English Legal History and its Materials

Armorie v. Delamirie (1722) K.B., 1 Strange 505, 93 ER 664

We are at work on this, plz direct comments or help to Carol DeMartino? and Alex Feerst.

The Opinion

Before Pratt, C.J. at nisi prius.

The plaintiff, being a chimney sweeper's boy, found a jewel, and carried it to the defendant's shop, (who was a goldsmith,) to know what it was, and delivered it into the hands of an apprentice, who, under pretense of weighing it, took out the stones; and, calling to the master to let him know if it came to three half-pence, the master offered the boy the money, who refused to take it, and insisted to have the thing again; whereupon the apprentice delivered him back the socket without the stones. And now in trover against the master these points were ruled:

1. That the finder of a jewel, though he does not by such finding acquire an absolute property right of ownership, yet he has such a property as will enable him to keep it against all but the rightful owner, and consequently may maintain trover.

2. That the action may well lay against the master, who gives a credit to his apprentice, and is answerable for his neglect.

3. As to the value of the jewel, several of the trade were examined to prove what a jewel of the finest water that would fit the docket would be worth; and the chief justice directed the jury that, unless the defendant did produce the jewel, and show it not to be of the finest water, they should presume the strongest against him, and make the value of the best jewels the measure of their damages, which they accordingly did.

Key Legal Propositions

1. Finders Keepers (except against the prior owner)

This case is a staple of modern property textbooks for the proposition that one who finds a chattel is considered its owner against anyone in the world other than its prior and rightful owner.

2. Respondeat Superior

Armory is not considered an important case in the development of the doctrine of Respondeat Superior.

3. Spoliation of Evidence

Armory is considered “one of the first instances of spoliation of evidence. Under this evidentiary rule, courts presume that evidence a party has concealed or destroyed would have been injurious to their case, based on the interpretive canon omnia praesumuntur contra spoliatorem, ('all things' against the spoliator of the evidence). See Ariel Porat, Liability Under Uncertainty: Evidential Deficiency and the Law of Torts 11 (2001); Margaret M. Koesel et al, Spoliation of Evidence ix-x (2006).

Interpellating Armory: Chimney Sweeps and their Apprentices

Legal historian A.W. Brian Simpson has this to say about the problem of tracking down Armory, the chimney sweep's apprentice:

"I’ve tried to find out more information about [Armory v. Delamirie], but so far I’ve got nowhere. I’m still trying. But the trouble is that if the people in the case are poor, they tend to leave no trace in historical records. So if you do a case involving fairly wealthy people, you often find information. It’s easier to find information in the nineteenth century, because there are extensive newspaper reports. They often give very detailed accounts of litigation, so you get a lot of information from them, but the further back you go, the more difficult it gets. . . It’s such a strange case. I mean, here’s this chimney sweep boy, they were the lowest of the low, somehow suing – who paid for his lawyer? He’s suing the most distinguished silversmith of the early eighteenth century. The defendant’s work now sells for a million dollars an item. And yet we don’t know anything about how the case happened . . .I’ve [tried to get information on the case] intermittently for years, but I haven’t gotten anywhere. History is sometimes just hopeless. Sometimes you just have to give up."

Short of finding the climbing boy at the center of this case, this section tries to do the next best thing -- to gather as much information as possible that is likely to describe someone in Armory's position.

Relevant Historiography

Kathleen H. Strange, Climbing Boys: A Study of Sweeps' Apprentices, 1773-1875 (1982), Ch. 2

Benita Cullingford, British Chimney Sweeps: Five Centuries of Chimney Sweeping (2001), Ch. 4

Peter Kirby, Child Labour in Britain, 1750-1870 19-20 n.2 (2003)

Peter Kirby offers some empirical revisionism as a corrective to our populist love affair with the picturesque Dickensian and post-Mary-Poppins image of Chimney Sweeps' apprentices:

"Chimney-sweepers' apprentices, for example, loom large in the popular historical imagination but were very small in number. Much of their high visibility resulted from the campaigning of Jonas Hanway in the eighteenth century and Lord Shaftesbury and Charles Kingsley in the nineteenth [in the 1863 novel The Water Babies]. In 1841, the number of sweeps' apprentices aged below 10 in London was estimated by Mayhew to be 370 (at a time when London's population numbered 2.2 million). Hanway estimated that in 1785 there were 400 to 550 climbing boys in London, and an estimate from seven years later supposed their number to be 500. . . According to the census of 1851, there were 1107 British chimney-sweeps aged below 15 in Britain."

Climbing Boys in Literature and Art

William Blake published two versions of his poem "The Chimney Sweep," once in Songs of Innocence (1789) and then in Songs of Experience (1794).

Scrotum Cancer

Soot and the chemicals it contained led to a notably high rate of scrotal cancer among chimney sweep's boys.

Brown & Thornton, Percivall Pott & Chimney Sweepers' Cancer of the Scrotum (1957)

Pott's 1775 treatise, Chirurgical observations Relative to the Cataract, the Polypus of the Nose, the Cancer of the Scrotum, . . ., which includes an account of scrotum cancer among chimney sweepers has been cited as the first description of an occupational cancer:

". . . there is a disease as peculiar to a certain set of people, which has not, at least to my knowledge, been publickly noticed; I mean the chimney-sweepers' cancer . . . it produced a superficial, painful, ragged, ill-looking sore, with hard and rising edges. The trade call it the soot-wart . . . The fate of these people seems singularly hard; in their early infancy, they are most frequently treated with great brutality, and almost starved with cold and hunger; they are thrust up narrow, and sometimes hot chimnies, where they are bruised, burned, and almost suffocated; and when they get to puberty, become peculiarly liable to a most noisome, painful, and fatal disease."

Henry T. Butlin, Three Lectures on Cancer of the Scrotum in Chimney-Sweeps (1892)

Butlin considers possible reasons that chimney sweeps on the continent suffer a much lower rate of scrotum cancer. He hypothesizes that it is owing to protective clothing which varies by local custom that:

"in spite of every other condition which may be regarded as favourable to the disease, including the employment of children as 'climbing boys,' it is really almost unknown in those countries."

Walter Jacobson, Diseases of the Male Organs of Generation (1893)

Jacobson argues against Butlin's belief in the protective properties of specialized clothing and also departs from medical consensus holding that improved sweeping technology has reduced the incidence of cancer by allowing one to sweep from below rather than inside the chimney. Instead, Jacobson proposes:

"A more important explanation than the intersection of machinery, is to be found in the fact that chimney-sweeps, being no longer employed in boyhood, the delicate scrotal skin is not exposed so early or so long to the irritation of soot."

Paul De Lamerie

* Paul_De_Lamerie,_Goldmsith.pdf: "Paul De Lamerie, Goldsmith" from The Burlington Magazine (1920)

* Paul_de_Lamerie.pdf: Review of exhibition, from The Burlington Magazine (1990)

Below are links to images of De Lamerie's work:

* de_lamerie_cup_with_cover: 1742

* basket: 1744-45

* candlesticks: 1738-39

* shells: 1724-25

* Newdigate: 1743-44

Armory in Motion

Since it came down, the case has appeared in legal treatises on property, evidence, and tort law, judicial opinions, and case books on property law.

Navigation

Webs Webs

Attachments Attachments

  Attachment Action Size Date Who Comment
pdf A_model_by_Paul_de_Lamerie.pdf props, move 1141.3 K 03 Dec 2008 - 18:20 CarolDeMartino "A Model by Paul de Lamerie" from the Burlington Magazine (1956)
pdf Armory_in_Indermaur.pdf props, move 378.6 K 17 Dec 2008 - 20:51 AlexFeerst  
pdf Jacobson_scrotum_cancer.pdf props, move 936.1 K 17 Dec 2008 - 20:52 AlexFeerst From Walter Jacobson, Diseases of the Male Organs of Generation (1893)
else Newdigate props, move 77.4 K 03 Dec 2008 - 18:44 CarolDeMartino 1743-44
pdf Paul_De_Lamerie,_Goldmsith.pdf props, move 967.0 K 03 Dec 2008 - 17:51 CarolDeMartino "Paul De Lamerie, Goldsmith" from The Burlington Magazine (1920)
pdf Paul_de_Lamerie.pdf props, move 802.8 K 03 Dec 2008 - 17:55 CarolDeMartino Review of De Lamerie exhibition, from The Burlington Magazine (1990)
else basket props, move 100.6 K 03 Dec 2008 - 18:38 CarolDeMartino Basket, 1744-45
jpg blake_chimney_experience.jpg props, move 23.7 K 02 Dec 2008 - 22:04 AlexFeerst Image of Blake's "The Chimney Sweeper" from Songs of Experience (1794)
pdf butlin_scrotum_cancer_article.pdf props, move 1922.1 K 02 Dec 2008 - 19:34 AlexFeerst Henry T. Butlin, Three Lectures on Cancer of the Scrotum in Chimney-Sweeps (1892)
else candlesticks props, move 116.4 K 03 Dec 2008 - 18:41 CarolDeMartino 1738-39
pdf climbing_boys_strange_ch_2.pdf props, move 234.7 K 17 Dec 2008 - 20:54 AlexFeerst K.H. Strange, The Climbing Boys, Ch. 2
pdf cullingford_ch_4.pdf props, move 391.4 K 17 Dec 2008 - 20:55 AlexFeerst B. Cullingford, Five Centuries of British Chimney Sweeps, Ch. 4
pdf cullingford_title_page.pdf props, move 5.1 K 17 Dec 2008 - 20:59 AlexFeerst Cullingford title page
else de_lamerie_cup_with_cover props, move 76.3 K 03 Dec 2008 - 18:27 CarolDeMartino image of Cup with Cover, De Lamerie, 1742
pdf pott_scrotum_article.pdf props, move 731.0 K 02 Dec 2008 - 21:20 AlexFeerst Brown & Thornton, Percivall Pott & Chimney Sweepers' Cancer of the Scrotum (1957)
pdf review_of_De_Lamerie_biography.pdf props, move 684.3 K 03 Dec 2008 - 18:23 CarolDeMartino Review of Phillips' De Lamerie biography, from the Burlington Magazine (1935)
else shells props, move 76.6 K 03 Dec 2008 - 18:43 CarolDeMartino 1724-25
pdf strange_title_page.pdf props, move 45.0 K 17 Dec 2008 - 20:59 AlexFeerst K.H. Strange, title page
pdf sweep_image_1.pdf props, move 82.9 K 17 Dec 2008 - 20:56 AlexFeerst Sweep's Apprentice Image 1
pdf sweep_image_2.pdf props, move 125.1 K 17 Dec 2008 - 20:57 AlexFeerst Sweep's Apprentice Image 2
pdf sweeps_house_image.pdf props, move 137.3 K 17 Dec 2008 - 20:57 AlexFeerst Sweep's House Image
r10 - 18 Dec 2008 - 14:36:34 - AlexFeerst
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