There the word "special" was not used. The term " special
warrant " therefore was a new term which came into use between
1751 and 1802, and on inquiry we find that very good reason had
occurred for using it. Shortly after 1751 the question arose, in
the case of the North Briton Newspuper, Wilkes' case, as to the
validity of what were called "general warrants." In 1756 the
celebrated resolutions of the House of Commons declaring general -
warrants to be illegal were passed. In the case of Money v. Leach, -
19 HLS. Tr., 1001; 1 Wm. BL, 555, a case of trespass and false -
imprisonment for acts done under a general warrant, the question :
arose whether such warrants were valid. The marginal note is
" General warrants are illegal and void." That case was decided -
in 1765. During the argument it was pointed out by Sergeant -
Dunning, that Lord Chief Justice Scroggs' general warrants had
been made a ground of parliamentary impeachment, and then the -
Court proceeded to consider the question whether general warrants
were good. The warrant in that case was to search for the authors,
printers and publishers of a certain seditions and treasonable libel,
and to apprehend and seize them together with their papers, not
for the apprehension of any particular person or to search any
particular place. It was held to be bad on the ground that it was
a general warrant. In Wilkes v. Wood, (1763) 19 HS. Tr., 1153,
the same point had arisen and had been decided in the same way.
In Burns' Justice of the Peace, p. 1181, general warrants, to
apprehend «ll persons suspected, and bring them before a justice,
are compared to blank warrants, and there is a precedent in
Dalton, which gives the form of a special warrant as distinguished
from a general warrant. The subject is dealt with in 2 Hawk.
P.C., p. 130, sec. 10 (8th ed.), where the learned editor adopts the
statement of the law in Money v. Leach. :