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A50697 Observations on the acts of Parliament, made by King James the First, King James the Second, King James the Third, King James the Fourth, King James the Fifth, Queen Mary, King James the Sixth, King Charles the First, King Charles the Second wherein 1. It is observ'd if they be in desuetude, abrogated, limited, or enlarged, 2. The decisions relating to these acts are mention'd, 3. Some new doubts not yet decided are hinted at, 4. Parallel citations from the civil, canon, feudal and municipal laws, and the laws of other nations are adduc'd for clearing these statutes / by Sir George Mackenzie ... Mackenzie, George, Sir, 1636-1691. 1686 (1686) Wing M184; ESTC R32044 446,867 482

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passes in the Exchequer King JAMES the first Parl 3. IS in Desuetude THis Act was made to exclude all pretentions of the Emperour or Pope and all Laws made or Priviledges granted by them but was not design'd to exclude the Civil and Canon Laws which by many of our Statutes are call'd the Common Law and are followed in this Kingdom and to exclude the Danish Laws in the Isles Jac. 4 Par. 6 c. 79. THis Act against Transporting of Money is after many Innovations severly renew'd and the Merchants ordained to swear thereupon allowing only sixty Pounds to Passengers for their Charges by the 11 Act Par 1. Sess 3 d Ch 2 d. But many think it more reasonable to allow Exportation as in Holland since the hindering Exportation prejudges much all manner of commerce THe first part of the Act discharging Officers in the Countrey wherein any man is Indyted to be upon his Assize seems to be founded upon the suspition that arises from an Interest they may have in having the Pannel Convict since a part of his Escheat belongs to them and therefore I think this should not be extended to exclude any such Officers within the Shire as may expect no share such as Commissars c. The second part of the Act which discharges those who Indyte a man to be upon his Assyze extends also against Informers and these who gave advice for raising the Libel but from this part of the Act it clearly appears that it is not generally true that when a penalty is adjected to an Act the deed is not null though the penalty be due for it is here forbidden that any Officiar or other who Indyts a man shall be on his Assyze under the penalty of ten pounds and yet certainly this Act would sett the informer from being on the Assyze and though to this it may be answered that this is unlawful by the Law of Nations prior to all Law and so this Law is only declaratory yet that cannot be alleadged as to discharging Officers within the Shire to be upon assyzes it may be also alleadg'd that this Penalty is only irrogated in case any should pass on such Assyzes without being known to be such But I do really believe that we in our Parliaments considered not the subtile distinction betwixt Acts which proceed paenam irrogando and these which proceed actum irritando vide Obs on the the 216 Act Par 14 Jac 6. It may be likewise concluded from this Act that the Kings Advocat is oblig'd to condescend who is his informer for else the Informer may be upon the Pannels Assyze and yet because that would discourage men from informing interest Reipublicae ne crimina maneant impunita Therefore the Council has several times found that the Advocat is not oblig'd to condescend upon his Informer further than that if it be referred to the Advocats oath of Calumny that some of the Assyzers or Witnesses were his Informers as to which he will be oblig'd to give his Oath of Calumny THe difference betwixt Forethought-fellony and Chaudmella is only observed as to Murder though this Act seems to extend it to all Transgressions and even as to murder the Murderer is to be imprison'd whether it be committed upon Forethought-fellony or Chaudmella for Chaudmella or homicidium in rixa commissum is Capital by our present Law THis Act appointing all Barons to appear in Parliament may seem abrogated by the 102 Act Par 7 Jac 1. Whereby the Barons of each Shire are allowed to choose two wise Men to Re-present them which is the Custom at this day But it is observable that though by that Act they may for their conveniency choose two yet they are by no expresse Law discharg'd to come in greater numbers Nota It seems by that Act that a Prelat or Earl may send their Procurator to Vote for them if they have themselves a lawful excuse but yet de praxi that is not allow'd but this Act is more fully Explain'd in the Observations on the 7 Act Par 22 Jac 6. OBserve that this Act proves the Books of Regiam Majestatem and Quoniam Attachiamenta to be our Law for they are called the Books of Law ARe Explain'd in the 96 th Act Par 6 Jac 4. THis Act appointing all Ferriers to have Bridges in places where Horses are to be Ferried is renewed by the 20 Act Par 4 Jac 3. Wherein all passages on each side of the Water are ordained to have Bridges whereupon Brunt-Island and Kinghorn rais'd a Process against Kirkaldy to have their Passage-Boats discharg'd as not being able to have such Bridges and for the good of the Kingdom since if all places were allow'd to have Boats Kinghorn and Brunt-Island which in the old Evidents is called Wester Kinghorn could not have sufficient Boats against Storms as now but this being thought by the Council matter of Property was remitted to the Session it being dangerous upon pretext of publict good to discharge Property for else many Innovations might be pretended BEfore this Act the Kings Council were the Supream Judges in civil Causes but by this Act some Commissioners of Parliament are to be chosen by turns who with the Chancellor are to be the Session and are to be pay'd out of the Unlaws so that the Session was then a Committee of Parliament their power is further settled and declared by the Acts 61 62 63 Parl 14 Jam 2 d. By which it is clear that they were to Sit but fourty days at a time and that the Session was then ambulatory and their sitting was Proclaim'd in each Shire where they were to Sit three Moneths before and they were by that 63 Act to bear their own Expenses after which the Sessions were by K James 4 Par. 6 Act 58. turn'd in a dayly Council which was to be chosen by the King and was to Sit at Edinburgh continually and wherever the King Resided they had the same power that the Session had and their Sitting was to be notified to the People by open Proclamation at the Kings pleasure In place of all which The Colledge of Justice and The Lords as they now are were Instituted by King James 5 th Parl. 5 th Act 36. Nota There is power granted by this Act to determine Causes finally which may import an excluding of Appeals but thereafter Appeals are discharged expresly Jac. 2 Par. 13 Act 62. THe Sheriff are not now oblig'd to publish the Acts of Parliament but they are to be published at the Mercat Cross of Edinburgh only and bind not the Leidges till fourty dayes after Publication K. James 6 Par. 7 Act 128. King JAMES the first Parliament 4. ARe Explained in the 96 th Act 6 Par Jac 4. BY this Act wilful Fire-raising is Treason 2. Fire-raising by Mis-governance is punishable in Servants 3. Reckless Fire-raising is punishable either in the Owner or the Mealer or Tennent
did write such a hand and for proving of this must produce the Hand-writs of all these Servants at that time February 7. 1672. Kirk-hill contra Ketlestoun IT was Debated upon this Act whether the Lands of Duncow though here annexed by a publick Law were sufficiently annexed so as to exclude the Earl of Nithisdale who pretended that a year before this Act he had a valid Right under the Great-Seal from the King and so could not be prejudg'd by a posterior annexation which behov'd to be salvo jure quoad him To which it was Reply'd that this annexation being by a publick Law was not of the nature of Ratifications which were salvo jure and such Acts of annexation were in effect the Kings Charter and being granted by a publick Act of Parliament in favours both of King and People they could not be taken away but by another Act of Parliament sibi imputet he who had the prior Right and compeared not at the time of this publick Law and objected it but now after so many years the King had at least prescrived a Right by vertue of this Act this case was not decided but the Lords inclined to think that there was a great difference betwixt original annexations where special Lands were annexed as falling in the Kings Hands by a special Forefalture or other cause which they thought could not be quarrelled by the Session or other Inferiour Judicatory and general Acts where Lands formerly annext are only repeated such as this is in which Lands belonging to privat parties may be by mistake repeated Nota The Lands of Duncow annexed by this Act came to the King upon Forefalture of Robert Lord Boyd anno 1477. BEfore this Act Decreets pronunced by Magistrates within Towns could not be the ground of a Charge of Horning till a Decreet conform had been first obtained before the Lords but by this Act Letters of Horning are summarly appointed to be granted upon such Decreets It is observable that though this Act says That Letters of Horning shall be granted upon the Decreets of Burrows in the same way as upon the Commissars Precepts yet it would seem that Commissars had no such priviledge at the time of granting this Act for that priviledge is only granted them by the 7 Act 21 Par. Ja. 6. To which nothing can be answered but that Commissars had that priviledge even at the time of this Act de praxi though de jure it was only granted them by that Act for their further Security VId. Act 155. 12 Par. Ja. 6. THis Act giving the King twenty shilling of Custom of every Tunn of imported Beer is Explained in the Observations upon the 2 Act 4 Sess. Par. 2 Ch. 2. IT is observable that by this Act the Dean of Gild is founded in the power of judging all Cases betwixt Merchant and Merchant and is here declar'd to be the most competent Judge because the most knowing Judge in such cases and declar'd to have the same power that the like Judges have in France and Flanders and in France such Cases are Judg'd by these who are call'd les consuls des marchants The Lords have found that according to this Act the Dean of Gilds Court is a Soveraign Court in suo genere and not subordinat to the Towns Court July 21. 1631. and they use to Advocat Causes from the Admiral to the Dean of Gild's Court upon this Act it being declar'd that he is Judge to all actions betwixt Merchant and Mariner though it be alleadg'd by the Admiral that these general words should be restricted by the nature of the respective Jurisdictions and so the Dean of Gild should be only Judge competent betwixt Merchant and Mariner in cases which fall out at Land but not at Sea THe Act related to here is the 36 Act 3 Parl. Ja. 4. IT is observable from this Act that it is there declar'd in geneneral that Acts of Parliament should only in reason and equity extend ad futura for regulating future cases for though Declaratory Acts may oft-times extend ad praeterita yet Statutory Acts should only extend ad futura THis Act differs not one word from the 170 Act of this same Parliament and has been only repeated here by mistake BEfore this Act such as were at seid with one another us'd ordinarly to fight together upon the Street of Edinburgh and us'd to beat the Magistrates or their Officers when they came to red them and that truly gave rise to this Act though the Narrative here bears only that several persons used to Deforce the Magistrates in their Execution of their own or the Councils Decreets By the Act it is declar'd That whosoever disobeys or opposes the Command of the Provost and Baillies of Edinburgh when they are Executing the Kings Commands or Letters from the Secret Council or Session or the Ordinances of their own Burgh shall be punished as Committers of Deforcement as Seditious and Perturbers of the Common well It has been found that naked assistance at such Tumults without Arms is not punishable by Death though a person be killed in the Tumult December 1666. But Convocation at all such Tumults with Arms is punishable by Death if a person be Murdered as was found September 11. 1678. And the acting any thing either by word or deed was found to infer Death Observ. That the using Fire-weapons within Town is discharged by this Act and long weapons that is to say Halbards Picks c. are only allow'd lest innocent persons passing on the Street might be kill'd but yet if Souldiers shoot in defence of their Prisoners on the Streets they are not punishable and this Act was found not to militat against the Kings granting Commissions to the Magistrates of Edinburgh to raise a Company with Fire-locks within Town for the Act discharges only Fire-locks without the Kings consent and a Commission implys his consent THe Act here related to is the 159 Act 12 Par. Ja. 6. THis Act is Explain'd in the 7 Act 9 Par. Ja. 6. VId. Obs. on the 29 Act Par. 11 Ja. 6. THe Abbacy of Dumsermling was Dispon'd by Ja. 6. in a morning Gift to Queen Ann. This Lawyers call Morganeticum and King Charles the First was Infeft in these Lands as heir to His Mother Observ. That this Confirmation was under the Great Seal and under the Seals and Subscriptions of the States King IAMES the sixth Parl. 14. THis Act seems very ill conceived for it appears that wilful hearers of Mass shall be executed to the death how soon they shall be found guilty or declared Fugitive since no man by our Law dies upon his being Denunced Fugitive except in the case of Treason and wilful hearing of Mass is not Treason even by this Act. Observ. 2. That as this Act is conceiv'd the wilful hearing or concealing is punishable by death either by Conviction or being denunced Fugitive before
but to the end each distinct Estate might have a special Habit and yet Barons nor Burgesses have as yet no distinct Habit for Parliament FOr understanding this Act appointing the number of the Lords of Articles in every State to be equal and that the most shall not exceed ten nor the least be fewer nor six it is fit to know that by the 1 Act 3 Sess. Par. 1. Ch. 2. The Lords of the Articles are ordained to be elected and constitute in manner following viz. the Clergy choose 8 of the Nobility the Nobility 8 of the Clergy and these sixteen so elected or such of them as are present do choose 8 Barons and 8 Burgesses to whom are added the Officers of Estate and the Chancellor Presides And the Articles being so constitute do prepare Laws Acts and Overtures and orders all things remitted to them by the Parliament BY the 135 Act Par. 7. Ja. 6. no Advocat could plead in Reductions of Forfaulters without a licence which is abrogated by this Act but because this Act gave leave only to persons accused before the Parliament to have Advocats without licence therefore by the 90 Act of this Parliament Advocats are ordained to plead in all Criminal Cases and they do so upon Supplications This craving a Licence was founded upon 98 Act 14 Par. Ja. 3· vid. crim observ tit Advocats THis Act is fully cleared crim observ Tit. Jurisdiction of the Parliament IN this Act the King promises to do nothing that may prejudge the liberty of Voting and reasoning but yet if any person should offer to argue what is down-right Treason this Act would not defend him for by voting and reasoning jointly may be inferred that that reasoning is only allowed which relates to a stated case and to be put to the Vote and nothing that is treasonable will be allowed to be stated in order to a Vote THis Act discharging all contention for priority of place relates only to Parliament and the disturbance thereof but by a Decreet of Ranking in anno 1606. his Majesty having ranked the Nobility has commanded them to observe the Precedency there assigned in all places and that under the pain of being punishable as contemners of his Authority THough by this Act all actions of molestations are ordained to be pursued before inferiour Judges as being naturally but actions for cognoscing of Marches where the controversie being facti can best be understood upon the place yet now such actions are ordinarlie pursued before the Lords because there is a Declarator joyned with the molestation for the Pursuer Libels that though such Lands be his Property yet he is molested in the possession thereof and the reason of this Invasion is because Declarators of Property as all other actions concerning double Rights can only be pursued before the Lords of Session The form prescribed to molestations by this Act is that the Lords shall direct Letters to the inferiour Judges upon 15 dayes warning who shall continue their Courts from 8 dayes to 8 dayes and these inferiour Judges having discust the points of Law they shall choose an Assize the most part whereof shall have 4 Ploughs of Land or 300 Merks of yearly Rent in the same or Neighbouring Parochs if there be mutual pursuits the Judge shall discuss both together and choose an Assize out of the Assizes cited by either party equally and the Odd-man to be choos'd by Cavil if the Judge ordinar be suspect the Lords shall grant Commission by their own Act or by a Commission under the testimony of the Great Seal to unsuspect Judges This form is still almost in observance only the Lords in dubious cases grant Advocations to themselves where the Judge is suspect and after the Cause is debated the Lords ordain the Ground to be visited by some of their own number or grant Commissions to others if the Lands ly very remote but these Commissions under the testimony of the Great Seal are absolutely in Desuetude If the most part of the Inquest be not clear the Lords find that in that case the Cause should be Advocat to them as the Supream Court and they will judge according to the probation already taken or will grant warrand to cite new Witnesses as they did 21 July 1675. Walstoun contra Cheislie Though this Act appoints the Inquest to be chosen of Landed-men having 4 Ploughs or 300 Merks and that in or near the Paroch where the contraverted Land lies yet the verdict will be sustained though they have not so much and though they dwell not in that Paroch albeit there be such in the Paroch This was formerly appointed §· 14. c. 74. lib. 2. R. M. where such cognitions are appointed to be per fideles homines de viceneto And Skeen there observes that Perambulations differ from Molestations in that Perambulations are petitory Judgements and concern Property but Molestations are only possessory Judgements though both tend to the tryal of Marches Nota That by the last Clause of this Act the Members of the Colledge of Justice are exeemed from Tryal before Inferiour Courts which was formerly granted in Removings p. 6. c. 39. Queen M. and is here extended to all Causes according to old accustomed use and though it was alleadg'd that thir last words were restrictive and so the Members of the Colledge of Justice could not Advocat their Causes from Inferiour Courts except in such Cases only as they could prove old use and wont yet these words are found Exegetick and to be equivalent as if the Act had said because of old accustomed use granting them that priviledge and this was very reasonable for since they are oblig'd to attend the Lords and their Clients the Citing them before Inferiour Courts had been inconsistent with both The Action of Molestation is the same with us that finium regundorum was by the Civil Law and what can stop Perambulations in our Law are set down Statut. David 2. cap. 20. where amongst other things it is observ'd that a Minor is not oblig'd to Defend in Perambulations and this is the only place in our written Law where that old Maxime is to be found minor non tenetur placitare de hareditate paternâ and yet it seems that a Molestation being declar'd by this Act to be judicium possessorium a Minor should be oblig'd to Defend in this as he is in all other possessory Judgements but the reason of this Exception in Molestations seems to be because ordinarly Molestations resolve in Declarators of property or are joyn'd with them BY this Act the Defender is indefinitly to pay the Expence of the Obtainer of the Decreet at the modification of the Judge vid. Act 110 Par. 7. Ja. 5. But though this Act be general yet statutum quod disponit simpliciter ut victus victori in expensas sit condemnandus hunc sensum admittit si non habuerit justam litigandi causam hic quippe sensus juri communi est
Act is Explain'd in the 6 Act Sess. 2. of this Parliament THis Act is Explain'd in the 17 Act Par. 1 Sess. 1 Ch. 2. THis Act is Explain'd Act 4 Par. 3. Q. Mary IN all Retoures it is usually exprest whether or how the Lands are in his Majesties Hands as if they be in his Majesties Hands by vertue of Ward the Retour bears it but since the Retour did not use to bear the Taxt of the Marriage or of the Feu cum maritagio Therefore this Act appoints these to be exprest and the reason why I think these were not exprest formerly was because Taxt-Ward was a very late invention and Lands holding feu cum maritagio is a very extraordinary thing and so the inquest took no notice of either THis Commission for Plantation of Kirks differs nothing from the Commissions given by the other Parliaments but only in that the Power whereby Titulars were forced to sell to each Heretor his respective Teinds is only to last for three years after this Act so that all that great design ends here except it be reviv'd by the next Commission but if the impediment during that time flow from the Titular by reason of his Minority or other inability in that case the Heretor who offered to buy his own Teind is to have place to buy his Teind as soon as the impediment is remov'd but the Act does not express within what time and therefore it would seem that except the Heretor offer to buy during the Minority and did really renew the offer to buy immediatly after the Minority or inability was over he cannot have place to buy It is also declared that if the Heretor be Minor and his Tutors neglect to buy his Teinds the Minor shall have action for 2 years after his minority to compel the Titular to sell them but the Act is ill conceived not mentioning Curators but the giving power to buy after minority includes both but it may be doubted whether this should extend to Idiots and fatuous persons or where there is tutor bonis datus ob non existentiam haeredis and it seems the liberty to buy should be extended to their Heirs for two years after they succeed or two years after furious persons Reconvalesce THe King in anno 1669. by a Commission under the Great-Seal did impower Noblemen and others to Regulat the Judicatures and these Regulations set down by them are here Ratifi'd But it was objected that this could not have been done in Law because by the Institution of the Colledge of Justice and particularly by the 93 Act Par. 7 Ja. 5. The Session has power to make sick Acts Statutes and Ordinances as they shall think expedient for ordering of Processes and hasty expedition of Justice And it was thought strange how Noblemen and Gentlemen who understood not Forms of Process could Regulat incident Diligences and the ordinary Terms in Reductions and Improbation which with many other things specified in these Regulations were so much matter of Form and were so little to be known by the strongest Reason that the greatest Lawyers did oft-times understand less of them than the ordinary Leaders of Processes The first thing in these Regulations is the Roll in which all Causes are to be taken up and are Ordain'd to be Discuss'd according to the Dates of the Returning of Processes which Roll was formerly in use though by the 12 Article it was here added That if any Cause should be call'd by anticipation out of its due place the Pursuers Advocat might refuse to insist or the Defenders Advocat to answer and upon this Article it was that the Lord Almond appeal'd to the Parliament because in the Action at Dumsermlings Instance against him there having been a Debate in the Outter-house Reported to the Lords they had ordain'd the Cause to be summarly heard before themselves in praesentia Whereas by the 5 Article where the Lords upon intricacy Ordains a Cause to be heard in praesentia the Process should have been insert in the Roll of the Inner-house according to the Date of that Deliverance which Article being controverted It was alleadg'd that by this Article Almonds Procurators were not oblig'd to Debate To which it was answered that though where a Cause is Ordain'd to be Inroll'd it must be heard according to that Date yet that did not hinder the Lords to call in any Cause for clearing the Terms of a Debate in the Outter-house Reported to them before they give their Interlocutor therein which as needing no Inrolment falls not under this Article and this Course of Calling in Advocats summarly for clearing some Points is ordinarly us'd without Inrolling Causes in the Inner-house Roll but after a Cause is once Inrol'd in the Inner-house Roll it must be heard according to its Date The Council sometimes likewise when they sustain themselves Judges Competent to Ryots do if any Defence be propon'd before them in point of Right remit the matter of Right to the Lords of Session but ordain it to be discussed summarly without attending this Enrolment to the end that when the matter of Right is Discuss'd they may know how to Judge the Ryot As to the 16 and 17 Articles Vide Observations upon the 9 Act Sess. 3 Par. 1 Ch. 2. By the 22 Article it is appointed That the Advocat who Returns the Process shall give out all the Papers whereupon he resolves to found his Defences which was done to prevent the Pursuers being forc'd to take a time to see those Papers upon which the Defence was founded but this was found unpracticable because the Defenders Advocats knew not what would be found Relevant or not and therefore the Defenders Advocat does now propone his Defence and if it be found Relevant he takes a Day to prove it as formerly The Difference betwixt Outter-house and Inner-house Advocats which was appointed by the Regulations is omitted in this Act which Confirms the Regulations without that distinction Before this Act in Incident Diligences four Terms were allowed for producing the Writs which were accidentally crav'd to be produc'd The first was Letters with Certification that if the Havers produc'd not other Letters would be direct against them Charging them thereto simpliciter 2. That Letters of Horning would be direct The third was Horning The fourth was Caption But by this Act the first Diligence is appointed to be Horning The second Caption which may seem too short for it is hard that third Parties should without any previous advertisement be Charged with Horning for though no Escheat will fall on this Denunciation yet the Rebel will upon this Denunciation be debarr'd ab agendo beside other inconveniencies As to the Regulations concerning the Justice-Court it has been doubted whether they extended to Justice-airs or Circuit-Courts and therefore it was doubted whether a Citation given to a Pannal who is in Prison might be given upon fewer than fifteen dayes in a Justice-air and the