Whether acting under pressure or from grounds of policy, John lost no time in instituting the machinery necessary for effecting this part of the reforms. On the very day on which the terms of peace were finally concluded between king and barons at Runnymede, namely, on 19th June, 1215, he began the issue of writs to sheriffs, warreners, and river bailiffs. Within a few days every one of these had been certified of the settlement arrived at, and had received commands to have twelve knights chosen by the county in the first county court, who should make sworn inquest into evil customs.[[982]]
These orders were obeyed: knights were appointed in the various counties, who seem to have taken a liberal view of their own functions. Far from confining themselves to declaring customs to be evil, or even to seeing them abolished, they claimed to share with the sheriffs the exercise of the entire executive authority of the county. Some warrant for these pretensions may be found in the terms of a second series of writs issued in the king’s name on 27th June and following days. These were addressed to the sheriff and the twelve knights jointly, commanding them to make instant seizure of all who refused to take, as required in the previous writs, the oath of obedience to the twenty-five executors of the Charter.[[983]] The revolutionary committee of the central government had thus in each county local agents in the twelve knights whose original duties had been to see evil customs abolished.
The hatred which all classes bore to the forest laws is well illustrated by the iconoclastic spirit in which these knights concurred with the jurors of each small district, and with all others concerned, for the drastic treatment of abuses. Moderate-minded men began to fear that these sweeping changes would virtually abolish the royal forests altogether (in their technical legal sense). Accordingly, the leading prelates, who were in large measure responsible for inducing the king to make truce at Runnymede, and were thus under a moral obligation to do what they could to prevent the barons breaking faith, issued a written protest. They declared that the chapter in question must be understood by both parties “as limited,” and “that all those customs shall remain, without which the forests cannot be preserved.”[[984]] Clearly, the whole code of the forest laws was in danger of being swept out of existence, as forming one huge “evil custom.” What effect, if any, this protest had, is not known. The country was soon plunged in civil war, during the continuance of which neither side had leisure for the reform of abuses, however urgently required. In 1216 the subject was one of those “respited” for future consideration, and in 1217 an attempt was made to specify in detail those evil customs which were to be abolished. The dangerous experiment of leaving such definition to local juries in each district was not repeated.
[980]. The last sixteen words, inclusive of “per eosdem,” appear at the foot of both of the Cottonian versions of Magna Carta. Cf. supra, 194–7.
[981]. Contrast the more restricted meaning of the same word in c. 41.
[982]. See Rot. Pat., I. 180, cited also Select Charters, 306–7. Cf. supra, p. [47].
[983]. Cf. infra, c. 61.
[984]. Cf. supra, p. [52]. The text is given Rot. Claus., 17 John, m. 27, d. and New Rymer, I. 134. It runs in name of the archbishops of Canterbury and Dublin, and of the bishops of London, Winchester, Bath, Lincoln, Worcester, and Coventry, forming (with one exception, the bishop of Rochester) precisely those mentioned in the preamble to Magna Carta.