Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n court_n justice_n law_n 3,065 5 4.7299 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A69292 A record of some worthy proceedings in the honourable, wise, and faithfull Howse of Commons in the late Parliament England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons.; Bacon, Francis, 1561-1626. 1611 (1611) STC 7751; ESTC S122422 22,834 50

There are 5 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

men at what price they please f. 161. 4. Proclamations referring punishmēt to be done by Iustices of peace Majors Bailives Constables other Officers or seisure by persons who have no authoritie to require heare and determine of those offences So it is to be inflicted before lawfull triall cōviction 8. Ian. 2. Ia f. 72. A Proclamation for folding wooles 23. Aug. 5. Ia. f. 151. seisure of starch c. f. 154. 5. Proclamations penned with penalties in forme of penal Statutes 4. No. 1. Ia. f. Paine of confiscation of goods f. 56. 18. Ian. 2. Ia. f. 72. Ten dayes imprisonment standing in the pillory f. 72. Iustices of peace to forfeyt 20. pounds if they see not the Proclamation of folding wooles executed f. 75. 23. Aug. 5. Ia. f 151. forfeyture of one moitie of starch c. seised c. 154. 6 Punishment of offenders in courts of arbitrary discretion as starre chamber 1. Mar. 2. Ia. f. 102. Proclamation for building f. 103. 12. Oct. 5. In. 159. Proclam for building f. 160. 5. Iul. 6. Ia. f. 177. Procl for starch f. 180. 25. Iul. 6. Ia. f. 180. Procl for building f. 181. 7. Proclam former become Presidents and vouched in later Proclam 18. Iun. 2. Ia. f. 75. avoucheth 5. E. 6. 4. Eliz. f. 73. 25. Iul. 6. Ia. f. 180. mentioneth former Proclam against buildings explaineth and qualifieth them f. 180. Your Majesties commons in this session of Parliament assembled doe cheerefully acknowledge the spring and fountaine of the publique justice of this state to be originally in your Ma from the benefite therof is conveyed and derived into every member of this politique body by your Highnes writs Amongst which none are more honourable for the support of the common justice of the realm then the writes of prohibition habe as corpus de homine replegiādo writs have been ever held and found to be a chief meanes of reliefe vnto the poore distressed and oppressed subjects of this kingdome and can be no inconvenience at all Seing they are no way conclusive against any man and doo draw no benefit to the procurers but rather a fruitless charge if they be obteined vpon any vnjust ground or pretence In the free granting of proceccing vpon some of which writes especially that of prohibition there hath of late been observed to be some obstruction by reason that vpon the complaintes and the importunity of some who desire the support of inferiour courts against the principall courts of the common law wherewith your Majesty hath been greatly troubled you have taken into your royall consideration the severall extents of the jurisdiction of the sayd severall courts Since which time the said writes have been more sparingly graunced and with stricter cautiōs then anciently hath been accustomed It is therefore most humbly desired that it may please your Majestie whose glory is never more cōspicuous then when the poorest of the commonalty are blessed with the influence of the ancient beames of justice to require your judges in the courts of Westminster to grant the said writes in cases wherein such writes doe lye and by law are grantable And in such sort as that such persons whose bodies being eyther cōmitted to prison or their causes like to receive great prejudice by procedings against them in times of vacation may not be debarred nor deferred from hauing the speedy reliefe benefite of those writes more then in former times For asmuch as the exercise of authoritie over the counties of Glocester Hereford Wigorne and Salope by the president councell of Wales by way of instructions vpon pretext of a statute made in the 34. yeare of the reigne of King Henry the 8. is conceived not to be warranted by that or any other lawe of this Realme of England And for that in the 2. session of this present parliament there did a bill pass the house of the Commons whereb● it was declared that the true intent and meaning of that before mentioned statute was not thereby to subject these countries to that kind of government by instructions And yet notwithstanding the inhabitāts of those Counties are since vtterly discouraged and in effect debarred from triall of the right of that kind of jurisdiction over those countries by the ordinarie course of the cōmon lawes of this land by reason of Prohibitions which were heretofore frequently granted vpon suggestion that those countries are not part of Wales or of the marches of the same which is the very point in question are now become very hard to be obteyned except in cases where those of that councell doe exceed the instructions set downe to them by your Majestie As also for that in cases where actions have been brought at the common law whereby that question might haue come to dicision the plaintifes haue been stopped sometimes by injunctions out of your Majesties court of Chancery from their proceedings sometime before sometime after judgemēts and some time also by imprisonment The precedent of which proceedings doth concern all your Majesties loyall and dutifull subjects of this kingdome aswell in respect of the stopping of the free course of Iustice as also by reason that if that kinde of jurisdiction were at first extended over those 4. counties and be now still continued without warrant of law then consequence of this example may in future times give countenance to the erecting of like jurisdictions in other places of this Realme And for asmuch as your Majestie was pleased to commaund all the Iudges to consider of this question and that they thereupon bestowed very many dayes in hearing the cause argued by learned counsaile on both sides And in viewing and considering of great numbers of recordes produced before them concerning that cause whereby they have no doubt throughly informed themselves of the right It is therefore the most humble petition of the commons in this present Parliament assembled that your most excellent Majestie will also be pleased to commaund that the Iudges may deliver their opinion upon that so exact and deliberate hearing which was had before them concerning the right of the foresayd jurisdiction over those 4. Counties by force of that statute And that the opinion which they shall deliver therein may be in such sort published as that all your Majesties subjects whome it may concerne may have meanes to take knowledge thereof And that your Ma will vouchsafe to declare it by your most princely pleasure that any of your Maiesties subiects who may have occasion thereof may trye his or their right in that point by due and ordinarie course of the common lawe eyther by suing out of prohibitions or any other your Maiesties writs without restraint And that if the sayd iurisdiction over those 4. Counties shall appeare to your Maiestie by the opinion of the Iudges or otherwise not to be warranted by law that then your Maiesty be pleased out of your most princely and gracious favour towards all
other cannot possibly be severed in debate of either we alledge that your Majesties prerogatives of that kynd cōcerning directly the subjects right and interest wee dayly handled and discussed in all courts at Westminster and have been ever freely debated vpon all fit occasions but in this all former Parliaments without restraint Which being forbidden it is impossible for the subject either to know or mainteine his right propertie to his owne landes and goods though neuer so just and manifest It may further please your Most excellent Majesty to vnderstand that wee have no minde to impugne but a desire to informe ourselves of your highnes prerogative in that point which if ever is now most necessary to be knowne And though it were to no other purpose yet to satisfie the generality of your Majesties subjects who finding themselves much grieved by these new Imdositions do languish in much sorrow and discomfort These reasons dreade soveraigne being the proper reasons of Parliament do pleade for the vpholding of this our ancient right and liberty Howbeit seing it hath pleased your Majestie to insist vpon that judgement in the Exchequer as being direction sufficient for us without further examination upon great desire of leaving your Ma vnsatisfied in no one point of our intents and proceedings w● professe touching that judgement That we neither doe nor wil take upon us to reverse it but our desire is to know the reasōs whereupon the same was grounded And the rather for that a generall cōceipt is had that the reasons of that judgement may be extēded much further even to the utter ruine of the ancient libertie of this kingdome and of the subjects right of propertie to haue landes and goods Therefore the judgement it self being the first and the last that ever was given in that kind for ought appearing unto us and being onely in one case and against one man it can binde in law no other then that person and is also reversable by writ of error graunted heretofore by act of Parliament And neither hee nor any other subject is debarred by it from trying his right in the same or like case in any of your Majesties Courts of record at Westminster Lastly wee nothing doubt but your intended proceeding in a full examination of the right nature measure of these new impositions if this restraint had not come betweene should have been so orderly and moderately caried so applied to the manifold necessitie of these tymes and given your Majesty so true a view of the state and right of your subjects that it would have been much to your Majesties content and satisfaction which wee most desire remoued all cause of feares and jealousies from the loyall hearts of your subjects which is as it ought to be our carefull indeavour Whereas contrarywise in that other way directed by your Majesty wee cannot safely proceed without concluding for ever the right of the subject which without due examination thereof wee may not doe We therefore your highnes loyall and dutifull commons not swerving from the approved steps of our ancestors most humbly and instantly beseech your gracious Majesty that without offence to the same we may according to the vndoubted right and libertie of Parliament proceed in our intended course of a full examination of these new impositions that so we may cheerefully pass on to your Majesties busines from which this st●p hath by diversion so long with held vs. And wee your Majesties most humble faithfull and loyall subiects shall ever according to our bounden dutie pray for your Majesties long and happie raigne over vs. Delivered by 20. of the lower howse of Parliament the 24. of May 1610 Petitions MOst gracious and dread soveraigne Sith it hath pleased Almightie God of his unspeakable goodnes mercie towards us to call your Majestie to the government of this kingdome and hath crowned you with supreme power aswell in the Church as in the cōmon wealth for the advancement of his glorie the generall benefite of all the subjects of this land Weo doe with all humilitie present at the feet of your excellent Ma our selves and our desires full of confidence in the assurance of your religious minde and princely disposition That you wil be graciously pleased to give life and effect to these our petitions greatly tending as undoubtedly we conceive to the glorie of God the good of his Church safetie of your most royall person wherein we acknowledge our greatest happines to consist 1. Whereas good and provident lawes have beene made for the maintenance of Gods true religion safetie of your Majesties most royall person issue and estate against Iesuites seminarie Priests and popish recusants And although your Majestie by your godly learned and judicious writings have declared your princely christian zeale in the defence of the religion established have very lately to the comfort of your best affected subjects published to both howses of Parliament your princely will and pleasure that recusants should not be concealed but derected and convicted yet for that the lawes are not executed against the Priests who are the corrupters of the people in religion and loyaltie and many Recusants haue already compounded and as it is to be feared more and more except your Ma in your great wisdom prevēt the same will cōpound with those beg their penalties which maketh the lawes altogither fruitless or of litle or none effect the offenders to become bold obdurate and unconformable Your Majestie therefore would be pleased at the humble sute of your commons in this present Parliament assembled in the causes so highly concerning the glorie of God the preservation of true religion of your Majestie and state to suffer your highnes naturall clemencie to retire it self and to giue place unto justice and to lay your royall cōmand upō al your ministers of justice both ecclesiastical civil to see the lawes made against Iesuites seminarie Priests and Recusants of what kind and sect soever to be duely and exactly executed without dread or delay And that your Majestie would be pleased likwise to take into your owne hands the penalties due for recusancie and that the same be not converted to the priuate gaine of some to your infinite losse the imboldning of the Papists and decay of true religion 2. Whereas also divers painfull and learned Pastors that haue long traveiled in the work of the Ministerie with good fruit and blessing of their labours who were ever ready to perform the legal Subscription appointed by the Statute of 13. Elizab which onely concerneth the confession of the true Christian faith and doctrine of the Sacraments yet for not conforming in some points of ceremonies and refusing the subscription directed by the late Canons have been removed from their ecclesiasticall livings being their freehold and debarred from all meanes of maintenance to the great griefe of sundry your Majesties well affected subjects seing the whol people that want
of them are decayed and many of them have given over that trade to the hinderance of the Realme And also the like is fallen to the Marriners and Shipwrights of this Realme which number is greatly decayed and with them the serviceable shipp and shipping very much weakened which threatneth a decay of the walls and strength of the Realme which by good shipping and good Marriners is well defended And I find also that God hath not blessed the treasure of the Realme for it is gone from us as if God had blown upon it to turne it out of the land so as Prince people want And I finde also in the calling of lawyers that there is not the like increase of their labors as in times past except it be some fewe favorites and I think that divers Knights Citizens and Burgesses now here present about me could say the like of divers sorts of men in their coūtryes cities and Burroughes if they list to speak whereupon I doe assuredly think that for some publique sinns of the land God hath a quarrell to the land whereby he doth withdrawe his ordinary blessings which publique sinnes this great Councell of the Realme ought first to seeke out and as much as in our power to redress the same that God being thereby reconciled vnto the land an happy blessing might insue to all the estates thereof which to effect you shall see what we for our parts have done to obteyne Gods loving countenance to the land as a shield by removing the publicke sinnes thereof which as a thick cloud doth keepe from vs Gods sun-shining grace First we did see and consider that the precious name of God which we ought to regard more then our lives is not by the lawes of England so tenderly regarded preserved as the name of all sortes of people in the land For if some evill wordes be vsed against the King it is high treason for which the offender shall dye And if some evill words be vsed against noble men it is publishable by the statute de Scandalū magnatum And that for some evill words vsed by any private person against another an actiō of the case doth lye at the common law to punish the offender and to recompence the partie wronged But for abusing the holy name of God and tearing him in peeces by wicked oathes there is no punishment by the lawes of the Realme whereby both men women and children increase in that sinne greevously every day without punishment or checke wherefore to prevent that sinne we did at two severall sessions of Parliament make two severall bills which did passe our howse of Commons to be made lawes for punishment of such Offenders And to take away that crying sinne which doth most provoke God most greeve the subjects viz the depriving priving disgracing silencing disgrading and imprisoning such of Gods Messengers being learned and godly preachers as he hath furnished with most heavenly graces to call us to true repentance for no other cause but for not conforming themselves otherwise than by subscription limited in the statutes made in the 14. yere of the late Queene Elizabeth of famous memory thereby making the lawes of the Church and cōmon wealth to iarre which to reforme we made a lawe for subscription agreeing to the intent of the foresayd statute which every wise mā will approue willingly subscribe unto whereby much peace unitie would grow in the chnrch cōmon wealth be an occasion that many subiects might be well taught the meanes of their salvation who now want sufficient knowledge of the word of God to ground their faith upon And to take away another grosse sin which is made lawfull by act of Parliament whereby the land is made guiltie thereof viz. concerning non residents and pluralitie of benefices we did passe a bill in the last Sessions of Parliament have another bill concerning that offence ready to passe being twice read and agreed upon at the Cōmittees whereby we abrogate so much of the statute of the 21 yere of K. Hē the 8. as did inable non residēts or the taking of more benefices then one with cure of soules for by the provisoes in that Statute the Kings Chapleines may haue as many benefices as they can get without stint some others may have 4. benefices with cure at one time in severall counties some two benefices yet be resident upon none of them so long as he attendeth upon his Lord or Mr. which is a thing intolerable in a Christian common wealth And for that some scandalous Ministers of evill life do bring a great slaunder to all the rest being many godly learned preachers we did make a good law to remove such scandalous Ministers from their place And where by the lawes of God and the lawes of this Realme the ecclesiasticall persons should in their goverment use onely the spirituall sword by exhortation admonition and excōmunication which are the keyes of the Church to exclude impenitent sinners to receive into the Church the penitent and faithfull persons and to leave the temporall sword to the temporall Magistrate which was alwayes so used in England untill the second yeare of King Hen. 4. at which time the popish Prelates following the example of the man of sinne at Rome obtayned a statute without the free consent of the subjects as is set forth by Mr. Foxe and in some sort appeareth by the record of the Towre by which statute they got the temporall sword into their handes which statute was since by severall acts of Parliament made voide with great disgrace and yet by colour of that temporall authoritie once by a short space by them used some ecclesiasticall persons doe use both swords to the great griefe and trouble of the subjects and with those two swordes they doe also use the oath ex officio which began first in England by that statute of the 2. yere of K. Henry the 4. being contrary to the lawes of England as I verily think contrary to the lawes of God Wherefore we to reforme those great abuses made 2. good lawes the one to abridge the force of the ecclesiasticall cōmission in many pointes thother to abrogate and take away the power of ecclesiasticall persons to minister the oath ex officio being a very hatefull thing and unlawfull Andi for that among the Canons late made by the clergie of England in their Convocation it was thought that some of their canons did extend to charge the bodies landes and goods of the subjects of the Realme further then was lawfull and meet we therefore made a good lawe to make voide such Canons as doe charge the bodies lands and goods of the subjects unlesse that the same Canons were confirmed by Parliament And as we had care of the Church so had we care of the common wealth touching impositions layd upon the subiects goods and merchandize and other thinges therefore after long travel
taken by us in searching ancient Records in the Tower of Londō in other places after great dispute made herevpon in open house by many learned Lawyers we found it cleare in our opiniō that impositions layd upon merchandize or other goods of the subiects of this Realme by the Kings Maiesty with out the free consent of the subiectes in Parliament was not lawfull and therefore we did make and passe a bill by the generall consent of the house of Commons intended by us all to be a lawe thereby to declare that by the lawes of England no imposition could be lawfully layd vpon goods or merchandize of the subiects of England without consent of the subiects in Parliament And because that many subiects were greatly troubled by purueyance and cartaking notwithstanding the good lawes in that behalf made to restraine the same a bill was preferred by some member of the house for reformation of that abuse at the beginning of the last Sessions of Parliament which bill by all likelihood had long since passed this howse of commons if the matter of purveyance had not been comprehended in the great contract which matter of great contract being nowe ended a new bill concerning purveyance and cartaking is in my hands now presently to be delivered into the house to receive such proceeding therin as shal be thought meet And touching wardship tenures because it is thought a heavie law and grievous to the subjects after the death of the father to have the sonne heire within age taken from the mother and kindred to be bought and sold with the heire also to take all the lands and tenements of the father that should many times mainteyne both the heire the rest of the children for the onely benefit of the gardian therefore we made a very large offer to free the land thereof which we laboured earnestly to effect but God hath not blessed it nor brought to good effect any of those good intended lawes above by me mentioned although we much desired the same and had done therein as much as perteyned to vs to doe which if they had been well effected and passed as lawes and statutes and that all such grievances concerning the Church and cōmon wealth as wee carefully cōmended unto his Ma in writing whereof the copies doe remain in this house had procured such amendemēt of things as we expected it had made England so honourable and happy in the government thereof as ever was kingdome in this world as I think And which when the same shal be well effected will as I think make both King and subjects more happy then ever they were For if all these thinges had so concurred togither as wee wished and laboured for what would wee not give to supply the Kings wants and to support him in a most Roiall princely estate But rebus sic stantibus as is before declared without reformation of those things which were by us so earnestly sought we cannot give much to supplie the Kings wants because we know no certainty of that which should remaine to us after our gift so as in mine opinion the good proceeding of this Parliament hath not been hindred by us which is all I meant to say at this time The particulars to be contracted for in consideration of two hundred thousand pounds per annum to be paid unto his Majestie 1. Wardshippes and tenures with their particular dependances shal be vtterly taken away 2. The maxime Nullum tempus occurrit regi shal be no longer of any effect 3. All the Kings patents shal be expounded for the good of the patentee according to the true meaning 4. No forfeiture shal be taken by the King or his patentee for non payment of rent 5. Any subject shall plead the generall issue Not guilty vpon information of intrusion 6. All penall lawes and informations shal be ordered for the best ease of the subject 7. All maner purveyance taken by prerogative cart taking compositiōs cōmissions therfore Praeemption except of time shal be vtterly taken away no clerke of the market shall set price on any victuall nor any other shall doe the same 8. All prefines and post fines to be due vpon alienation by fine and recovery shal be taken away 9. Debts shal be paid to the subjects before any advantage be taken by the King of forfeitures vpon outlaries or attainders of felons or traitors 10. That clause in the statutes of 34. 35. of Hen. 8. touching alteration of lawes in Wales shal be repealed 11. Every subject that hath possessed land by the space of 60. yeares where the King in that time hath not had the possession or profit thereof by the space of one yeare shal be free from the Kings claime And if the King within that space hath been seised of any rent out of the same landes then that rent onely shall remaine to the King 12. Old debtes due to the King before tenne yeares last past shal be forgiven 13. The King shall express the cause of demurrer in pleading against any of his subjects 14. Fees of all courtes to be payd by the subjects shal be expressed in a booke in print 15. All lawes absolute that are penall shal be repeaied and all penall lawes of one nature shal be reduced to one law 16. No protection against law shal be graunted by the King 17. Any thing doubtfull in any of these articles shal be explaned by our selves 18. Any other matter which at our next meeting we shall conceive to be for ease of the subjects shall not detract from the King in point of soveraignty or profit shal be essential in this cōtract To the Kinges most excellent Maiestie MOst gracious soveraigne whereas we your Majesties most humble subjects the cōmons assembled in Parliament have received first by message since by speach from your Majestie a commandement of restraint from debating in Parliament your Majesties right of imposing vpon your subjectes goodes exported or imported out of or into this Realme yet allowing vs to examine the grievances of these impositiōs in regard of the quantitie tyme and other circumstances of disproportion thereto incident wee your said humble subjectes nothing doubting but that your Majesty had no intent by that commandement to infringe the ancient and fundamentall right of the libertie of Parliament in point of exact discussing of all matters concerning them and their possessions goods and rights whatsoever which yet wee cannot but conceive to be done in effect by this commandement doe with all humble dutie make this remonstrance to your Majesty First we holde it an ancient generall and vndoubted right of Parliamēt to debate freely all matters which do properly concerne the subject and his right or state which freedome of debate being once foreclosed the essence of the libertie of Parliamet is with all dissolved And whereas in this case the subjects right on the one syde and your Majesties prerogative on the
of their loving subjects agreed that this old fundamentall right should be further declared and established by act of Parliament Wherein it is provided that no such charges should ever be layd upon the people without their cōmon cōsent as may appeare by sundry records of former times Wee therefore your Majesties most humble cōmons assembled in Parliament following the example of this worthy care of our ancestors and out of a dutie of those for whome we serve finding that your Majestie without advise or consent of Parliament hath lately in time of peace set both greater impositions and farre more in number then any your noble ancestors did ever in time of warre have with all humilitie presumed to present this most iust and necessarie Petition unto your Ma That all impositions set without the assent of Parliamēt may be quite abolished and taken away and that your Maiestie in imitatiō likewise of your noble Progenetors wil be pleased that a law may be made during this session of Parliament to declare that all Impositions set or to be set upō your people their goods or merchandizes save onely by cōmon consent in Parliament are and shal be void Wherein your Ma shal not onely give your subiects good satisfaction in point of their right but also bring exceeding ioy and comfort to them which now suffer partly through the abating of the price of native cōmodities partly through the raising of all forraign to the overthrow of Merchants and shipping the causing of a generall dearth decay of wealth among your people who wil be thereby no lesse discouraged then disabled to supply your Ma whē occasion shal require it WHereas by the statute 1. Eliz cap. 1. intituled an Act restoring to the crown the auncient iurisdictiō over the state ecclesiasticall c. power was given to the Queene and her successors to constitute and make a Commission in cause ecclesiasticall the said Act is found to be inconvenient of dangerous extent in d●vers respects First for that it inableth the making of such a cōmission as wel to any one subiect borne as to more Secondly for that whereas by the intention and wordes of the sayd statute ecclesiasticall iurisdiction is restored to the crown and highnes by that statute inabled to give only such power ecclesiasticall to the sayd cōmissioners yet under colour of some words in that statute whereby the Cōmissioners are authorised to execute their Commission according to the tenour and effect of your highnes letters patents And by letters patents grounded thereupon the sayd Commissioners doe fine and imprison and exercise other authoritie not belonging to the ecclesiasticall iurisdiction restored by that statute which we conceive to be a great wrong to the subiect And that those Commissioners might as well by colour of those words if they were so authorized by your highnes letters patēts fine without stint and imprison without limitation of time as also according to will and discretion without any rules of law spirituall or temporall adiudge and impose utter confiscation of goods forfeiture of lands yea and the taking away of limme and of life it selfe this for any matter whatsoever perteyning to spirituall iurisdiction Which never was nor could be meant by the makers of that law Thirdly for that by the said statute the King and his successors may howsoever your Maiestie hath been pleased out of your gracious disposition otherwise to order make and direct such Comission into all the Counties and Dioceses yea into every parish of England and thereby all causes may be taken from ordinarie iurisdiction of Bishops Chancellors and Arch deacons and lay men solely be inabled to excommunicate exercise all other censures spiritual Fourthly for that every petty offence perteyning to spirituall iurisdiction is by colour of the sayd wordes and letters Patents grounded thereupon made subiect to excommunication and punishment by that strange and exorbitant power and commission whereby the least offenders not cōmitting any thing of any enormous or high nature may be drawne from the most remote places of the kingdome to London or York which is very grievous and inconuenient Fifthly for that limit touching causes subject to this cōmission being onely with these words viz. Such as perteine to spirituall or ecclesiasticall iurisdiction it is very hard to knowe what matters or offences are included in that number And the rather because it is unknown what ancient canons or lawes spirituall are in force what not from whence ariseth great incertaintie and occasion of contention And whereas upon the same statute a cōmission ecclesiasticall is made Therein is grievance apprehended thus First for that thereby the same men have both spirituall and temporall jurisdiction and may both force the party by oath to accuse himselfe of an offence also inquire thereof by a jurie and lastly may inflict for the same offence at the same time and by one and the same sentence both a spirituall and temporall punishment Secondly whereas upon sentences of deprivation or other spirituall censures given by force of ordinarie jurisdiction an appeale lyeth for the partie grieved that is here excluded by expresse wordes of the cōmission Also here is to be a tryall by iury yet no remedy by traverse nor attaint Neyther can a man haue any writ of errour though a Iudgement or sentence be given against him amounting to the taking away of all his goodes imprisoning him during life yea to the adiudging him in the case of Praemunire whereby his lands are forseyted and he out of the protection of the lawe Thirdly that whereas penal lawes and offences against the same cannot be determined in other courts or by other persons then by those trusted by Parliament with the execution thereof yet the execution of many such statutes diverse whereof were made since 1. Eliz. are cōmended and cōmitted to these Cōmissioners ecclesiasticall who are eyther to inflict the punishment conteyned in the statutes being premunire and of other high nature and so to inforce a man upon his own oath to accuse expose himself to these punishments or els to inflict other temporall punishment at their pleasure And yet besides and after that done the partie shal be subiect in the Courtes mentioned in the Acts to punishments by the same actes appointed and inflicted which we think very vnreasonable Fourthly that the cōmission giveth authority to inforce men called into question to enter into recognisance not onely for appearance frō time to time but also for performance of whatsoever shal be by the cōmissioners ordered And also that it giveth power to enioyne parties defendant or accused to pay such fees to ministers of the court as by the cōmissioners shal be thought fit And touching the execution of the cōmission it is found greivous these wayes among other First for that laymen are by the Cōmissioners punished for speaking otherwise then in iudiciall places and courses of the symonie and other misdemeanours of spirituall