Uncommon Law is a book byA. P. Herbert first published byMethuen in 1935. Its title is a satirical reference to the Englishcommon law. The book is ananthology of fictitiouslaw reports first published inPunch asMisleading Cases in which Herbert explores, as he saw it, rather absurd aspects of the law, and upholds hiscivil liberties with the protagonist Albert Haddock, representing Herbert's point of view, taking many to court. It includes perhaps the best-known of these cases,The Negotiable Cow. Herbert himself said "Albert Haddock made his first public appearance, inPunch, in 1924. I have always understood that I invented him: but he has made some disturbing escapes into real life".[1]
Over his lifetime Herbert published five collections, entitledMisleading Cases in the Common Law,More Misleading Cases,Still More Misleading Cases,Codd's Last Case andBardot M.P.?. Stray cases also appear in his collections of miscellaneous humorous essays, such asGeneral Cargo. Virtually all the cases were assembled into two omnibus volumes,Uncommon Law in 1935 andMore Uncommon Law in 1982. A shorter selection,Wigs at Work, appeared in 1966.
TheBBC successfully adapted them for television as three series ofA P Herbert's Misleading Cases (1967, 1968 and 1971: 19 episodes in total), withRoy Dotrice as Haddock andAlastair Sim as the judge, Mr Justice Swallow who has to unravel Haddock's logic.
Being a law reform activist, Herbert, through these "Misleading Cases", aired, initiated and sustained debate on various aspects of the law in which he saw need for change: copyright, divorce, defamation, liquor licensing, the police asagents provocateurs (usually Constable Boot) and rules of the road being some of the recurrent themes. At one point, Haddock turns himself into alimited company and insists to the court that he be called Haddock, Haddock, Haddock, Haddock Haddock & Co. because the copyright law states that copyright expires fifty years after the author's death (in the United Kingdom) (the fictional judge asking "Would this be Mr. Albert Haddock? Then we are in for some fun litigation") but since a company being in law aperson he objects to awinding-up order to shut the apparently defunct company becausea company never dies and so its copyright can never expire. Every time the prosecution calls him Mr. Haddock he intervenes "You mean theManaging Director". Haddock argues that individuals should have the same rights as companies. The case is found in his favour, Haddock also suggesting to the prosecution that it is open to other authors to take the same tack as he has.