Magna Carta: A Commentary on the Great Charter of King John With an Historical Introduction
chapter 15 some protection against their mesne lords, they received none
against the claims of the king. The Charter affected not national “taxation,” but merely feudal dues. (3) The scant measure of protection afforded did not extend even to all Crown tenants. The king’s villeins were, of course, excluded; and so were even freeholders whose tenure was other than that of chivalry. Socage tenants were left liable to carucage and other exactions, tenants in frankalmoin (among them the wealthy Cistercian monks) to forced contributions from the wool and hides of their sheep, while the right of the Crown arbitrarily to raise the “farms” of all parts of its own demesnes was deliberately reserved.[476] (4) The Crown’s initiative in “taxation” (here restricted in regard to “aids” and “scutages”) was, under many other names and forms, left intact. The king required no consent before taking such prizes and custom dues as he thought fit from merchandise reaching or leaving England, or before taking tolls and fines at inland markets under the plea of regulating trade. Tallages also were exigible at discretion from aliens and Jews, from tenants of demesne, from London and other chartered towns. (5) The limited scope of this restriction on prerogative is further illustrated by the method provided for taking “the common consent.” The assembly to be convened for that purpose was a narrow body, representative neither of the several ranks and classes of the community, nor of the separate national interests, nor yet of the various districts of England. On the contrary, its composition was extremely homogeneous, an aristocratic council of the military tenants of the Crown, convened in such a way that only the greater among them were likely to attend.[477]
Footnote 476:
See _infra_, under c. 25.
Footnote 477:
Even when an honour escheated to the Crown, the tenants of that honour “were not suitors of the _Curia Regis_.” See _Report on Dignity of a Peer_, I. 60.
These facts serve as a warning not to read into Magna Carta modern conceptions which its own words will not warrant. This famous clause was far from formulating any national doctrine of self-taxation; it was primarily intended to protect Crown tenants from impositions levied by John, not _qua_ sovereign but _qua_ feudal lord. Such as it was, it was totally omitted, along with its corollary (chapter 14), in 1216. The provision substituted for both, in the Charter of 1217, referred only to scutages, saying nothing about aids, and cannot possibly be read as a general prohibition of all arbitrary taxation by the Crown.[478]
Footnote 478:
Cf. _supra_, pp. 173-4 and _infra_, under c. 14.