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A54632 Lex parliamentaria, or, A treatise of the law and custom of parliaments shewing their antiquity, names, kinds, and qualities ... : with an appendix of a case in Parliament between Sir Francis Goodwyn and Sir John Fortescue, for the knights place for the county of Bucks, I Jac. I.; Lex parliamentaria. English Petyt, George. 1690 (1690) Wing P1944; ESTC R8206 195,455 448

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agreed That regularly he cannot be compelled out of Parliament to answer Things done in Parliament in a Parliamentary Course but it is otherwise where Things are done exorbitantly for those are not the Acts of the Court. No Privilege is allowable in Case of the Peace betwixt private Men 2 Nalson 450. much more in Case of the Peace of the Kingdom Privilege cannot be pleaded against an Indictment for any Thing done out of Parliament Ibid. because all Indictments are contra Pacem Domini Regis Privilege of Parliament is granted in regard of the Service of the Commonwealth Ibid. and is not to be used to the Danger of the Commonwealth All Privilege of Parliament is in the Power of Parliament Ibid. and is a Restraint to the Proceedings of other inferior Courts but is no Restraint to the Proceedings of Parliament 16 Car. 1 Resolved Rush 2 vol. 2d Part. 1147. That the Lords voting the propounding and declaring Matter of Supply before it was moved in the House of Commons was a Breach of Privilege of the House Dec. 1641. Resolved 2 Nalson 729. That the setting of any Guards about this House without the Consent of the House is a Breach of the Privilege of this House and that therefore such Guards ought to be dismissed Resolved upon the Question Id. 743. Nemine Contradicente That the Privileges of Parliament were broken by his Majesty's taking Notice of the Bill for suppressing of Soldiers being in agitation in both Houses and not agreed on Resolved upon the Question Ibid. Nemine Contradicente That his Majesty in propounding a Limitation and provisional Clause to be added to the Bill before it was presented to him by the Consent of both Houses was a Breach of the Privilege of Parliament Resolved upon the Question Ibid. Nem. Con. That his Majesty expressing his Displeasure against some Persons for Matters moved in the Parliament during the Debate and Preparation of that Bill was a Breach of the Privilege of Parliament Whereas his Majesty 2 Nalson 823. in his Royal Person the 4th of Jan. 1641. did come to the House of Commons with a great Multitude of Men armed in a warlike Manner with Halberts Swords and Pistols who came up to the very Door of the House and placed themselves there and in other Places and Passages near to the House to the great Terror and Disturbance of the Members then there sitting and according to their Duty in a peaceable and orderly Manner treating of the great Affairs of both Kingdoms of England and Ireland and his Majesty having placed himself in the Speaker's Chair did demand the Persons of divers Members of the House to be delivered unto him It was thereupon declared by the House of Commons Ibid. That the same is a high Breach of the Rights and Privileges of Parliament and inconsistent with the Liberty and Freedom thereof and therefore the House doth conceive they could not with Safety of their own Presons or the Indemnities of the Rights and Privileges of Parliament sit there any longer without a full Vindication of so high a Breach of Privilege and a sufficient Guard wherein they might confide The Lords cannot proceed against a Commoner Sleden's Jud. p. 84. but upon a Complaint of the Commons But Note as to Freedom from Suits and Arrests Stat. 12 13. Wil. 111. that in the Parliament of 12 13 William the Third an Act passed entitled An Act for preventing any Inconveniencies that may happen by Privilege of Parliament Which enacts Sect. I. That any Person may prosecute any Peer of this Realm or Lord of Parliament or any of the Knights Citizens and Burgess of the House of Commons for the Time being or their or any of their menial or other Servants or any other Person entitled to the Privilege of Parliament in any of the Courts of Record at Westminster or high Court of Chancery or Court of Exchequer or the Dutchy Court of Lancaster and in the Court of Admiralty and in all Causes Matrimonal and Testamentary in the Court of Arches the Prerogative Courts of Canterbury and York and the Delegates and in all Courts of Appeal from and after the Dissolution or Prorogation of any Parliament until a new Parliament shall meet or the same be reassembled And from and after any Adjournment of both Houses for above fourteen Days until both Houses shall meet or reassemble And that the said Courts respectively shall and may after such Dissolution Prorogation or Adjournment proceed to give Judgment and make final Orders Decrees and Sentences and award Execution thereon any Privilege of Parliament to the contrary notwithstanding Sect. II. Provides against subjecting the Person of any Knight Citizen or Burgess or any other intitled to the Privilege of Parliament to be arrested during the Time of Privilege Nevertheless allowing the Liberty that any Person having Cause Action or Complaint against any Peer of the Realm or Lord of Parliament so that after any Dissolution Prorogation or Adjournment as aforesaid or and before any Session of Parliament or Meeting of both Houses as aforesaid shall and may have such Process out of the Courts of King's Bench Common Pleas and Exchequer against such Peer or Lord of Parliament as he might have had against him out of the Time of Privilege And if any Person having Cause of Action against any of the said Knights Citizens or Burgesses or any other intitled to Privilege after any such Dissolution Prorogation or Adjournment or before any such Sessions or Meeting of both Houses ut supra he shall and may prosecute such Knight Citizen or Burgess or other such privileged Person in the said Courts of King's Bench Common Pleas or Exchequer by original Bill and Summons Attachment and Distress infinite out of the same Courts who are respectively impower'd to issue the same against him or them until the Defendant shall enter a Common Appearance or file Common Bail to the Action according to the Course of each Court. And that any Person having Cause of Suit or Complaint may in the Time aforesaid exhibit any Bill of Complaint against any Peer of the Realm or Lord of Parliament or against any Knight Citizen or Burgess or other Person so intitled to Privilege in the Chancery Exchequer or Dutchy Court and proceed thereon by Letter or Subpoena as usual And upon leaving a Copy of the Bill with the Defendant or at his House or Lodging or last Place of Abode may proceed thereon and for Want of an Appearance or Answer or for Non-Performance of any Order or Decree or for Breach thereof may sequester the real or personal Estate of the Party as is used and practised where the Defendant is a Peer of the Realm but shall not arrest or imprison the Body of any of the said Knights Citizens or Burgesses or other privileged Person during the Continuance of Privilege of Parliament Sect. III. That where any Person by reason of Privilege of Parliament is stayed or prevented from prosecuting any Suit
the Officers and Persons making or procuring the same and every or any of them at his Election in any of his Majesty's Courts of Record at Westminster and shall recover double the Damages he shall sustain by reason thereof together with his full Costs of Suit And if any Officer shall willfully Like Action given the elected against Officer c. falsly c. making double Returns and the Prosecuters of such Returns Contracts Bonds c. given to procure the Return of any Members adjudged void and such Members as make or give them to procure any false or double Return forfeit 300 l. One third to the King another to the Poor of the County City c. and a third to the Informer with his Costs to be recovered by Action of Debt c. wherein no Essoign c. and but one Imparlance falsly and maliciously Return more Persons than are required to be chosen by the Writ or Precept on which any Choice is made the like Remedy against him or them and the Party or Parties that willingly procure the same or any of them by the Party grieved at his Election All Contracts Promises Bonds and Securities whatsoever hereafter made or given to procure any Return of any Member to Parliament or any thing relating thereunto shall be adjudged void and whoever makes or gives such Contract Security Promise or Bond or any Gift or Reward to procure such false or double Return shall forseit the Sum of 300 l. one third part to his Majesty another third part to the Poor of the County City Borough or Place concerned England and one third part to the Informer with his Costs to be recovered in any Court of Record at Westminster by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information wherein no Essoign Protection or Wager of Law shall be allowed nor more than one Imparlance The Clerk of the Crown to keep a Book of Entry of every single and double Return Clerk of the Crown to keep Books of Entry of Returns c. and of every Alteration and Amendment in every such Return whereto all Persons are to have access and take Copies of so much as desir'd at a reasonable Fee The Parties prosecuting such Suit Candidates may give such Book or a true Copy thereof in Evidence and have like Advantage as by producing the Record itself And if the Clerk of the Crown makes not such Entry within six Days after any Return or alters any Return without Order of the House of Commons or gives a Certificate of any Person not returned or wilfully neglects or omits his Duty herein he shall forfeit 500 l. for each Offence to the parth grieved Candidate to be recovered as aforesaid and lose his Office and be for ever incapable of holding it Every Information or Action upon this Statute England shall be brought within two Years after the cause of Action shall arise Informations or Actions on this Statute to be brought within 2 Years and not after That upon every Election to be made of any Knight or Knights of the Shire in case a Poll shall be requir'd the Sheriff or his Under-Sheriff shall appoint for each Candidate such one Person as shall be nominated to him by each Candidate Candidates for Knights of the Shire may nominate Persons to be Inspectors of the Poll and may require each Freeholder to be sworn before admitted to Poll. to be Inspectors of every Clerk who shall be appointed for taking the Poll and every Freeholder before he is admitted to Poll at the same Election shall if required by the Candidates or any of them first take the Oath in this Act contained Vide ante And if any Person do unlawfully and corruptly procure or suborn any Freeholder or Person to take the said Oath in order to be Polled Any Person procuring a Freeholder or other to take the Oath for the Poll whereby he commits Perjury and convicted of such Subornation for every Offence forfeits 40 l. and be incapacitated as a Witness till such Judgment reversed and for want of 40 l. imprisoned half a Year and stand in the Pillory an Hour per Stat. 5 Eliz. ch 9. whereby he shall commit wilful and corrupt Perjury and shall be thereof convicted he for every such Offence shall incur the like Pains and Penalties as are in and by one Act made in the 5th Elizabeth c. enacted against all such who shall c. Suboru or Procure any Person to commit any unlawful and corrupt Perjury contrary to the said Act. England The said Sheriff Without the Candidates consent the County Court not to be adjourned from the place of Election nor the Poll discontinued or in his Absence his Under-Sheriff or such as he shall depute shall not adjourn the County-Court from the Place of Election to any other Town or Place within the same County without consent of the Candidates but shall duly and orderly proceed to take the Poll from Day to Day and Time to Time without any further or other Adjournment without the Consent of the Candidates for such Adjournment Every Sheriff Any Person may demand a Copy of any Poll which the Sheriffs Mayors c. are required to deliver paying reasonably for writing it To each Party grieved Mayors Sheriffs c. for every wilful offence forfeit 500 l. to be recover'd by such Party his Executors or Administrators with full Costs by Action of Debt c. wherein no Essoign c. Under-Sheriff Mayor Bailiff and other Officer to whom the Execution of any Writ or Precept shall belong for the electing Members to Parliament shall forthwith deliver to such Person or Persons as shall desire the same a Copy of the Poll taken at such Election paying only a reasonable Charge for writing And every Sheriff Under-Sheriff Mayor Bailiff and other Officer to whom the Execution of any Writ or Precept for electing Members to Parliament doth belong for every wilful Offence contrary to this Act shall forfeit to every Party so aggrieved the Sum of 500 l. to be recovered by him or them England his or their Executors or Administrators together with full Costs of Suit and for which he or they may Sue by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any Court at Westminster wherein no Essoign Protection Wager of Law Privilege or Imparlance shall be allowed No Person shall be capable of being elected a Member to Parliament who is not of the Age of 21 Years None shall be elected under the age of 21 Years The choice of any elected under that Age declared void and such Minor sitting c. in Parliament shall incur like Penalties as if sitting c. unchosen or returned and every Election or Return of any Person under that Age is declared Null and Void And if any such Minor chosen shall presume to sit or vote in Parliament he shall incur such Penalties and Forfeitures as if he had presumed to Sit and Vote in Parliament without being chosen or returned The Sheriff of
made in like Manner and Form to all Intents Constructions and Purposes as is used within the County Palatine of Lancaster or any other County and City within England which said Knights and Burgesses and every of them shall be returned by the said Sheriff into the Chancery of England in due Form and upon like Pains as is ordained that the Sheriff or Sheriffs of any other County should make their Return England Sheriff of Chester to make like Returns and on like Pains as other Sheriffs That the Burgesses of all Cities Stat. 35 H. 8. c. 11. Mayors Bailiffs c. of the twelve Shire-Towns in Wales and of Monmouth-Shire shall summon the Burgesses as well of all other Cities Boroughs and Towns in those Counties as of Burgesses of those Towns themselves to come to Elections Boroughs and Towns in the twelve Shires within Wales and County of Monmouth not finding Burgesses for the Parliament themselves and contributary to Wages of Burgesses of such Shire Towns shall be lawfully admonished by Proclamation or otherwise by the Mayors Bailiffs and other Head Officers of the said Towns or by one of them to come and give their Elections for the Electing the said Burgesses at such Time and Place lawful and reasonable as shall be assigned for the same by the said Mayors Bailiffs and other Head Officers of the said Shire Towns or by one of them That the County Palatine of Durham may have two Knights for the same County St. 25 C. 2. c. 9. Writ of Election under the Great Seal for Elections in Durham to be directed to the Bishop of Durham c. and his Precept thereon to the Sheriff of that County and the City of Durham two Citizens to be Burgesses for the same City to be elected by Writ to be awarded by the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper to the Lord Bishop of Durham or his Temporal Chancellor of the said County England and a Precept to be thereupon grounded and made by the said Lord Bishop or his Temporal Chancellor to the Sheriff of the said County and the same Election to be made in Manner following viz. the Elections of the Knights to be made by the greater Number of the Freeholders of the said County Palatine which shall be present at such Elections as is used in other Counties of this Kingdom and that the Election of the said Burgesses for the City of Durham to be made by the major part of the Mayor Aldermen and Freemen of the said City which shall be present at such Elections which said Knights and Burgesses Sherish of Durham to make like Returns and under like Pains as other Sheriffs St. 7 and 8 W. 3. c. 7. continued by St. 12 and 13 W. 3. c. 5. False Returns illegal and prohibited and all made contrary to the last Determination of the Right of Election in the House of Commons adjudged a false Return so elected shall be returned by the said Sheriff into the Chancery in due Form and upon the like Pains as be ordained for the Sheriff or Sheriffs of any other County in like Cases That all false Returns wilfully made of any Knight of the Shire Citizen Burgess Baron of the Cinque-Ports or other Members are against Law and are hereby prohibited and in case that any Person or Persons shall return any Member for any County City Borough Cinque-Port or Place contrary to the last Determination in the House of Commons of the Right of Election in such County England City Borough Cinque-Port or Place such Return is hereby adjudged a false Return The Party so grieved to wit He that shall be duly elected for any County Officers c. making such false Return liable to an Action at the Suit of any duly elected in any of the Courts at Westminster with double Damages and full Costs City Borough Cinque-Port or Place by such false Return may sue the Officers and Persons making or procuring the same and every or any of them at his Election in any Court of Record at Westminster and shall recover double Damages with his full Costs Any Officer that shall wilfully Officers c. falsly c. making double Returns liable to the like Action falsly and maliciously return more Persons than are required to be chosen by the Writ or Precept on which any Choice is made the like Remedy may be had against him or them and the Party or Parties that willingly procure the same by the Party grieved All Contracts Contracts Bonds c. given to procure the Return of any Member adjudged void and such as make or give them to procure any false or double Return forfeit 300 l. one third to the King another to the Poor of the County City c. and a third to the Informer with his Costs to be recovered by Action of Debt c. wherein no Essoign c. Promises Bonds and Securities whatsoever hereafter made or given to procure any Return of any Member or any thing relating thereto be adjudged void and that whoever makes or gives such Contract Security Promise or Bond or any Gift or Reward to procure such false or double Return England shall forfeit 300 l. one third Part to his Majesty another third Part to the Poor of the County City Borough or Place concern'd and one third Part to the Informer with his Costs to be recovered in any Court of Record at Westminster by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information wherein no Essoign Protection or Wager of Law allowed nor more than one Imparlance The Clerk of the Crown to keep a Book of Entry of every single and double Return and of every Alteration and Amendment in every such Return whereto all Persons to have Access and take Copies of so much as desired at a reasonable Fee And if the Clerk of the Crown makes not such Entry in Six Days after any Return or alters any Return without Order of the House of Commons or gives a Certificate of any Person not returned or wilfully neglects or omits his Duty herein to forfeit 500 l. for each Offence to the Party grieved to be recovered as aforesaid and lose his Office England and be for ever incapable of holding it Every Information or Action brought upon this Statute Informations or Actions on this Statute to be brought within two Years after the Cause shall be brought within the Space of two Years after the Cause of Action shall arise That when any New Parliament shall at any Time hereafter be Summoned or called Staf. 8 W. 3. c. 25. Writs of Summons to Parliament to have forty Days between the Teste and Returns and be issued with all Expedition and delivered to the proper Officer to whom its Execution belongs who shall indorse thereon the Day he received it and within three Days issue out his Precept to the like proper Officer of each Borough c. who shall also indorse the Day of his Receipt of the Precept in the former's Presence and proceed to Election in
disturb the House shall pay the like Forfeiture And it is further ordered that the Business then in Agitation being ended no new Motion of any new Matters shall be made without leave of the House 5 Dec. 1640. Id. 84. Ordered that no Bills have their second Reading but between Nine and Twelve 10 Dec. 1640. Id. 92. Declared for a constant Rule that those that give their Votes for the Preservation of the Orders of the House shou'd stay in and those that give their Votes otherwise to the introducing of any new Matter or any Alteration should go out 8 Sept. 1641. Id. 392. See how far an Order of this House is binding In March 1627. Rush Coll. vol. 1.513 Resolved that is the ancient and undubitable Right of every Freeman that he hath a full and absolute Property in his Goods and Estate that no Tax Tallage Loan Benevolences or other like Charge ought to be commanded or levied by the King or any of his Ministers without common Consent by Act of Parliament March 1627. Id. 513. Resolved that no Freeman ought to be detained or kept in Prison or otherwise restrained by the Command of the King or Privy-Council or any other unless some Cause of the Commitment Detainer or Restraint be expressed for which by Law he ought to be committed detained or restrained Resolv'd Id. 513. that the Writ of HabeasCorpus may not be Detain'd Deny'd but ought to be granted to every Man that is committed or detained in Prison or otherwise restrained tho' it be by the Command of the King the Privy-Council or any other he praying the same Resolved that if a Freeman be committed or detained in Prison or otherwise restrained by Command of the King the Privy-Council or any other no Cause of such Commitment Detainer or Restraint being expressed for which by Law he ought to be committed detained or restrained and the same be returned upon a Habeas Corpus granted for the said Party then he ought to be delivered or bailed 2 April 1628. Resolved Id. 523. that no Freeman ought to be confined by any Command from the King or Privy-Council or any other unless it be by Act of Parliament or by other due Course or Warrant of Law King James I. having in 1621. Rapin Vol. 2. No. 54. p. 208.209 for some Words spoken by him in the House it occasioned a Remonstrance of the Commons to the King therein complaining of Breach of Privilege and asserting their Liberty of Speech and Debate to be their antient and undoubted Right and Inheritance receiv'd from their Ancestors c. This they sent to the King by twelve Members at the Head of whom they affectedly set Sir R. Weston a Privy-Counsellor one whom they conceiv'd had incens'd the K. against them who were receiv'd very roughly and their Remonstrance rejected But some Days after the K. sends 'em a long Answer in Writing wherein towards the Conclusion he objects against the stiling their Privileges Id. p. 211. their antient and undoubted Right and Inheritance and wishes they had said i. e. commands 'em to acknowledge that their Privileges were derived from the Grace and Permission of him and his Ancestors The House on reading this Answer plainly perceiv'd the King's Aims The Commons Protestation in Vindication of their Privileges Ibid. p. 211. 212. c. and knowing the Parl. was going to be prorogued or dissolv'd drew up a Protestation in Order to vindicate their Privileges viz. The Commons now assembled in Parl. being justly occasion'd thereunto concerning sundry Liberties Franchises and Privileges of Parliament amongst others here mentioned do make this Protestation following That the Liberties Franchises Privileges and Jurisdiction of Parliament are the antient and undoubted Birth-right and Inheritance of the Subjects of England and that the arduous and urgent Affairs concerning the King the State and the Defence of the Realm and of the Church of England and the Maintenance and making of Laws and Redress of Mischiefs and Grievances which happen daily within this Realm are proper Subjects and Matter of Counsel and Debate in Parliament And that in the handling debating and proceeding in those Businesses every Member of the House of Parliament hath and of Right ought to have Freedom of Speech to propound treat reason and bring to Conclusion the same and that the Commons in Parliament have like Liberty and Freedom to treat of these Matters in such Order as in their Judgment shall seem fittest See of the Terms Parliament and Prerogative Id. p. 213. and that every Member of the said House hath like Freedom from all Impeachment Imprisonment and Molestation other than by Censure of the House it self for or concerning any speaking reasoning or declaring of any Matter or Matters touching the Parliament or Parliament-Business and that if any of the Members be complained of and questioned for any Thing said or done in Parliament the same is to be shewed to the King by the Advice and Assent of the Commons assembled in Parliament before the King give Credence to any private Information But the K. being inform'd of this Protestation call'd a Council and sending for the Commons Journal in Presence of the Judges c. with his own Hands tore it out of the Journal and in a few Days after dissolved the Parliament but this did not deter the Commons from insisting on their Claim And in his Son's Reign it was asserted with a Witness and is now confirm'd by the Claim of Right and other Statutes Mar. 12. 1700. the House Journal Dom. Com. on a Report of that Part of the K's Speech which related to the Hanover Succession agreed with the Committee in these Resolves viz. 1. That all Things relating to the well governing of this Kingdom which are properly cognizable in the P. Council shall be transacted there and all Resolutions taken thereupon shall be sign'd by the P. C. 2. That no Person whatsoever that is not a Native of England Scotland or Ireland or of the Dominions thereunto belonging or who is not born of English Parents beyond the Seas altho such Person be naturaliz'd or made a Denizen shall be capable to be of the P. C. or a Member of either H. of P. or to enjoy any Office of Place or Trust either Civil or Military P. Council 3. That no such Person c. shall be capable of any Grant of Lands Tenements or Hereditaments from the Crown to himself or any other in Trust for him 4. That upon the further Limitation of the Crown in Case the same shall come to any Person not being a Native of this Kingdom of England this Nation be not oblig'd to engage in any War for the Defence of any Dominions or Territories not belonging to the Crown of England without the Consent of Parliament 5. That whoever shall hereafter come to the Possession of this Crown shall join in Communion with the Church by Law establish'd 6. That no Pardon shall be pleaded to any Impeachment in Parliament 7. That