Sir James Hales (c. 1500–1554) was an English judge from Kent, the son of the politician and judge John Hales. Though a Protestant, he refused to seal the document settling the crown on the Protestant claimant Lady Jane Grey in 1553, and during the following reign of the Catholic Queen Mary opposed the relaxation of the laws against religious nonconformity. Imprisoned for his lack of sympathy to Catholicism and subjected to intense pressure to convert, in a disturbed state of mind he committed suicide by drowning. The resulting lawsuit of Hales v. Petit is considered to be a source of the gravediggers' dialogue after Ophelia drowns herself in Shakespeare's play Hamlet.[1]
Biography
The eldest son of John Hales, Baron of the Exchequer and lord of the manor called The Dungeon at Canterbury,[2] and his wife Isabel Harry,[3] His father was a bencher of Gray's Inn, and he was admitted as a student there between 1517 and 1519, being elected an ancient of the Inn in 1528. By 1530 he was acting a counsel in the Court of Requests, and in 1532 became a bencher of Gray's Inn.[4]
Hales supported the Protestant reformation, and in 1551 was among those who gave sentence of deprivation against Bishop Stephen Gardiner. However, in 1553 he was one of three judges who refused to seal the document by which John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland attempted to settle the crown on the Protestant Lady Jane Grey. When Mary became queen instead, and greater tolerance towards Catholics was expected, Hales pointed out in a charge to a jury at the Kent assizes that the statutes against Catholics had not been relaxed and that the jury must find according to the law as it then stood.
In October 1553 the Queen renewed his post as a Justice of the Common Pleas but the Lord Chancellor, the reinstated Bishop Gardiner, refused to take his oath and instead sent him to jail. He was held in the King's Bench Prison, the Counter prison in Bread Street, and finally in the Fleet Prison. During his months of captivity, he underwent repeated attempts to make him adopt Catholicism. He eventually complied but, after doing so, tried to commit suicide with a penknife.
In April 1554, the Queen ordered that Hales be released, and in some sources he is said to have been brought to her presence and given "words of great comfort". By then, however, his mental condition was so unsettled that on 4 August of that year, while staying at Thanington near Canterbury with his nephew, he drowned himself by lying face down in a shallow stream. A coroner's inquest determined that his death, being self-inflicted, was a felony.[9] He was commemorated by an inscription in his parish church of St Mary Bredin at Canterbury.[10][11]
Hales v. Petit
In 1558 his widow instigated legal proceedings against Cyriac Petit to recover a lease of land in Graveney marsh which had been made in 1551 to herself and her late husband. Since the coroner had earlier ruled Hales' death to be a felony, the case of Hales v. Petit turned on the abstruse point of whether the felony of committing suicide had occurred during Sir James' lifetime or after his death. In 1562 the court ruled in favour of Petit.[12]Edmund Plowden published a full report of the case in 1571.[13]
The gravediggers' jocular argumentation in Act V of Hamlet refers to the case,[1] poking fun at its highly abstract legal arguments. Shakespearean commentator John Hawkins (1773) noted[14] the similarity in phrasing between Plowden's report of the case:
Walsh said that the Act consists of three Parts. The first is the Imagination, which is a Reflection or Meditation of the Mind [...] The second is the Resolution, which is a Determination of the Mind to destroy himself [...] The third is the Perfection, which is the Execution of what the Mind has resolved to do [...][15]
and the gravediggers' humorously mangled version:
It must be se offendendo; it cannot be else. For here lies the point: if I drown myself wittingly, it argues an act; and an act hath three branches — it is to act, to do and to perform; argal, she drown'd herself wittingly.[16]
Family
He married twice, his first wife being Mary, daughter and coheiress of Thomas Hales (died 1520), a merchant of the Staple from Abingdon who in 1491 had acquired the manor of Fillets Court in Henley-on-Thames,[18] and his wife Agnes. Their children included:
Humphrey (died 1571), who married Joyce (died 1594), daughter of Robert Atwater of Royton by Lenham, and was the father of Sir James Hales (d.1589).[19]
Edward, who followed his father and elder brother in a legal career.[4]
Mary, who in about 1534 married Wiliam Ryther (died 1563), of Harewood Castle, an esquire of the body to Queen Mary, and was mother of the MP James Ryther.[21]
Jane, who in about 1547 married Walter Mantell, the son of her stepmother Margaret, who was executed at Sevenoaks in 1554, and after his death Christopher Carlell, of Monks Horton.[22]
His second wife was Margaret, daughter and coheiress of Oliver Wood (died 1521), of Collington,[23] who had been widowed twice. Her first husband was Sir Walter Mantell (died 1529) of Nether Heyford in Northamptonshire, and two of her sons had been executed: John Mantell for felony in 1541,[24] and Walter Mantell in 1554 for his part in Wyatt's rebellion, as was her grandson Walter Mantell, son of John.[25][26] Her daughter Margaret Mantell (died 1540) was the mother of the poet and translator Barnaby Googe.[27] Her second husband (as his second wife) was Sir William Haute (died 1539) of Bishopsbourne in Kent.[28] Dying on 18 September 1567,[29] Margaret was buried in St Mildred's Church, Canterbury, where there is a monument to her memory.[30][31][32]
^Among the monuments and inscriptions are the following: .... A plain altar tomb on the south side of the altar rails, and round the verge an inscription for Humphry Hales, esq. son of Sir James Hales, deceased 1555. The same father Sir James Hales.[citation needed]
^Edward Christian, in his editions of Blackstone's Commentaries, noted that when 'a joint-tenant of any chattel interest commits suicide, the right to the whole chattel becomes vested in the King'. 2 William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England *409 n.1 (Edward Christian ed., London, A. Strahan 13th ed. 1799).
^Some sources state that Margaret's father was Oliver Wood, Justice of the Common Pleas, but according to Foss the only justice surnamed Wood was Thomas Wood, Chief Justice in the reign of Henry VII.[citation needed]
Carlisle, Nicholas (1822). Collections for a History of the Ancient Family of Carlisle. p. 55.
Cassidy, Irene; E.L.C.M. (1981). "Ryther, James (1536-95), of Harewood, Yorks.". In Hasler, P.W. (ed.). History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1558-1603 (online ed.). Boydell and Brewer.
Foss, Edmund (1857). The Judges of England. Vol. 5. London: Longham Brown. pp. 370–374. Retrieved 17 October 2023.
Hales, R. Cox (1882). "Brief notes on the Hales Family". Archaeologia Cantiana. XIV. London: Kent Archaeological Society: 61–84. Retrieved 4 January 2013.
Richardson, Douglas (2011). Everingham, Kimball G. (ed.). Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families. Vol. IV (2nd ed.). Salt Lake City. ISBN978-1460992708.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Robson, T. (1830). The British herald, or Cabinet of armorial bearings of the nobility & gentry of Great Britain & Ireland. p. 640.
Shaw, William A. (1906). The Knights of England. Vol. II. London: Sherratt and Hughes.
Simpson, Justin (1890). "Mantell of Heyford". In Taylor, John (ed.). Northamptonshire Notes and Queries. Vol. III. Northampton: Dryden Press. pp. 227–228. Retrieved 5 January 2013.
Townley, Simon (2011). A History of the County of Oxford: Henley-on-Thames and Environs: Binfield Hundred, Part 1. Vol. XVI. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell and Brewer. pp. 73-78.
Woolnoth, William; Hastings, Thomas (1836). Illustrative views of the Metropolitan Cathedral Church of Canterbury. London: Whittaker. p. 30.
External links
Hutchinson, John (1892). "James Hales" . Men of Kent and Kentishmen (Subscription ed.). Canterbury: Cross & Jackman. p. 59.