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A36230 Honors pedigree, or, The [se]veral fountaines of gentry [be]ing a treatise of the distinct degrees of the nobilitie of this kingdome, with their rights and priviledges, according to the lawes and customes of England / [by] that juditious lawyer, Sir John Dodoredge ... Doddridge, John, Sir, 1555-1628. 1652 (1652) Wing D1793; ESTC R37279 103,037 198

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titul nosve dignitot 33. See in Cooks 8. parts 156. John Stile is bound by obligation to W. B. the obliger is afterwards made into a title of honour or a Knight the Bond is forfeited W. B. by his Atturney draweth a note or title for an originall according to the Defendants degree although it vary from the specialty as it ought to be made by the Statute but the Cursitor mistaking did make the originall onely according to such addition as was specified in the obligation omitting his degree of dignity and the entry of the Capias alias plures was according to the said Originall bnt in the Exigent and Proclamation and in the Entry of it the Defendant was named according to his degree of dignity upon a Writ of Errour after judgement doubt was if this might be amended in another Court then where the originall was made Injuries done to the name and honour of a Nobleman IN the second yeer of Richard 2. in the first Chapter It was inacted that counterfeiters of false news and of horrible and false lyes of Prelates Dukes Earls Barons and other Nobles and great men of the Realm and also of the Chancellor Treasurer Clerk of the Privy Seal Steward of the Kings House Justices of the one Bench or of the other and of other great officers of the Realm of things which by the said Prelates Lords Nobles and Officers aforesaid were never spoken touched nor thought in great slander of the said Prelates Lords Nobles and Officers whereby debates and discords might arise betwixt the said Lords and Commons which God forbid and whereof great perill and mischief might come to all the Realm and quick subversion and destruction of the said Realm if due remedy be not provided It is straightly defended upon grievous pain for to eschew the said dammages and perils that from henceforth none be so hardy to finde say or tell any false news lyes or other false reports of Prelates Lords and of other Officers aforesaid whereof discord or any slander might arise within the said Realm and he that doth the same shall incurre and have the pain ordained thereof by the Statute of Westminster in the first Chapter 33. which will that he be taken and imprisoned till he have found him of whom the word shall be moved And further By another Statute made in 22. Richard 2. cap. 11. It was moreover enacted That when the said offender is taken and imprisoned and cannot finde him that spake the words then he shall be punished by the advise of the Councell And to the intent that such evill disposed persons which by their lewd speeches and slanderous words or reports do endeavour to break or disquiet the peace of the Realm might the sooner be inquired found out and punished by a Statute made Anno 2. Phil. Mary It was further established That the Justices of Peace in every Shire City or Town Corporate within the limits of their severall Commissions shall have full power to examine hear and determine the causes aforesaid in the said two Acts of Edward the first and Richard the second specified and to put the said two Statutes and every branch in them contained in due execution that condigne punishment be not deferred from such offenders and besides the afore mentioned penalties assigned to be inflicted upon transgressors by the aforesaid Statutes every Nobleman and great Officer of the Realm against whom any scandalous words false news or lyes be spoken may prosecute against the offender an action de scandalis magnatum and recover dammages against him and in like sort may every inferiour person for any such like words of infamy against him persue an action upon his cause against the offender and recover his dammages And if any person shall exhibite a Bill into the Starrechamber against a Nobleman or other and amongst other things charge him with murther piracy robbery or other fellony or to be a procurator thereof or accessary thereunto or with any other offence which is not examinable in the said Court the defendant in the said Bill may prosecute against the complanant therein an action upon the cause and recover his dammages for his Bill was exhibited of malice by the complainant to remain of record in the said Court to the infamy and slander of the defendant and not punish him for the said offences suggested in the said Bill by a course of Justice seeing the Court of Starre-chamber hath no authority to inquire of or punish the same offence but if the complainant did suggest in his Bill of complainant any matter against the defendant which is examinable in the said Court then no action upon the case is maintainable against him by the defendant therefore though the matter surmised be meerly false for it is done in course of Justice sub judice lis est whether the matters suggested be true or false untill they be proved And in former ages speeches tending to the reproach of others were so odious that King Edgar Le. 4. ordained that his tongue should be cut out which did speak any infamous or slanderous words of another Dyer 285. and in Kelway 13. Henry 7. 27. Cooks 4. part 14. Book 2. Richard 3. 9. 6. In which Book you may read at large where the Lord Beauchampe did sue an action upon the Statute of the 2. Rich. 2. cap. 5. de scandalis magnatum against Sir Richard Crafts because he did sue a Writ of forging of false deeds against the said Lord Beauchampe and the defendant doth justifie the said slander by the use of the said Writ c. And the demurrer was good and out of the intendment of the Common Laws or Statute Laws concerning slanderers for no punishment hath been at any time appointed for suits in Law though the matter be false and for vexation only other then amerciaments or fine to the King and therefore the plantiff is sufficiently discharged against the said Lord Beauchampe not only for the time that the suite is depending but after the action tryed or otherwise ended yea though the Plantiff were non-suited or by other means it went against him for if actions of revenge upon the event it would terrifie and discharge many who have just cause to complain for fear of infinite vexations for the event and successe of suits and matters in action is uncertain Cooks 6. part 40. a. There is another foul puddle that ariseth from the same corrupt quagmire and distilleth out of a heart likewise infected with malice and envy but is divised and practised by another mean then the former which is by libelling secret slandering and defaming of another for this privy backbiter doth not by words impeach his adversary in so manifest and turbulent manner as the collerick menacer in his fury doth seeming to sit quietly in his Study he doth more deeply pinch him and infixeth a more durable wound into his fame and credit then the other boysterous fellow doth in his
Noble person for it appertaineth not to them to argue or dispute the Authority of the Court but if the Court ●e thereof certified in forme aforesaid they will award a Supersedeas which is in the Booke of Enteries in the Title of Errour Sect. 20. and there are two reasons or causes wherefore no Capias or Exigent lyeth against any Peere the one because of the dignity of their persons the other by Intendment of Law there is none of the Nobility but have sufficient Freehold which the Pl●intiffe may extend for their payment or satisfaction but a Capias o● Exigent lyeth against a Knight for the Law hath not that opinion of his Freehold as the Court said in 26. H. 8. vide 27. H. 8. 22. in Brookes abridgement Exigent 2. 3. Cooko 6. part 52. 54. And if any of the Nobility happen to be so wilfull as not to appeare the Court will compell the Sheriffe to returne great issues against him and so at every default to increase and multiply the iss●es as lately against the Earle of Lincolne hath been in practice By the Ancient Lawes of this Realme before the comming of William the Conquerour many good Lawes were made for the keeping of the peace amongst others that every man above the Age of 12. yeares should b● sw●rne to the King as you may read more at large i● Lamberts perambulation of Kent 21. which we in remembrance thereof doe keep at this day in view of Frank pledge or leete Court but Noblemen of all sorts are neither bound to attend the Leete nor to take that Oath as appeares by Britton cap. 29. treating of this Court called the Sheriffes Turne Courts of which the Leete seemes to be extracted and agreeable thereunto is the Statute of Marlbridge cap. 10. in these words de turnis vice contra provisum est quod necesse non habeant ubi venire Archiepiscopi Episcopi Abbates Priores Committes Barones vide the Lord Chancellors Speech in the case of Post-nati fol. 78. If a Writ of Error be brought in Parliament upon a Judgement given in the Kings Bench the Lords of the higher House alone without the Commons are to examine the errors vide Jbid. fol. 22. Jn 11. H. 4. 2. b. In a case concerning a distresse taken for expences and Fees of the Knights of the Parliament it is agreed for Law that the Baronies and other Lands as are parcell of their ancient Lordships and Baronies but for other Lands they are But there is a question made one which is no Barron but ignoble doe purchase any ancient Barony whether he shall be discharged of such ignoble purchase by reason onely of such his purchase challenge or pretence to have Nobility and place in Parliament as before in this treatise more at large appeareth for as Lands by Villany service doe not make a Villany or Bondman which being free doth purchase the same as Littleton doth teach lib. 2. cap. 12 though by his Tenure he shall be bound to doe such Villanie service so of the other side and that is holden by Barony doth not make the villany peasent or ignoble which purchaseth the same to be noble although the charge of such tenure doe lye upon him in respect of the service of the Realme It is said in our Bookes that a day of grace or by the favour of the Court is not to bee granted to the Plaintiffes in any Suite or Action wherein a Nobleman is defendant 27. H. 8. 22. 27. E. 3. 88. because thereby the Nobleman should be longer delayed then the Ordinaty course of the Court is and such Lord is to have expedition of Iustice in respect that he is to attend the Person of the King and the Service of the Common-wealth but if there be no ignoble person party to the Suite the Judges doe and may at their discretions grant upon a motion and prayer a day or more of tryall otherwise then by the strict course of the Law the Plaintisse may challenge Cambden fol. 169. writing upon the Sub●ect saith where the Noble man is demandant the Tenant may not be essoyned for the delay and causes aforesaid to which ● would also subscribe but that the Booke of 3. H. 4 5 6. is otherwise adjudged if I doe misunderstand it there the King brought a O●●re Impedit against a Common person and the defendant was essoyned by the rule of the Court Therefore a fortiori he might be essoyned against a Nobleman Jf any Peere of the Realme being a Lord of the parliamant be plaintiffe or demandant defendant or Tenant in any Action reall or personall against another whereupon an issue is to be tryed by a Jury the Sheriffe must returne one Knight at the least to be of the Inquest otherwise upon a challenge made the whole Pannell shall be quashed which by the order of the Law is appoynted to be done for Honour and reverence due to the persons of that degree for as the words of the Booke are when a Peere of the Realme is party the Law is otherwise then when the Suite is betweene other persons Fitz. Chall 113. 13. E. ● in a Quar. Impedit against a Bishop adjudged Plowd 117. Dyer 208. b. 27. H 8. 22. b. But the Earle of Kent by the name of Reignald Gray Esq brought a Writ of Entry against Sir H. G. Knight 4. Eliz. and the parties did plead to an issue the venire facias was awarded which the Sheriffe did returne ferved and a Pannell returned according in which pannell there is no Knight named the truth of which Cause was that after the returne made the demandant is published and declared by the Queene and the Heraulds to be Earle of Kent in right and by discent although hee had not beene so reputed or named Earle before and also after that time that is to say at the then last parliament the Tenant is made a Baron by a Writ of parliament and both parties have places and voyces in parliament and then the Iury doe appeare in the Court of Common pleas and the Earle of K●nt did challenge the array because no Knight was returned but it was not allowed him by the Court for the admittance of both parties as to the contrary and no default can bee layd to the Sheriffe for he had no notice of the honourable estates of either of the parties the demandant not being then knowne or reputed to bee an Earle by discent or of the Tenants then also being no Ba●on Dyer 318. How much the Common Law hath alwaies prohibited perpetuities in Lands and Tenements you may see in Corbets Case in the first part of Sir Edward Cookes Booke Fol. 84. and in many other Cases in the rest of his Books also Littleton Fol. 145. saith it is a Principle in the Law that every Land of Fee-simple may be charged with a Rent in Fee-simple by one way or other but of the Kings Majesty upon the Creation of any Peere of the Realme Duke
only and in all legall proceedings he ought to be stiled ● that his dignity In the first yeer of King Edward 3. fol. 151. a W● of Formedon was brought against Richard son to Al● late Earl of Arundel and did demand the Mannor of with the Appurtenants c. The Tenant by his learned Councell did plead that he is Earl of Arundel and was Earl the same day of the Writ purchased and demanded Judgement of the Writ because he was not named in the same according to his dignity and title of Honour to which the Demandant saith That at day and time when he did purchase the Writ the Tenant wat not known nor taken to be an Earl and it is hard Justice if the Writ should abate without any default in the Plantiffe Neverthelesse Because the truth of the matter so that the Earldom did descend unto him before the Plaintiff commenced his Action and purchased his Writ against him therefore by judgement his Writ was abated although the Tenant was not at that time known or holden to be an Earl But if a Baron be Plaintiff or Defendant c. It is not of necessity to name Baron 8. H. 6. 10. Yet see a distinction of Barons concerning this matter heer following Fol. 27. b. And so Reynald Gray was reputed an Esquire after the Ea●ldom discended to him till at the last it was published and declared by the Queen and by the Heralds that he was Earl of Kent in right and by discent although he was reputed or named Earl before that time Dyer 318. lib. 10. Addition of Name BUt an Addition may be used or omitted at pleasure except in some speciall cases where processes of Utlary lyeth as hereafter followeth the title of Supremum caput ecclesiae Anglicanae which was by Act of Parliament in the 26. yeer of H. 8. c. 1. an 35. H. 8. cap. 3. annexed to the Emperiall Crown of this Realm is no parcell of the King by stile but only an addition of the Kings stile so that it may be omitted in the Summons of the Parliament as it was done in the first yeer of Queen Mary or used as it was by the late Queen Elizabeth and by the King that now is at his pleasure and so it is adjudged as you may read in Dyer In the first yeer of Queen Mary Fol. 98. And so is the Law declared by authority of Parliament 1. 2. P●il Mary cap. 8. 256. See in Fox his Book of Martyrs Fol. 217. An argument made by Hales contrary But between the Majesticall stile of the King and the title of honour appertaining to a Subject this ●ifference is between grants or purchases made by or to the King and grants or purchases made by or to a Nobleman c. For in that first Case it is necessary that the Name of Kings be expressed otherwise they are voide and of none effect But if a Duke Earl or other of the Nobility do pu●chase or grant by the Name of Baptism and su●name omitting other title of honour it is not void but good enough for it is a rule in the Law That every mans grant shall be construed most strongly against the grantor and most for the benefit of him to whom the grant is made and so ut Res magis valeat quam pereat that the matter may rather be strengthened then void for there is a great diversity in Law between Writs and Grants for if Writs be not formally made they shall be abated which is no greater prejudice then the purchasing another Writ But if a Grant should so Ligersie be made void then the party hath no remedy to have a new for that cause the Law doth not favour advantages by occasions of Misnomer more then the strict rule of the Law doth require Cooks 6. part 64. b. Et sequentia false Latine shall abate a Writ but not a Grant Ibidem And if an Earl be Plantiff or Demandant and hanging the Writ shall not abate but neverthelesse he shall proceed and count by the name of an Earl according to such title of honour as he did b●ar at the time of his action commenced Pasch 13. Edw. 3. brief 259. Pasch 19. Edw. 3. Procedendo 2. 32. Hen. 8. 39. 7. Hen. 6. 14. b. Et sequentia 25. Ed. 3. 39. 22. Rich. 2. brief 9. 37. Pasch 24. Edw. 3. 14. But if the Plantiff in a quere impedit be made Knight hanging the Writ the Writ shall abate Cooks 7. part 27. b. There is a Statute made in the first yeer of H. 5. c. 5. where in is contained as following Item It is ordained and established that in every Originall Writ of accounts personall Appeals and Indictments in which the Exigent shall be awarded in the Name of the Defendants In such Writs originall Appeals and Indictments addition shall be made of their estate and degree or mistery and the Towns Hamlets or places and the Counties where they were or be conversant and if by Processe upon the said Originall Writs Appeals or Indictments in the which the additions be omitted any Outlaries be pronounced the said Writs and Indictments shall be abated by the execution of the party wherein the said additions are omitted provided alwayes that though the said Writs of additions personall be not according to the Records and deeds by the surplussage of the additions aforesaid That for this cause they are not abated and that the Clerks of the Chancery under whose names such Writs shall go forth written shall not leave out or make omission of the said Additions as is aforesaid upon point to be punished and to make a fine to the King by the discretion of the Chancellor And this Ordinance shall begin to hold place at the suite of the party from the feast of Saint Michael next ensuing forwards Although the addition of estate degree and mystery to be added unto names be written in the Statute first and before the additions of place and Counties yet it hath been used alwayes after the making of the said Statute to place the additions of estate degree and mistery after the places and County in every Writ Appeals and Indictments against common persons But the use is otherwise in Appeals and Indictments of Treason or Fellony against Dukes Marquesses and Earls for their names of degrees are in such Cases put before the Additions of places and Counties as Charles Earl of Westmerland late of Bramspeth in the County of Durism Thelowell lib. 6. cap. 14. Names of dignity as Dukes Earls Barons Knights Serjant at Law c. Be contained within this word degree for gradus continet statum in se non è contrario degree doth contain state in it self and not of the contrary for the state of a man as Gentleman Esquire Yeoman Widdow single-Woman c. And the art or craft of a man is his mystery by Brook chief Justice in the Common-Pleas in abridgement of the Case of 14. Hen. 6. fol. 15.
they may have their writ for their discharge to the Sheriffe Rex Vic ' Com' c. quia barones regni nostri in Assizis Iuratis seurecognitionibus aliquibus poni non consuever●nt ut dicunt nisi eorum sacramentum adeo sit necessarium quod sine illis varitas inquire non p●test Tibi precipimus quod dilectum fed●lem nostram A. B. in Assizis Iuratis seu recogniti●nibus aliquibus non ponas seu poni faciat is contra voluntatem suam sine mandato nastro speciali nisi suam presentia ob aliquam causam specialiter exigatur teste c. But it is a rule in Law vigilantibus non dormientibus subve●iun● Iura For if the Sheriffe have not received any such writ and the Sheriffe have returned any Lords in Iuries or in Assizes c. and they thereupon doe appeare they shall be sworne and if they doe not appeare they shall loose their issues 35. H. 6. 46. and in such case they must purchase a writ out of the Chancery reciting their priviledge directed to the Iustices before whom such noble persons are so impannelled commanding them to dismisse him or them that were so impannelled out of the said pannell Fitz. na br 165. This priviledge hath restraint in two cases first if the Enquiry concerne the King and Common-wealth in any necessary or important degree or busines of the Realme then this priviledge is not allowed nor taketh place and therefore divers Barons of the marches of Wales were impannelled before the Bishop of Ely and after Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer to enquire of a notable out-rage committed by Gilbert de Clare Earle of Gloucester against Humphery de Boh●n Earle of Hereford and Essex and his Tennant in Wales the 12th yeare of Ed. 1. where John de Hastings Edmond de Mortimer Theonald de Bordmor and others Barons of the Marches challenged their Priviledges aforesaid and much insisted upon the same but it was afterwards answered by the Courts as by the words in the Records appeareth Domino quod res ista Dom. Regem Coronam dignitatem suam tangit dictum fu●● Dominum Regis Joh●n de Hastings omnibus aliis magnatibus s●pra nominatis quod per statu Iure Regni per conservatione dignitatis Coronae pacis suae apponunt manum ●d librum adfaciendum idquod eis ex perte Dom. Regis in jungeretur The Baron● aforesaid did neverthelesse persist in the Challenge and in the end both the said Earles between whom the said outrage had been perpetrated submitted themselves to the Kings grace and mad● their Fines Secondly this Priviledge hath no place in case of necessity where the truth of the case cannot otherwise come to light for the words of the Writ in the Register before mentioned are Nisi sua presentiae ob aliquam causam specialiter exigatur c. Register 179. If a Nobleman doe bring an Action of debt upon an Accompt in case where the Party is to be examined which is alwayes intended to be upon Oath upon the truth of his cause by vertue of the Statute of 2. H. 4. cap. 8. ●t shall suffice to examine his Artorney and not himselfe upon Oath 3. H. 6. 48. Cooke 6. part 53. And this Priviledge the Law doth give to the Nobility that they are not to be arrested by any Warrant o● any Justice of the Peace for the peace or for the goo● behaviour nor by a supplicavit out of the Chance●y ●● called because it issueth out at the supplication of the partie or from the Kings Bench for such an opinion hath the Law conceived of the peaceable disposition of Noblemen that it hath beene thought enough to take their promise upon Honour in that behalfe Lamb. Iustice of Peace lib. 2. cap. ● Fol. 17. E. 44. 24. E. 3. 33. subpenae Fitz 20. And as in civill causes the like rule doth the Court of Equity observe in causes of conscience for if the defendant be a Peere of the Realm in the Star-Chamber or Court of Chancery a Subpena shall not be awarded but a Letter from the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper in liew thereof and if he doe not appeare no attachment shall go forth against him For in the 14. Yeare of the late Queene Eliz. the Order and rule was declared in the Parliament Chamber and so to be inrolled in the Parliament that attachment is not to be awarded by Common Law custome or president against any Lord of the Parliament Dy●r 315. ● and if he doe appeare he may make his Answer to the B●ll of complaint upon his Honour onely and is not compelable to be sworne By the Statute 5. Eliz. chap. 1. ●t is enacted that all Knights and Burgesses of the Parliament shall take their Oath for the Supremacy and so shall Cittizens and Barons of the Cinque-ports being returned of the Parliament before they enter into the Parliament House which Oath shall be according to the tenour effect and forme of the same Oath ●erbatim which is and as it is already set forth to be taken in the Statute 1. Eliz. provided alwayes that for so much as the Queenes Majestie is otherwise sufficiently assured of the faith and loyalty of the temporall Lords of her high Court of Parliament Therefore this Act nor a any thing therein contayned shall not extend to compell any temporall person of or above the degree of a Baron of this Realme to take or Pronounce the Oath abovesaid nor to incurre any Penalty limited by this Act for not taking or refusing the same If any Peere of the Realme be sued in the Common Pleas in an Action of debt or trespasse and Processe are awarded against him by Capia● or by Exigent then he may sue a Certi●rare in the Chancery directed to the Justices of the Common Pleas testifying that he is a Peere of the Realme and the Writ is thus Rex c. Iusticiari●s suis de banco salutem mandamu● vobis quasi G. F. miles corum nobis ad sectam alicujus per Actionem personalem in placitatus existat talem processum non alium versus ipsum in actionem predicta scire faciat qualem versus Dominos magnates Comites seu Barones Regni nostri Anglium qui ad Parl. nostra de su●inicionem nostra venire debent aut eorum aliquem secundum legem consuetudinem regnum nostri Anglfieri faciendum quia pred G T. vnius Baronum Regnum in pred ad Parliamentum nostri de sumini●ionem regia venient record hoc vobis manda●us alijs quorum interest in●atescimus teste est Fitz. H. N B fol. 247. For unlesse the Court be judicially certified by the Kings Writ out of the Chancery that the defendant is a Lord of the Parliament Jf a Capias or Exigent issue for● against him no errour neither is it punishable in the Sheriffes his Bayliffes or Officers if they execute the said processe and Arrest the body of the said
the Court. And after that the other Champion was brought in like manner at the South-side of the lists with like congies by the hands of Sir Henry Cheney Knight and was placed on the Northside of the Barre and two Serjeants being of the counsell of each party in the midst betweene them this done the Demandant was solemnly called againe and appeared not but made default Burham Serjeant for the Tennant prayed the Court to record the non-suite quod factum fuit and then Dyer chiefe Iustice reciting the Writ and Count and issue joyned upon the battaile and the oath of the Champion to performe it and the prefixion of his day and place did give Iudgement against the Demandant and that the Tennant should have the Land to him and to his heires for ever And the Demandant and his pledges de prosequendo in miserecordia Reginae and afterwards solemne Proclamation was made that the Champions and all other there present which were by estimation four thousand persons might depart in the peace of God the Queen Et sic fecerunt magna clamore vivat R●gina vid. Dy. 30. Also if false Iudgement bee given in the county in the Sheriffes Court then the Writ shall be directed unto the same Sheriffe and the writ shall bee thus viz. Henricus c. vic Lincoln ' saltum si Jo Afec ' tunc in pleno Comitat. tuo recordari fac ' loquar que est in eodem Comitatu tuo per bre ' nostri de rect● inter Iohannem a pretend W. B. tenent ' de vno messuagio centum acres terrae cum pertinend in Com unde idem Io acqueritur falsum sibi factum fuisse Iudicium in eodem recordo illud litter ' coram Iustic ' nostris apud Westm ' tali die sub figillo tuo et legales milites ejusd●m Com' illis qui record ' illi interf●enun● som ' per bonos somonon ' pred ' B. quod tunc et ibi auditurae recordum illud et habeas ibi sun ' nostra quatuor militum et hoc ●re ' Fitz. H. Nat. b● ' et ibid and these foure must be Knights indeed Also the Iustices upon consideration of the usuall words in every Writ of Venire facias which by precipimus tibi quod venire facias c●ram c. 12. tam milites quamalios liberos et legales homines c. Say that these words tam milites were not at the first put into the Writ without effect Plowden fol. 117. b. For it seemeth that in diebus illis some Knights were returned upon every Venire facias By the Statute of Magra Charta cap. 12. It is ordained that Assizes of Novell diseisin and Mort. Dancestor should not be taken any where but within the Connties where they happen If a Tennant doe lay an essoyne de malo lecti he may have a Writ out of the Chancery to warrant it by which it shall bee commanded to foure Knights to view him and if they see himsicke then they are to give him day to the end of a yeare and a day Finches booke 87. b. note the Register fol. 117. b. quod corceraiur non obligatur nisi sit miles c. juxta fornam statuti Westm 1. cap. 10. Stamfords pleas fol. 40. It is a received opinion that Knights are excused from attendance at Leets Britton ●9 and 36. is cited to p rove it and by a large understanding of the intent and meaning of the Statute of Marlbr cap. 10. For the ancient Common-law hath such respect unto the degree of knight-hood that they or their eldest sonnes were not compellable to find pledges in the Leet or Law-dayes For the Statute of Marlbr aforesaid was not introductive legis For it was before the Conquest vide the Lord Chancellors speech fol. 77. and the Common-law by this Statute is not alleadged and to that effect vide Finches Booke fol. 132. a. and Bro. tit fol. 39. and to the booke called the Mirrour of Iustice mentioned in the Preface to Cooks uinth part it is said that Knights are excepted and so it appeares that the practise was as well before as immediatly after the making of that Statute of Marlb and interpretation practica a ptinciple way and forme of interpretation of Lawes The Lord Chancellors speech in the case of Post-nati 34. and in Divinity Propter sanctorum est interpretes preceptorum ●bidem 66. But a Knight and superiours and inferiours are bound by Law to take notice of the proceedings there For if a man be out-lawed for felony at a Countie Court and one of the same County not knowing of the felony doth receive him hee is accessary 13. 14. Eliz. Dyer 355. a. et Stamford 96. et 41. Eliz. Also when the King doth summon to his Parliament Writs shall bee sent to the Sheriffe to make choice of Knights for every shire in this forme Rex vic' c. saltim quia nostri Consilii pro quibusdam arduis urgentihus negotiis nos statum et defensionem regni nostri Angli● Ecclesiae Anglicanae concernen ' quoddam Parliamentum nostrum apud civitatem nostram Westm 12. die Novembr prox futur ' teneri ordinavimus et ibidem prefatis magnatibus Proceribus dom ' regni nostr● colloquium habere et tractare tibi precipimus fi●miter iujungentis quod facta proclamatione in proxim● tuo po●t receptionem hujus litteris nostris tenen ●● die loco praedict ' d●os milites gladi● cinctis magis idoneos discret ' com' praedict ' c. electionem illam in dist●ncte aperte sub sigillo tuo sub sigillis ●orum qui electioni illi interfuerint nobis in Cancellaria nostra locum certisices indilate Cromptons Courts 1. b. vide Stat. de A● 23. H 6. cap. 15. Where amongst other things it is enacted that the Knights of the Shires for Parliaments hereafter to bee chosen shall bee naturall Knights of the same County for the which they shall bee so chosen or otherwise such naturall Esquiers or Gentlemen being of the same County as shall bee able to bee Knights vide Plowden fol. 121. Peeres are by intendment of Law sufficient of Freehold and that is one of the reasons whereof no capias or exigent lyeth against him for debt or trespa● but the Law h●th not that opinion of the Knights sufficiency of Freehold for ●ee may bee a Knight Sans terrae therefore 26. H. 8. 7. a. Brooke Exigent 72. and then hee is to bee returned of any jury or inquest howsoever hee may bee worthy and sufficient to serve the Common-wealth in Marshall affaires The wives and widdowes of Knights in legall proceedings and in Courts of Iustice have not the titles of Ladies as the wives or widdowes of Noblemen have but that title by the curteous speech of England And if in any action they be not called Ladies for that cause the writ shall not abate for that surplusage
not to have them learned in the Lawes nor to live by the practice thereof but onely upon their Fathers allowance vide Fortescue de landibus Anglorum cap. 49. But the Statute of An. 3 Iac. cap. 4. amongst other things it is enacted that if any Gentleman or Person of high degree shall hereafter goe or passe voluntarily out of this Realme to serve any forraine Prince State or Potentate before that hee or they shall become bounden with two sureties as shall bee allowed of the Officers by that act limited to take the said bond unto the King his Heires and Successours in the summe of twenty pounds of currant English money at the least with condition to the effect following hee shall bee a felon viz. That if the within Bounden c. shall not at any time then after bee reconciled to the Pope or Sea of Rome nor shall enter into or consent unto any practise plot or conspiracy whatsoever against the Kings Majesty his Heires and Successours or any of his or their estate or estates Realmes and Dominions but shall within convenient time after knowledge thereof had revealed and disclosed to the Kings Majesty his Heires and Successours or some of the Lords of his or their Privy Counsell all such practises plots and conspiracies and that then the said obligation to bee void c. Of Yeomen THe Yeomanry or Common people for they bee called of the Saxon word Zemen which doth signifie Common who have some lands of their owne to live upon for a carve of land or Plow land was in antient times of the yearely value of five Nobles and this was the living of a sober man or Yeoman Cookes 9. part fol. 124. b. But in our Lawes they are called Legales hom●nes a word very familiar in writs and inquests and by divers Statutes it hath beene enacted that none should passe in any inquest unlesse they had fourty shillings freehold in yearely revenues which maketh if the most value were taken to the proportion of moneyes above six pounds of our currant money at this present Sir Thomas Smith fol 30. and by the Statute of 27. Eliz. cap. 6. Iurours must have 4. l. in lands In the end of the Statute 23. H. 6. cap. 15. concerning the election of Knights for the Parliament it is expressely provided that no man shall bee such Knight which standeth in the degree of a Yeoman It appeareth in Lamberts perambulation of Kent that this Saxon word Telphinorman was given to the Theine or Gentleman because his life was valued at twelve hundred shillings and in those dayes the lives of all sorts of men were rated at certaine summes of money Telphinorman to the Chorle or Yeoman because the price of his head was taxed at two hundred shillings which thing if it were expressely set forth in sundry old Lawes yet extant might well enough bee found in the Etimologie of the words themselves the one called a Twelve hund as if it were a twelfe hundred And in this estate they please themselves and joy exceedingly insomuch as a man may find sundry Yeomen although otherwise comparable for wealth with many of the Gentle sort that will not yet for that change their condition nor desire to bee apparelled with the title of Gentry Lamberts esta●e of Kent names the Yeomanry of Kent when a Yeoman of 1000. l. yearely revenues and ref●sed any other superiour title but these are now no more heard of c. By the Common Law as may appeare in An. 1. E. 2. De militibus in An. 7. H. 6. 15. men that had lands of the yearely value of 28. l. were comp●llable at the Kings pleasure to take upon them the order of Knight-hood and upon summons there came a Yeoman who might dispend 100. markes per annum and the Court was in doubt how they might put him of and at last hee was wayved in because hee did come the second day An. 7. H. 6. fol. 15. a. By this sort of men the triall of causes in the Countrey proceedeth ordinarily for of them there are greater number in England then in any other place and they also of a more plentifull livelyhood and therefore it cometh that men of this Countrey are more apt and fit to discerne in doubtfull causes of great examinations and trials then are men wholly given to moyling in the ground to whom the rural● exercise engendreth rudenesse of wit and mind and many Franklins and Yeomen there are so neere adjoyning as you may make a Iury with little difficulty For there bee many of them which bee able to spend 100. l. a yeare vide Fortescue de landibus Anglorum c. As in ancient time the Senatours of Rome never elected a Censor and as with us in conserving of Nobility respect is had unto the Revenues by which their dignity and Nobility may bee supported and maintained Cookes 7. part 33. b. so the wisedome of this Realme hath of ancient provided that none shall passe upon Iuries for the trials of any matters reall or personall or upon any criminall cause but such as besides their moveables have lands of estate for life at the least to a competent value least for need and poverty such Iurours might easily bee corrupted and suborned Fortescue 56. b. And in all cases and causes the Law hath conceived a better opinion of those that have lands and tenements or otherwise are of worth in moveable goods presuming that such will commit or omit nothing that any way may bee prejudiciall to their estimations or which may endanger their estates then hath Labourers Artificers Retaylers or such like of whom Tully saith Nihil proficiunt in se adm●dum mentiuntur and by divers Statutes certaine immunities are given to men of quality which are deemed to the vulgar sort of people read hereof amongst other in An. 1. Iac. cap. 127. By the Statute of 2. H. 4. cap. 21. amongst other things it is enacted that no Yeoman should take or weare any livery of any Lord upon paine of imprisonment and to make fine and ransome at the Kings will FINIS
to mention one case which I read in the bookes of the common Law concerning the discent of a title of honor whereof the Ancestor had estate in fee simple There is a maxime in the Law Possessio fratris de feodo simplici facit ' sororem esse heredem the possession of the brother in fee simple doth make his sister to bee his heire But if a man by any of the three names before mentioned be created into a title of dignity to him and to his heires for ever and hee hath issue a sonne and a daughter by one Venter and hath also a sonne by a second wife afterwards the Father dyeth and his eldest sonne entreth into all his Fathers inheritance and also enjoyeth the title and name of dignity which his Father had but dyeth without issue In this case the dignity shal goe and discend unto the younger sonne though hee be but of the halfe blood unto him that last enjoyed that name and title by discent and shall ●ot discend unto his sister of the whole blood and yet in this case shee should only bee her brothers heire of all his fee simple Lands and the reason and cause hereof is because Possessio fratris because the possession of the brother is the maine and sole cause which may give title to her his sister which fayleth in this cause of dignity For it cannot be said that her eldest brother was in possession of his title of honour no more then of his blood For the diguity was inherent to his blood so that neither by his owne Act neither by any act to be done by another did hee gaine any more actuall possession if so it may be termed then by the law did discend unto him and therfore the younger brother may well by the Law make himselfe heire unto his Father of the honour though hee cannot be heire unto his brother so that this word Possessio which is none other then pedis positio a fixing of the foot extendeth only unto such things of which a man may by his entry or other act and doth require actuall possession Cooks 3. part 42. Ratcl●ffs case And having thus much dilated concerning the creations and other things incident to the degrees of Nobility I cannot with silence pretermit something to declare concerning that sufficiency and ability of estate which the Law doth require to be in every of them according to their severall dignities The Common Law alwayes will that decorum and conveniency be observed considering the charges and expences appertayning to these degrees and dignities being offices of principall service to the King and the Realme both in time of warre and peace as hath beene said hath ordered that each of them have a convenient portion and value of lands of inheritance for the support of their honours which supplyes are as sinewes conjoyned unto the same For in vertue and in riches as Aristotle counselleth all the old Nobility consisted and which two as Ecclesiastes teacheth maketh a good accomplement for saith he Vtilior est sapientia cum divitiis conjuncta Lamberts Perambulation of Kent ●68 Therefore a Knight ought to have 20. l. land by the ye●re a Baron 13. Knights fees and a quarter an Earle 20 knights fees and this doth appeare by the Statute of Magna Charta cap 2. For alwayes the fourth part of such Revenues which is by the Law requisite to the dignity shall be paid to the King for reliefe as for example The reliefe of a Knight is five pound which is the fourth part of 20. l. which is the revenue of a Knight see the Statute hereof 1 E. 2. and the reliefe of a Baron is a 100. markes which is the fourth part of his revenues that is to say 400. markes a yeare which doth include 13. Knights fees and a quarter and the reliefe of an Earle is a 100. l. which is the fourth part of 400. l. which is the revenue of an Earle and it appeares by the Records of the Exchequer that the reliefe of a Duke amounteth unto 200. l. and by consequence his revenue ought to be 800. l. per annum and this is the reason in every of our bookes that every of the Nobility is presumed in our law to have sufficient free-hold Ad sustinendum nomen onus and to what value these ancient rents in time of H. 3. Edw. 1. at this day do amount unto every man knoweth not Cooke 7. part 33. And in cases of decay of Nobility and meanes as Senatores Romani rereamoti senata as Senators of Rome were removed from the Senate so sometimes they are not admitted to the upper house in the Parliaments though they keepe the name and title of dignity still Sir Thomas Smith de reipub Angl. 221. And by a Statute made 31. H. 8. ca. 10. The Lords have their places prescribed after this manner following viz. these foure the Lord Chancellour the Lord Treasurer the Lord President of the Councell and the Lord Privie Seale being persons of the degree of a Baron or above and in the same act appointed to sit in the Parliaments and all assemblies or Councell above all duties not being of the blood royall viz. the Kings brother Vncle Nephew and these sixe the Lord High Chamberlaine of England the Lord Marshall and the Lord Admirall of England the Lord Steward of the Kings House and the Lord Chamberlaine of the Houshold by that act to be placed in all assemblies of Councell after the Lord Privy Seale according to their degrees and estates so that if hee bee a Baron then hee is to sit above all Barones or an Earle above all Earles and so likewise the Kings Secretary being a Baron of the Parliament hath a place above all Barones and if hee bee a man of higher degree hee shall sit and bee placed according thereunto Priviledges incident to the Nobility according to the Lawes of England VVHen a Peere of the Realme and Lord of the Parliament is to be arraigned upon any treason or fellony whereof he is indicted and whereupon hee hath pleaded not guilty the King by his Letters Pattents shall assigne some great and sag● Lord of the Parliament to bee High Steward of England for the day of his arraignement who before the same day shall make precept to his Sergeant at armes that is appointed to serve him during the time of his Commission to warne to appeare before him 18. or 20. Lords of the Parliament or 12. at the least upon the same day and then at the day appointed when the High Steward shall bee set under the Clothe of State upon the arraignement of the Prisoner and hath caused the Commission to bee read the same Sergeant shall returne his Precepts and thereupon the Lords shall bee called and when they have appeared and set in their places the Constable of the Tower shall bee called to bring his Prisoner into the Court who then shall bring his Prisoner to the Barre and the High
Steward shall declare unto the people the cause why the King hath assembled thither those Lords and him and perswade him to answere without feare and then hee shall cause the Clarke of the Crowne to read his endictement unto him and aske him if hee bee guilty or not whereunto when hee hath answered not guilty the Clarke of the Crowne shall aske him how hee will bee tryed and then hee will say by God and his Peeres and then the Kings Sergeants and Attourney will give evidence against him whereunto when the Prisoner hath made answere the Constable shall bee commanded to retire the Prisoner from the Barre to some other place while the Lords doe secretly conferre in the Court together and then the Lords shall rise out of their places and consult amongst themselves and what they affirme shall bee done upon their Honour without any oath to bee ministred unto them and when they all or the greatest part of them bee agreed they shall returne to their places and sit downe and then the High Steward shall aske of the youngest Lord by himselfe if he that is arraigned bee guilty or not of the offence whereof hee is arraigned and then of the youngest next him and so of the residue one by one untill hee have asked them all and every Lord shall answere by himselfe and then the High Steward shall send for the Prisoner againe who shall bee led to the Barre to whom the High Steward shall reherse the verdict of the Peeres and give judgement accordingly Stamford Pleas del Coronae lib. 3. cap. 1. Poulton 188. The antiquity of this kind of triall by the opinion of the last recited Authours is grounded from the Statute of Magna charta so called not in regard of the quantity but in regard of the waight thereof Cooke Epistle to the 8. part fol. 2. c. 29. beginning thus Nullus liber homo c. nec supereum ibimus nec super eum mittemus nisi per legale judicium parvu ' suorum But I take it to bee more ancient then the time of Hen. 3. as brought into the Realme with the Conquerour being answerable to the Norman and French Lawes and agreeable with the Customes Fewdall where almost all the controversies arising betweene the Soveraigne and his vassall are tried per judicium Parvu ' suorum And if a Peere of the Realme upon his arraignement of treason doe stand mute or will not answere directly judgement shall bee given against him as a Traytour convicted and hee shall not bee pressed to death and thereby save the forfeiture of his lands for treason is out of the Statute of Westminster the first c. 12. 15. E. 4. 33. Dyer 205. and 300. But if hee bee arraigned upon an indictement of fellony hee may bee mute I● appeareth by this Statute of Magna charta that a Peere of the Realme shall bee tried by his Peeres onely in case where hee is indicted at the Kings suite of treason or fellony for the words of the Statute bee Wee will not passe or sit in judgement upon him but by his Peeres But if an Appeale of murder or other fellony bee sued by any Common person against a Peere of the Realme hee shall bee tried by Common persons and not by his Peeres Stam. Pleas del Coron lib. 3. cap. 1. Brooke triall 142. Poulton 188. 6. This Priviledge hath some restraints as well in regard of the person as in the manner of proceedings As touching the person First the Archbishops and Bishops of this Realme though they bee Lords of the Parliament if they bee impeached of such an offence they shall not bee tried by the Peeres of the Realme but by a jury of Knights and other substantiall persons upon their oaths the reason thereof alleadged is for as much as Archbishops and Bishops cannot passe in like cases upon the triall of any other of the Peeres for that they are prchibited by the Common and Ecclesiasticall Lawes to bee Judges of life and death and reason would that the other Peeres should not trie them for this triall should bee mutuall for as much as is performed upon their Honours without any oath taken And so by the way you may see the great regard the Law hath to the word of a Peere of the Realme when hee speaketh upon his Honour even in a case concerning the life of a man and that of a Peere and therefore ought they much more to keepe their words and promises in smaller matters when they engate their Honours for any fast cause or consideration Crompton Courts 13. Secondly as touching the Persons no temporall Lords but they that are Lords of the Parliament shall have this kind of triall and therefore hereout are excluded the eldest Sonne and Heire apparant of a Duke in the life of his Father though he bee called an Earle and it was the case of Henry Howard Earle of Surrey Sonne and Heir apparent of Thomas Duke of Suffolke in 38. H. 8. which is in Brooks abridgement treason likewise the Son and Heir apparant of an Earl though he be called Lord or Baron And all the younger Sonnes of the Kings are Earles by birth though they have no other creation but shall not be partakers of this or other priviledges incident to the Lords of the Parliament Thirdly those that are Barons of the Nobility of Ireland or of Scotland if upon the like offence committed in England they be apprehended in England they shall not have their triall by Peeres no though they were borne within England for they received their dignity from a King of their Nations But if the King of England at this day do create one of his subjects of Scotland to be Viscount Ro●hester within England or by ordinary summons under his great Seale doe call him to his upper House of Parliament do assign him a place and to have a voice there in his great Councell amongst the Lords and Peeres of the Realme he shall thereby also be a Peere of the Realme and be partaker with them in all priviledges and thus much concerning the restraint of the said priviledges in respect of the person as touching the manner of proceeding it appeareth by the said statute of Magna charta c 29. that a Peere of the Realme shall be tried by his Peeres only in case where he is indicted at the Kings suite of treason of fellony for the words of the statute be Nec super eum ibimus But if an appeale of murder or other fellony be sued by any Common person by a Peere of the Realme he shall be tried by Common persons and not by his Peeres Stam. Pleas del Corone lib. 3. cap. 1. P●ulton 118. and so was Fines Lord Dacres tried in a●peale of murder 33. H. 8. Brooke Abridgement trials 142. The Nobility of this Realme enjoy that priviledge that they are not to be impanelled in any Iury or Inquests to m●ke tryall or Enquiry upon their corporall oathes betweene party and party for