- John Vaughan (judge)
Sir John Vaughan SL (14 September 1603 – 10 December 1674) was a British justice. He was born in
Cardiganshire the eldest of eight children of Edward Vaughan and his wife Lettice, and was educated initially atThe King's School, Worcester between 1613 and 1618, when he was admitted toChrist Church, Oxford . He attended until 1621, leaving without gaining a degree, and the same year was accepted into theInner Temple . In 1625 he married Jane Stedman, with whom he had a son Edward, and in 1628 he was elected as a Member of Parliament for Cardigan, representing them again at both the Short and Long Parliaments. He was a moderate royalist, helping to prosecuteWilliam Laud and write theTriennial Acts , but refused to support abill of attainder against Thomas Wentworth, saying it was unconstitutional. He returned to Cardiganshire before the outbreak of theEnglish Civil War and bought large amounts of land formerly belonging toStrata Florida Abbey , leading him to be one of the richest landowners in an economically poor country. Although at first a strong loyalist, the fall of Tenby in 1643 disturbed him, and he began training the local militia. As a result of this his house was plundered in July 1645, and he was banned from sitting in Parliament in September.After the civil war he refused to return to public life, barely venturing out of his estates; the Earl of Clarendon claimed that he had lived ‘as near an innocent life as the iniquity of that time would permit’. [ [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/28134?&docPos=64&backToResults=list=yes|group=yes|feature=yes|aor=3|orderField=alpha Oxford DNB:Vaughan, Sir John] ] After the
English Restoration he represented Cardiganshire in theCavalier Parliament between 1661 and 1669, and was widely admired for his eloquence, withSamuel Pepys describing him as 'the great Vaughan’. He was knighted and made aserjeant-at-law on 20 May 1668, and madeChief Justice of the Common Pleas on 23 May. His most enduring case wasBushel's Case in 1670, which set the precedent that a jury could not be forced into making a verdict, one that has endured ever since; as such a plaque in theOld Bailey with the names of the jurors involved also includes that of Vaughan. He was a friend ofJohn Selden , and acted as one of the executors of his estate after Selden's death in 1654, placing his library in the 'Selden end' of theBodleian Library . Vaughan died on 10 December 1674 atSerjeant's Inn , and was buried twelve days later atTemple Church , withEdward Stillingfleet speaking at his wedding. His court reports were later published by his son in 1677, with a corrected edition in 1706.References
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