The case was heard by Sir
Nicholas Hyde, the new Lord Chief Justice, with the prosecution led by
Attorney General Sir
Robert Heath. The problem before the court was the defendants had been arrested but the warrants did not specify why; this was unsurprising, since Coke had previously ruled the loans themselves were illegal. Heath claimed the
Royal Prerogative allowed the king to take whatever action he considered necessary "in time of crisis" and thus he had no need to justify the detentions. For the defence,
John Selden, a distinguished legal scholar, argued that "by the constant and settled laws of this kingdom, without which we have nothing, no man can be justly imprisoned ...[even by the king]... without a cause of the commitment expressed in the return", and that to hold otherwise would be to treat the free man as having no greater legal status than the
villein. Although the judges were unable to determine what law had been broken, they upheld the right of the king to detain
per speciale mandatum domino regis (by special command of the lord the king) and denied
bail on the basis that, as there were no charges, "the [prisoners] could not be freed, as the offence was probably too dangerous for public discussion". ==Significance==