Compounding is a legal procedure whereby a
criminal or avoids prosecution in a court of law, potentially leading to the confiscation of his estate or some other punishment, in exchange for his payment to the authorities of a financial penalty or fine. The agreement so reached is termed a
composition. The term is from the
Latin verb
pono, ponere, posui, positum, "to place", +
com, "with/together". In general legal terminology a "composition" is "an agreement not to prosecute in return for a consideration". It was commonly used by the victorious Parliamentarians against the Royalists after the
English Civil War, for which purpose the
Committee for Compounding with Delinquents was established in 1643. Also in
Early Germanic law and in the modern period, see Ausgleich, also called the
Composition of 1867).