Hermann Kantorowicz (born Nov. 18, 1877, Posen, Ger.—died Feb. 12, 1940, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Eng.) was a German teacher and scholar whose doctrine of free law (Freirechtslehre) contributed to the development of the sociology of law.
Specializing in criminal law, Kantorowicz taught at the universities of Freiburg (1908–29) and Kiel (1929–33) until the rise of the Nazis to power. Afterward, he taught at various universities in the United States, Italy, and (from 1935) Great Britain. His later writings include Der Geist der englischen Politik und das Gespenst der Einkreisung Deutschlands (1929; The Spirit of British Policy and the Myth of the Encirclement of Germany); Dictatorships (1935); Studies in the Glossators of the Roman Law (1938; with William W. Buckland); and The Definition of Law (written 1938, published 1958), in which he elaborated the statement that law is “a body of rules prescribing external conduct and considered justiciable.”
According to Kantorowicz’ free-law doctrine, judicial decision-making is properly a kind of legislative function. Judges should apply preexisting legal rules as individual cases require and should declare new law (derived from custom and social usage) to fill statutory gaps to which court proceedings call attention. In expounding these views, Kantorowicz clashed with the legal positivists. In 1911 he drew a distinction, sometimes obliterated by his followers, between the complementary disciplines of jurisprudence (a science of values) and sociology (a science of facts).