Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n day_n defendant_n plaintiff_n 1,434 5 10.7453 5 false
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
A94265 Syllogologia; or, An historical discourse of parliaments in their originall before the Conquest, and continuance since. Together with the originall growth, and continuance, of these courts following, viz. [brace] High Court of Chancery, Upper Bench, Common-Pleas, Exchequer, Dutchy, and other inferiour courts now in use in this Commonwealth. J. S. 1656 (1656) Wing S93; Thomason E1646_1; ESTC R203463 29,703 88

There are 4 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

was then fled unto as to the onely Altar of help and refuge But whence the Court of Equity took a beginning to be a distinct Court I have made proof as I think that the power thereof was alwaies in exercise and considering that formerly all the Princes of this Realm and now the Lord Protector of this Nation is the immediate Minister of Justice under God and sworn to deliver to the people aequam rectam Justitiam I cannot see how that it may otherwise be but that besides his Court of meer Law he must either reserve to himself or refer to others a certain preemment power by the which he may both supply the want and correct the rigor of that positive or written Law which of it self neither is or can be made such a perfect rule as that a man may thereby square out Justice in all causes that may happen For written Laws must needs be made in a generality and be grounded upon that which happeneth for the most part because no wisdome of man can foresee every thing in particular which in time experience doth beget and therefore although the written Law be generally good and just yet in some speciall case it may have need of correction by reason of some considerable circumstance falling afterwards which at the time of the Law making was not forseen whereas otherwise to apply one generall Law to all particular cases were to make all Shooes by one last or to cut one Glove for all hands which how unfit it would prove every man may readily perceive And here of this Equity hath this name in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. secundum and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id est conveniens assimulatum because it doth not onely weigh what is generally meet for the most part but doth also consider the person time place and other circumstances in every singular case that cometh in question and doth thereof frame such a judgement as is agreeable and convenient to the same so that in summe the written Law is like a stiffe rule of Steel or Iron which will not be applyed to the fashion of the Stone or Timber whereunto it is laid and Equity as Aristole saith well is like to the leaden rule of the Leasbian Artificers which they might at pleasure bend and bow to every Stone of whatsoever fashion And hereby it may also appear what use there ought to be aswell of the positive or written Law as also of Equity it self for seeing that the positive or common Law is made meet for the most part and that Equity is added for help in few or singular causes it followeth by reason that commonly and singularly the positive Law should be put in ure and that Equity should be appealed unto but onely in rare and extraordinary matters least on the one side if the Judge in Equity should take Jurisdiction over all it should come to pass as Aristotle saith that the best should bear rule for so he calleth man whose judgement if it be not restrained by the chain of Law it is commonly carried away with unruly affection and on the other side if onely streight Law should be administred the help of God which speaketh in that Oracle of Equity should be denyed unto men that need it And therfore even as two Hearbs being in extreamity of heat or Cold be by themselves so many poisons and yet if they be skillfully contempered will make a wholesome medicine so also would it come to pass if either this Arithmeticall Government as they call it by rigor of Law onely or this Geometricall judgement at the pleasure of the Commissioners onely should be admitted And yet if they be well compounded together a most sweet and Harmonicall Justice will follow them And as a good Chancellour then would not so the Commissioners now will not make this Proclamation Nullus recedat a Cancellaria sine remedio and so receive Cognisance of every complaint which shall be made before them upon whatsoever suggestion and thereby both overthrow the authority of the Courts of Common Law and also bring in upon men such a confusion and uncertainty as hardly any man shall know how or when he shall hold his own assured but they will rather have the Common Law to have her just honour and not to be interrupted in her right course or current and will yet withall provide that the Gate of mercy may be opened in all calamity of Suit to the end that where need shall be the rigor of right may be amended by the Judgement of Equity in which behalf this our age hath greatly to thank God for that by the Ministry of our Protector he doth not onely leave to us the right use of the Courts of meer Law but hath also hitherto placed in that Praetoritall Room or Chancery men no less learned in the common Laws of the Nation than accomplished with the skill of this moderation and equity I see that occasion is offered me to enter into the handling of some few questious concerning the order of Chancery and chiefly of this one whether it be meet that the Commissioners should appoint unto themselves and publish to others any certain rules or limits of equity or no about the which men Godly and learned have differed in opinion For on the one part it is thought as hard a thing to prescribe equity any certain bounds as it is to make one generall Law to be a meet measure of Justice in all particular causes And on the other side it is said That if it be not known aforehand in what cases they will reach forth their help and where not then neither shall the people be assured how or when they may possess their own in peace nor the practiser of Law be able to inform his Clyent what may become of his action The later of which opinions I hold to be the best according to the late Regulation of the high Court of Chancery together with the Common Law in August the 22th Anno 1654. by his Highness the Lord Protector and his Counsell For though equity cannot be limited yet as it puts an end to controversies it must have certain rules prescribed to it otherwise it can neither be called a Court nor can the Suitors be certain of any relief to be had therein which Court were it so would soon be destroyed Because this and the like matters be of more difficultie than that I may with modesty take upon me to determine them And for that also it is not my present purpose to dispute what is convenient to be done in any Court but rather to discourse the beginning and acknowledge the benifit of them all I will onely wish this one thing That before any motion should be made for either the parties Plantiff or Defendant 4. or 5. dayes notice thereof were left with the Clerk in Court on the other side to defend that motion that so he
the King himself hath a high Court of Justice wherein it seemeth that he sate in person for the words be Let him not seek the King And lastly that the same Court of the King did judge not only according to meer right and Law but also after equity and good conscience For first the words be unlesse he cannot find right at home by which it is permitted that then he might use to go to the King for right Secondly Again if that right be too heavy then let him seek to the King c. whereby it is meant that he should have the rigor of the Law mitigated by the conscience of the Prince and after this order and in these two sorts of Courts was all Justice administred untill the time of King William the Conquerour● during whose reign as allso under the Government of King Rufus his son it is to be thought that the ordinary course of Justice was greatly disturbed as well by reason of the intestine and sorraign wars as also because that these two Princes governed by a meer and absolute power as in a Realm obteyned by Conquest but yet it was so farre off that any of them did utterly abolish these Courts That the same did not only remain during all their times howsoever put to silence for the season but also had continuance afterwards and do yet as they may here bear life amongst us for as I said those base Courts of the Shires Hundreds Boroughs and Mannors do yet continue in manuer the same in substance that they then were and that the pleas ought no more to be taken from then now in our dayes without cause then they ought to have been may evidently be proved by the writs of Tolt pone accedas ad Curiam and Recordari vhich wee now yet use and that to this only end to remove suits upon cause out of one Court into another The like I may also affirm of that high Court which then followed the King himself for albeit that many particular high Courts be now since that time advanced by reason that the multitude of suits still increasing with the iniquity of the age of the World would not suffer them all to be ordered in one place without both into ler●ble delay of matters and grievous vexation of men yet nevertheless if ye will throughly behold the matter and subject about which all these Courts are now occupied you shall perceive that they are but as it were so many branches sprung up out of that one tree or stream derived from the same spring and sountaine For letting pass those Courts of the Country which I have already touched also those other small Courts of record that be in Cityes and Townes corporate Pipowders of Pies and powldres that is dusty feet because it is for Travailers to the sayr yea and the Pipowders Court it self that lasteth no longer then the Fayr All our higher Cours at this day be either Courts of right and Law or else of equity and conscience as they then were although they now require another subdivision than they then had And that if you will may be this The Courts of Law do either handle civil or criminall causes The late division of Lay Courts And these Civill causes be either moved between the Lord Protector and the people of England formerly between the King his tenants and subiects or else between one subiect and another Those Courts of Law that hold plea of common or civill matters that grew between the Prince and subiects be these The Exchequer devised for the safe custody of the lands formerly called the Crowne lands and for the faithfull answering of the revenues of the same The Court of wards and Liveryes and the Court of the dutchy of Lancaster both which are now altered And the Chancery Court at the least so far forth as the same hath to do with Petitions traverses de droith and such like Those other Courts of Law that have jurisdiction of civil or Common Pleas arising between subiect and subiect be these The Common Place or Bench The Marshalsea for matters heretosore within the vierge or limits assigned to the Kings house or Palace The Admiralty Court which was for marine Causes And the upper Bench in time past termed the Kings Bench so far forth as it yet doth retain jurisdiction in matters of debt Assumptions Actions upon the Case and such other things properly tryable in the Common Place and not there Criminall causes do generally belong to the upper Bench and have formerly belonged to the Starre Chamber or else particularly do appertaine to the Constables Court to the Marshasie Admiralty Goale delivery Oyer and Detorminer and Sessions of the Peace And these be the Courts of Law that have ordinary resort and jurisdiction The Courts of Conscience be these First the Chancery open to all men at all times Secondly the Court of the Request that did hear only the suits of poor men and of the Princes servants Thirdly The Chancellors Court that was within the Exchequer and Fourthly two Councills which formerly were established the one in Wales and the other in the North Country both consisting of President and Councill now taken away which were like unto those which in France are called Parliaments as I said before But now to the end that it may the more evidently appear how and by what degrees of increase these many Courts have sprung out of that one it is requisite that I proceede to the history of King William the Conqueror where I left and to descend from him downward untill I have set all on foote The Court of Exchequer The Authority of this Court is of originall jurisdiction without any Commission Cook 4. Inst c. 11. p. 130. It is confessed by all writings that the Conqueror after such time as he had suppressed the forces of those that made head against him here did immediatly cause the whole Realm to be exactly surveyed by Shires and Hundreds severally aswell for the understanding of the woods pastures meadows and tillage thereof The first survey of the Kingdome was by Alfred about 872. the Register thereof was kept in his treasury at Winchester Daniell f. 11. as also of the profitts of Churches Mills Villaines and of all other Commodities whatsoever The record of which survey was then called Domesday Book and was appoynted to be kept in the Exchequer at Westminster where it now resteth And that Court did he then also newly erect for the ordering of his revenues after the name of the Exchequer in Normandie it had not only the government of revenues of the Duke there but was also the soveraigne Court for administration of justice amongst his subjects Custom Normand 48.52.635 and so continued untill that Lewis the 12. King of France converted it into a Court of Parliament consisting of President and Counsellors and established it at Roan in Normandie where it now remaineth But this his Exchequer in England had
the reign of the Conquerour the which also without all doubt he hath ever since continued Howbeit when I say writings I do not mean he had the authority of making originall writs here before the time of the Conquest for those came out of Normandy also as the very forms of the most of them being expressed in the book of the Norman customes may leade a man to think and that rather also because the Saxons our Ancestors whose proceedings in Judgment was deplano and without solemnty did not use so far as I have hitherto observed to call the parties by any writ or writing but to send for them by certain Messengers which they tearmed Theins that is to say Ministers or Serjeants yea and what that manner of summoning by Writ was brought into use here forthwith committed to the Chancellour For Originall Writs of this time had this form Teste Ranulpho de Glanvilla c. Which was the name of the chief Justice of the Kings Court then under whose sealing they passed abroad Nevertheless for as much as it is to be read in Bracton quod omnia bre●ia de pace which are prohibitions indeed irrotulari debent in Rotulo de Cancellaria and for that not onely the Statute of Westminster the second which was made in the 15. year of King Edward the first saith in plain words that the for me donne in reverter satis est in usu in Cancellaria and hath often mention of the Clerks there But also that other Statute of articuli super Chartas hath the express names both of the Chancellour and Chancery it must be confessed that the Chancellour had the keeping of the Rolls of Record and the making out of Writs either at the same time that the common lace was erected or not long after that is to say either under the reign of King Henry the third or else in the beginning of King Henry the third or else in the beginning of Edward the first which later King as Judge Prisot reporteth of him laboured carefully to reduce our Law into order and writing and in mine opinion may therefore not unworthily be accounted our English Justinian And albeit that the House of the Rolles which hath been of long time as it were the Colledge of the Chancery men was builded at the first by the same King Henry the third for another purpose namely for the sustentation of such Jews as would give their names to Christ and was thereof called Dominus Judeorum conversorum Mat. Paris yet that hindreth not but that the same House might shortly after be converted to another use upon experience as it is likely that sew converts was found amongst the Jews to inhabite it and then thus have you the Chancellour or now instead of him the Commissioners furnished with the Seal of Grace and Seal of common Justice and with him or them the Chancery for the keeping of Records and the Clerks thereof for the framing of Writs Coment ●43 and as touching the authority in Judgement I see not what Jurisdiction he had his Court of Equity and some powers given by late Statutes onely excepted which is not incident to the making or keeping of Records for he could not reform the errour of another Court yea errour committed in his own Court was reversed in the Bench of the King now called the upper Bench. Neither could he try any Issue taken before him ●4 E. 1. ●5 For that also was and is to be done in the upper Bench as a thing without his Jurisdiction It remaineth then that I speak of this Court of Equity which in my opinion is not altogether so antient as others Os the high Court of Chancery for as you have heard before King Edward the first and the Parliament took order that the Chancellour should follow the King even as the Justices of the Bench did to the end that he might alwaies have at hand all men for his direction in Suits that came before him the meaning hereof as I think was that the Justices should inform him of the Law and the Chancellour of Equity for otherwise I see not what use he could have of the Chancellour in this behalf but onely for that he being commonly a Bishop or other Spirituall person was the more meet after the opinion of men in those dayes to give advice according to equity and conscience In which respect also he was visitor for the King and bestowed his Benefices so that such as then sought relief by Equity were Suitors to the King himself who being assisted with the Chancellour and Counsell did mitigate the severity of Law in his own person when it pleased him to be present and did in absence either refer it to the Chancellour alone or to him and some others of the Counsell And this continued if I be not mistaken untill the 20th year of the reign of King Edward the third in which year when he made preparation for his wars in France it was enacted by Parliaments that the Chancellour and Treasurer should determine all complaints against extortion of Officers maintenance imbracery and such like offences and albeit that indeed this authority be neither granted to himself alone nor doth plainly erect any Court of Equity yet for as much as it is the very first severall power of this sort that I find committed to him from the King in which also it is to be thought that the proceeding was extraordinary and absolute even as the Kings own before was I suppose it to be the laying of the first stone of the foundation of the Chancellours Court But after this in the 36th year of the same Kings reign it was provided by Parliament That if any were grieved contrary to the Articles of that Parliament or others That he should have remedy in the Chancery without other Suit by which Law the Chancellour was not onely made sole Judge in this newly erected Court but was enabled so to proceed in Judgement after his own discretion or otherwise the words without other Suits were not Beneficiall After this also his authority was inlarged by sundry Parliaments as by one to award damages upon untrue suggestion made before him by another To send Proclamation of Rebellion against such as would not appear And by others To grant Commissions of divers kinds and to do many other things whereof it is not needfull to make rehearsall here And truly as these be first beginnings that I can find in Statute Law concerning this authority of Chancery Court so also I do not remember that in our reports of Common Law there is any mention of causes drawn before the Chancellour for help in Equity but onely from the time of King Henry the fourth in whose dayes by reason of those Intestine troubles Feofments to uses did either first begin as some have thought or else did first grow common familiar as all men must agree for remedy in which causes of uses chiefly the Chancery Court
might not be put off to shew cause from day to day which rather increaseth trouble and charges than either furthereth the suit for the hearing or benefits the parties in their cause Which thing whether it might be more couvenient than the present manner of motions I will leave to the judgement of such as have more wisdom to devise and power to execute And will sum up the rest of our Courts and make an end The Court of the Dutchy or County Palatine of Lancaster which is by a late Act of Parliament committed to the custody of a Commissioner grew out of the grant of King Edward the third The Court formerly called The Dutchy Court the jurisdiction whereof is now committed to a Commissioner or Commissioners County Palatine of Lanc. erected in Parliament 50 E. 3. and Iustices of Assises Gaole delivery and of the Peace have been since the erection of it Cook lib. 4. f. 204. 205. who first gave that Dutchie to his Son John of Gaunt and endowed it with such royall rights as the County Palatine of Chester had And forasmuch as it was afterward extincted in the person of King Henry the 4th by reason of the union of it with the Crown of the Realm the same King knowing himself more rightfully Duke of Lancaster then King of England determined to save his right in the Dutchy whatsoever should befall the Kingdom And therefore he separateth his Dutchy from the Crown and setleth it so in the naturall persons of himself and his heirs as if he had been no King or Pollitique Body at all in which manner it indured during the reign of King Henry the first and of King Henry the 6th that were descended of him But when King Edward the 4th had by recovery of the Crown recontinued the right of the House of York he feared not to appropriate that Dutchie to the Crown again And yet so as he suffered the Court and Officers to remain as he found them And in this manner it came together with the Crown to King Henry the 7th who liking well of that policy of King Henry the fourth by whose right he also obteined the Kingdom made by separation of the Dutchie as he hath done and so left it to his posterity It appeareth in our Books of the Tearms of King Edward the 4th The Star Chamber and the Report of cases happening under the usurpation of Richard the third This Court was in being before 28 E. 3. Cook lib. That sometimes the King and his Counsell And sometimes the Lord Chancellour and other great personages did use to sit Judiciall in the place then and lately called for that it is decked with certain Stats the Star Chamber But forasmuch as be like that Assembly was not ordinary therefore the next King Henry the 7th and his Son Henry the 8th took order by two severall Laws That the Chancellour assisted with others there named should have power to hear complaints against Reteinors Embraceries misdemeanours of Offices and such other offences which through the power and countenance of such as do commit them do lift up the head above other faults and for the which inferiour Judges are not so meet to give correction And because that place was before time dedicated to the like service it hath ever since also been so used untill it was taken away in the late King Charls his reign The Court of Requests The Court of the Requests being of the same nature as I said with the Chancery took beginning by Commission from King Henry the 8. before which time the Masters of the Requests had no warrant of ordinary Jurisdiction This Court had no warrant by act of Parliament or prescription to establ shit Cook lib. 4. fol. 97. but travailed between the Prince and Petitioners by direction from the mouth of the King The same King also established one Court of President and Counsell in the Marches of Wales 34. 35. H. 8. The Court of the Marches of Wales and that of the North parts were taken away in the late K Ch. his reign Anno 17. Car. And another like Court of President and Counsell in the North parts which Court in Wales was a Court of Law in its principall Jurisdiction although it did withall exercise other powers of equity by vertue of other severall Commissions that did accompany the same and the Court of York was in its principall Jurisdiction Equity and did exercise other powers by vertue of other Commissions Court of Wards The Court of Wards began about the 32th year of the reign of King Henry the 8 who also in the next year after added thereto the office of the Masters of the Liveries and withall conjoyned the names ordaining that it should be called The Court of his Wards and Liveries The same King likewise had erected one Court of the generall Surveiours of his Lands and one other of the Augmentations and Revenues of his Crown and a third Court of the first fruits and Tithes of Benefices But all these were afterwards dissolved and by Queen Mary united to the Court of Exchequer Thus having run along these Courts deriving them from the Crown I might proceed yet further to shew the originall and beginnings of some Courts erected by the late Parliament and the nature and beginning of the High Court of Justice that was erected in Westminster Hall Anno 1648. but they being so fresh in the memory of this age I shall not need to make mention thereof FINIS