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A96344 For the sacred lavv of the land. By Francis Whyte. White, Francis, d. 1657. 1652 (1652) Wing W1765; Thomason E1330_2; ESTC R209102 136,470 313

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of it Many great Families have been advanced by the Law many of the best and noblest thought it no disparagement to professe it Some of our illustrious names may be met with amongst the Serjeants and Apprentices of our yeere books as well as in the Heralds books If like Boccace his Ghost all those who laid the foundations of their houses who first broke through the miste of time wherein they and their ancestors were hid before who first shewed their names to the world were to appeare before us in the habit of their sprouting up with all their sordid cheats with all the crafts several close arts of thriveing used by some displayed and revealed all the false sleights of the Town and Country laid open where every peny is got oftentimes too too dishonestly by the unworthiest sins a man can commit how would the gawdy off-spring curse his own rise the branch be ashamed of its own root vertue alone is honourable mony can neither make men wise valiant nor good Arts and Armes onely and really innoble that of all others most deservedly whose object is meerly the good of mankind which imployes men continually for the publique for the preservation of the people pacique imponere morem The souldier as Cicero may once profit his Country the Lawyer always Our most Reverend Judges and professors of the Laws have in all ages * Anciently part of the Persian kings title The ophyl risen with the Sun and given eyes to the blinde night But I have offered my selfe too far to ingrateful dangers Here I will stop and give over Not that much is not left out which might have been said of the sacred Law of the Land and the administration of Justice here Much is left out and I wish some more happy and more able would undertake the whole It is enough which again I may protest that I speak not in the midst of Fetters and that I have defended and the defence could not but be easie truth onely for its own sake yet I believe he who knows most who commands most in language and Sciences who pretends justly a title to the kingdome of the barre or schooles with all his mouths and tongues if he had more then one hundred could not do full right would be short and wanting here Not in our right hands as is said of those souldiers in Curtius but in our Laws our helpe our hope and liberty lie We need not aske for propriety not for peace not for order concord security not for wealth nor honours one wish comprehends them all carries all these with it the safety of the laws is all these propria haec sidona We have seen at large what excellent blessings we have received from the Law these blessings may be everlasting if that be made so I know nothing it ought to yield to and our Parliaments have thought so but eternity and the change by that FINIS The Table A. AIde to Knight the eldest son c. 127 Alodium alodiaries 129 130 c. Aelfred the King not the founder of the Saxon policy 85 86 Aequity and judging according to equity how to be understood 31 32 Aescuage 127 149 Aldermen amongst the Saxons 98 B. Barons Norman and English ever lovers of the Laws 107 280 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 80 Bocland 140 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 80 Britannie and the Britains under the Romans 71 72 73. The Civil Law the first Law heard of them amongst them 73 74 governed by Kings 72 C. Casars Commentaries l. 6. concerning the Gaules and their wives 75 L. Chancellours Oath 65 Chiefe Justice the greatest subject 159 288 289 Church highly favoured by Lawes 273 274 Circuits of the Iudges 163 Civilians what opinion they have of the Pandects c. 226 Clergy men heretofore Lawyers 292 Cnut the king composed the law called the law of St. Edward 88 Counsellours 175 Courts of Iustice are of Saxon original 94 95 96 Courts since 159 160 c. Courts standing and ever open 165 166 Customes unwritten why 89 D. Delayes odious in the law 169 170 c. De rerum venditione that constitution set forth at Yorke 74 Drenches 143 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 80 The Duilian ba●k 218 E. Earles amongst the Saxons 98 Edilinges 140 Edward the third first changed the Welsh lawes 76 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what 200 Eleutherius his Epistle to Llever Maur a forged piece 73 F. Faulehen what 124 Feudes 121 Firdfare 149 Foleland 129.152 Forstale 134 Frankalmoigne 127 Frankleudes 129 130 The French Policie and ours much alike 126 Fyheren 124 Frilinges 126 Fundi limitrophi 119 G. Gavelkinde in Germany 125 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 80 The Germanes and their institutions have over●●owen all Europe 78 79 80 Their lawes called salic more antient then Justinian 81 Glebal gold 120 Adscriptitius ibid. Grithbrece 134 H. Henry the eight imposed wholely the English lawes upon the Welsh 77 Heinfare 145 Hereban 150 Herefare 127 143 Hereot 127 14 High Court of Iustice 97 159 Hotoman his censure of Littleton 240 I. Infangennethiefe 134 Iudges not to decide causes according to discretion how to be intended 32 33 Their authority 199 c. Assistants to Kings and Parliaments there heretofore Barons 290 Honoured 292 293 Iuries tryals by them not brought in by the Conquerour 92 93 Iustice to obey laws 33 K. Kings of Macedon ruled by law 24 Of Mexico might not be touched 45 Kings of England their Oath 111 Might free men from the Firdfare Burgbote c. 151 Kisses given to Princes 118 L. Laudamentum 124 Laws the enemies of them 1 2 Necessity of them 18 35 Law what it is 34 35 Force is not law 23 24 25 Nor the arbitrary will of man 27 28 Why laws were written 30 31 How antient 35 Law of the land in Magna Charta is not waging law 50 51 Common Law 75 excells and may controle Statute laws ibid. Custome and expirience begot it 60 61 It is known and to be found in books 60 65 66 67 Its antiquity not Norman c. 64 c Laws of Hoel Dha and the Welsh 76 77 Salie Laws 86 81 82 The Saxon laws 84 the several kinds 88 Our fundamental laws Saxon 90 91 known by the name of St. Edwards laws 100 101 102 104 setled in the great Chaster 108 110 then called Common Law Letters of the Ionians and Phaenicians heretofore neer the same 37 Loudes 131 Liberty what is 45 46 c. Littleton vindicated 240 241 Lombards their laws 84 M. Manners and priviledges belonging to them amongst the Saxons 133 Method of our law 243 N. Normans themselves ever zealous for the laws of St. Edward 135 107 108 They as some received their lawes from the Saxons 112 O 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 80 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 120 Operae liberterum 119 P Papinian Judge at York 74 Papists ever enemies to the law●s 67 Parkes 136 Plea of Pinneden under Will the 1. 104 Pleadings 209 Polydore Virgil 92 93 Propriety 2 3 R Rectories and glebe-land whence 151 Reliefe 127 131 147 S Salbuch in Germany 83 Saxons their policy and government 85 86 Sac. 134. The Saxons subverted all things 77 78 Saxon tongue 215 216 217 Sicyon never changed her lawes in 740. yeers 53 Slaves thrown to Lampries 252 Soc 134 Socage 129 Spaniards retain the German customs 128 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 120 Subverters of the laws 66 67 T Team 134 135 Tenures all Europe ever 118 Reasons of them 119 120 All lands held of the King 149 Terms of the law 213 c. Thanes Thenes 137 138 c. Tol 134 Tribonian censured by Perrinus 226 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 V Vassi dominici 125 Vicedominus 99 Villeins 153 154 Vtwara W William the 1. his entry not so violent as is thought by some 143 144 Writs whence they issue 162. See 207 c. anciently the Kings letters there No man to answer or be called in question without a Writ 209 FINIS
intent to hurt the adversary they see not before how great it is and however are too weak of themselves were the right of their side and most plain to manage it to the best advantage It may seem strange too why the ordinary course of our Circuits should not now be sufficient why we should need quicker returns of this sun of Justice unlesse we think our selves the worst of all men and our age the most corrupt every day falling further from the piety of our forefathers and more prone to oppresse and devoure one another were there a recession from the known Law after a few of the first judgements not to go on far it may be feared there would be no small discord and contrarieties in the determinations where the Courts should be so numerous not derived from one fountaine nor judging by one rule that would be Law and right in one County which would be wrong in another and which is the greatest curse in the Law that which should be most certain would be without any certainty at all To proceed instead of Conservators of the peace at the common Law now antiquated there are Justices of peace of larger power then the Irenarchae of old appointed to take care not so much of the publique discipline and correction of manners as for the peace and security of the highwaies m Cod. Thead in rub de Irenarch l. 1. Their name shews why they were instituted They are in their sessions quarterly to heare and determine all Felonies breaches of the peace contempts and trespasses They are to suppresse riots and tumults to restore possessions forceably taken away to examine felons apprehended and brought before them To provide according to the Statutes for impotent people and maimed souldiers to punish rogues beggers forestallers and ingrossers c. to commit or bind over offenders to the Sessions or Gaole to take recognizances for the peace c. such a form saies the Lord Coke of subordinate government for tranquillity and quiet c. as no part of the Christian world hath the like if the same be duly executed n 4 Inst 170. suites There are other Coures for administration of justice of narrower jurisdiction and confined in smaller limits of some of which I have spoken before yet able to put an end so small differences and ordinary trespasses not to be prevented sometimes amongst neighbours if men would be so contented Who commonly themselves make the Courts below thin and are the causes of the troubles they seem to detest let the quarrel be as trivial as is imaginable for an Asses shadow yet as in some Countries the custome is to threaten they wil have a London proces for him the poorest clownes wil trudge to London on foot from the farthest parts of the North or West more miserably then Carriers horses and undoe themselves which is no hard matter with one journey rather then not discharge their full spight who if they return not back as merrily as they set out they may thank themselves But because delay is charged up on the Courts not onely as an heynous crime but such as must by all means be born with them inseparably inherent to them something I wil speak of that I wil make it evident that delay is more odious to the Law then to those who complaine of it and that it bred from nothing else but the corruption without We finde in the Saxon lawes not onely one which fines the Shieriffe for doubtlesse of him is the word gtrtfan there meant o V. Ll. edu sen c. 5.11 who sentences not according to right after the testimony of witnesses p ibid. Ll. c 5. but also another commanding the Shieriffe to keep his Court to have his Assembly which now we call the County Court as the words and institution of King Edward the elder every moneth And that every man may have justice and every plea an end at the day when it comes whoso omitteth this still as the Law he shall make amends c. q ibid. c. 11 like that of the twelve Tables SOL OCCASVS SVPREMA TEMPESTAS ESTO We need not wonder that suits could be so prepared or rather that so little could be in them that they could be dispatched in a day if the plainnesse of the age before noted be considered when the folcland the possession of the rural man passed without writing and the bocland not to be aliened if there were such a condition in the writing r Ll. Aelfr c. 37. in a few words No man might change any thing but in the presence of the gtrtfan or Baily or of the Masse Prie●t or of the Hordre or of the Lord or the soile c ſ Ll. Aethelst c. 10. and no man might buy beyond twenty pence but within a Town before the Portgreve other tenth man or with the Shieriffes witnesse in the Folcmote t ibid. c. 12 To look downward Magna Charta has it We sell no man nor deny or delay no man justice and right u c. 29. It is a maxime in Law Lex semper dilationes exhorret The Law alwaies as Markam eschewes delaies w 22 H 6.40 a.v. w. 1. c. 40 44 45. w. 2. c. 25. sta Glou. c. 2. The Barons of the Exchequer are commanded to doe right to all men without delaie x 20 E. 3. c. 2.28 E. 1. c. 10. they are sworn to it y 4 Jnst 109. The common Law requires often that full and speedy justice according to the words of those w●its be done to the parties z Na. Br. 23.182 4 Just 67. all writs of Praecipe quod reddat are That justly and without delay he render c. all Judiciall Writs are without delay c. When any Court makes delayes and will not give judgement the Writ de procedendo ad judicium lies The words of which are Because the rendring of judgement of the plea which is before you c. hath taken long delayes c. We command you that you proceed to give judgement thereupon with that speed which is according to Law and Custome When execution is denyed the Writ of execution of judgement lyes by which the Justices are commanded to canse execution to be done without delay of the judgement lately given a Na. Br. 20. v. 2. J●s 270 271. There was a Court raised by Statute for redresse of delayes in the great Courts where yet the delaies are not imputed to any foul play of the Ministers of justice The words are Because diverse mischiefes have happened of that that c. the judgements have been delayed sometimes by difficulty sometimes by diverse opinion of the Judges and sometimes for some other cause it is assented c. a Prelate two Earles and two Barons henceforth at every Parliament shall be chosen which shall have Commission and power of the King to beare c. the complaints of those that will complain to
them of such delaies c. and to cause the same Justices to come before them c to hear the cause and reasons of such delayes which cause and reasons so heard by good advise of themselves the Chancellour Treasu●er the Justices of the one Bench and other c. shall proceed and make a good judgement c. if the difficulty were so great to require it they were to bring the tenor to the next Parliament Where a finall according as this Statute was to be taken according to which the Judges were commanded to proceed to give judgement without delay b 14 E. 3. c. 5. Causes have used to be adjourned out the Courts and to be determined by an assembly of all the Judges called since the Exchequer chamber as in Chudleighs case c V. 1. warranted saies the Lord Coke by the common Law and ancient presidents before this Statute The frequent use of which so he has been the cause why the Court founded upon that Statute of Edw. the 3. hath been rarely put in ure d 4 Just 68. There is a Court erected by Parliament for errours in the Kings Bench as it is called by the Statute e 27 El. 8 3● El. c. 1. and for those who love no errours another Statute commands That judgement be given after the demurer is joyned and entred notwithstanding any defect in proces or pleading other then such as the party demurring shall particularly expresse f 27 El. c. 5 If things were truly looked into we should finde delayes and other indirect courses to proceed from the artifice and unjust subtilties of suitors of those who prosecute bad causes to infest and wrong other men and from the cheating Mountebanks a skum of litigious men of no rank nor quality nor of any study in the Law who undertake them Impostors more doted on then those of the profession famous for their integrity and industry really and honestly understanding Impostors rather to be listed under the notion of Incendiaries and common Baretors then of any others catching at any thing refused by the honest learned practiser venturing to soder the most broken title by sleights and false daubings to the ruine at last of those who imploy them though not without some mischiefe and infinite vexation of the adversary and the injust Client having consumed himselfe much is encouraged not to flinshe for what follows is blown up with fresh hopes tampered with new shifts and arts of reviving till he has given himselfe wholly up till he is wilful and at last like a Gamster swearing over his last stake he loves every tergiversation and struggles with all his power and cunning to avoid the disgrace and losse of being overthrown when he must see while there is any justice left it cannot be avoided but when this blow hits him though himselfe was the worker and the motion began and continued from his own hand then he implores the faith of God and man Hence is a never dying quarrel to the Lawes the justly deserved calamity is imputed to nothing else If deceits and wrong may not be secure and happy the Lawes shal be cursed and blasphemed like Tacitus his Gods rather carefull of any thing else then to provide as he prophanely for our safety But in these exceptions to the Lawes the kindnesse would be wonderfull if the professours should goe free as it might we meet with an old censure which at the first fight seems something Councellours which includes the professors of all Laws alike it is this That the Lawyers of the best quality and fame one and another all of them seldome refuse any man and since their cannot be a right of both parties oftentimes defend the wrong which in good conscience they ought not nor cannot wish should prevaile To this I reply every right is not clearly seen nor every wrong suddenly known * 4 Reppreface of late some Statutes are long and full of perplexities ill penned here are late and new inventions in assurances which the eye of the Law before never beheld Many unskillful Empericks are employed about wills and Conveyances where if the words of their general president or receipt if they have any will fit the sense of the party who conveys 't is well and lucky otherwise the patches of their own prove dangerous And some ambiguities in clauses and expressions may happen which cannot easily be tryed by any law before nor can any Councellour very often assure himselfe he may give his opinion conjecturally and probably and that is all accidents alone the act of God may make things litigious which it is not in the power of the most wise to prevent The lawyer himself too may not stranges a a man make his mistakes something may slip from him imperfect which may trouble others to judge Suarez speake● excellently of this For whereas says he such is humane condition that a man can scarcely explicate his sense in so perspicuous words but that often ambiguities happen especially in laws of men which are briefly and generally delivered therefore in applying them to various cases in particular many time doubts arise to take away which the Legislator either not in being or at hand to declare his intent The opinion of wise men and interpretation doctrinal is necessary out of which necessity comes the skill of the Civill Law weighty because in every Art the judgement of the skillful of that Art is of great moment and inducing at least probability that is all for if all were of one minde they would make a moral certainty in these things g l. 6. deleg c. 1. The Statute raising the Court for delays before-mentioned makes it plain there may be not onely difficulties but diversities of opinions in the Judges too h 14. E. 3. c. 5. there may be postnate cases which could not be foreseen in the laws where all remedies could not be comprehended nor are all things which follow in confimili casu The Statute of exemplifications begins For the avoiding of all such doubts questeons and ambiguities as have risen and been moved c. in and upon the 3 and 4 of Edward the 6. i 15 E. v. 32 H. 8 c. 26. The declarative Statutes are commonly made to take away doubts and incertainties before Nor is this any wonder that the Councellor should guesse at the case when in the extraordinaries in things strange and undiscovered the Judges themselves sometimes are divided Of the case of the Shellies and the Unckle the Nephew in Queen Elizabeth her time the Lord Cooke reports thus After the said case was openly and at large argued by the Councel of either party in the Queens Bench three days the Queen hearing of it for such was the rarenesse and difficulty so he of the case being of importance that it was generally known and out of her gracious disposition to prevent long tedious and chargeabl suits betwixt parties so neer of blood which would be
great distraction in opinions Hence it is that Gentilis and Alciat require that the authorities and cases of the Doctors be weighed not numbred k Gentil l. 3. Epist Alciat l. 4. perarerg c. 17. Which is otherwise in our Law where the judgement of any man whatsoever is not of authority nor is any thing binding but the determination of Courts and the rule of judgements before Lawes are not causes of strife but the variety of senses which is put upon them we are told of a constitution of Pope Nicholas the third upon the rule of that Monster Francis of Assise in the argument ambiguous and doubtful enough yet did it never trouble the Order all Glossers and Commentators being forbidden to meddle with it l Concil Trid. 660. He that puts out the Imperial institutions sayes he has added the cases or Themes as they call them of Cornelius Vibulanus Having rejected the old as barbarous and uselesse and that he has cut off part of those Notes taken out of the Commentaries of the Doctors which are called small accessions because so he very many of them were partly wide of the marke nothing to the purpose partly absurd andridiculous Till of late there was never any glosse upon our Littleton and now that which is is made up out of the resolutions and judgements of Courts not as if Littleton needed any confirmation One of whose cases was acknowledged for Authentick by four Judge in the time of king James with this expression That they owed so great reverence to Littleton they would not suffer his case to be disputed or questioned m Mich. 21 Jac. B. C. The Civil Law hath its circumstances and exceptions the anomale before and in the contestation of the suit to the Fact of the intention of deceit fear c. temporary perpetual It s formulae or solemn forms by which let the matter of Fact be never so orderly related if either no conclusion or an unfit one be collected from it the whole libell falls Sometimes sayes a French Civilian of the Parliament of Paris a Proces is determined by contrary arrests differing from others preceding then which is pittiful this clause is added to the Text of the arrest Without drawing it to consequence or the motive I believe not alwayes is registred France sayes this Bodin again bas more laws and Customes more Proces and suits then the rest of Europe beside and more have been prosecuted in the last six score yeeres then in a thousand before which have througed in more and more as he goes on since that Charles the seventh and his successours have begun to people the realm with lawes made after the mode of Justinian with a long train of reasons against the forme of the antient Ordinances of the kings and sage Legislators he addes Where laws are few and simple rather commanding then intreating and reasoning Commonwealths have flourished to a wonder under them Whereas others with their Godes and Pandects in a few yeers have been destroyed or troubled with seditions or the mischiefs of Proces and wranglings immortal n Repul l. 1927 l 6. By the multitude of Authors and Doctors as the illustrious Viscount the law is torn in pieces the Judge astonished and the proceedings everlasting o Angm. Scient 691 We may see as this French man again enough of these suits aged one hundred yeers as that of the Earldome of Rais so well managed that the parties who made the entrance into it are all dead and the Proces yet alive Nor are the terms of the ancient laws of the Tables to us now who know not the propriety of the first Latin much more winning more graceful then ours Where they are certainly antient they will seeme as hard to the first sight as any and their sense as strange after as the sound of others As that Senates should be used for revolters reconciled reunited Fortes for good men never revolted p Tab. c. 49 Pauperies in the law Siquadrupes pauperiem fecerit c. Should signifie hurt or damage q c. 15. Proletarius a word which a Lawyer in Gellius takes to be of Grammer learning and when he was shown it in the tables is content to say he had not learned the Law of the Faunas and Aborigines a poor Roman whose rate in the publique valuation of good was 1500 Asses or one that did nothing for the publick but get children r Gel. l. 16. c. 10. Tab c. 44. A famous Grammarian being asked what those words out of the ancient Actions in jure manum conserunt sayes the tables ex jure manum consertum mean sayes he taught Grammer A way of suing they signifie which he had never heard of Å¿ v. Gell. L. xx c. 10. Godwin antiquit l. 3. c. 21. That retanda flumina in an old Edict should be rivers to be cleered of trees growing in the Channel or upon the banks and hanging over from retae such trees t Gell. 11. c. 17. This of the tables will appeare as strange as any thing QVI. SE. SI ERYT TEST ARIER LIBERI PENS VE FVERIT NI TESTIMONIVM FARIATVR IMARN BYS. INTE STABILIS QVE ESTO u Idd. 15. c. 13. A. Gellius in his ch where he asks the question upon manum consertum speaks thus of the learning of the laws and the termes I have thought fit to insert into my Commentaries whatsover I have learnd from the Lawyers and their bookes because he that lives in the midst of things and men ought not to be ignorant of the most famous words of civil actions Amongst the later terms which are proper and necessary for the sense they serve many of them would trouble much our over curious Sirs they would not willingly be brought to an acquaintance with them Such are Suitas The quality of the heir inducing a necessity of succession the definition of which has perplexed some of the Authors not a little yet no worse doubtlesse then the Haecceitas of the Metaphysicks as is confessed by them it is unheard of of old but say they in those things which by degrees are received and become of use we ought not too strictly to eye our selves to the Canons of the Grammarians Alciaet who is known to all the world often used the word superesse rebus Which is used for overseeing and managing anothers businesse more then Gellius ever knew or thought of where he blames another false and strange signification of the word which sayes he was inveterate and got strength not onely amongst the rabble but in the Courts it being ordinary to say bic illi superest for he is the Advocate of such one w l. 1. c. 22 neer the last sense Secta which is used for Reason interleverit for deleverit insidiare for insidiari infecta for corrupta honestus for dives which is a great depravation reformare for rescindere prodere for dimittere per aversionem emere which