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A54680 The ancient, legal, fundamental, and necessary rights of courts of justice, in their writs of capias, arrests, and process of outlary and the illegality ... which may arrive to the people of England, by the proposals tendred to His Majesty and the High Court of Parliament for the abolishing of that old and better way and method of justice, and the establishing of a new, by peremptory summons and citations in actions of debt / by Fabian Philipps, Esq. Philipps, Fabian, 1601-1690. 1676 (1676) Wing P2002; ESTC R3717 157,858 399

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made in the eighth year of her Reign for that many of their malicious minds and without any just cause did procure divers of the Queens Subjects to be Arrested it was enacted that the defendants should recover their costs and damages where the Plaintiffs doe delay discontinue their Suits or be non Suited And by an Act of Parliament made in the one and thirtieth year of her Reign it was for the avoiding of secret outlawries in Actions personal ordained that upon every Writ of exigend awarded against any person three several Proclamations shall be made by the Sheriff of the County or place where such defendant inhabiteth first at the County Court the second at the Quarter Sessions and the third at the Church dore of the Parish where such Person inhabiteth And the like to be done in the County Palatine of Durham where as the Statute saith many men have without knowledge been outlawed to their utter undoings if some speedy remedy be the sooner provided but those misdoings were not not then accompted to be sufficient to bereave a Multitude or far greater number of the people of the good which they received by the process of Utlary By an Act of Parliament made in the three and fortieth year of Her Reign the procurers or makers of any Warrant to Summon Arrest or Attach any Person by his or their Body or Goods to appear in any of her Majesties Courts of Justice not having before an original Writ or Process to warrant the same shall be Imprisoned without Bail or mainprise and not be delivered until he shall have paid 10l to the Partie grieved besides his Costs and Damages and 20l. a peice for their offences to her Majestie her Heirs and Successors By an Act of Parliament made in the 21th year of the Reign of King James the Lands of him which Dieth in Execution shall be Chargeable with the Debt By an Act of Parliament made in the 13th year of his now Majesties reign reciting that by the antient and fundamental Laws of this Realm where any Person is Sued Impleaded or Arrested by any Writ Bill or Proces Issuing out of any his Majesties Courts of Record at Westminster at the Suit of any Common Person the true cause of Action ought to be set forth and particularly expressed It was ordained that where the true cause or certainty of Action is not expressed in any such VVrit Bill or Process the Sheriff shall take no greater Bond for any Defendants Appearance thereunto then of the Penalty of Forty Pounds Which in such a length of time and approbation of many Statutes and Acts of Parliament and of our Judges in Courts of Justice in the awarding and allowance of such kind of Writs and Process which as the Rolls and Records of the Court of Common Pleas in the 17th year of the Reign of Edw. the 2 and of former Kings Reigns do declare were not granted of Course as for the ease of the People they have been in later times by sworn and experienced officers but upon grave and deliberate advice upon Petitions or motions to the Judges and the names sometimes of the Chief Justice and at other times of the particular puisne Judge that granted them mentioned in the latter ends of the Entries thereof might if there had been no Vestigia or track of the necessary Process of Arrest to compel men to appear in Courts of Justice to be found a multis retro seculis ex longissima experientia observata in almost all the foregoing ages and wisdom of the Auntients abundantly serve to recal that humour or desire of novel experiments or imposing or practising upon our Laws and Liberties and conduct those Sons of Innovation to a better obedience and veneration of our Laws rules of right reason and necessity of maintaining the indispensable Antient Legal power and Authority of Justice in the blessings of that which we have already received and may hereafter receive by its due administration if we do not give entertainment unto the wild proposalls of those who in their plenty of Ignorance Obstinacy and Interest would have they know not what And bring upon the Nation and themselves and posterities the many sad effects and consequences it will produce and may give them to understand that having such a small assureance of an Infallibility they may do better to stop the Carrere of their so causeless prejudice against the Process of Capias and Arrest and observe what their Neighbour and other Nations have adjudged to be very necessary and unavoidable in their proceedings in Courts of Justice upon personal Actions Who have not so lost or forsaken the Antient Customes and Pathes of their Fore-Fathers but that the same or very like what is and hath been so long in use amongst us may be seen amongst many of the most civilized of them and was so early in the World as it seemes saith John Oldendorpius to be deduced from the Laws of God and Nature Right reason and necessity By an Edict or Law of Theodorico King or Emperour of the Gothes made in the year of our Lord God 497 Arrests of the Bodies of Defendants were allowed to be made By a Constitution of Charlemaigne whose dominion extended over the greatest part of Europe made about the year of our Lord God 780. the houses of those that with-held their Tythes were to be seized and if they opposed and presumed to enter again of their own authority the Ministers of the Common-wealth were to put them in Custody In the Empire of Germany more especially in famous Mart Towns and Imperial Cities as Frankford upon the Mayn Lipsich Norinberg c. saith John Koppen in Rangensdorff Chief Councellor to the Elector of Brandenburgh Arrests for Debt are frequently made and the Debtors Imprisoned and this saith he a vetustissimis Romanorum legibus originem sumpsit had it's begining from the most Antient Roman Laws a Clark in holy Orders and likely to run away a Debtor that hath no Land or is likely to remove away his Goods is a Prodigal or contumatious refuseth to appear and cannot give Sureties may by the Laws and practice of those Countries Jure Saxonico be Arrested and taken In Poland he that will not or cannot give Bayl to answer the Action is arrested In Russia when any of the officers of the Courts of justice do come to a Defendant if he give not Bayl he is to be detained in Custody In Geneva upon a return or Certificate that the Defendant hath nothing he is arrested The like course of Arrest and compelling of men to appear in Judgment is and hath been long ago practised in the Kingdomes of France Spain Hungary Scotland and in the Dukedom of Savoy and many other Places who do think that they have a great deal of Liberty as the Common-wealths of Venice Holland and the united Provinces the Hanse Towns Switzerland and Genoa
be made In the seventeenth year of the Reign of King Edward the second a nihil habet being returned by a Sheriff upon a Distringas in wast a Capias was awarded by the Justices of the Court of Common Pleas against the defendant And that if a Sheriff return upon a pone a Tarde that the VVrit came so late unto him as he could not execute it and it be averred that the VVrit came time enough or that the Party was present and might be attached the Sheriff was to be amerced Personal Actions saith the Mirrour of Justice so much admired by Sir Edward Coke have their introductions by Attachments of their Bodies real by Summons and mixt actions By Summons and after by Attachment in personal Action And in the same Kings Reign if a Religious man Professed had forsaken the house and become vagrant a VVrit upon a Certificate of the Abbot or Prior issued out of the Chancery to the Sheriff to take him In the eight year of the Reign of King Edward the third presentatio facta fuit apud Lincolne contra Thomam de Carleton sub Vicecomitem Indictatum de extorsionibus aliis malefactis inter alia quod mittit homines arrestatos pro debitis in ergastulum strictum fetidum inter latrones quousque finem fecerint cum illo pro deliberatione sua extra c. Contra formam statuti plurima alia pro quibus fecit finem cum Rege postea pardonatur per breve domini Regis eo quod invenit Regi in guerra sua Scotiae tres homines armatos duos Hobelarios Thomas de Carleton under Sheriff of the county of Lincolne was indicted at Lincoln for several Extortions and Misdemeanors and amongst other things for that he did put such as were Prisoners and arrested for Debt in a close and loathsom Prison amongst Theeves until they gave him mony for their better accomodation against the form of the Statute and did commit many other Misdemeanours for which he paid a Fine to the King and was pardoned for that he furnished the King in his VVars in Scotland with three armed men and two Hoblers or common Soldiers By an Act of Parliament made in the 18 year of the Reign of the same King a Capias is to be awarded against such as not having wherewithal to live do refuse to serve 22. Ed. 3. It was held for Law that upon a Judgment obtained for Debt or Damages the Body of the Defendant might be taken in execution and by the opinion of Thorpe and Basset Judges where conusance of Pleas is granted there are also granted all things necessary unto it as to proceed by way of Capias Distresse c. And it was in those times agreed to be Law that the Judges have Power by Word of Mouth to command a Defendant to be Attached and that he that Bailed a man might by the Law without Process Arrest or take the partie Bailed and bring him into the Court. All which put together and brought to a due consideration with the small or no difference which is betwixt a Pone and a Capias as to the Attaching and Compelling of Defendants to appear in the Tenor and antiently practised and yet intended use of it may be enough to Rescue us from the imputation of Error or presumption if pace tanti viri we shall take that which hath been said in Sir Will. Herberts case by Sir Edward Coke in his third Reports that the Body of a Defendant in an Action of debt was not subject or lyable to an execution before the Statute made in the 25th year of the Reign of King Edward the third to be no more than an opinion built upon a great mistake for that Statute was not made only to give Process of Arrest by Capias upon a nihil habet or non est Inventus upon a Pone or a nihil habet or non est Inventus returned upon a Distringas by a Sheriff because it was so before by the Common Law of England it being altogether improbable that those who had Lands or any visible Estate in Goods or Chattels were before the making of that Statute always Resident or did never hide or absent themselves for Debt or some other Actions to avoid a Summons or some Arrest or compulsory way to bring them into Courts of Justice to answer and give satisfaction unto such as had cause to complain of them or that those who had no Lands or Goods were always to be free and exempted from any restraint or arrest of their Bodys upon actions of Debt or for any other matters commenced against them But was intended only to have Process to the Exigend and Utlary which could not be without a Write of Capias in Actions of Debt detinue of Chattels and taking of Beasts per Capias Exigend selon retourne du vicecount come home use en breifs daccompt by Capias and Exigen● according to the return of the Sheriff as was used in Writs of accompt and being at the petition of the Commons in Parliament priont les Commons the King as the record it self witnesseth did answer I l plese ou Roy que ainsi soit quil soit mys en Estatut it pleaseth the King that it should be so and that it be put or formed into a Statute And the reason of that petition of the Commons in Parliament to the King which introduced and procured that Act of Parliament many Acts of Parliament and good Laws in the former Ages being usher'd in and obtained by the Petitions of the Commons in Parliament to their King and Sovereign may in all probability seem to be for that they did not think either the former Process of the Law by Summons Pone Distringas or Capias to be severe or sufficiently coercive or so powerful to bring a Defendant to Justice as the fear of an Utlary which in the Saxons times were so Terrible as he that was outlawed was accompted to be a Friendless or Lawless man and was afterwards so formidable to those that by the contempt of the Laws incurred in the forfeiture of their Liberties Goods Chattels Profits of their Lands and Benifits of the Laws as it might well be believed every man would be careful to avoid so great a danger and trouble And therefore in the eighteenth year of the Reign of that King being but seven years before the making of that Statute it was deemed to be for the good of the People to have it declared by Act of Parliament in what cases process of Exigend and Utlary should be that is to say against such as received the Kings Wool or Mony and detained it such as transported Wool not Cocquetted or without Custom against Conspirators and Confederates of quarrels such as commited Ryots and brought in false mony if they could not be found or brought in by Attachment or Distress and not
and 40 s. for every page more for all Leases Mortgages Jointures Dowers or Debts 10 s. for the first page and 20 s. for the following pages including the Fees for the Certificates for all Entries of Inheritances in Fee in the Provincial Registry 10 s. for the two first pages and 20 s. for every page more for all Leases Mortgages Jointures Dowers or Debts 7 s. 6 d. for the first page and 15 s. for every following page Certificates included for the entry of every Inheritance in Fee in the Subprovincial Registry 7 s. 6 d. for the first page and 10 s. per page for every page after and for all Leases Mortgages Jointures Dowers or Debts 5 s. for the first page and 7 s. 6 d. for every following page for the entries of Inheritances in Fee in every Parochial Registry 5 s. for the first page and 7 s. 6 d. for every page more and for all Leases Mortgages Jointures Dowers or Debts 2 s. 6 d. for the first page and 5 s. for every following page And in case any of the Entries of Debts Leases Mortgages Jointures or Dowers shall not exceed 6 lines Registerially wr●t in the Parochial Registry the Fee thereof shall be but 1 s. the Fees for the Certificates excepted the Fees for Entry and Certificate of every Birth Christening Death Burial in the Parochial Registry if it exceed not 6 lines to be only 6 d. as also for the retainer of any Servant or Apprentice but if it shall exceed the● the Fees to be according as was allotted per page No money shall be recoverable upon any Bargains or Contracts whatsoever unless the same be entred in the Registries as aforesaid within he times limited the Fee of the Seal of the National Registry in all cases of settlement of any Estate Lease Mortgage Jointure or Dower to be 5 l. in all cases of Debt not exceeding 2000 l. the Fee to be 50 s. otherwise 5 l. the Fee of every Provincial Seal in the cases aforesaid 50 s. in all cases of Debt 25 s. and in all cases of Debt Mortgages c. to be 12 s. 6 d. In the National Registry 3 4th parts of the Seal shall be to the Commonwealth and a 4th to the Register and his assistants and Clarks for all entries of each two first pages of every particular Entry and for all the following pages an 8th part only in each Provincial Registry 3 4th parts of the Fees for the Entries and for Seals also to be to the Commonwealth and the 4th to the Register his assistants and Clarks in the Subprovincial Registry 2 parts of 3 of the Entries and Seals to be to the Commonwealth and the 3 to the Register in the Parochial Registry 2 parts of 3 of the Seal to the Commonwealth and the 3 of all the Fees of Entries to be to the Register his Clarks and Deputies Every Clark Assistant or Deputy of the National Registry shall have six sworn Attorneys or Messengers whose care shall be to transmit his several Certificates to the several Registries of the Provinces solicit the causes in the said Registerial Court and have for every cause in every Court-day besides all charges 7 s. 6 d. and no more every Clark assistant in each Provincial Registry shall have 3 Attorneys or Messengers who are to officiate as in the National Registry and have for every cause in which any of them shall be imployed 5 s. for Fee and no more besides charges and expences each Subprovincial shall have 2 Attorneys who shall do the same work and for every Court day shall have for Fee in every cause 4 s. besides all charges each Parochial Registry shall have 2 Attorneys which according to the number of 9725 Parishes in England and Wales will make almost 20000 Attorneys besides their Clarks which with Solicitors and their Clarks added unto them will more then three times exceed the number of Attorneys Solicitors and Clarks if truly accompted now in being whose Fee shall be for every Court day 3 s. besides charges and shall do the like as is before directed every Attorney shall be punished for fraud or neglect and make satisfaction to the Client for all damages and if not able to do it shall be dismissed of his place another chosen and the Client restored to his former condition the Clarks assistants to be chosen by the respective Registers upon security to be given and they are to give directions unto them and be responsal for them each Clark assistant in the Provincial Registry shall make choice of one Attorney and the Register of two The Judges in the several Parish Courts shall be the Register the Minister and the Constable and Churchwardens for the time being whereof in all hearings two to be present with the Register or his Deputy the several Courts to be kept every Thursday fortnight and all matters to be brought to hearing the 3d. Court day and to hold pleas of all Debts not exceeding 10 l. principal and all Estates under 10 l. per annum lying in the same Parish 12 Judges learned in the Law to be appointed by Parliament to attend the National Registerial Court 21 Judges be appointed to attend every Provincial Registerial Court where one Judge at least is to be present with the Register and one Clark assistant when all matters are to be ●eard every month shall be a Court Provincial upon the Tuesday in every week the Subprovincial Court every Friday 3 weeks and the Judges to be the Register and his Assistant and the Minister of the Parish All Summons to be granted upon motion of the party or his Attorney giving security to defray the charges of the party to be S●mmoned if his Action he not good or cause just by the respective Registers their Clarks Assistants or Deputies in writing under their hands unto which of Apparance shall be given either in person or by Attorney the Cause is to proceed but if no Apparance shall be given a second Summons is to be granted under the seal of the Register to which if no Apparance shall be given Judgment shall be given the second day of Apparance and entred in the Court Registry and if agreement intervene not before the next Court day and be entred with the Register Execution shall be granted and the Registers seal put thereon not to be reversed or any appeal admitted Two Vacations in the whole year to be in t● National Registry as to the trying of Causes the one from the first of December to the 10th of February and from the last day of May to the first day of September But that Chaos-maker or good man if any one could find any cause or reason to call him so or some of his Partisans when they shall have remembred it themselves or have heard it from others that the Noble and innocent Earl of Strafford was by false witnesses and accusations remote and improbable inferences strained constructions and never like to
Soul of Trade and their growing and already gained Riches there may be reckoned in their two Sheriffs Courts twice every week in the Year holden no less than two hundred Actions and Arrests weekly entered and made upon Debts which makes no more disturbance than a quiet putting in of Bail which secures the Debt more than it was before And in all the Counties Cities and Corporations of England and Wales as well as in the City of London the death of a Bailiff Serjeant at Mace or Catchpole is not to be found in the remembrance of the most aged persons And the Writs and Records of the Courts of Westminster from which very many Writs and Proces do Issue and are to be returned into cannot shew any frequency of Writs of Rescues or any assaults made upon the Sheriffs or their Bayliffs in the Execution of them And if the Proposers of this Bill and great Alteration of the Laws will not think themselves to be prejudiced if they should speak according to the Truth and what every man upon the visible evidence of demonstration and Records may rationally believe It cannot be denied but if there be in one County or City two Thousand Writs or Actions of Debt made out in a year to Arrest not above five hundred of them do proceed or come to Appearance and that of that five hundred unagreed there are scarce half of them that are declared against or make any defence and not half of that half ever come to be tryed and that those do also most commonly come to an end or determination Where there is no Demurrers or matters of difficulty in Law or peevishness in some of the parties to occasion the contrary within less than a third Term that many thousands of Actions are both in the Superior courts at Westminster and the Country and hundred court Barons and the inferior Courts determined within a few days weeks or months very many in a quarter of a year and those that remain uncompounded and undispatched do not survive the contention or trouble of half a year after the Suit commenced or begun So that all things considered if the Laws and Praxis in Scotland France Spain Germany Italy Holland Brabant and all the other Kingdoms and Provinces of the Christian world civil and municipal shall be rightly compared with our more happy less troublesome and chargable they will not be found to afford to their people such a quick dispatch of Justice adaequate and ready way unto it as ours have done and will always do if they be not turned out of their old course and channel By an Invention now proposed which will be as illegal as unparallel'd and hath no other precedent or pattern then that late way of proceeding in Actions of Ejectment hatched in the leveling or Oliverian times and hath then and ever since amongst knowing and good men gained no better an esteem then that of a publick grievance and a monstrum horrendum informe ingens cui lumen ademptum spawned and bred up in a Rebellion when Monarchy was Banished and the word of God and Laws of the Land were shamefully and as much as they could be misused For that there is an absurdity confusion and Hysteron Proteron in it putting the Cart before the Horse and making a Declaration which should be after a summons Executed and Appearance entred to precede the Appearance and at the same time go along with the Summons with a prefixion but from one Terme to the next which betwixt Easter and Trinity Terme being but with an Interval of seventeen days Sundays not excepted will be too short peremptory and prejudicial to Defendants and in the Lent Vacation which is commonly three Months and the Summer Vacation which is never less than 15 weeks and sometimes longer may be as inconvenient to Plaintiffs who by the ancient and more legal prefixions with the small distance of time of 15 days from return to return in the Term time might sooner have recovered their Debts appoints no Tryal by Juries nor declares by what certain Authority or Court the Summons shall be made whether by the Parties Plaintiffs or otherwise and gives a promiscuous Conusance of Pleas to all the Courts of Law at Westminster when as all but the court of Common Pleas some cases of priviledge excepted have by our ancient Laws and Magna Charta no jurisdiction or right therein Makes the Summons for a time to come to falsifie the Declaration if at the same time deliver'd with it to suppose it to be already made and the Declaration which supposeth it to be already made and is and ought to be a copy of the Record in the Court wherein the Action is pretended to be laid and intended to be Tryed to say he was Summoned when he was not the Fieri to be a Factum and the future to be a past or present and will create some contradictions when the injured defendant shall come to wage his law make Affidavit of a non Summons or bring his action for damages sustained by a false Affidavit or returne And will be sure enough to produce as necessary effects of causes very many not easie to be altogether foreseen or enumerated mischeifs and inconveniences Overturn and mutilate all our fundamental Laws upon which the Monarchy of England the best of Governments and less arbitrary in the world and the Justice of our Nation have for above one Thousand years been built and established and cut and canton both it and our well tempered Monarchy into little pieces and bring them as near as may be to an unhappy Republique which will neither fit or be for the good of the Nation Deform or almost annihilate our long approved Courts of Justice at Westminster by taking away a great part of the Process and excellent Formes and Proceedings thereof as Adonizebek is said to have done to his Captive Kings when he did cut off their Thumbs and great Toes destroy a great part of the Kings Prerogative which limited and bounded by our Laws and our Kings and Princes Concessions is no more than his just and necessary means of Government and in and by his High court of Chancery superintends over all the Courts of Justice in the Kingdom And as to the Law and Latine part of it and granting out of Writs remedial under his Teste meipso will appear to be a Court as antient as the reason and civility of the Nation from which all the other Courts of Westminster-Hall Country-courts Sheriffs Turns Court-Leets and Baron and all other Courts inferior in the Realm may truly be said to have their beginning the Matrix or Womb of all our Fundamental Laws either before or since Magna Charta which had its birth and being from it the Repository under the King in the absence of Parliaments of Justice in all cases where an appeal to the King or Parliament or the helps of Parliament shall be necessary the Custome of the Nation
or peremptory is by the Civilians themselves acknowledged to be a deviation à jure communi in casibus necessitatis tantum recepta quando alio modo qui● citari non potest Secondly Vbi locus non est ●utus ubi citandus habitat Thirdly Si persona est vagabunda quo casu edictum eo loco affigi debet ubi solita est conversari That such a possession is notwithstanding but fiduciary and the Plaintiff only put in possession Custodia causa vice pignoris deti●et donee reus veniat responsurus That a 2d trial decree or sentence restitutio in integrum do not seldom afterwards follow And that appeals from the lower Courts or Judges to the higher Commissions of adjuncts and revisions will never allow that Law to be ●o desirable expedite or little chargeable as our Common Laws are which our Novellists would perswade us to renounce and abandon Of which and the disparity of a great part of the Body of the Civil Laws with those of our cipal and common Laws the Dukes Earls and Barons of England were so sensible as in the eleventh year of the Reign of King Richard the 2. in the cause and appeal of Thomas Duke of Glocester and others against Robert de Vere Duke of Ireland the Earl of Suffolk and others they denyed to proceed to Judgment thereupon according to the Law civil and declared que la Roialme de Angliterre ne estoit devant ces Heures ne al intent du Roy signiours de parlement unques ne serra rule ne govern per le ley civil and our Ancestors more than what they retained of some of the actions rules and directions of reason which that excellent Law afforded and was necessary would not as our learned Selden hath observed constanti adhaesione by a constant perseverance and affection be drawn from that singular reverence and esteem which they had of the common Law which so long a course of time and antiquity had fitted to their nature and Genius In so much as William de la Pole Duke of Suffolk was in the Reign of King Henry the sixth accused amongst other things by the Commons in Parliament that he had sought to introduce the Civil Law And the great Cardinal Wolsey was in the Reign of King Henery the eight indicted or informed against quod ipse intendebat finaliter antiquissimas Anglicanas leges penitus subvertere enervare in universum hoc Regnum Anglie ejusdem Regni populum legibus Imperialibus dict legibus Civilibus earundem legum canonibus subjugare And King James coming from a Kingdom where those Laws were much in use and seemed to have some inclination to introduce or intermingle some part of it with our Common Laws did notwithstanding forbear to do it acknowledging that the Civil Law was not applicable to this government or fit for it And our Innovators that have been so wiling to intermingle with their System that part of the Civil Law which in the cases of contumacy did allowe a missio bonorum repleuisable as aforesaid may upon a further search and enquiry satisfie themselves and others that for the expedition of Justice put on and perswaded by the increase of trade and insolvency of debtors the Caesarean or Civil Law hath long ago forsaken their course of granting judgments for not appearing missionem rum and Seisure and found the Citatio realis captura incarceratio to be the more ready and less prejudicial way of compelling debtors or Defendants to appear in judgment For certainly to inforce perswade or give a libertie to the people in their Law Suits and concernments depending thereupon to circulate when they may go a more easy and less expensive way nearer more streight and better conducing to their honest ends will be but to vex and tire both Plaintiffs and defendants and multiply their charges When to draw and prepare the declarations which in Debt and common Actions were until the fourteenth year of the Reign of King James to be entred by the Filacers and ought yet if the cause or reason of their remitting that ancient part of their imployment do cease and be taken away the Plaintiffs will in this new devised expedient for a quick and Pie-powder Course of Justice be put to a charge for the drawing of their Declarations before hand when it may be there will be no need of them and to pay for the Copies of them which in a more regular course after apparances entred were to be payed for by the Defendants And to the Trouble and charge of entring judgments and the hazard of the loss of charges poundage aud other fees payd to Sheriffs and Bayliffs upon execution or paying of damages where they are wrongfully or not well obtained multitude of Affidavits pro con of motions in Court on the one side and the other many referrences and reports wagers of non-summons writs of restitution actions on the case for non summons or for slander or defamation brought for malitious contrivances cum muliis aliis which will increase and heighten the Bill of Charges And that goods Seized inventaried and sold by under Sheriffs and Bayliffs at half or less value though it may suffice one greedy and merciless Creditor will not be unlikely to defeat another or many others of their more just debts and utterly blast the Debtor in his credit by which he might well have subsisted and survived the disgrace and trouble of so furious a prosecution And that the long ago trodden path or way of compelling or bringing men unto judgment or unto Courts of Justice would not so frequently be made use of in England the way of Summons Pone and distress being not yet altogether forsaken and disused as it was formerly for that betwixt the Reigns of Canutus a Danish King the 25 year of the reign of King Edward the Third and for some ages after there neither could be any either frequency of arrest or necessity for it as there hath been since and is now CHAP. III. The reason and necessity of the more frequ●nt use of VVrits of Arrest and Outlawry then was before thi making of the Statute of 25 E. ca. 17. IN regard that in those former Ages there were more Lands than Tenants more real Estates but little personal the Trade of the Nation not the fortieth part of what it is now so little before the Reign of King Edward the third as those few Merchants that came hither had Letters of safe conduct granted unto them before they came and that the Commerce and Trade which was in King Edward the Third's time long after was only with the Esterlings and Hanse Towns Burgundy Aquitaine some Genoese and Italian Merchants the Turky East and West Indy and Affrican trades not then or long after known or used Usury so horrid and damnable a Crime as it was a cause of Excommunication denyal
of Christian Burial or a power to make a last Will and Testament the Friborghs or Tubings in every County so obliged men to an obedience to the Laws the publick peace as every man of the Tubing or Freborgh were bound upon all occasions to bring each other to Justice the Nobility Gentry Masters of their numerous Families were to do the like for all that were de manu pastu or in their service the Lords of Mannors kept much of their demesnes in their own hands with great Stocks Herds of Cattel thereupon had their Bondmen and Bondwomen in their Families Villains Neifes regardant to their Mannors did let their other Lands for small Rents and much personal service as to plow their Land now their Grass make their Hey reap their Corn carry in their Harvest Wood do a great part of their Husbandry and sometimes ride with them 600 Abbies and Religious Houses with their numerous Monks Fryers Nuns and all their Dependants and Servants belonging to them lived out of the reach of Writs and Proces and all or most of them and the secular Clergy in above 9600. Parishes so formidable as they were as it were exempt from common Proces and no man durst lay violent hands upon them that many thousand Tenants in Capite and by Knight service and the Tenants which did hold their Lands of the Nobility Gentry either as free-hold or copy by Lease or at Will in the times of that great Hospitality Protection and Comfort which they receivedunder them and the great Veneration Awe and respects which they paid unto them could never find it to be either safe or convenient for them to commence or prosecute any Action or Suit in Law against them or any of their very numerous Dependants Friends Kindred or Alliances and there were many thousands which in the Reignes of King Henry the 1 Henry the 2 Richard the 1 King John Henry the 3 and Edward the first were Croysadoed for the wars in the Holy-land and at Jerusalem and thereby claimed and enjoyed a Freedom from any arrests or molestations concerning the paymentof their debts with the many necessary protections given unto such as were imployed in Servitio Regis which the said several Princes several of their successors whilst they had so many Provinces in France and wars for the defence of the same could not deny unto those whose service they made use of increase of people by reason of more than formerly frequent marriages of the laicks and the marriages of all our Clergy which before had been for some hundred of years forbidden could not but administer so many occasions to disuse the more slow way of the process of summons pone distringas and make use of that more expedite and quicker way of recovery of Debts or bringing men to justice when in so great a change as hath since happened in the alteration of the Estates Manners business and trade of the Nation not only at home but a broad inward and outward and that every man could not like a Snail carry his house upon his head or be sure always to be found in it there could not be a few very great and pressing necessities to call for it especially When if all the People of the Nation were numbred or put into Ranks there would be 1. Free-holders 2. Copy-holders Lease-holders and such as have an Estate only in Tythes Annuities or Rent Charges 3. Men of Estate only in Goods 4. Or of Trade and Credit only 5. Men whose Estates are only in Money at use or abroad in other mens hands 6. Or of no Estate but what they carry about with them or hope for by their Friends or their Industry or some future preferment 7. Such whose Estates depend upon their daily labours or profits arising thereby as mechanicks Artificers Servants Labourers and the like 8. Mariners and a sort of adventitious people who have little or no abode going or coming to or from beyond the Seas Merchants Strangers and the like Of all which several sorts of people the Free-holders and first Classis are the only men who are properly to be summoned or to be within this new proposed Law because they have lands Estates to be known and thereby summoned and are to be found with some certainty but are not the fortieth part of those which have not Of the second sort the Copy-hold Estates which being very near a fifth part of the Nation are not extendable or liable to debts nor can without manifest prejudice to the Lords of the Manors whose Predecessors or Ancestors did under certain Limitations permit them to enjoy them be made to be so Tithes are for the most part not distrainable and may be sold or compounded for before they be due Leases may be surrended or assigned so as none shall easily find the true Proprietor Annuities or Rent-Charges are not extendable The third and fourth sort may either convey away their Goods or have very little of them The Estate of the fifth either not to be found out or hardly to be come at And the experience of some Thousands of years past and the latter as well as the former Ages can and will bear witness and record of the usefulness and approbation of the Proces of Summons pone and Distress where the Defendants are Free-holders have a visible Estate and of Arrest in case of Contumacy and Contempt of Courts of Justice and suspition of Flight and Insolvencies CHAP. IV. The Ancient use as well as necessity of the Proces of Arrest and outlawry in this and other Nations FOr it may be evident to any who shall not too much be led by a causless prejudice or an humour of censuring that which they do not understand that an attachment upon Pones do cause a manucaption or Bail and that upon on a Distringas made thereupon a manucaption of the Defendants person is Returned as well as the issues or profits of his Lands or goods that the words of Attach or Capias used in the writs process and records of our Law are in many thi●gs Synonimous and of one and the same signification And that the procedings in law by process of Capias and Arrest may not at all seem to be unwarrantable cruel and unjust when precedents and approbation of the like and greater severities are to be found in the sacred and always to be believed records of holy Writ in the old and new Testament as the putting the man in ward that was found gathering of sticks upon the Sabbath whilst the Children of Isreal were in the wilderness because it was not declared what should be done unto him and if thy Brother that dwelleth by thee be waxen poor and sold unto thee thou shalt not compel him to serve as a Bond Servant and the selling of a debtor and taking his Children to be bondmen If thou be surety for thy friend thou art snared and taken with
then what should be just and shew as much mercy if there should be occasion for it as the Debtor should have need of and that every man would be as willing to do right one unto another as it should be asked or demanded of him But that being not to be found in too many of the Sons of men or the smallest Societies nor was alwayes or is likely to be in the subluna●y and lapsed condition of mankind some kind of compulsion was necessary and a lesser then what is now or hath been most anciently practised could not be to any purpose unless we could content our selves and take that to be a happiness which would certainly never prove to be any to have Justice which next to the Creation and the mercy of all mercies the Redemption of mankind and the Divine Protection and Providence is one of the greatest blessings which was ever imparted by God unto it and as to the continual guard and preservation of our lives liberties and estates is more necessary and less to be wanted then our food apparel houses or places of rest and is the great support of the being and well being of all humane Societies to be a meer speculation or empty word for Schollars only to dispute of in the Schools of Ethiques Or sit like Old Ely in a Chair with Why do you so my Sons and permit every man to deceive mischief one another and render the Justice of the Nation to be nugatory for the restraint now used of the Body of a Defendant refusing to appear voluntarily or upon a Summons or Citation is not in vinculis or Cippis in Chains or Fetters not ad poenam but ad Cautionem and in so moderate and gentle a manner and lessening of their liberty as it is but temporary and when so done is but after many delayes threatnings warnings and forbearings and most commonly occasioned by their own default or some long abuse of the Plaintiffs patience and such a remedy or course taken is no more if rightly interpreted then what common and right reason necessity and endeavour of right to be done did require And when it is but Majoris mali vitandi causa to avoid greater evils is so little in derogation of publick liberty as although it may for a time be something prejudicial to some particular man it proves many times to be a special help unto many men to recover their Debts or Money due unto them the want whereof might otherwise be a cause of their own imprisonment And so long as any man is a Member of a Common-wealth his liberty is to attend or depend upon the good of that Common-wealth otherwise he may claim a liberty as a Free-man but not as an English-man Nor could our Fore-fathers in the necessity of bringing or compelling men to appear in Judgment as well as of the preservation of the alwayes very necessary Power Authority and Jurisdiction of Courts of Justice which do order and direct it ever tell how to imagine that it should be understood to be a Tyranny to arrest attach or imprison such as should refuse to appear upon the Summons or Proces of a Court of Justice or be fugitive or like to run away or that it ever was or can be deemed to be an oppression to enforce such Persons in a legal and orderly way to pay their Debts and do that which God commandeth them to do and hath no less Justice or conscience in it then to be constrained to do right one unto another perform Covenants and Promises and obey Magistrates and Laws in force when the Book and Dictates of God himself do accompt a Man wicked that borroweth and payeth not and the wilful deceiving of Men in the not paying of Money due unto them or not performing of Promises is by good Divines and Expositors conceived to be a kind of theft and reckoned to be within the meaning of the Eight Commandment and to be numbred amongst the breaches and transgressions of it and it is no Tyranny by the Law of Nature for a Man to stay or lay hold of one who is running away with his Money or Goods or for a Judge by the Common Law of England to commit such as misbehave themselves by word or gesture in their presence or a Court of Justice or for a Creditor by the Civil Law to Arrest or stay his Debtor if he be running away before he can get a Warrant or Proces from a Judge To punish Souldiers with death by the Law Military for running away from their Colours stragling in their March or going above a Mile from the Army without licence to Arrest or Imprison such as resort to unlawful Games until they shall find Sureties no longer to use or haunt any place where such unlawful Games are used or to imprison Collectors for the Poor refusing to accompt And Sir Edward Coke in his Commentaries upon that part of Magna Charta saith that a Watchmans arresting a Night-walker or one that hath dangerously wounded another or that keepeth Company with a notorious Thief whereby he comes to be suspected is lawful and no breach of Magna Charta although it be done without the Warrant of a Writ By what rule of right reason then shall so gentle and necessary a course or way of compelling Men by Proces of Arrest to appear in a Court of Justice in order to a Sentence or Judgment when he may be bailed be styled a Tyranny or Oppression When it shall not be so called or esteemed to take a Man in Execution for not obeying or performing a Judgement where he cannot be bailed or shall it be Tyranny to Arrest a Defendant to oblige him to appear in a Cause or Action Civil and none at all in a Criminal An Oppression or Tyranny to Arrest a Defendant to constrain him to appear in an Action of Debt and none at all in an Action of Trespas Nay rather is it not an Oppression to endeavour to defraud and injure Men detain their Estates and Livelyhoods withhold from the Poor and needy their right and undo the Widdows and Fatherless by keeping away the Money which should feed or keep them from starving without making satisfaction or shall it be no Tyranny to do the wrong but a Tyranny in a legal and ordinary manner or way to seek to be reliev●d against it Or how can it be justly accompted to be a Tyranny when no whereelse it hath been so esteemed but was so little believed to be a Tyranny or Oppression by other Nations or any thing less then right reason as they have not only made use of the Proces of Arrest and Imprisonment of the Body in Actions of Debt and other the like Personal Actions in these later Ages but long before the Incarnation of our blessed Saviour The Athenians had their Bailiffs Serjeants and Apparitors to bring Defendants into their Courts of Justice and the Plaintiff might
their wisdom could foresee and provide indifferently devised for all men Sed quia plus pollere multorum ingenia consiliaque in animis versarent secum unamquamque rem agitarent deinde sermonibus at que in medium quid in quaque re plus minusve esset conferrent eas leges habiturum populum Romanum quas consensus omnium invasisse nec jussisse latas magis quam tulisse videri posset But for as much as the wits and heads of many men might see further and better advise they gave them leave to consider and ponder every particular and to reason together from point to point and deliver their opinions openly what was short wanting or superfluous in every Article and what Laws an universal consent of the people should bring in those should be enacted and none other that it might appear they were not so much to approve of them give their assent after they were propounded as to propose prefer them their own selves Cumque ad rumores hominum de unoquoque legum capite edito satis correctae viderentur Centuriatis Comitiis decem Tabularum leges perlatae sunt qui nunc quoque in hoc immenso aliarum super alias acervatarum legum cumulo fons omnis publici privatique est Juris And when as they were thought to be sufficiently corrected as every one spake to the Titles and Chapters thereof in an Assembly of all the Centuries and degrees of men the Laws of the Ten Tables were enacted and established which even at this day saith Livy amongst that infinite number of Laws heaped one upon another are the very Well-spring and Fountain of all Justice both publick and private But the next year after the people finding the Decem viri growing insolent to determine matters at home before they gave Sentence openly and usurping Kingly Government begun to repent themselves of putting the power of appeal out of themselves tumult and protested against the Decem viri or Ten which they had chosen saying They had created them Magistrates only for the publishing and enacting of certain Laws but they had now no Justice in the City And Appius one of the Ten having ingrossed into his hands the power and disposing of his Partners helps on the Tumult by a business that happened upon his lusting after a young Maid the Daughter of L. Virginius a Commander of good note in the Army and setting Mr. Claudius to claim her as his Bond-woman who laying hands on her in the Market-place cited her to appear and commanded her to follow him otherwise he would force her the People flock together but the Plaintiff tells them they need not trouble themselves for he proceeded according to Law and would do nothing by force cites her again to appear before Appius and the People perswade her to follow where the cause by reason of the expostulation of Icilius to whom she was betrothed not coming to hearing that day she was bailed and suffered to go under Sureties till the next but the second day Appius without hearing the Defendant or her Friends decreed that she should be a Bond-woman to Claudius who going to seise her finds the People resisting him Appius sends a Serjeant to assist him Virginius in a rage killeth his Daughter that she might not come into the Oppressors hands and a great uproar happening by the People Kindred and Friends of the Maid Appius cites Icilius the Spouse of the Maid as an Author of the Tumult and for his contumacy in not coming caused him to be attached and carried to Prison but Valerius and M. Horatius two popular and powerful Senators thrusting back the Serjeant said If Appius had any thing to charge him with by order of Law they would Bail him but if he went about to offer violence he should meet with his match After that Appius himself is arrested who desiring to be bailed and not to be put in Prison or lye in Chains by all the Friends and pittyful speeches he could make could not obtain it For that he had saith the Father of Virginia so much against all order of Law denyed the bailing of her who therefore commanded him to be carried to Prison as a person attaint and convict The Tribun of the Commons set him a day to plead for himself and make his answer but Appius before that day killed himself his Goods were confiscated by the Tribuns the rest of the Decem viri fled and were banished and all their Goods confiscated And the Ten Tables having two more added to them by the appointment of the Tribuns are set or hung up openly to be seen engraven in Brass The Romans having long before the compiling of the Twelve Tables used to Arrest and compel Men to appear in Judgment as is manifest by their manner of giving Bail before such time as Appius denyed to take Bail in the case of the Daugh-of Virginius which was ex veteri Jure an Old Law and Custom amongst them saith Pomponius And this grand Commotion of the People having nothing at all in it the while of complaint or action against the Laws of citing and compelling men to appear in Judgment and a putting them to Bail in the interim but a confirmation or allowance rather of them Threescore and five years after that Marcus Manlius Capitolinus so named because he had saved the City of Rome and the Capitol from ruine and spoil growing ambitiously discontented not contenting himself to deal in the Laws Agraria about the Division of Lands which had alwayes ministred occasions of Seditions began to intermeddle between the Debtors and Creditors and to overthrow saith Livy all keeping of Credit And seeing a Centurion condemned in an Action of Debt and carrying to Prison upon an Execution with a rout and crew of his Followers rescues and takes him from the Officers and crying out that his merits in saving the Capitol had been to little purpose if he could abide to see his Fellow-Souldier carried away captive did in sight of the People pay down the Debt set to sale his own Land and caused it to be openly cried that as long as he had one foot of ground or any thing else rest he would not see one of the People condemned upon Execution carried to Prison and stirred up such a Sedition in the City as the People followed him as the protector of their Liberties whereupon the Dictator being sent for from the Army assembled the Senate caused the Ivory Chair of State to be set in the Common-Hall and sent a Serjeant for Manlius who with a great retinue of his party presents himself before the Tribunal and tells the Dictator that now he saw he was created Dictator not against the Common Enemies but himself and the Commons of Rome for he did see well that he professed to maintain and bear out the Usurers against the Commons Whereupon after many insolent speeches the Dictator commanded him to be
Doth wast his Estate and intendeth to defraud his Creditors 9. Is a Gamester 10. Hath all the signs of a suspitious Person 11. Makes use of many Men to be bound or ingaged for him 12. Engageth himself in many business 13. Is looking out or providing for another Habitation 14. Is turned Informer 15. Keeps his Shop shut up 16. Is a Man of ill life or conversation 17. Or hath been so formerly 18. Hath been an Offender in Criminal matters 19. Lodgeth his Goods in some secret place 20. And is packing up to be gone But they that can dream of Tyranny and Oppression in our Proces of Arrest and Outlawry and know not how to prove it will rather then miscarry in their design of Metamorphosing our Laws and putting them into as many new fashions as the variety 〈◊〉 vanity of their Cloths and Habits w●ll if those accusations must vanish and never be able to make them any good return seek out some other way to alter or abrogate those kind of Law proceedings and therefore to pretend that the Statute of 25 E. 3. ca. 〈◊〉 giving Proces of Capias and Outlawry in Actions of Debt is either by the Act of Parliament of 28 E. 3. ca. 3. or 42 E. 3. ca. 1. repealed CHAP. XIV That the Statute of 25 E. 3 ca. 17. which giveth Proces of Capias and Bxigen● in Actions of Debt and other Actions therein mentioned is not repealed either by the Acts of Parliaments of 28 E. 3. ca. 3. or 42 E. 3. ca. 1. there being no ind●●venim●● or prejudice to the publick good in those kind of Law proceedings which might deserve a repeal by those or any other Acts of Parliament WHen it cannot come within the virge of any probability that the said Statute of 25 E. 3. ca. 17. should in the same Parliament those grand Assemblies being then long before usually shout and of no long continuance be made when the Statute of 25. E. 3. ca. 4. was made That none should be taken by Petition or Suggestion to the King or his Councel but by 〈◊〉 Indictment Presentment or Proces made by Writ original If it had not been believed to have been consistent with it or the meaning of our Magna Charta ca. 29. or if the Statute of 25 E. 3. ca. 17. had been repealed by the shortly after following Statutes of 28 E. 3. or 4● E. 3. ca. 1. such a repeal should not be taken notice of by those that lived in those times or near unto them or that if there had been any grievance found or perceived in that Statute of 25 E. 3. ca. 17. or that the said Statute of 28 E. 3. had repealed it the Statute made by the aforesaid King E. 3. in the 36. year of his Reign would have ordained the Confirmation of the great Charler and the Char●er of the Forrest and commanded that the other Statutes mode in his time and in the time of his Progenitors be well and surely holden and kept in all points or that the Citizens of London who in their Courts of Justice in their City have for so many Centuries of years last past to their very great advantages made use of the Proces of Arrest as a lawful and beneficial Custom and constrained all that were to enjoy the largely comprehensive Freedom of that City to take an Oath to maintain the Franchises and Customs thereof would have made it their business to get many an Act of Parliament to confirm them if they had supposed it to have been prejudicial to them And that the People of England should in so many several Ages since those pretended Acts of repeal not only have petitioned for several Acts of Parliament for Proces of Arrest and Outlawry in several Actions but through so many past Ages and Generations Arrest and imprison one another in the way to Justice and not at all think themselves guilty of betraying their own Liberties and never complain of it Or that the Justice of the Nation should in all that long course of time be so sleepy or mistaken as to continue and put in Execution an Act of Parliament repealed and maintain and continue a grievance O● that our Ancestors who were not all restrained by that Statute of 25 E. 3. ca. 17. from the former more usual course of proceedings in Actions of Debt by Writs of Summons Pone and Distringas for there were Writs of Summons Pone and Distress made use of in Debt and Accompt after the making of that Statute where there was such a visibility of Estate as the Sheriff could not safely return that the Defendant had nothing whereby he might be summoned it having been in Easter Term in the 22 year of the Reign of King Edward the 1. declared to be a constant rule in Law Quod nullus qui habet terras debet arrestari per Corpus ad reddendum compitum set per terras cum habeat sufficientiam No Man that had Lands sufficient was to be arrested by his Body in an Action of Accompt as there may be at this day if the Plaintiffs have a mind unto it and would rather procede by a longer way about then a shorter And should of themselves have made an Election of the way of Capias Arrest or Outlawry and continue it for above three hundred fifty years without any thing like a complaint against it if they could have believed that that Act of Parliament of 25 E. 3. ca. 17. had been repealed and a long and undeniable experience had not informed them that it was a much better and expedite way of bringing Men to Justice or that if the Writs of Pone and Distress had been the better way the Statute made in the Seventh year of the Reign of King Henry the Fifth which was sixty-nine years after to give Proces of Arrest and Outlawry in Actions or Writs for forging of Charters or Evidences would have esteemed it to be for the Common good of the People to have enacted it or if after the making of that Statute the course of Capias Arrest and Outlawry had not been believed to be the most beneficial the Statute made in the 19th year of the Reign of King Henry the Seventh for giving of Proces of Arrest and Outlawry in Actions of the Case which was made 84. years after would have declared the way of Pone and Distress to have been the Cause of great delays or that the Act of Parliament made in the 23th year of the Reign of King Henry the Eigth for giving Proces of Capias in Writs of Annuity which was made twenty-eight years after the making of that Statute would have said there were many delayes in Actions of Annuities because no Writ of Capias did lie in that Action Acts of Parliament in those dayes and long before after having by our Kings been granted upon the Petitions and Request of their Subjects and penned advised or carefully perused
a magis and minus and variatioe of Circumstances in such kind of Offences which may either lessen or heighten them Nor do those Rules which are given by Bracton for the reason of Arrests or Restraints of liberty in personal Actions before judgment that a Habeas Corpus which amounteth in effect to a Capias or Restraint of the person or his liberty is presently to be granted propter privilegium eruce signatorum mercatorum in respect or favour of those that were to go to the Holy War or were Merchants or propter causam sive necessitatem for some urgent cause or necessity of dispatch or in Trespas propter atrecitatem injuriae the horridness or evil of the Offence or propter personam contra quem injuriatum est ut si injuriatus sit Domino Regi vel Reginae vel eorum liberis vel Fratribus vel Sororibus vel eorum Parentibus Propinquis in respect of the Person against whom the wrong is done as the King Queen their Children Brothers Sisters or their Parents or Kindred come up to the Rules of Justice for urgency of Affairs necessities or occesions considerations or respect of Persons can of themselves be no cause of making Justice which is not to be a respecter of Persons to be Eccentrick or go a step out of her way or to do any thing in one case which should not or ought not to be done in other Cases having the like ground of reason and justice attended with the same circumstances neither can atrocitas facti vel injuriae the grandeur and oughliness of the offence be the sole cause or ground of Arrest in common or petty actions of Trespas or for words if there could properly be any atrocitas or hainousness in them or where it is done involuntarily as in Cases of Trespass or damage done by a mans Cattle for Trespass may be greater or lesser and if every Trespass could be understood to be of the greater size or magnitnde and so horrid and enormous yet there can be no reason to make the Caption or Arrest to be in part of Corporal punishment before the Judge or Magistrate be ascertained of the guilt of the Party or instructed how to keep the order which the Laws of God Nature and Nations and our Magna Carta have enjoyned that is to say to punish only secundum quantitatem delicti according to the nature of the offence And that supposed ground or reason given by Sir Edward Coke will be as deficient that the Common Law of England abhorring all force as the capital Enemy to it subjects the body to imprisonment until it hath made agreement with the Party and fined to the King bring any better reason with it For if the King shall as he conceiveth punish force by a Capias to Arrest the body before the party be permitted to defend him-or a Tryal had by Jury whether he be guilty or not that would be more against Magna Carta then any Process of Capias or Arrest in Debt can be dreamed or fancied to be and a Capias pro fine after a Tryal and finding guilty will either shew that it was not the arresting of the body in Trespass which was intended or inflicted for the punishment but the Capias pro fine and if both the Capias in Trespass before Judgement and the Capias pro fine after Judgement should be inflicted for one and the same offence They would not be secundum modum sive quantitatem delicti proportionate to the offence and the Capias to Arrest would be before the King or his Courts of Justice could be ascertained that there was an offence Nor will that other cause or ground given by him in the Report of the said Sir William Herberts Case that the King may by the Common Law arrest the body of the Debtor for that Thesaurus Regis est vinoulum bellorum nervus The Money and Treasure of the King is the Bond of Peace and Sinuwes of War obtain the conclusion which he aims at For that were to make a King or supream Magistrate which ought to be Lex viva and Justice it self to destroy that which he was sworn to protect and give him licence to break Laws who is not in ordinary Cases against the Rules of Justice and right reason to give such a liberty to himself or any others or to do an act for an advantage or necessity which the even and adequate Rules of Justice common right or right reason cannot allow So as by the favour of so great an autho●●ty in our Laws as Sir Edward Coke is and with as much reverence as is or can be due to so great a lover of the Laws of England and the veneration which he justly merits I must of necessity by what appears in the Cabinet and Treasury of time and Antiquity and what is clearly to be perceived in those pure streams which the Fountains of Justice and right reason have imparted unto Mankind assert what I have done and conclude that he was a man and hath as the best Authors may in their Books sometimes do which are not Scripture and Canonical erred in averring that there was no Process of arresting the body of a Debtor either before or after judgment until the Statute of 25 Ed. 3. which gave Process of Outlawry in Actions of Debt When in allowing Process of Arrest in debt in the Kings Case as he doth in Actions of Trespass he must acknowledge the same reason and necessity which is a just and rational coertion to appear before the Tribunals of Justice and of caution to be given to abide their judgments to be in Actions of Debt and other personal Actions And he himself in many of his Books and Writings hath as well as the Civil Law and our Common Law and the Law of Nations affirmed that the same Reason may claim the like Law For the reason that Joseph would have imprisoned his Brethren upon a suspition that they were come to espie the Land and kept Simeon a Prisoner until their words and denials were proved gives us the reason necessity and justice of arresting in personal Actions and Debt as well as Trespass until cause or caution be given of appearing in Courts of Justice and performing the judgments And that learned Judge could if he were now living very well remember that he hath often said as well as found that many of our Acts of Parliament are but declaratory of the Common Law and that which was long before used and understood to be as it was reasonable That the matter or thing excepted in an Act of Parliament is not included in any purvieu or provision of it but is out of the reach and gun-shot thereof and that when in the Statute of Magna Carta made in 9 H. 3. ca. 29. it is said That no Freeman shall be taken and imprisoned or be disseised of his Freehold or Liberties or free Customes or be outlawed or exiled
Book stiled the Good Old Cause dressed in its Primitive lustre said to have been written by R. Fitz-Brian it was insinuated that the distempers of the Nation being so great as they could not admit of a redress and conserve still their old frame things must unavoidably wheel about and fix themselves upon another Basis Providence united the honest party of the victorious Army so as it was resolved that the poor who had nothing to pay their Debts should be freed from the bondage of a perpetual Confinement the corruption of the Laws were become at once both the shame and impoverishment of the Nation and some Expedient was to be had for the freeing of it from so horrid a Cheat Divine providence did by degrees point out a necessity of the change of Government and Kingship being laid aside as unnecessary chargable and dangerous it was devolved into a Commonwealth It being a certain rule that corrupt and degenerate States cannot be perfectly healed and regulated but by stepping into those forms which are the farthest distant from that wherein they were corrupted Backed by an Anonymous Author who being desirous to try an experiment as well projected as that of the cutting the Moon into Stars to make the greater light and save the expence and trouble of Candles and to contrive a way for the ruining at once of many of our fundamental Laws root and branch doth in a Book entituled a Chaos or frame of a Government by way of a Republick printed by the said Livewel Chapman endeavour a creation of new Laws out of a confusion of his own making wherein as a well-willer to the Publique as he stiles himself but a greater to all at home he doth in order and respect which there will be no reason to believe to the Lawyers profit and to the peoples enjoyment of Magna Charta propound National Provincial Subprovincial and Parochial Registries to which Courts all causes of Civil concernment are to be reduced all Suits in Law or Equity to be determined in six months upon a penalty to the Judges and loss of Cause to the Client whether Plaintiff or Defendant if guilty of delay the Judges in Chancery to sit de die in diem the Itinerant Judges to determine all Causes that shall be tryed before them and a Term of a month to be at Westminster-hall after every Circuit for the determination of matters of Law with rules to be given for the Jurisdiction of each Registerial Court a National Registry to be appointed at Westminster to consist of a Register and six Clarks Assistants or Deputies which may have each as many writing and examining Clarks under him as the business shall require each County of England to be one entire Province and those allotted to the Jurisdiction of the said several six Clarks and Deputies viz. so many Counties as are comprised within the several Circuits of the Judges in every Shire-Town a Provincial Register and he to have two Clarks assistants who shall as to the imployment divide the Province only Yorkshire is to have three Clarks assistants who are to divide according to the Ridings Subprovincial Registers to depend upon the Provincial and to have one Clark assistant every Parish or two where one is too little to have one Register and a Clark assistant every person having Estates in two or more Counties shall enter their Estates and Annual values in the National Registry of each Circuit and all that have any claim or right in possession or reversion of Lands of Inheritance of the yearly value of 1000 l. or upwards shall enter it accordingly and of the yearly value of 100 l. and under 1000 l. either in possession or remainder are to enter it with the Provincial Register all persons having Estates above the clear yearly value of 10 l. and under 100 l. are to enter them in the Registry in the Hundred or Wapentake of the Province and all not exceeding 10 l. per annum to be entred in the Parochial Registry all Debts exceeding 1000 l. to be entred with the National Registry all above 100 l. and not exceeding 1000 l. with the Provincial Registry all above 10 l. and not exceeding 100 l. with the Subprovincial Registry and all under 10 l. with the Parochial Register where the Debtor inhabiteth or his Estate lyeth And when such Entries are perfected the National Register shall within 14 days certifie it unto the Provincial who shall within 8 days certifie it to the Subprovincial and he within 6 days to the Parochial Register And where several claims under several titles shall be made unto one and the same thing the Register shall give notice thereof to the several Inhabitants and Tenants thereof the Parochial Register shall likewise certifie to the Subprovincial the Subprovincial to the Provincial and the Provincial to the National Registry the Seal of the National Registry shall be the Great Seal of England to be kept by the Register and his six Clarks and nothing to be sealed but in the presence of the National Register and two of his Clarks assistants each several Province shall have his peculiar seal whereon shall be the Arms or cognisance of the Province City or Corporation wherein the Registry is and shall be in the custody of the particular Register or his Assistants and in like manner for the Subprovincial and Parochial Registries The several Registers where no double claim is entred shall give Certisicates under their seals of any Entries which shall be desired Claims not entred within three months unless in case of Infancy Death or being beyond Sea shall be an absolute bar Entry to be made within three months after the establishing of the Registries Certificates to be made under seal to any that shall desire it which shall be a sufficient warrant for the recovery thereof without any further trouble to the Creditor then to make his claim thereunto All manner of Bargains and Contracts w●ere any Estate of Inheritance Mortgage or Lease shall be made or any right transferred from one to another all Covenants Conditions Considerations and Times of payment in the presence of the several parties shall be made before the several Registers certified under his seal delivered to the Creditor and Counterparts to the other parties And Entries made of payments and discharges of Bargains personally by the parties in the presence of two known witnesses unless where the parties Bargaining shall be sufficiently known to the Register or his Deputy all Marriages to be entred in the Parochial Register the Covenants and Conditions of the Marriage to be entred and certified under the seal of the Register who is also to enter the Christening of every Child deaths and burials of all persons all Wills and Testaments the hiring and wages of Servants to be entred in the Parochial Registries and Certificates under seal given thereof the Fees for entring any Estate of Inheritance in the National Registry 20 s. per page for the two first pages