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A46779 Severall papers lately vvritten and published by Iudge Ienkins, prisoner in the Tower viz. 1. His vindication. 2. The armies indempnity [sic]: with a declaration, shewing, how every subject ought to be tryed for treasons, felonies, and all other capitall crimes. 3. Lex terræ. 4. A cordiall for the good people of London. 5. A discourse touching the incoveniences of a long continued Parliament. 6. An apologie for the army.; Severall papers lately written and published by Judge Jenkins, prisoner in the Tower. Jenkins, David, 1582-1663. 1647 (1647) Wing J608; ESTC R217036 64,480 98

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the Lawes be violated And no reflection to be made on the King All Counsellors and Judges for a yeare and three months untill the tumults began this Parliament were all left to the ordinary course of Justice what hath beene done sithence is notorious For great Causes and considerations an act of Parliament was made for the surety of the said Kings person R. 3 1 R. 3. cap. 15. if a Parliament were so tender of King Rich. the 3. the houses have greater reason to care for the preservation of his Majestie The Subjects are bound by their allegiance to serve the King for the time being against every Rebellion power and might H. 7. 11 H. 7. cap. 1. reared against him within this land that it is against all lawes reason and good canscience if the King should happen to be vanquished that for the said deede and true duty and alligeance they should suffer in any thing it is ordeined they should not and all acts of processe of law hereafter to be made to the conteary are to be void This law is to be understood of the naturall person of the King for his politique capacity cannot be vanquished nor war reared against it Relapsers are to have no benefit of this act It is no statute if the King assent not to it 12 H. 7.20 H. 8. and he may disassent this proves the negative voice The King hath full power in all causes to doe justice to all men this is affirmed of the King 24 H. 8. cap. 1● 25 H. 8. cap. 2● and not of the two Houses The commons in Parliament acknowledg no superior to the King under God the houses of Commons confesse the king to be above the representative body of the Realme Of good right and equity the whol sole power of pardning treasons fellonies c. belong to the King 27 H. 8. cap. 24 Note as also to make all Justices of Oyer Terminor Judges Justices of the peace c. This law condemns the practise of both houses at this time The kings royall assent to any Act of Parliament signed with his hand expressed in his Letters-patents under the great Seale and declared to the Lords and Commons shall bee as effectuall 33 H. 8. cap. 21 as if he assented in his owne person a vaine act if the King be virtually in the Houses The King is the head of the Parliament the Lords the princip●ll members of the body Dier 38. H. 8 fo 59.60 the Commons the inferior members and so the body is composed therefore there is no more Parliament without a king then there is a body without a head There is a corporation by the Common-law as the King Lords 14 H. 8 fol. 3. and Commons are a corporation in Parliament therfore they are no body without the King The death of the King dischargeth all mainprise to appeare in any Court 24 Ed. 3.48 1 Ed. 4.2 2 H. 4.8 1 H. 7.10 1 Ed 5.1 or to keepe the Peace The death of the King discontinues all pleas by the Common-law which agreeth not with the virtuall power insisted upon now Writs are discontinued by the death of the King Ed. 6. 1 Ed. 6. cap. 7. Patents of Judges Commission for Justices of the Peace Sheriffs Escheators determined by his death Where is the virtuall power All authority and jurisdictions spirituall and temporall is derived from the King 1 Ed. 6. cap. 2. therefore none from the Houses His Majesties subjects 2. 3 Ed 6. ca. 2 11 H. 7. cap. 1. Calvins Case Sa. pars Cooke according to their bounden duties ought to serve the king in his warres of this side or beyond the Seas beyond the seas is to be understood for wages This proves the power of warres and preparation for war to be in the king It is most necessary both for common policy and duty of the subject 5. 6 Ed. cap. 11 to restrain all manner of shamefull standers against their king which when they be heard cannot but be odible to his true and loving subjects upon whom dependeth the whole unity universal weale of the realm This condemns their continuing of the weekely pamphlets who have been so foule mouthed against his Majesty The punishment of all offenders against the lawes belongs to the king Q. Mary 1 Mar. Pl. 2. c. 2 and all jurisdictions doe and of right ought to belong to the King This leaves all to his Majesty All Commissions to levy men for the warre 4 5 P M. c. 3 Q. Eliz. 10 Eliz pl 315 are a warded by the king The power of warre only belongs to the king It belongs to the king to defend his people and to provide Armes and Force No speech of the two Houses Roy ad sole government de●ses subjects Plow 234.242 213. Calvins case 7. pars fol 12. Plow com 213 Corps naturall le Roy politique sunt un corps that is The king hath the sole government of his Subjects the body politique and the naturall body of the king make one body and not divers and are inseparable and indivisible The body naturall and politique make one body and are not to be severed Ligeance is due to the naturall body Plow 934 243.213 Calvins case 7. pars fol. 12. and is due by nature Gods Law and Mans law cannot be forfeited nor renounced by any meanes it is inseparable from the person Every Member of the House of Commons at every Parliament takes a corporall Oath 1 Eliz. cap. 1. Cawdries case 5. pars fol. 1. That the King is the Supreme and only Governour in all Causes in all his Dominions otherwise he is no Member of that House the words of the Law are In all Causes over all persons The said Act of 1 Eliz. is but declarative of the ancient Law Cawdries Case ibid. The Earle of Essex and others assembled multitudes of men to remove Councellors 43 Eliz. 3 pars instit fo 6.2 adjudged Treason by all the Judges of England To depose the king or take him by force to imprison him untill he hath yeelded to certain demands adjudged Treason 39. Eliz. Hil. 1 Jacobi ibid. and adjudged accordingly in the Lord Cobhams Case Arising to alter Religion established or any Lawe is Treason 39 Ed. B●adf case f 9. 16. By all the Judges of England ibid. 10 Eliz Plow 316. so for taking of the Kings Castles Forts Ports or Shipping Brooke treason 24. 3 4. Philip and Mary Dier Staffords Case concerning Scarborough The Lawe makes not the servant greater then the Master nor the subject greater then the King for that were to subvert Order and Measure The Law is not knowne but by Usage 10 Eliz. Plow 319. and Usage proves the Law and how Usage hath been is notoriously knowne The King is our only Rightfull and lawfull Liege Lord and Soveraigne K. James 1 Jac. cap. 1. 9 Ed. 4. fol. 8. We
Land or without any thing should lose or forfeit for doing their duty or service of Allegiance It be therefore ordained enacted and established by the King our Soveraigne Lord by the advice and assent of the Lords spiritual and temporall and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by authority of the same that from henceforth no manner of person or persons whatsoever he or they be that attend upo● the King and Soveraigne Lord of this Land for the time being in his person and doe him true and faithfull service of allegiance in the same or be in other places by his commandement in his wars within this Land or without that for the said deed and true duty of allegiance he or they be in no wise convict or attaint of high treason nor of other offences for that cause by act of Parliament or otherwise by any processe of Law whereby hee or any of them shall lose or forfeit life lands tenements rents possessions hereditaments goods chattels or any other things but to be for that deed and service utterly discharged of any vexation trouble or losse And if any act or acts or other processe of the Law hereafter thereupon for the same happen to be made contrary to this Ordinance that then that act or acts or other processe of the Law whatsoever they shall be stand and be utterly void Provided alwaies that no person or persons shall take any benefit or advantage by this Act which shall hereafter decline from his or their said allegiance Cap. 24. In the Statute of 27. H. 8. It is enacted that no person or persons of what estate or degree soever they be of shall have any power or authority to pardon or remit any treason murders man-slaughters or any kinde of Fellonies c. but that the King shall have the sole and whole power and authority thereof united and knit to the Imperiall Crowne as of right it appertaineth c. And in the same it is enacted further that none shall have power of what estate degree or condition soever they be to make Justices of Eyre Justices of Assize Justices of the Peace c. but all such officers and Ministers shall be made by Letters Patents under the Kings great Seale in the name and by the authority of the King and his Heires and Successors Kings of this Realme In the first yeare of Queen Mary and the first Chapter It is enacted by the Queen with the consent of the Lords and Commons That no deed or offence by Act of Parliament made treason shall be taken deemed or adjudged to be high treason but only such as be declared and expressed to be treason by the Act of Parliament made 25. Ed. 3. cap. 2. before mentioned A Declaration of M. David Ienkins now Prisoner in the Tower of London one of His Majesties Iudges in Wales for tryalls of Treasons Murthers Felonies and all other capitall crimes that they ought only to be by Iuries and not otherwise unlesse it be by Act of Parliament THe common Law of this Land is That every freeman is subject to a tryall by bill of Attainder in Parliament wherein His Majesty and both Houses must necessarily concurre for that tryall and attainder is an Act of Parliament to which all men are subject to a Mag. Chart. cap. 29. 2 part instit fol. 28 29.46.48 49 50. composed by Sir Ed. Cooke and published by the Order of the House of Commons in May 1641. No man shall otherwise be destroyed c but by the lawfull judgement of his Peers or by the common Law of the Land Peers to Noblemen are Noblemen Peers to the Commons are Knights Gentlemen c. Judgement of Peers refers to Peers those words The Law of the Land refers to the Commons the Law of the Land is for the tryall of the life of a free Commoner by Indictment Presentment of good and lawfull men where the deed is done or by Writ originall of the common Law all this is declared in Magna Charta c. 29. and by 25. Ed. 3. c. 4. 28. Ed. 3. c. 3. 37. Ed. 3. c. 8. 42. Ed. 3. c. 3. If the Lords will try any man by an Ordinance they destroy that excellent Act of Magna Charta and all those other good Lawes Sir Simon de Bereford a free Commoner of England was condemned by the Lords to death by an Ordinance which after the Lords better considering the matter that they might be acquitted of that sentence became suters to the King that what they had so done in future time might not be drawn into president because that which they had so done was against the Law b Rot. Par. 1. roule 4. E. 3. Num. 2. part inst page 50. with this 〈◊〉 grees Sir Jo●n Lees case Rot. Par. 42. E. 3. Num. 22.23 2. inst fol. 50. with this agrees the practice and usage of all times in this Land all the free Commoners of this Kingdome have alwayes been tryed and acquitted or condemned in capitall causes by Jurers of their equalls An Ordinance bindeth not in Law at all c See 4. part inst fol. 23.48.292 2. part inst f. 47 48. and but pro tempore as the two Houses now affirme a mans life cannot be tryed by that which is not binding and to continue for all times for a life lost cannot be restored By an Act of Parliament of the 1. and 2. of Philip and Mary chap. 10. It is enacted that a●● tryalls for Treason hereafter to be had shall be according to the course of the common-law If the crime charged upon any be treason against the two Houses against the Parliament it cannot be for there is no Parliament without the King that is no Treason in Law as appeares by 25. Ed. 3. chap. 2. 11. R. 2. chap. 3. 1 Hen. 4. cha 10. 1. and 2. Philip and Mary chap. 10. 3 part of the institutes Page 23. An Act of Parliament to make any a Judge where he is party is a void act d Dr ●o●ams case 8. part of Cooks reports for none can be a Judge and party in the same cause and therefore the House of Peers being a party touching the crime charged upon any man whom they would try by an Ordinance for Treason against both Houses cannot be a Judge By the Petition of Right e Petition of Right 3. Car. Regis if any man deserve death he ought to suffer the same according to the Lawes of the Land established and not otherwise but an Ordinance of the Lords is no established law The Protestation the Vow and Covenant the solemne League and Covenant the Declarations of both Houses had made and published sithence this unnaturall Warre are amongst other things sworne and set downe to be for the maintenance of the Lawes the people of this land ought to enjoy the benefit of their Birth-right the Law of the Land and the making good of the said Protestation Vow and Covenant League and Covenant and
said Duke then Protector to summon that Parliament Prynne ibid. fol. 19. ●●t the new count c●fe it Seale was made when the King was at G●xford in his own kingdome and not in the holy Land M● Prynne in his Book of the two Houses power to impose Taxes restraines Malignants against any Habeas Corpus 20. Ob. c. saith that the Parliament is above Magna Charta and fol. 15. ibid. The Parliament hath power over Magna Charta to repeale the same when there is Cause This Argument supposeth that they have the kings power Sol. which hath appeared formerly they have not But suppose they had Magna Charta containes many morall Lawes which by the Law of the Land a Parliament cannot alter 21 H. 7.2 D. Student 2. Dialogue For example it saith cap 18 Justice shall not be sold delayed no● denyed to any man but by this Argument the Parliament may make law to delay deny and to sell Justice which surely is a very ill position to maintaine What they would have doth now by the Propositions sent to N●●● castl● to his Majesty appeare whereby they would have him divest himselfe and settle in them all his kingly power by Sea and land and of themselves ●o have power without him today upon the people of this land what taxes they think meet to abolish the Common prayer booke to abolish Episcopacie and to introduce a Church Government not yet agreed but such as they shall agree on His Majes●y finding 〈◊〉 prevailing p●rty in both Houses to 〈…〉 and being chased away with Tumults from London leaves the Houses for these Reasons 〈◊〉 First because to 〈◊〉 the Government for Religion in against the king 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 against their Oathes For every of them hath sworne in this Parliament That His M●j●sty is the 〈◊〉 supreme Governour in all Causes Ecclesiasticall and over all persons Thirdly This course is against Magna Charta the 1. chap. and the last Salvae suis Episcopis omnes libertates suae Confirmed by thirty two Acts of Parliament and in the two and fortieth of Edward the third in the first Chapter enacts If any Statute be made to the contrary it shall be holden for none and so it is for Judgements at Law in the 25. of Edward the 1. chap. 1 2. The Great Charter is declared to bee the Common Law of the Land Fourthly they endeavour to take away by their Propositions the Government of Bishops which is as ancient as Christianity in this Land and the Book of Common-Prayer setled by five Acts of Parliament and compiled by the Reformers and Martyrs and practised in the time of foure Princes Fifthly these Propositions taking away from His Majesty all his power by land and Sea rob him of that which all his Ancestours kings of this Realme have enjoyed That Enjoyment and Usage makes the Law and a Right by the same to His Majesty They are against their owne Protestation made this Parliament viz. to maintaine His Royall person Honour and Estate They are against their Covenant which doth say that they will not diminish His Just Power and Greatnesse For these Reasons His Majesty hath left them and as i● beleeved will refuse to agree to the said Propositions as by the Fundamentall Law of the land hee may having a Negative Voyce to any Bills proposed The result of all is upon the whole matter That the king thus leaving of the Houses and his Denyall to passe the said Propositions are so farre from making him a Tyrant or not in a condition to Governe at the present That thereby hee is rendred a Just Magnanimous and pious Prince so that by this it appeares clearly to whom the Miseries of these Times are to be imputed The remedy for all is an Act of Oblivion and a Generall pardon God save the KING DAVID JENKINS now Prisoner in the Tower 28 Aprilis 1647. THE CORDIALL OF JVDGE JENKINS For the good People of LONDON In Reply to a thing called AN Answer to the Poysonous Seditious Paper of Mr David Jenkins By H.P. Barrester of Lincolns-Inne Printed in the Yeare 1647. The Cordial of Judge Jenkings for the good People of London c. After the said Mr H.P. hath made a recitall of the Heads of my Vindication hee deduceth his Answer unto these eight Particulars which follow verbatum 1. It cannot be denyed but the Parliament sits by the Kings Writ ●ay if Statute Law be greater then the Kings Writ it cannot be denyed but the Parliament sits or ought to sit by something greater then the Kings Writ And if it be confessed that the Parliament sits by the Kings Writ but does not Act by the Kings Writ then it must follow that the Parliament is a void vaine Court and sits to no purpose nay it must also follow that the Parliament is of lesse authority and of lesse use then any other inferiour Court forasmuch as it is not in the Kings power to controule other Courts or to prevent them from sitting or Acting 2. This is a grosse non sequitur the Kings power is in himself Ergo it is not derived to nor does reside virtually in the Parliament For the light of the Sun remaines imbodied and unexhausted in the Globe of the Sun at the same time as it is diffused and displayed through all the body of the ●yre and who sees not that the King without emptying himselfe gives commissions daily of Oyer and Terminer to others which yet he himselfe can neither frustrate nor clude but for my part I conceive it is a great errour to inferre that the Parliament has onely the Kings power because it has the Kings power in it for it seemes to me that the Parliament does both sit and act by concurrent power devolved both from the King and Kingdom And this in some things is more obvious and apparent then in others For by what power does the Parliament grant Subsidies to the King if only by the power which the King gives then the King may take Subsidies without any grant from the Parliament and if it be so by a power which the people give to the Parliament Then it will follow the Parliament has a power given both by King and Kingdome 3. The sending Propositions to the King and desiring his concurrence is scarce worth an Answer for Subjects may humbly petition for that which is their strict right and property Nay it may sometimes beseeme a superiour to preferre suite to an inferiour for matters in themselves du● God himselfe has not utterly disdained to beseech his own miserable impious unworthy creatures besides t is not our Tenet that the King has no power because he has not all power nor that the King cannot at all promote our happinesse because hee has no just claime to procure our ruine 4. We affirm not that the Kings power is separated from his Person so as the two Spencers affirmed neither doe we frame conclusions out of that separation as the two
all persons this Oath is taken now in the Parliament time by all the Members of the House of Commons and is required by the Law to be taken in all Parliaments otherwise they have no power nor colour to meddle with the publike Affaires This Oath being taken in Parliament that the King is the only and Supreme Governour in all Causes then it followes in Parliament causes over all persons then over the two Houses let them keep this Oath and we shall be sure of peace in the Land and good Lawyers ought to desire peace both for the publike good and ●heir private and not dishonour that Noble profession as many doe in this miserable time The Gent. sayes We doe not sweare that the King i● above all Law nor above the safety of his people neither doe we so sweare but His Majesty and we will sweare to the contrary and have swom and have made good and will by Gods grace make good our Oath to the world that the King is not above the Law nor above the safety of his people the Law and the safery of his people are his safety his Honour and his Strength AD. 8. The Gent. concludes That Acts of Parliament are not formally binding nor compleat without the Kings assent yet the Houses have a virtuall power without the Kings particular assent to doe things in order to publike Iustice and Safety viz In setting up the Excise in raising and maintaining of Armies in taxing the peo-people at pleasure with Fifth and Twentieth part Fifty Subsidies Sequestrations Loanes Compositions imprisoning the King abolishing the Common-prayer-Book selling the Churches Lands c. all these are in order to the publike Justice and Safety Mr H.P. you are of my profession I beseech you for the good of your Countrey for the Honour of our Science perswade your selfe and others as much as in you lies to believe and follow the monition and Councell of that memorable reverend and profoundly learned in the Lawes and Customes of the Land the Lord Coke who writes as becomes a great and a learned Judge of the Law a person much magnified by the two Houses in these words Peruse over all Books Records and Histories and you shall finds a Principle in Law 3 Pars Instit p. 36. a Rule in Reason and a Tryall in Experience that Treason doth over produc● futall and finall destruction to the offender and never attaines to the desired and two incidents inseparable thereunto and therefore l●t all men abandon it as the poysonous hait of the Devill and follow the Precept in holy Scripture SERVE GOD HONOVR THE KING AND HAVE NO COMPANY WITH THE SEDITIOVS CONCLUSION I Say againe that without an Act of Obliviow a gracious generall Pardon from His Majesty the Arreares of the Soulaiers paid a favorable regard had to tender Consciences there will be neither Truth nor Peace in this Land nor any man secure of any thing be hath By me David Jenkins Prisoner in the Tower The End A DISCOURSE Touching the Inconveniencies of a Long continued Parliament AND THE IVDGEMENT OF THE LAW OF THE LAND In that Behalfe By DAVID JENKINS now Prisoner in the Tower of LONDON Printed in the Yeare 1647. A DISCOURSE Touching the Inconveniencies of a Long continued Parliament 1. Aerpetuall Parliament is repugnant to the Act made this Parliament for a Trienniall Parliament for how can every three years a Parliament begin if this be perpetuall which may be so if the two Houses please 2. An adjournment of the Parliament makes no Session 4 Pars Institut fol. 27. Howbeit before the Adjournment the King gives His Royall assent to some Bills Cooke ibid. 3. There is no Session till a prorogation or dissolution of the Parliament 4. This Parliament as appeares by the Act for not dissolving thereof set downe in the Printed Statutes of this Parliament fol. 138. cannot be prorogued but by Act of Parliament There hath beene as yet no Act of Parliament present and therefore all the Acts of this Parliament are Acts of one Session 5. All the A●●● of one Session relate to the first day of the Parliament Plow ● com 79 35 H. 8. Bro. relation 35. Bro. Parl. 86. Dier 1 Mariae 45. and all the Acts of such a Pa●liament are Acts of one day so the Act for the Trienniall and the Act for this Perpetuall are two Acts of one day by the Law 6. 4 Ed. 3. cap. and 36 Ed. 3. cap. 10. A Parliament is to bee holden once every yeere and more often if need shall bee those Acts are confirmed by the Act for the Trienniall Parliament How doth a perpetuall Parliament agree with a Parliament once every yeere or with the intention of those Lawes How doth a Parliament every three yeers agree with a Parliament for ever which may be if the two Houses please 7. The result is this at one day in Law this Parliament two Acts have passed for howbeit the one was in 16● Carol. and the other in 17. Carol. yet both in Law are Acts of one day the one saith there shall be a Trienniall Parliament after the end of the sitting of this Parliament The other this Parliament shall sit for ever if they please The one will have a Parliament with an end the other a Parliament without an end When an Act of Parliament is against common right or Reason 8 Pars Doct. Bonhams case fol. 118. 8 Ed. 3.30 33 E. 3. cessavit 32. 27. H. G. Annuity 11. 14 Eliz. Dier 313. or repugnant or impossible to bee performed the Common Law shall controle it and adjudge this Act to bee void they are the words of the Law An Act of Parliament that a man shall bee Judge in his owne cause is a void Act. Begin with Common Right It is against Common Right that indebted men should not pay their debts That if any Member of the House of Comons doe any Subject wrong by diffeising him of his land or dispossessing him of his goods or blasting of his fame or doing violence to his person that such persons during their lives should not bee questioned by a priviledge of Parliament and that extended also to many others besides themselves Common Right doth abhorre these enormities which a perpetuall Paliament doth beget besides the utter destruction of all mens actions reall personall or mixt who have to doe with Parliament men 21 Jac. by the Statute of Limitation which confines suits to certain yeares For Common Reason Parliaments were ordained for remedies to redresse publike grievances It is against Reason they should make publike and insufferable grievances The Law of the Land allowes no protection for any man imployed in the service of the Kingdome but for a yeare to be free from suits and in many suits none at all howbeit hee be in such service 39 H. 6.39 but a Parliament perpetuall may prove a protection not for a yeare but for ever which is against all manner of Reason For
the ruine of King and people AD. 3. The Gent. affirms That the sonding Propositions to the King and desiring his concurrence is carce worth an answer for Sub ects may humbly petition for that which is their strict right and property c. The Propositions sent to Newcastle are in print wherein the two Houses are so farre from humbly petitioning that they stile not themselves his Majesties Subjects as appeares by the Propositions That they have a strict right or property to any one of these Propositions is a strange assertion every one of them being against the Lawes now in force Have the two Houses a strict right and property to lay upon the people what Taxes they shall judge meet To pardon all Treasons c. that is one of their Propositions Have they a strict right and proporty to pardon themselves and so for all the rest of their Propositions These Propositions have been Voted by both Houses 12 H. 7.20 1 Iac. cap. 1. 1 Car. cap. 7. the Kings assent the● being drawn into Bills makes them Acts of Parliment Hath the King no right to assent or dis-assent Was the sending but a Complement All our Law-Books and Statutes speak otherwise This Gent. and others must give an account one time or other for such delusions put upon the people AD. 4. The Gent. saith They affirm not that the Kings power is separated from his person so as the two Spencers affirmed c. His Majesties person is now at Holnby under their Guards have they not severed his power from him when by no power they have left him he can have two of his Chaplaines who have not taken their Covenant to attend him for the exercise of his Conscience For the three Conclusions of the Spencers 15. Ed. 2. Exilium Hugonis 1 E. 3. c. 2. Calvins case 7 Pars Reports 11. doe not the two Houses act every of them They sa● his Majesty hath broken his Trust touching the Government of his people They have raised Armies to take him they have taken him and imprisoned him they govern themselves they make Lawes impose Taxes make Iudges Sheriffes and take upon them omnia insigna summae p●t●statis Is not this to remove the King for misdemeanours to reform per aspertè to govern in aide of him the three Conclusions of the ●Pencers Doe they think the good people of England are become stupid and will not ●t length see these things The Gentleman saith They doe not separate his power from his Person but distinguish it c. His power is in his legall Writs Plowd 4. Eliz. 213. the Kings power and his Person are indivisible Courts and Officers when they counterfeit the Great Seale and seale Writs with the same make Iudges themselves Courts and Officers by their own Ordinances against his consent declared under his true Great Seale of England not by word of mouth letters or ministers only their Seale is obeyed their own Writs their own Iudges their own Courts their own Officers and not the Kings The time will come when such strange actions and discourses will be lamented AD. 5. The Gentleman goes on We take not from the King all power of pardoning Delinquents we only say it is not proper to him quarto modo c. What doe you meane by quarto modo I am sure Omnis Rex Angliae solus Rex semper Rex can doe it and none else read the Books of the Law to this purpose collected by that reverend and learned Iudge Stanford Stanfor Plcas 99. 27 H 8. c. 24. Dier 163. from all Antiquity to his time who dyed in the last year of King Philip and Queen Maries Reign you shall finde this a truth undeniable and this power was never questioned in any Age in any Book by any untill this time that every thing is put to the question You Gentlemen who professe the Law and maintaine the party against the King return at length and bring not so much scandall upon the Law which preserves all by publishing such incredible things We hold only what the Law holds the Kings Prerogative and the Subjects Liberty are determined and bounded and admeasured by the written Law what they are 1 Pars Inst●t pag. 344. Plowd 3. Eliz. 236 237. we doe not hold the King to have any more power neither doth His Majesty claime any other but what the Law gives him the two Houses by the Law of this Land have no colour of power either to make Delinquents or pardon Delinquents the King contradicting and the Army under Sir Thomas Fairfax howbeit but Souldiers doe now understand that to be Law and doe now evidently see and assuredly know that it is not an Ordinance of the two Houses but an act of Parliament made by the King Lords and Commons that will secure them and let this Army remember their executed fellow Souldiers And the Law was alwayes so taken by all men untill these troubles that have begot Monsters of opinions AD. 6. This Gentleman sayes The Parliament hath declared the King to be in no condition to govern c. There is no end of your distinctions I and you professe the Law shew me Law for your distinctions or letter syllable or line in any Age in the Books of the Law that the King may in one time be in no condition to govern and yet have the habit of governing and another time he may viz. when the two Houses will suffer him The Law saith thus Vbi lex non distinguit non est distinguendum He sayes The King is not barred from returning to His Parliament as he calls the two Houses he knowes the contrary the whole City knowes the contrary Nos juris consulti sumus sacerdotes as Institian the Emperour hath it in the first Book of his Institutions and therefore knowledge and truth should come from our lips Worth and ingenious men will remember and reflect upon that passage of that good and wise man Seneca Non qua itur sed qua eundum follow not the rayes of the Lawyers of the House of Commons God forgive them I am sure the King will if they be wise and seek it in time AD. 7. The Gent. sayes We sweare that the King is our supreme Governour over all persons and in all causes c. Why hath he lest out the word only for the oath the Members now take is that King Charles is now the only and supreme Governour in all causes over all persons 5 El●z cap. 1. Cawdreys case 5 pars fol. 1. and yet they keep their only Supreme Governour now in prison and act now in Parliament by vertue of their Prisoners Writ and by a concurrent power in this Parliament and by their own strict right and property as the Gent. This Oath is allowed by the Common L●w of the Land affirms in his Answer These things agree well with their Oath that the King is the only Supreme Governour in all causes over
Impossibility The death of His Majesty whose life God prolong dissolves it necessarily For the Writ of summons is Carolus Rex in hoc individuo and Carolus Rex is in this particular Habiturus colloquium tractatum cum Prelatis proceribus c. 2 H. 5. Cooke Title Parliam 3. pars King Charles being to have Conference and Treaty with his Prelates and Peeres Carolus Rex cannot have Colloquium tractatum Conference and Treaty when he is deceased and therefore it is impossible for any Parliament to continue as long as they please as for a Parliament to make a dead man alive For Repugnancie That which is but for a time cannot be affirmed to have continuance for ever it is repugnant The end of the Act of 17. Caroli Regis which is to continue at pleasure is in the said Act expressed to be to raise credit for money for these three purposes First for reliefe of his Majesties Army and people in the North. Secondly for preventing the iminent danger of the Kingdome Thirdly for supply of other His Majesties present and urgent occasions These ends are ended the reliefe of that Army the iminent danger supposed was sixe yeares agoe the supply of His Majestie hath beene a supply against him take away the end the meanes thereto are to no purpose take away the cause the effect ceaseth and therefore the three ends of this Act being determined it agreeth with Law and Reason the Act should end Sir Anthony Mayns case 5. pars 1. H. 4.6 Littl. cap. Villen the Law rejects things unprofitable and uselesse A perpetuall Parliament besides that it incites men to selfe-ends destructive of the publique of which the whole Kingdome hath had sufficient experience wil be a constant charge to the Kingdome for that every County and Borough who send Members to the Parliament are by the Law to pay wages to their Parliament men which to many Counties will amount above some Subsidies Yearely There are many poore Borough-Townes in each County of this Kingdome who being to maintaine two Burgesses in Parliament will be quickly begger'd if the Parliament have no end for all which reasons it is cleare that such long continuance of Parliaments will instead of a remedy which is and ought to be the proper and true end of Parliaments become an insufferable grievance and oppression to all the People of the Land The Writ of Summons this Parliament is the basis and foundation of the Parliament If the Foundation be destroyed the Parliament falls The Assembly of Parliament if for three purposes Rex est habiturus colloquium et tractatum cum praelatis magnatibus et proceribus super arduis negotijs concernentibus 1. Nos 2 Defensionem regni nostri 3. Defensionem Ecclesiae Anglicanae This Parliament hath overthrowne this Foundation in all 3 parts 1. Nos the King they have chased him away and imprisoned him they have voted no prelats and a number of other Lords about 40. in the City must not come to the House and about 40 more are out of Towne the colloquium et tractatus are made void therby For the King cannot consult and treat there with men removed from thence 2. Defensionem regni nostri that is gone they have made it their Kingdome not His for they have usurped all His Soveraigntie 3. Defensionem Ecclesiae Anglicanae that is gone that Ecclesia Anglicana trust be understood necessarily that Church that at the test of the Writ was Ecclesia Anglicana they have destroyed that too So now these men would be called a Parliament having abated quashed and made nothing of the Writ whereby they were Summoned and Assembled If the Writ be made void all the processe is void also that House must needs fall where the Foundation is overthrowne Sublato fundamento opus cadit the Foundation being taken away the worke falls is both a maxime in Law and Reason For some yeares past there is no crime from Treason to Trespasse but they are guilty of all Treason Felonies Robberies trespasses are contra pacem coronam et dignitatem Regis against the Peace Crowne and Dignitie of the King as appeares by all Indictments in all Ages Pax Regis the Kings Peace Corona Regis the Kings Crowne Dignitas Regis the Kings Dignitie are all trod under foot and made nothing Pax Regis the Peace of the King is become a Warre against the King His Dignitie put into prison and the Crowne put upon their owne heads All the Judges of England have resolved Nevills ease 7. part 34. 2. Jacobi that Noblemen committing Treason have forfeited their Office and Dignitie their Officei●s to councell the King in time of Peace to defend him in time of Warre and therefore those men against the duty and end of their Dignitie taking not onely Councell but Armes also to destroy Him and being thereof attaint by due course of Law by a racite condition annexed to the estate of their Dignitie have forfeited the same they are the words of the Law and therefore they have made themselves incapable to be Members of the upper House The Oppressions of the People Briberies Extortions Monopolies ought to be inquired after by the House of Commons and complained of to the King and Lords what have they done The House of Commons cannot by the Law commit any man to prison who is not of the said House for Treason Murder or Felony or any thing but for the disturbance of the publique Peace by the priviledge of the whole body They have no power by the Writ which the King issueth to elect and returne Members of that House so to doe For the Writ for them is onely ad faciendum et consentiendum to those things whereof His Majestie shall consult and treat with his Prelates and Nobles et de communi consilio Regni shall be there ordained as appeares by the Writ Here is no separate power given over the Kings people to them but onely ad faciendum et consentiendum 4 Pars. institut 23.24.25 and in all times this hath beene expounded and restrained to that which concerned their owne Members in Relation to the publique Service as he is a Member of the corporate body of the Parliament wherof the King is the Head But that the House of Commons have committed any man for Treason Murder or Felony or for any offence that had no relation to a Member of the House of Commons as it is against Law and Reason so no instance can be given till this Parliament 19 H. 6.43 22. E. 4.22 5 H. 4. cap. 8. 3 H. 6.46 All Questions and trials where witnesse are examined the examination is upon oath by the Law by all our Bookes Statutes every dayes practice Examination without an Oath is but a loose discourse therefore the House of Commons not claiming power to give an Oath have no power to examine any man No man shall bee imprisoned by the King or His Councell unlesse it be