was an action brought against the plaintiff for false accusation. The punishment, upon conviction, was insulio frontis, or branding in the forehead. See INUSTIO.
JUDICIVM Dei, Judgement of God, was a term anciently applied to all extraordinary trials of secret crimes; as those by arms, and single combat; and the ordeals, or those by fire, or red-hot ploughshares, by plunging the arm in boiling water, or the whole body in cold water; in hopes God would work a miracle, rather than suffer truth and innocence to perish. Si super defendere non possit, judicio Dei seil. aqua vel ferro, fieret de eo justitia.—These customs were a long time kept up even among Christians; and they are still in use in some nations. See BATTLE, ORDEAL, &c.—Trials of this sort were usually held in churches in presence of the bishops, priests, and secular judges; after three days fasting, confession, communion, and many adjurations and ceremonies described at large by Du Cange.
JUDICIVM Parium denotes a trial by a man’s equals, i.e. of peers by peers, and of commoners by commons. In magna charta it is more than once insisted on as the principal bulwark of our liberties, but especially by chap. 29. that no freeman shall be hurt in either his person or property, nisi per legale judicivm parium suorum vel per legem terrae. And this was even esteemed in all countries a privilege of the highest and most beneficial nature. JUDICIUM Falsi, was an action which lay against the judges for corruption or unjust proceedings.
JUDICIUM Prevaricationis, was an action brought against the prosecutor, after the criminal was acquitted, for suppressing the evidence of, or extenuating his guilt, rather than urging it home, and bringing it to light.