgesÕ oath Òconcerning matters about which there are no laws, to judge by the most just gnome,Ó is superfluous, because the individual laws were partly formulated in such a way that they were able to encompass all possible cases.
[4] [=104] Syll.4 953; Recueil 1.159; Collitz-Bechtel III/3591.
[5] [=105] The term amphisbetein, characteristic for a diadikasia, is used twice in the speech (11 for these must happen when we ÔdisputeÕ over an office or something else, 28 at that time you did not suppose you had any connection even with my tribe, how could you ÔclaimÕ to be related to my grandfather?). Gernet 1954/57 12ff. and, most recently, Furkiotis 1962 12, 41ff. identify the case as a dike blabes. Gernet cites in particular 5: how much damage he did, first to me and then also to you, I shall show. . . The use of the word blaptein gives no indication, however, for the use of the dike blabes. Cf. Pringsheim 1953, 53 n.1. Furkiotis 36ff. even believes that the speech appeals to an absolute right to a name, which was recognized by the Greeks. However, this appears to follow modern legal thought too closely and does not do justice to the archaic character of ancient Greek law. In particular, it is inconceivable that, as the scholar thinks, a dike blabes could be used to file for injunctive relief. This suit was always for the sentencing to a fine for damage, but did not grant anything like a preventive legal protection against an imminent limitation of absolute rights.
[6] [=106] Thucydides 3.38.4ff.; Plato, Gorgias 515E; Apol. 28A; Crito 46-46C; Nomoi IX 876b-e; Xen. Apol. 4; Aristophanes, Achar. 375-6, 686; Knights 1356ff.; Wasps 550ff., 579ff. Collected in Frþnkel, 1877.
[7] [=109] It was a panhellenic custom, rather than law, to ensure the honorable burial of the fallen, even if it required a new campaign. Cf. Euripides, Supp. 670ff.; Helen 1241.
[8] [=110] Plato, Apology 32B
[9] [=115] Lys. 21.12, Dem. 24.192f. For the partly different development of criminal and civil proceedings see Steinwenter, 1925 and Wolff, 1946.
[10] [=116] Aristophanes, Peace 505; Birds 40-1.
[11] [=117] Lys. 25.3, 30.1; Isocr. 7.33-4, 54, 8.129-30, 15.142, 18.9-10; Dem. 20.166, 21.189, 23.206.
[12] [=121] Cf. Is. 1.41 and Aristophanes, Wasps 583ff.
[13] [=122] See also Is. 2.19, 6.21, 29; Dem. 48.56. Cf. Vinogradoff 1922 67.
[14] [=125] Wolf, 1950/1956, III 167.
[15] [=128] Gernet 1955 67; Vinogradoff 1922. Calhoun 1944 31ff. also still overestimates the legal education of the dikasts.
[16] [=129] This may not have disqualified the dikasts from having an understanding of legal matters, especially if they could have made some experiences in other public offices before being elected judges. See Pringsheim 1950 5; Calhoun 1944 35-7; Wolff 1945 103.
[17] [=130] Aristotle (Pol. 2.5.8 1268b10-11) rejects the proposal by Hippodamas of Miletus, that the judges should discuss the decision with each other, by pointing out that most lawgivers intended to exclude precisely this possibility: but it is not practicable in the law-courts, but the contrary to this is actually provided for by most lawgivers, who prohibit consultation between the dikasts. See Zepos 1953 376-77.
[18] [=131] Pseudo-Xenophon, Ath. Pol. 3.7. However, a reform of the existing system is discarded in 3.8. See Wolf 1950/56 152. Bonner-Smith 296 Jones 125 and Ruschenbusch, Historia 6 1957 262 consider the large popular courts in appropriate, since the family relationships described in the speeches are so complicated that one could only understand them with the help of genealogical tables. They refer to the statementof the speaker in Dem. 43.18, that he had intended to show the court a family tree, but had abandoned his plan because only part of the dikasts could have seen the sign. On the other hand, the cityÕs inhabitants at that time almost all knew each other - unlike modern readers - and were largely familiar with family relationships. See Is. 1.41: For you all know what a family relationship is, and it is impossible to misrepresent it to you, Aristot., Prob. 29.3 950b5-7: itÕs impossible to lie about birth but only to reveal what is true.
[19] [=133] Pringheim 1950 2: ÒThe rule was: iura non novit curia.Ó
[20] [=138] Zepos (1953) correctly emphasized that the change proposed by Hippodamas would have satisfied the demands of equity.
[21] [=139] Syll. 364; Recueil I 30ff.
[22] [=144] Hirzel 1900 58-9 disagrees, claiming that the public diaitetai were understood as an organ of equity.
[23] [=146] Isocr. 18.11; Pollux 8.57; cf. Steinwenter 1925 79 and 103.
[24] [=147] This follows from Aristotle, Polit. 2.5.8 1268b6-7.
[25] [=148] Steinwenter 1925 107 accurately points out that the contrast dikaion - sumpheron corresponds to the pair dike – epieikes. On the other hand, Lipsius (1905/15 224) believes that the realization should not go towards the just, but towards what is useful for all parts. This literal interpretation, however, does not logically result in a genuine contradiction between dikaion and sumpheron, which has to be alluded to here. Jones 1956 132 juxtaposes the Òstrictly legal aspects of the questionÓ with the Òmost advantageous course to be adopted in the circumstances.Ó
[26] [=149] See Steinwenter 1925 105ff. His research refers comparatively to the arbitrator in French law and especially to the development of the classical Roman law to Justinian law (Digest 4.8.27.2; 17.2.71), which brought arbitration closer to the state-run trial, limiting the arbitrator to strict law (CJ 7.45.13; 2.3.29.2; Nov. 82.11).
[27] [=155] IG. 12.5; 1065.8ff. See Steinwenter 1925 147-8.
[28] [=157] See the criticism Aristotle directed towards the Pythagorian notion of law, Nic. Eth. 5.5 1132b21ff. to some reciprocity seems just without qualification, as the Pythagoreans claim. See also MM I.33 1194a29ff. Cf. Vinogradoff 1922 69-70.
[29] [=159] Plato, Apology 1D, 29A, 35C; Crito 50A ff.; Xenophon, Mem. 4.4.19ff.
[30] [=160] Xenophon, Cyr. 1.3.17; see Hirzel, 1907; Weiss, 1923; Wolf 1950/1956; Jones, 1956.
[31] [=164] A significant portion of this speech has survived, see Diels-Kranz, 1959.
[32] [=169] Rhet. 2.24 1402a23ff.; cf. Wolf, 1950/56.
[33] [=170] Eupolis fr. 146, 160 in Meineke, 1847. See also fr. 95. Aristophanes, Clouds 114ff., 657, 888; Acharnians 705; Birds 1448-9.
[34] [=172] Republic 2 359A; Epist. 8 354E. See Jones 1956 68-9; Michelakis 1953 6ff.
[35] [=173] Nic. Eth. 5 1129a35-6, 1129b11ff.
[36] [=176] See also Nic. Eth. 5 1138a1.
[37] [=177] ÒIn order to avoid the easily misunderstood ÔequityÕ (Billigkeit),Ó Dirlmeier translates epieikeia as
Òbenevolence in justiceÓ (GŸte in der Gerechtigkeit).
[38] [=179] Salomon 1937 71ff. correctly emphasizes that the principle of nomos-justice was not undermined by epieikeia. Michelakis 1953 is less clear, however.
[39] [=182] Radin 1934 214ff.; Michelakis 1953 28ff; Stoffels 1954 17ff, 59ff . In addition, it should be noted that epieikeia and epieikes were also not used as juristic terms in the language of the papyri; cf. SB 2.4513.3, 3.6185.11, 6817.4, 4.7439.9, 7475.9, 5.7518.16, 8513.3, P Soc 86.10, P Lond. 231.10, P Lips. 35.18, P Mon 8.6, P Masp 151.188. On the other hand, the term anepieikes appears to have a specific juristic meaning in P Giss. 39, 3-4 and SB 2.5231.6; 5275.7, but also not the meaning of ÒinequitableÓ; see Pestman 1961 72 n.4. Preisigke 1921 s.v , however, translates anepieikes as Òinequitable, relentlessÓ.
[40] [=185] Rhet. 1.13 1374b19.
[41] [=187] See Wolff (1945), in opposition to such assumptions by Calhoun (1944) and Radin (1934).
[42] [Thanks to Edwin Carawan and Josh Sosin for helping in my attempt to translate this passage from the Greek. DM]
[43] [=192] The koinodikion was responsible for legal conflicts between Greeks and Egyptians. See Seidl, 1962; Wolff, 1962.