› 01 It was autonomous — made by merchants, not kings Overdrawn
The Legend
Merchants built their own legal system entirely outside the state. Private rules, private judges, private enforcement. No king's writ ever ran there. It is the great historical proof that law can emerge without government.
Berman, Law and Revolution (1983) 333–56 · Trakman, The Law Merchant (1983) · Benson, 55 S. Econ. J. 644 (1989)The Record
The piepowder court's right to exist came from a royal franchise. When the king granted a town its fair, he granted the court with it. The Carta Mercatoria (1303) was Edward I's charter. The Statute of the Staple (1353) was an Act.
And the earliest English treatise on merchant law — the Little Red Book of Bristol, c. 1280 — calls the common law the mother of the law merchant, who endowed her daughter with certain privileges in certain places. Not a rival. A parent.
Sachs went to the actual court rolls of the St. Ives fair — the fullest surviving record of the period — and found merchants substantially subject to local control, in a court that ran on the Abbot's franchise.
Sachs, 21 Am. U. Int'l L. Rev. 685 (2006) · Little Red Book of Bristol, c. 1280 · Kadens, 5 Chi. J. Int'l L. 39 (2004)