“…Taking issue with these sentiments, Powell has argued convincingly that informal methods of settling disputes flourished, and well established methods of arbitration already existed, at the end of the fourteenth century. 60 Likewise, Biancalana has recently argued that the use of arbitration was 'frequent' both before and after the fifteenth century as 'perceived shortcomings' of judicial institutions persisted, stating succinctly that 'the view that fifteenth-century arbitration is evidence of inadequacies in the common law judicial institutions particular to the fifteenth century states either a falsehood or a truism'. 61 Lacking a body of statistical data to draw on, Powell responded to Storey, Bellamy and Rowney's perceived 'growth of evidence for arbitration' in the fifteenth century by suggesting that while recourse to arbitration was constant throughout the century, 'compromise procedures became both more formal and better documented .…”