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

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utterly disabled from being a Justice of Peace By Parliament Ib. p. 46. the Spanish Frauds were discovered and by an Act of Parliament the two Treaties i. e. touching the Spanish Match and for restoring the Palatinate both which had cost the King and his Subjects much Money and much Blood were Dissolved and Annihilated And we may remember says the same Author That that sage Councellor of State Sir William Cecil Lord Burley and Lord Treasurer of England was oft Times heard to say He knew not what a Parliament might not do which saying was approved by K. James 1. and is cited by him in one of his publick Speeches The Parliament says one is of an absolute and unlimited Power in all Things Temporal within this Nation Sir Robers Atkins's Argument p. 50. Bract. fo 34. Fleta p. 2. 17. Another says Parliamentum omnia potest Bracton and Fleta both affirm Rex habet Superiorem in Regno Scilicet Curiam suam i. e. Comites Barones doubtless the Lords and Commons qui apponuntur Regi ut si Rex sine Fraeno i. e. sine Lege fuerit Debent ei Fraenum apponere c. Nay some great Authors have asserted Quod Concilium hoc i. e. Parliamentum Facultatem habet Deponendi Regem Malum Substituendi Novum See Mat. Paris per Watts pag. 498. Knighton de Eventibus Angliae p. 2683. in the Decem. Scriptores and that this Power is claimed ex antiquo Statuto c. Knighton has a remarkable Passage concerning the Execution of that antient Statute in the Cases of E. II. and R. II. which at this Time I forbear to Transcribe or Translate Note It appears by Mat. Paris p. 99. c. That the Commons were then i. e. 15 H. II. summoned to the Parliament held at Clerkenwell and that they also were a Part of the Parliament in the Time of K. H. I. See before p. 34. 35. c. CHAP. IV. Of the House of Lords in general THE House of Peers Rushw eol vol. 3. part 1. p. 777. are the hereditary Counsellors of the King and Kingdom as the House of Commons are the representative Body of the whole Commons of the Kingdom There certainly cannot in the whole World be seen a more illustrious Court Nalson 566. than this high and honourable Assembly of Peers in Parliament nor any Thing of greater Benefit and Advantage to the Subjects of this Monarchy No Lord of Parliament can sit there Sir Simon d'Ewes's Jour 11. Col. 1. till he be full One and twenty Years unless by special Grace of the Prince and that very rarely unless they be near upon the Age of Twenty one Years at least A Bishop elect may sit in Parliament Ibid. ante 3 4 43 44. as a Lord thereof i. e. if called thereto by Writ Q. For he is not properly a Peer or even a Bishop till his Temporalties are granted to him If the King by his Writ calleth any Knight or Esquire to be a Lord of the Parliament 4 Inst 44. he cannot refuse to serve the King there in communi illo Consilio for the Good of his Country It lies in the Favour of the Prince Sir Simon d'Ewes Journal 2.4 Col. 2. to make Heirs of Earldoms Members of the upper House by summoning them thither by Writ but then they take not their Place there as the Sons of Earls but according to the Antiquity of their Fathers Baronies The Archbishop of Canterbury is the first Peer of the Realm Id. 140. Col. 1. The Earl-Marshal's Place in Parliament is betwixt the Lord Chamberlain Id. 535. Col. 2. and the Lord Steward See the Statute No Man ought to sit in that high Court of Parliament 4 Inst 45. but he that hath Right to sit there If a Lord depart from Parliament Id. 44. without License it is an Offence done out of the Parliament and is finable by the Law 4 June 1642 Rushw Col. Vol. 3. part 1.737 Post upon an Order of the House of Lords to those Lords that had left the Parliament and repaired to the King at York requiring their Appearance as Delinquents in the Answer they returned to it there are these Words We do conceive that it is the apparent usual and inherent Right belonging to the Peerage of England that in the highest Misdemeanors whatsoever no Peer is to answer to the first Charge but in his own Person and not upon the first Charge to come to the Bar. Any Lord of the Parliament 4 Inst 12. by License of the King upon just Cause to be absent may make a Proxy 43 Eliz. 1601 Towns Col. 135. Vide Sir Simon d'Ewes Journal 605. agreed by the Lords That the antient Course of the House is That the Excuses of such Lords as shou'd happen to be absent from the House upon reasonable Occasions ought to be done by some of the Peers and not by other Information Anno Domini 1626 Rushw Col. Vol. 1. p. 365. 2 Car. 1. resolved upon the Question by the whole House Nemine dissentiente That the Priviledge of this House is That no Lord of Parliament the Parliament sitting or within the usual Time of Priviledges of Parliament is to be imprisoned or restrained without Sentence or Decree of the House unless it be for Treason or Felony or refusing to give Surety of the Peace N. B. This was upon the King's having committed the Earl of Arundel to the Tower without expressing the Cause of his Commitment All the Priviledges which do belong to those of the Commons House of Parliament Hakewell 82. a fortiori do appertain to all the Lords of the upper House for their Persons are not only free from Arrests during the Parliament but during their Lives Nevertheless the original Cause is by Reason they have Place and Voice in Parliament And this is manifest by express Authorities grounded upon excellent Reasons in the Books of Law A Proxy is no more than the constituting of some one or more by an absent Lord Sir Simon d'Ewes Journals 5. Col. 2. to give his Voice in the upper House when any Difference of Opinion and Division of the House shall happen for otherwise if no such Division fall out it never cometh to be question'd or known to whom such Proxies are directed nor is there any the least Use of them save only to shew prove and continue the Right which the Lords of the upper House have both to be summon'd and to give their Voices in the same House either in their Persons or by their Proxies As many Proxies as any Peer hath Ibid. Col. 2. so many Voices he hath beside his own and if there be two or three Proxies constituted by one absent Lord as is frequent then always the first named in the same is to give the Voice if he be present and if absent then the second sic de reliquis It is plain by the antient Treatise Ibid. 6. Col. 1. Modus tenendi Parliamentum That if a Peer neither came to the Parliament nor sent
Liberty of the Subject and when obstructed or denyed to either made the Kingdom deformed and leprous I may with good Reason and Warranty conclude Id. 125. that our Ancestors the Commons of England the Knights Gentlemen Freeholders Citizens and Burgesses of a great and mighty Nation were very far from being in former Times such Vassals and Slaves or so abject poor and inconsiderable as the absurd and malicious Ignorance and Falsities of late Writers have been pleased to make and represent them especially the Author of the Grand Freeholders Inquest and Mr. James Howel c. as if they were only Beasts of Carriage and Burthen ordain'd to be tax'd and talliated and have their Lives Estates and Liberties given away and disposed of without their own Assents If the Commons do only Accuse by any way of Complaint whatsoever Selden's Judicature c. 14. and do not declare in Special against the Party accused then the Suit is the King's and the Party is to be Arraigned or otherwise proceeded against by Commandment Ex parte Domini Regis In the Lower House sit the Speaker Crompton 2.4 Inst 1. and the Knights Citizens Burgesses and Barons of the Cinque-Ports who represent the Body of the whole Commonalty of England All Persons St. 5 Rich. 2 c. 4. Rast 140. and Commonalties which shall be summon'd to Parliament shall come as they have been used and accustom'd of antient Time and he that shall not come having no reasonable Excuse shall be amerced and otherwise punish'd as of antient Time hath been used Vide ante p. 17. Algernon Sidney c. 3. Sect. 38 An Eminent and Noble Author has in his Discourses on Government asserted that the Power of calling and dissolving Parliaments is not simply in our Kings alone And in support of this Assertion gives us the following Reasons viz. First says he the King can have no such Power unless it be given him by Law for every Man is naturally Free and the same Power that makes him King gives him all that belongs to his being King and no more 'Tis not therefore an Inherent but only a Delegated Power and whoever Receives it is accountable to those who gave it for they who give Authority by Commission do always retain more than they Grant Secondly The Law for Annual Parliaments expresly Declares it not to be in the King's Power as to their Meeting nor consequently as to their Continuance for they meet to no Purpose if they may not continue to do the Work for which they meet and it were absur'd to give them a Power of Meeting if they might not continue till the End for which they met were attained Qui Dat Finem Dat Media ad Finem Necessaria the only Reason End why Parliaments do Meet is to provide for the publick Good and they ought to Meet and continue for that End they ought not therefore to be Dissolved till it be accomplished and 'twas for this Reason that the Opinion given by Tresilian that Kings might Dissolve Parliaments at their Pleasure Note was adjudg'd to be a principal part of his Treason See other Reasons there Assign'd and on the whole he concludes that Parliaments have in themselves a Power of Meeting Sitting and Acting for the Publick Good After which Ibid p. 432. he further Prosecutes the same Point and then proceeds to shew That as the Peoples Delegatees or Representatives in Parliament do not meet there by a Power derived from Kings but from those that chuse them so they who Delegate Powers do always retein to themselves more than they give and therefore the People do not give their Delegates an absolute Power of doing what they please but do always retein to themselves more than they confer on their Deputies who must therefore be accountable to their Principalls Vide plura ibid. CHAP. VII The Power of the House of Commons in particular Cases THE House of Commons is a House of Information and Presentment Rush Coll. 217. vol 1. but not a House of Definitive Judgment The House of Commons is a considerable Grand Jury Trials of the Regicides p. 53. 'tis a good Billa vera they return their Orders are Records and that appears also by 6. H. 8. c. 16. where the Words are viz. And the same Licence shall be entred on Record in the Book of the Clerk of the Parliament appointed or to be appointed for the Common's House c. Sir Audley Mervyn's Speech to the Duke of Ormond 13. Heb. 1662. containing their Sum of Affairs in Ireland p. 17. And more directly in their point upon the Trial of Harrison the Regicide Mr. Jessop was produc'd to attest several Orders of the Common's House Mr. Jessop being Clerk of the House Note the said Stat. 6. H. 8. c. 16. says Rast Stat. p. 429. 4. Inst 23. Hales of Parl. 213. 215. That no Member should depart from the Parliament nor absent themselves from the same without the Licence of the Speaker and Commons in Parliament Assembled to be entred upon Record in the Book of the Clerk of the Parliament And yet some Judges have been of Opinion Hob. Rep. 110.111 that the Journals of the House of Commons are no Records but only Remembrances Before the Year 1550. 3. E. 6. Bur. Hist Ref. vol. 2. p. 143. it seems that no Eldest Sons of Peers were Members of the House of Commons and Sir Francis Russel becoming by the Death of his Elder Brother Heir Apparent to the Lord Russel it was on the 21st of January carried upon a Debate that he should abide in the House as he was before But this was by a special Order so it is entered in the Original Journal of the House of Commons and is the first Journal that ever was taken in that House 1. Car. 1. 1625. Resolved Rush ib. that common Fame is a good Ground of Proceeding for this House either by Enquiry or Presenting the Complaint if the House find Cause to the King or Lords 26 Jan. 28 Hen. 6. Selden's Judicat p. 29. Vid. id 38 The Commons required the Duke of Suffolk might be committed to Ward for that the General Fame went of him c. The Lords on Consultation with the Justices thought the same to be no good Cause of Commitment unless some special Matters were objected against him It is certain Pettyt's Miscell Pref. c. p. 5. and not to be deny'd That in elder Time the People or Free-men had a great Share in the Publick Council or Government For Dion Cassius or Xiphiline out of him in the Life of Severus assures us Apud hos i. e. Britannos Populus magna ex Parte Principatum tenet It was not in the Power of all the Tenants in Capite in England Id. 47 48. tho' with the King's Consent to bind and oblige others or to make or alter a Law sine Assensu Communitatis Regni who had Votum consultivum decisivum an Act of Authority and Jurisdiction as well in assenting to Spiritual Laws as Temporal
and every the Sheriffs Mayors G. Britain Bailiffs and other Officers The Act to be read by the Sheriff c. after reading the Writ to whom the Execution of any Writ or Precept for electing any Members belongs shall at the Time of such Election immediately after the Reading of such Writ or Precept read or cause to be read openly before the Electors there assembled this present Act and every Clause therein contained and the same shall also openly be Read once in every Year at the General Quarter Sessions of the Peace after Easter and at the Quarter Sessions after Easter and on electing Magistrates c. for any County or City and at every Election of the chief Magistrate in any Borough Town Corporate or Cinque-Port and at the annual Election of Magistrates and Town Counsellors for every Borough in Scotland That every Sheriff Under-Sheriff Wilful Offence forfeits 50 l. Mayor Bailiff and other Officer to whom the Execution of any Writ or Precept for the electing of Members doth belong for every wilful Offence contrary to this Act shall forseit 50 l. to be recovered with full Costs as before directed Provided Prosecution to commence within two Years That no Person shall be made liable to any Incapacity Disability Forfeiture or Penalty by this Act unless Prosecution be commenced within two Years after such Incapacity c. incurred or in Case of a Prosecution the same be carried on without wilful Delay any Thing herein to the contrary After a Recital of the St. 7.8 St. 6. G. 11. c. 23. W. 3. and the Inconveniencies of County Courts being adjourned to Mondays Fridays or Saturdays it enacts That no County Court in England shall be adjourn'd to a Monday Friday or Saturday and all Adjournments and Acts done at such Courts so adjourn'd to be null and void any Law Custom or Usage to the contrary Provided That any County Court begun holden on or adjourned to any Day not prohibited by this or the said former Act for electing any Knight of the Shire for any County or for hearing and determining Causes or for such other Matters and Business as are usually transacted at County Courts may be adjourned over from Day to Day tho' the same may happen to be on a Monday Friday or Saturday until such Election or other Matters be fully finished any thing therein to the contrary c. CHAP. XIII Election of the Speaker THE Speaker is he that doth prefer and commend the Bills exhibited to the Parliament Arc. Parl. 3. Smyth's Common-wealth 75. and is the Mouth of the Parliament It is true 4 Inst 8. Smyth's Common-wealth 75. See Bohun's Coll. 352. contra the Commons are to choose their Speaker but seeing that after their Choice the King may refuse him for avoiding of expence of Time and Contestation the Use is as in the Conge d'Eslier of a Bishop that the King doth name a discret and learned Man whom the Commons elect But without their Election no Speaker can be appointed for them 4 Inst 8. because he is their Mouth and trusted by them and so necessary as the House of Commons cannot sit without him And therefore a grievous Sickness is a good Cause to remove the Speaker Id. 8. and choose another So in 1 Hen. 4. Sir John Cheyny discharged and so William Sturton So in 15 Hen. 6. Sir John Tyrrel removed So March 14. 1694. Sir John Trevor The first Day each Member is called by his Name Modus tenend Pal. 35. every one answering for what Place be serveth That done they are willed to choose their Speaker who tho' nominated by the King's Majesty is to be a Member of that House Their Election being made he is presented by them to the King sitting in Parliament 35. So Sir Thomas Gargrave 1 Eliz. So Christopher Wray 13 Eliz. So Robert Bell 14 Eliz. See Bohun's Coll. 352 353. So John Puckering 27 Eliz. So George Snagg 31 Eliz. So Edward Coke 35 Eliz. So Yelverton 39 Eliz. So John Crook 43 Eliz. So Sir Thomas Crew 19 Jac. 1. So Sir Heneague Finch 1 Car. 1. cum multis aliis The Speaker ought to be religious Towns Coll. 1.4 honest grave wise faithful and Secret These Virtues must concur in one Person able to supply that Place The long Use hath made it so material Elsyng 154 that without the King's Commandment or Leave they cannot choose their Speaker Sed aliter ab Antiquo Surely the Election of the Speaker was antiently free to the Commons Id. 155. to choose whom they would of their own House which appears in this that the King never rejected any whom they made Choice of Vide contra Sir Simon d'Ewes Journ 42. Col. 1. where he saith That 28 Hen. 6. Sir John Popham was discharg'd by the King i. e. on his excuse and thereupon the Commons chose and presented William Tresham Esq who made no Excuse See the like of Paul Foley in Bohun's Collection 353. The Cause of Summons being declared by the King or Chancellor Elsing 151 Cook 12 115. Smyth's Common-wealth 79. the Lord Chancellor confers first with his Majesty and then in his Name commands the Commons to assemble in their House and to choose one of their Members to be their Speaker and to present him to his Majesty on a Day certain Upon which the Commons shall presently assemble themselves in the Lower House Co. 12.115 and he is to be a Member of their Parliament The Commons being thereupon assembled in their House Elsyng 152 Vid. Town Coll. 174. See Bohun ut Supra one of the Commons puts the rest in mind of their Charge given in the Upper House touching the choosing of a Speaker and then doth of himself commend one unto them and desires their Opinions to be signified by their Affirmative or Negative Voices and if any Man stand up and speak against him so named alledging some Reason he ought to name another Some Person when the generality of Members are come Scobel 3. Vid. Town 174. Vide Sir S. d'Ewe's Jour passim and sit doth put the House in mind that for their better proceeding in the weighty Affairs they are come about their first Work is to appoint a Speaker and re-commends to the House some Person of Fitness and Ability for the Service and Dignity which usually hath been one of the long Robe If more than one Person be named for Speaker Scobel 3. and it be doubtful who is more generally chosen sometime one of the Members standing in his Place doth by Direction or Leave of the House put a Question for determining the same or the Clerk at the Board So it was in the first Session 1 Jac. 1. Scobel 4. when Sir Edward Philips the King's Serjeant at Law was first named by Mr. Secretary Herbert as fit for that Place and the Names of others were mention'd but the more general Voice run upon Sir Edward Philips and a Question being put he was by general Acclamation chosen Speaker When the Speaker
agreed That regularly he cannot be compelled out of Parliament to answer Things done in Parliament in a Parliamentary Course but it is otherwise where Things are done exorbitantly for those are not the Acts of the Court. No Privilege is allowable in Case of the Peace betwixt private Men 2 Nalson 450. much more in Case of the Peace of the Kingdom Privilege cannot be pleaded against an Indictment for any Thing done out of Parliament Ibid. because all Indictments are contra Pacem Domini Regis Privilege of Parliament is granted in regard of the Service of the Commonwealth Ibid. and is not to be used to the Danger of the Commonwealth All Privilege of Parliament is in the Power of Parliament Ibid. and is a Restraint to the Proceedings of other inferior Courts but is no Restraint to the Proceedings of Parliament 16 Car. 1 Resolved Rush 2 vol. 2d Part. 1147. That the Lords voting the propounding and declaring Matter of Supply before it was moved in the House of Commons was a Breach of Privilege of the House Dec. 1641. Resolved 2 Nalson 729. That the setting of any Guards about this House without the Consent of the House is a Breach of the Privilege of this House and that therefore such Guards ought to be dismissed Resolved upon the Question Id. 743. Nemine Contradicente That the Privileges of Parliament were broken by his Majesty's taking Notice of the Bill for suppressing of Soldiers being in agitation in both Houses and not agreed on Resolved upon the Question Ibid. Nemine Contradicente That his Majesty in propounding a Limitation and provisional Clause to be added to the Bill before it was presented to him by the Consent of both Houses was a Breach of the Privilege of Parliament Resolved upon the Question Ibid. Nem. Con. That his Majesty expressing his Displeasure against some Persons for Matters moved in the Parliament during the Debate and Preparation of that Bill was a Breach of the Privilege of Parliament Whereas his Majesty 2 Nalson 823. in his Royal Person the 4th of Jan. 1641. did come to the House of Commons with a great Multitude of Men armed in a warlike Manner with Halberts Swords and Pistols who came up to the very Door of the House and placed themselves there and in other Places and Passages near to the House to the great Terror and Disturbance of the Members then there sitting and according to their Duty in a peaceable and orderly Manner treating of the great Affairs of both Kingdoms of England and Ireland and his Majesty having placed himself in the Speaker's Chair did demand the Persons of divers Members of the House to be delivered unto him It was thereupon declared by the House of Commons Ibid. That the same is a high Breach of the Rights and Privileges of Parliament and inconsistent with the Liberty and Freedom thereof and therefore the House doth conceive they could not with Safety of their own Presons or the Indemnities of the Rights and Privileges of Parliament sit there any longer without a full Vindication of so high a Breach of Privilege and a sufficient Guard wherein they might confide The Lords cannot proceed against a Commoner Sleden's Jud. p. 84. but upon a Complaint of the Commons But Note as to Freedom from Suits and Arrests Stat. 12 13. Wil. 111. that in the Parliament of 12 13 William the Third an Act passed entitled An Act for preventing any Inconveniencies that may happen by Privilege of Parliament Which enacts Sect. I. That any Person may prosecute any Peer of this Realm or Lord of Parliament or any of the Knights Citizens and Burgess of the House of Commons for the Time being or their or any of their menial or other Servants or any other Person entitled to the Privilege of Parliament in any of the Courts of Record at Westminster or high Court of Chancery or Court of Exchequer or the Dutchy Court of Lancaster and in the Court of Admiralty and in all Causes Matrimonal and Testamentary in the Court of Arches the Prerogative Courts of Canterbury and York and the Delegates and in all Courts of Appeal from and after the Dissolution or Prorogation of any Parliament until a new Parliament shall meet or the same be reassembled And from and after any Adjournment of both Houses for above fourteen Days until both Houses shall meet or reassemble And that the said Courts respectively shall and may after such Dissolution Prorogation or Adjournment proceed to give Judgment and make final Orders Decrees and Sentences and award Execution thereon any Privilege of Parliament to the contrary notwithstanding Sect. II. Provides against subjecting the Person of any Knight Citizen or Burgess or any other intitled to the Privilege of Parliament to be arrested during the Time of Privilege Nevertheless allowing the Liberty that any Person having Cause Action or Complaint against any Peer of the Realm or Lord of Parliament so that after any Dissolution Prorogation or Adjournment as aforesaid or and before any Session of Parliament or Meeting of both Houses as aforesaid shall and may have such Process out of the Courts of King's Bench Common Pleas and Exchequer against such Peer or Lord of Parliament as he might have had against him out of the Time of Privilege And if any Person having Cause of Action against any of the said Knights Citizens or Burgesses or any other intitled to Privilege after any such Dissolution Prorogation or Adjournment or before any such Sessions or Meeting of both Houses ut supra he shall and may prosecute such Knight Citizen or Burgess or other such privileged Person in the said Courts of King's Bench Common Pleas or Exchequer by original Bill and Summons Attachment and Distress infinite out of the same Courts who are respectively impower'd to issue the same against him or them until the Defendant shall enter a Common Appearance or file Common Bail to the Action according to the Course of each Court. And that any Person having Cause of Suit or Complaint may in the Time aforesaid exhibit any Bill of Complaint against any Peer of the Realm or Lord of Parliament or against any Knight Citizen or Burgess or other Person so intitled to Privilege in the Chancery Exchequer or Dutchy Court and proceed thereon by Letter or Subpoena as usual And upon leaving a Copy of the Bill with the Defendant or at his House or Lodging or last Place of Abode may proceed thereon and for Want of an Appearance or Answer or for Non-Performance of any Order or Decree or for Breach thereof may sequester the real or personal Estate of the Party as is used and practised where the Defendant is a Peer of the Realm but shall not arrest or imprison the Body of any of the said Knights Citizens or Burgesses or other privileged Person during the Continuance of Privilege of Parliament Sect. III. That where any Person by reason of Privilege of Parliament is stayed or prevented from prosecuting any Suit
the King might refuse the Return of him and for that Cause he was removable out of the House And therefore the Lord Chief Justice said That in the 35th of Henry the Sixth it was so adjudged in Parliament which answers the Precedents vouched by the Commons of that Time And also he said That in the first Year of Henry the Seventh it was adjudged in Parliament That Persons outlawed or attainted could not sit in Parliament without Restitution by Act of Parliament And he said That though the Books do not warrant his Saying yet the Parliament Roll which he had seen does warrant it which any Man might see 3. They resolved at the Instance of the King himself That the Party could not be discharged from the Outlawry without a Scire Facias sued against the Party Creditor Plantiff in Debt and Justice Windam for that Purpose recanting his former Opinion said That he upon perusing of his Books and by Reasons of the Law was of Opinion with his Companions 4. As for the Statute of the 31st of the Queen concerning Proclamation to be made in the County c. they all resolved as before Times it had been resolved That no Outlawry by that Statute was void until a Judgment declaring That there was no Proclamation issued forth to the County where the Party was Resiant at the Time of the awarding of the Exigent 5. As for the Statute of 7 Hen. 4. which enacts That the Indenture shall be only the Return of the Sheriff the Judges said That was true that such was the Statute and that that was his Return for so much but that Statute doth not restrain the Sheriff from returning any other Thing material which disables the Parties chosen 6. It was held That the Indorsement of the Writ comprehending the Matter of the Outlawry was material and not a Nugation 7. And lastly they resolved That by the Return of the Sheriff it apeared that Sir Francis Goodwyn was the same Person who was outlawed 31 Eliz. by the Name of Francis Goodwyn Esquire and 39 Eliz. by the Name of Francis Goodwyn Gentleman and that by the Words of the Return scilicet Idem Franciscus Goodwyn Miles Vtlagatus existit c. And they also agreed That no Person outlawed ought to have his Privilege of the Parliament-House and that all the Precedents vouched by the Commons were after the Parties were Members of the House and not before they were returned But notwithstanding these Resolutions scilicet the Resolution of the Judges the Commons House hold clearly That Sir Francis Goodwyn was well received into Parliament and the King commanded them to confer together and resolve if they could of themselves and if they could not resolve to confer with the Judges and then to resolve and when they were resolved then to deliver their Resolution to his Council not as Parliament-Men but as his Privy Council by whose Hands he would receive the Resolution and for that Purpose he left them behind him he himself being to ride to Royston a hunting And to pursue the Commandment of the King the Commons House clearly resolved That what they had done was well and duly done and they were of Opinion clearly against the Judges as to the Matter of the Outlawry and that Ratione of the Precedents And also that the Parliament only had to do with the Sheriff's Returns of Members of Parliament and that the Returns ought not to be made till the first Day of the Parliament and therefore They would not confer with the Judges But they appointed a Committee to consider of the Reasons to be delivered to the Council for the Satisfaction of the King which Committee by the Assent of all the House of Commons sent to the Lords this Resolution following videlicet As to what the King taxed the House for That they meddled with the Sheriff's Return of Members of Parliament being but one half of the Body the Lords being one and the principal Part of the Parliament's Body Note This Resolution was writen in Parchment and so delivered to the Council of the King not as Parliament-Men but representing the King's Person and a Copy thereof was kept in the House As to that they answered That all Writs for the Election of Members of Parliament were returned into the Parliament-House before 7 Hen. 4. at which Time it was enacted That all such Returns ought to be made in Chancery and that appeared by the Records from the Time of Edward the First until the said Year of the Seventh of Henry the Fourth And therefore the Parliament must of Necessity have only meddled with the Returns till the making of the said Statute of the Seventh of Henry the Fourth at which Time the Place of the Return was altered and enacted to be in Chancery but yet that did not take away the Jurisdiction of the Parliament to meddle with the Returns of the Members of Parliament but that remained as it was before And this was manifest as well by Reason as by Use For that Court is to meddle with Returns where the Appearance and Service of Members is to be made and used but in the Parliament only the Appearance and Service are to be made and used and therefore in the Parliament only are the Returns to be examined and censured Likewise ever since the making of the said Statute of the Seventh of Henry the Fourth the Clerk of the Crown attends the Parliament every Day till the End of it with all the Writs and Returns and at the End of the Parliament he brings them into the Petty-Bag The Precedents also do warrant this intermeddling with Returns for the Parliament as in the Twenty-ninth of the Queen a Writ issued forth to the Sheriff of who made a Return before the Day into Chancery and the Chancellor upon that Return containing such Matter as this Writ now contains sent a second Writ to the said Sheriff who thereupon made a new Election and that second Writ was also returned and both the Writs and Returns brought into Parliament and there censured by the Parliament That the first should stand and that the second Election was void and that the Chancellor hath no Power to award a second Writ nor to meddle with the Return of it and divers other Precedents were shewn by the Commons to the same Effect videlicet In the Nine and twentieth of Queen Elizabeth one And in the Three and fortieth of Queen Elizabeth another And in the Thirty fifth of the Queen two Whereof one was upon the Return of the Sheriff that the Party first elected was Lunatick and thereupon the Parliament examined it and upon Examination thereof they found the Return true and gave a Warrant for another Writ As to the Matter That they were but one half of the Body to that they said That though in the making of Laws they were but an half Body yet as to Censuring of Privileges Customs Orders and Returns of their House they were an entire
a Proxy upon his Writ of Summons he forfeited 100 l. if an Earl 100 Marks if a Baron 100 s. c. It seldom happeneth Towns Col. 4.39 40 42. That any Bishop doth nominate fewer than three or two Proctors nor any Temporal Lord more than one John Archbishop of Canterbury Id. 34. had this Parliament five Proxies 1 Eliz. a Lord of Parliament by License obtained of the Queen to be absent 4 Inst 12 13 made a Proxy to three Lords of Parliament one of which gave Consent to a Bill the other two said Not Content And it was by Order of the Lords debated among the Judges and Civilians Attendants and conceiv'd by them That this was no Voice and the Opinion was affirmed by all the Lords That it was no Voice 2 Car. 1. 1626. the House of Peers made an Order Rush Col. 269. That after this Session no Lord of this House shall be capable of receiving above two Proxies or more to be numbred in any Cause voted In the Lords House Arc Parl. 12. Smith's Common-wealth 87. the Lords give their Voices from the puisne Lord seriatim by the Word Content or Not Content 4 Inst 34. First for himself and then severally for so many as he hath Letters and Proxies A Bill had three Readings in one Forenoon Towns Col. 11. in the House of Lords Towns Col. 9. Where a Committee of Lords is selected out to meet with another Committee of the House of Commons neither the Judges being but Assistants nor the Queen's Council being but Attendants of and upon the House were ever nominated a Joynt-Committees with the Lords But when the Lords among themselves do appoint a Committee to consider of some ordinary Bill especially if it concern Matter of Law it hath been antiently used and may still without Prejudice to the Honour of the House that the King's learned Council but especially the Judges may be nominated as Committees alone or as Joynt-Committees with the Lords January 19. 1597. 39 Eliz. it was resolved Towns Col. 94. Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour That the Order and Usage of this House was and is that when any Bills or Messages are brought from the lower House to be preferr'd to the upper House the Lord Keeper and the rest of the Lords are to rise from their Places and to go down to the Bar there to meet such as come from the lower House and from them to receive in that Place their Messages or Bills Contrariwise when any Answer is to be delivered by the Lord Keeper c. In passing of Bills Arc. Parl. 5. if the Not Contents be most then the Bill is dash't i. e. the Law is annihilated and goeth no further If the Contents be the most then the Clerk writeth underneath Soit baile aux Commons i. e. Let it be delivered or sent to the Commons 3 Car. 1. 1626. resolved upon the Question Rush Col. 365. That the Priviledge of this House is that no Lord of Parliament the Parliament sitting or within the usual Time of Priviledges of Parliament is to be imprison'd or restrain'd without Sentence or Decree of the House unless it be for Treason or Felony or refusing to give Surety of the Peace Giving the Lye to a Peer Nalson 380. Hakewel 84. Vide Kel wey 184. Vid. Lord Hollis's Letter Vid. Lord Hollis's Remains Vid. contra Hunt's Argument for the Bishops Right c. Vid. Grand Question concerning Bishops Right per totum is a Breach of Priviledge Ever since the Conquest the Archbishops and Bishops have no Title to have Voice and Place in Parliament but only in respect of their Temporal Baronies where they are present quousque perveniatur ad Diminutionem Vitae c. When a Question is had of the Attainder of any Peer Hakewel 84. Vid. contra Hart ut supra per tot Vid. Grand Question concerning Bishops Right c per tetum or other in Parliament the Archbishops and Bishops depart the higher House and do make their Proxies for by the Decrees of the Church they may not be Judges of Life and Death 11 Rich. 2. Divers Lords and others being appealed of Treason and other Misdemeanors the Prelates absented themselves during the Trial Selden of Judicature p. 150. Vid. there the Protestation of the Bishops Ibid. 151. having first made Protestation saving their Right to be present in Parliament The Protestation I think intends That they could not be present by Reason of the Common Law and by Reason of an Ordinance made at the Council at Westminster in 21 Hen. 2. by which all Clergymen were forbidden agitare Judicium Sanguinis upon Pain to be deprived both of Dignities and Orders For surely as I think they might otherwise have been present both by the Common Law and by the Law of God Sed Quere All the Lords Spiritual and Temporal Selden's Judicature c. 39. 11 Rich. 2. claimed as their Liberty and Franchise that the great Matters moved in this Parliament and to be moved in other Parliaments in Time to come touching the Peers of the Land ought to be admeasured adjudged and discussed by the Course of the Parliament and not by the Civil Law nor by the Law of the Land used in the more base Courts of the Realm which the King granted in full Parliament The Proceeding against a Peer in Parliament is not necessary Id. 53. Q. It appears that the Lords cannot of themselves judge a Common Person for an Offence Id. 61. for he is no Peer according to that of 4 E. 3. Numb 26. 1 Rich. 2. Id. 123. The Lord Beauchamp was sworn and examined and the Duke of Lancaster being one of the Committee was diligently examin'd before the rest of the said Committee but not sworn ad testificandum Vid. rost Earls and Dukes are not sworn on Trials c. in Parliament In Judgments on Delinquents in Parliament Id. 132. the Commons might accusare petere Judicium and the King assentire but the Lords only did judicare The King's Assent ought to be to capital Judgments Id. 141. Vid. Id. 144 14● 148 154 158. and the Lords Temporal to be only Judges therein and not the Lords Spiritual but in Misdemeanors the Lords Spiritual and Temporal are equal Judges and the King's Assent is not necessary Id. 136. yet it seemeth that the King's Assent is necessarily required in capital Causes and Judgments If a Peer be committed to Prison the Gentleman Usher hath the Charge of him thither and the Serjeant attending on the Great Seal How Lords of Parliament shall be placed in the Parliament Vide Stat. 31 Hen. 8. c. 10. Vid. 4 Inst 362. Rot. Parl. 3 H. 6.10 Arcana Parl. 70. and other Assemblies and Conferences of Council A Peer of the Realm shall be tried in an Appeal by Knights c. and not by his Peers because it is at the Suit of the Party Brook 142 153. Otherwise it is in an Indictment of Treason or Felony for that it is at the Suit of the King The
Duke of Somerset in the Time of Ed. 6. was tried for Felony and Treason by his Peers upon an Indictment Id. 71. for it is the Suit of the King When a Lord of Parliament is tried by his Peers 1 Hen. 4.1 Id. 72. they shall not be Sworn to say their Verdict but they shall give their Verdict upon their Honour and are not charged but upon their Honours And 6 Maij 1628. Sir Wm. Jones's Rep. 154 155. It was ordered on the Question Nem. Dissen That the Nobility of this Kingdom and Lords of the upper House of Parliament are of antient Right to Answer in all Courts as Defendants upon Protestation of Honour only and not upon the common Oath An order of the House of Lords was in 1640. Cursus Cancel 112. That the Nobility of this Kingdom and Lords of the upper House of Parliament and the Widows and Dowagers of the Temporal Lords shall Answer in Chancery c. upon Protestation of Honour only but altho their Honour may bind their Conscience in Equity yet Evidence upon their Honour ought not to be admitted in any Court of Law And we must here Note That even Lords of Parliament or Peers of the Realm in giving Evidence to a Jury or in their Depositions in Chancery c. are to be Examined on Oath A Lord of Parliament shall have Knights upon his Trial in every Action 27 Hen. 8. f. 27. A Lord of Parliament may be Outlawed for Murder 27 Hen. 8. f. 17. If a Lord of Parliament makes a Rescous 27 H. 8.27 a Capias shall be taken out against him if the Sheriff return the Rescous otherwise it is in Case of Debt A Capias ad Satisfaciendum does not lyc against a Lord of Parliament 11 H. 4.15 27 Hen. 8.27 for the Law presumes that he has Assets An Attachment is not grantable by the Common Law Dyer 316. Statue Law Custom or Precedent against a Lord of Parliament and the Lord Cromwel by Order in the Parliament-Chamber was discharged of such Process In a Praemunire against a Lord of Parliament Arc. Parl. he ought to appear in his proper Person and not by Attorney unless he has a special Writ of Chancery De attornato faciendo CHAP. V. The Power of the House of Lords A Peer of the Realm being Indicted of Treason or Felony 4 Inst 23. or Misprision of Treason may be Arraigned thereof in Parliament a Lord Steward being appointed and then the Lords Spiritual shall make a Procurator for them and the Lords as Peers of the Realm during the Parliament are Judges whether the Offence be Treason c. that is supposed to be committed by any Peer of the Realm and not the Justices Vide a Letter sent by nine Lords Rush Col. 3. Stat. vol. 1. f. 737. Ant. 42. to the Parliament June 4 1642 who had gone from their House and repaired to the King at York wherein they say We do conceive that it is the apparent usual and inherent Right belonging to the Peerage of England that in the highest Misdemeanour whatsoever no Peer is to Answer to the first Charge but in his Place in his own Person and not upon the first Charge to come to the Barr. In 1553. primo Mariae Burn. His Ref. vol. 2. p. 253. The Bill of Tonnage and Poundage was sent up to the Lords who sent it down to the Commons to be reformed in two Provisoes that were not according to former Precedents How far this was contrary to the Rights of the Commons who now say that the Lords cannot alter a Bill of Money I am not able to determine Die Mercurij 25 Novembris 1692. It is Resolved upon the Question by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal that for the future when there shall be a Devision in the House upon any Question the Contents shall goe below the Barr and the Not Contents stay within the Barr And it is Ordered that this Resolution be added to the Roll of standing Orders of this House Die Lune 7. Decembris 1691. It is Ordered by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament Assembled that for the future upon giving Judgment in any Cases of Appeals or Writs of Error in this House the Question shall be put for Reversing and not for Affirming And that this be added to the Roll of standing Orders 30. Jan. 1640. Rush Col. 3. part vol. 1 p. 165. Upon a Debate in the Lord's House touching the Power of conveying away of Honour it was Nemine contradicente Resolved upon the Question that no Person that hath any Honour in him as a Peer of this Realm may alien and transfer the same to any other Person See Sir B. Shower's Cases in Parliament 1.2 c. See many notable Judgments by the Lords at the Prosecution of the Commons Rush Col. passim Nalson and in later Times Error serra sue in Parliament Vid. Crom. 18. Error Vid. infra Parliament poet prendre Recognizance Brook 137. Error Error shall be sued in Parliament and the Parliament may take a Recognizance If a Judgment be given in the King's Bench 4. Inst 21. either upon a Writ of Error or otherwise the Party grieved may upon a Petition of Right made to the King in English or in French and his Answer thereto Fiat Jusstitia let Justice be done have a Writ of Error directed to the Chief Justice of the King's Bench for removing of the Record in praesens Parliamentum c. And hence it may be presum'd that Writs of Error in Parliament were originally Returnable before the Commons as well as the Lords See Yelverton's Rights of the Commons and Hales of Parliaments p. 18. to 23. When one sueth in Parliament to Reverse a Judgment in the King's Bench he sheweth in his Bill which he exhibiteth to the Parliament some Error or Errors whereupon he prayeth a Scire Facias Id. 22. The Proceeding upon the Writ of Error is only before the Lords in the Upper House Secundum Legem Consuetudinem Parliamenti The Case between Smith and Busby in a Writ or Error Resolved 2 Nalson 716. 'twas decidable in no other Court but in Parliament If any Question be moved in Parliament for Priviledge 4 Inst 363 or Precedency of any Lord of Parliament it is to be decided by the Lords of Parliament in the House of Lords as all Priviledges and other Matters concerning the Lords House of Parliament are November 1641. 2 Nalson 625. Resolved by the House Nemine contradicente that it belongs to the House of Peers by the antient Laws and Constitutions of this Kingdom to interpret Acts of Parliament in Time of Parliament in any Cause that shall be brought before them Julij 12. 1641. 2. Nalson 381. An order of the Lords for Relief of a Feme-Covert and her Children against a Husband refusing to Cohabit The Sentence pronounced by the Lords upon Sir Giles Mompesson Rushw Col. 27.28 and Sir Fracis Michel for Projectors Upon Complaints and Accusations of the Commons Selden's Judicature
c. 6 7. the Lords may proceed in Judgment against the Delinquents of what Degree soever and of what Nature soever the Offence be For where the Commons complain the Lords do not assume to themselves Trial at Common Law Q. Neither do the Lords at the Trial of a Common Impeachment by the Commons decedere de Jure suo for the Commons are then instead of a Jury and the Parties Answer and Examination of Witnesses are to be in their Presence Post 120. or they to have Copies thereof and the Judgment is not to be given but upon their Demand which is instead of a Verdict so the Lords do only judge not try the Delinquent 28 Hen. 6. Id. 98. Tho' the Lords refused to commit the Duke of Suffolk upon the Commons complaint of him of a common Fame of Treason yet when they accused him of a particular Treason he was Committed and brought Prisoner to his Answer But in Cases of Misdemeanors it is otherwise Then the Party accused whether Lord or Commoner answers as a Freeman viz. The Lord within his Place Ibid. the Commoner at the Bar and they are not committed till Judgment unless upon the Answer of a Commoner the Lords find Cause to commit him till he find Sureties to attend c. lest he should fly Prout Jo. Cavendish upon the Lord Chancellor's demand of Justice against him for his false Accusation was Committed after his Answer until he put in Bail Anno 7 Rich. 2. and before Judgment In Cases of Misdemeanors only Id. 105. the Party accused was never deny'd Counsel If the Commons do only complain Id. 163. and do neither impeach the Party in Writing nor by Word of Mouth in open House nor demand Trial to be in their Presence Post 120. in these Cases it is in the Election of the Lords whether the Commons shall be present or not In Complaints of Extortion Id. 173. and Oppression the Lords awarded Satisfaction to the Parties wronged which sometime was certain sometime general but alway secundum non ultra Legem It appeareth plainly by many Precedents Id. 176 177. that all Judgments for Life and Death are to be render'd by the Steward of England or by the Steward of the King's House and this is the Reason why at every Parliament the King makes a Lord Steward of his House tho' he hath none out of Parliament And at such Arraignment the Steward is to sit in the Chancellor's Place and all Judgments for Misdemeanors are by the Chancellor or by him who supplies the Chancellor's Place In Case of Recovery of Damages Id. 187. or Restitution the Parties are to have their Remedy the Parliament being ended in the Chancery and not in any other inferior Court at the Common Law But the Lords in Parliament may direct how it shall be levied The Judges who are but Assistants to the Upper House have leave from the Lord Chancellor or Keeper Sir Simon d'Ewes Journal 527. Col. 2. to sit cover'd in the House but are alway uncover'd at a Committee 3. Car. 1. Petyt's Msscel Parliam 212 213. The Sentence of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal pronounced by the Lord Keeper against Ensign Henry Reynde for ignominious Speeches uttered by him against the Lord Say and Seal and for his Contempt of the High Court of Parliament was thus 1. That he never bear Arms hereafter but be accounted unworthy to be a Soldier 2. To be imprisoned during Pleasure 3. To stand under the Pillory with Papers on his Head shewing his Offence at Cheapside London or at Banbury 4. To be fined at 200 l. to the King 5. To ask Forgiveness here of all the Lords of Parliament in general and of the Lord Say and his Son in Particular both here and at Banbury And the Court of Star-Chamber ordered by the Lords to put the said Sentence in Execution out of Time of Parliament Id. 213. Vide a Sentence pronounced by the Lords Die Martis 26. Julij 1642. against one John Escot of Launceston in the County of Cornwall for speaking Scandalously of the Parliament in Rush Col. Vol. 1. f. 759 760. And likewise against John Marston Clerk Rector of St. Mary Magdalen in the City of Canterbury ibid. See divers particulars touching the Power and Jurisdiction of the House of Lords in Prynn's Plea for the House of Lords c. as also a Book printed Anno 1669. Entitled The Grand Question concerning the Judicature of the House of Peers Stated c. See also Sir M. Hales of Parliaments Pa. 138 139. and ibid 140 c. where Attendants on the upper House may be Members of the House of Commons Q. CHAP. VI. House of Commons THE House of Commons was originally Sir R. Atkyns Argument c. p. 13. and from the first Constitution of the Nation the Representative of one of the three Estates of the Realm and a part of the Parliament It is assirmed by Mr. Lambard Lambard's Archeion 257 258. that Burgesses were chosen to the Parliament before the Conquest The antient Towns call'd Boroughs Littleton Sect. 164. are the most antient Towns that are in England for the Towns that now are Cities or Counties in old Time were Boroughs and call'd Boroughs for that of such old Towns came the Burgesses to the Parliaments Knights of the Shire to serve in Parliament Sir Rob. Atkyn's 18. and the paying Wages to them for their Service has been Time out of Mind and did not begin 49 Hen. 3. for that is within Time of Memory in a Legal Sense The House of Commons Id. 34. as a Member of the High Court of Parliament have been as antient as the Nation itself and may in the Sense of Julius Caesar be accounted among the Aborigines and that they have had a perpetual Being to speak in the Language of the Law a Tempore cujus Contraria memoria Hominum non existit and that they are therefore capable by Law together with the rest of the three Estates in Parliament to prescribe and claim a share in all Parliamentary Powers and Priviledges I do not mean seperately but in conjunction with those other Estates which they could not otherwise legally have done if their Original and Commencement could have been shewn During the British Saxon Petyt's Preface to the antient Rights of the Commons c. p. 3. and Norman Governments the Freemen or Commons of England as now call'd and distinguish'd from the great Lords were pars essentialis constituens an essential and constitutent part of the Wittena Gemot Commune Concilium Baronagium Angliae or Parliament in those Ages It is apparent Id. 12. and past all Contradiction that the Commons in the Times of the Britons Vid. Ch. 1 ante Saxons and Picts were an essential Part of the Legislative Power in making and ordaining Laws by which themselves and their Posterity were to be Govern'd and that the Law was then the golden Metwand and Rule which Measured out and allowed the Prerogative of the Prince and
the Officers and Persons making or procuring the same and every or any of them at his Election in any of his Majesty's Courts of Record at Westminster and shall recover double the Damages he shall sustain by reason thereof together with his full Costs of Suit And if any Officer shall willfully Like Action given the elected against Officer c. falsly c. making double Returns and the Prosecuters of such Returns Contracts Bonds c. given to procure the Return of any Members adjudged void and such Members as make or give them to procure any false or double Return forfeit 300 l. One third to the King another to the Poor of the County City c. and a third to the Informer with his Costs to be recovered by Action of Debt c. wherein no Essoign c. and but one Imparlance falsly and maliciously Return more Persons than are required to be chosen by the Writ or Precept on which any Choice is made the like Remedy against him or them and the Party or Parties that willingly procure the same or any of them by the Party grieved at his Election All Contracts Promises Bonds and Securities whatsoever hereafter made or given to procure any Return of any Member to Parliament or any thing relating thereunto shall be adjudged void and whoever makes or gives such Contract Security Promise or Bond or any Gift or Reward to procure such false or double Return shall forseit the Sum of 300 l. one third part to his Majesty another third part to the Poor of the County City Borough or Place concerned England and one third part to the Informer with his Costs to be recovered in any Court of Record at Westminster by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information wherein no Essoign Protection or Wager of Law shall be allowed nor more than one Imparlance The Clerk of the Crown to keep a Book of Entry of every single and double Return Clerk of the Crown to keep Books of Entry of Returns c. and of every Alteration and Amendment in every such Return whereto all Persons are to have access and take Copies of so much as desir'd at a reasonable Fee The Parties prosecuting such Suit Candidates may give such Book or a true Copy thereof in Evidence and have like Advantage as by producing the Record itself And if the Clerk of the Crown makes not such Entry within six Days after any Return or alters any Return without Order of the House of Commons or gives a Certificate of any Person not returned or wilfully neglects or omits his Duty herein he shall forfeit 500 l. for each Offence to the parth grieved Candidate to be recovered as aforesaid and lose his Office and be for ever incapable of holding it Every Information or Action upon this Statute England shall be brought within two Years after the cause of Action shall arise Informations or Actions on this Statute to be brought within 2 Years and not after That upon every Election to be made of any Knight or Knights of the Shire in case a Poll shall be requir'd the Sheriff or his Under-Sheriff shall appoint for each Candidate such one Person as shall be nominated to him by each Candidate Candidates for Knights of the Shire may nominate Persons to be Inspectors of the Poll and may require each Freeholder to be sworn before admitted to Poll. to be Inspectors of every Clerk who shall be appointed for taking the Poll and every Freeholder before he is admitted to Poll at the same Election shall if required by the Candidates or any of them first take the Oath in this Act contained Vide ante And if any Person do unlawfully and corruptly procure or suborn any Freeholder or Person to take the said Oath in order to be Polled Any Person procuring a Freeholder or other to take the Oath for the Poll whereby he commits Perjury and convicted of such Subornation for every Offence forfeits 40 l. and be incapacitated as a Witness till such Judgment reversed and for want of 40 l. imprisoned half a Year and stand in the Pillory an Hour per Stat. 5 Eliz. ch 9. whereby he shall commit wilful and corrupt Perjury and shall be thereof convicted he for every such Offence shall incur the like Pains and Penalties as are in and by one Act made in the 5th Elizabeth c. enacted against all such who shall c. Suboru or Procure any Person to commit any unlawful and corrupt Perjury contrary to the said Act. England The said Sheriff Without the Candidates consent the County Court not to be adjourned from the place of Election nor the Poll discontinued or in his Absence his Under-Sheriff or such as he shall depute shall not adjourn the County-Court from the Place of Election to any other Town or Place within the same County without consent of the Candidates but shall duly and orderly proceed to take the Poll from Day to Day and Time to Time without any further or other Adjournment without the Consent of the Candidates for such Adjournment Every Sheriff Any Person may demand a Copy of any Poll which the Sheriffs Mayors c. are required to deliver paying reasonably for writing it To each Party grieved Mayors Sheriffs c. for every wilful offence forfeit 500 l. to be recover'd by such Party his Executors or Administrators with full Costs by Action of Debt c. wherein no Essoign c. Under-Sheriff Mayor Bailiff and other Officer to whom the Execution of any Writ or Precept shall belong for the electing Members to Parliament shall forthwith deliver to such Person or Persons as shall desire the same a Copy of the Poll taken at such Election paying only a reasonable Charge for writing And every Sheriff Under-Sheriff Mayor Bailiff and other Officer to whom the Execution of any Writ or Precept for electing Members to Parliament doth belong for every wilful Offence contrary to this Act shall forfeit to every Party so aggrieved the Sum of 500 l. to be recovered by him or them England his or their Executors or Administrators together with full Costs of Suit and for which he or they may Sue by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any Court at Westminster wherein no Essoign Protection Wager of Law Privilege or Imparlance shall be allowed No Person shall be capable of being elected a Member to Parliament who is not of the Age of 21 Years None shall be elected under the age of 21 Years The choice of any elected under that Age declared void and such Minor sitting c. in Parliament shall incur like Penalties as if sitting c. unchosen or returned and every Election or Return of any Person under that Age is declared Null and Void And if any such Minor chosen shall presume to sit or vote in Parliament he shall incur such Penalties and Forfeitures as if he had presumed to Sit and Vote in Parliament without being chosen or returned The Sheriff of
made in like Manner and Form to all Intents Constructions and Purposes as is used within the County Palatine of Lancaster or any other County and City within England which said Knights and Burgesses and every of them shall be returned by the said Sheriff into the Chancery of England in due Form and upon like Pains as is ordained that the Sheriff or Sheriffs of any other County should make their Return England Sheriff of Chester to make like Returns and on like Pains as other Sheriffs That the Burgesses of all Cities Stat. 35 H. 8. c. 11. Mayors Bailiffs c. of the twelve Shire-Towns in Wales and of Monmouth-Shire shall summon the Burgesses as well of all other Cities Boroughs and Towns in those Counties as of Burgesses of those Towns themselves to come to Elections Boroughs and Towns in the twelve Shires within Wales and County of Monmouth not finding Burgesses for the Parliament themselves and contributary to Wages of Burgesses of such Shire Towns shall be lawfully admonished by Proclamation or otherwise by the Mayors Bailiffs and other Head Officers of the said Towns or by one of them to come and give their Elections for the Electing the said Burgesses at such Time and Place lawful and reasonable as shall be assigned for the same by the said Mayors Bailiffs and other Head Officers of the said Shire Towns or by one of them That the County Palatine of Durham may have two Knights for the same County St. 25 C. 2. c. 9. Writ of Election under the Great Seal for Elections in Durham to be directed to the Bishop of Durham c. and his Precept thereon to the Sheriff of that County and the City of Durham two Citizens to be Burgesses for the same City to be elected by Writ to be awarded by the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper to the Lord Bishop of Durham or his Temporal Chancellor of the said County England and a Precept to be thereupon grounded and made by the said Lord Bishop or his Temporal Chancellor to the Sheriff of the said County and the same Election to be made in Manner following viz. the Elections of the Knights to be made by the greater Number of the Freeholders of the said County Palatine which shall be present at such Elections as is used in other Counties of this Kingdom and that the Election of the said Burgesses for the City of Durham to be made by the major part of the Mayor Aldermen and Freemen of the said City which shall be present at such Elections which said Knights and Burgesses Sherish of Durham to make like Returns and under like Pains as other Sheriffs St. 7 and 8 W. 3. c. 7. continued by St. 12 and 13 W. 3. c. 5. False Returns illegal and prohibited and all made contrary to the last Determination of the Right of Election in the House of Commons adjudged a false Return so elected shall be returned by the said Sheriff into the Chancery in due Form and upon the like Pains as be ordained for the Sheriff or Sheriffs of any other County in like Cases That all false Returns wilfully made of any Knight of the Shire Citizen Burgess Baron of the Cinque-Ports or other Members are against Law and are hereby prohibited and in case that any Person or Persons shall return any Member for any County City Borough Cinque-Port or Place contrary to the last Determination in the House of Commons of the Right of Election in such County England City Borough Cinque-Port or Place such Return is hereby adjudged a false Return The Party so grieved to wit He that shall be duly elected for any County Officers c. making such false Return liable to an Action at the Suit of any duly elected in any of the Courts at Westminster with double Damages and full Costs City Borough Cinque-Port or Place by such false Return may sue the Officers and Persons making or procuring the same and every or any of them at his Election in any Court of Record at Westminster and shall recover double Damages with his full Costs Any Officer that shall wilfully Officers c. falsly c. making double Returns liable to the like Action falsly and maliciously return more Persons than are required to be chosen by the Writ or Precept on which any Choice is made the like Remedy may be had against him or them and the Party or Parties that willingly procure the same by the Party grieved All Contracts Contracts Bonds c. given to procure the Return of any Member adjudged void and such as make or give them to procure any false or double Return forfeit 300 l. one third to the King another to the Poor of the County City c. and a third to the Informer with his Costs to be recovered by Action of Debt c. wherein no Essoign c. Promises Bonds and Securities whatsoever hereafter made or given to procure any Return of any Member or any thing relating thereto be adjudged void and that whoever makes or gives such Contract Security Promise or Bond or any Gift or Reward to procure such false or double Return England shall forfeit 300 l. one third Part to his Majesty another third Part to the Poor of the County City Borough or Place concern'd and one third Part to the Informer with his Costs to be recovered in any Court of Record at Westminster by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information wherein no Essoign Protection or Wager of Law allowed nor more than one Imparlance The Clerk of the Crown to keep a Book of Entry of every single and double Return and of every Alteration and Amendment in every such Return whereto all Persons to have Access and take Copies of so much as desired at a reasonable Fee And if the Clerk of the Crown makes not such Entry in Six Days after any Return or alters any Return without Order of the House of Commons or gives a Certificate of any Person not returned or wilfully neglects or omits his Duty herein to forfeit 500 l. for each Offence to the Party grieved to be recovered as aforesaid and lose his Office England and be for ever incapable of holding it Every Information or Action brought upon this Statute Informations or Actions on this Statute to be brought within two Years after the Cause shall be brought within the Space of two Years after the Cause of Action shall arise That when any New Parliament shall at any Time hereafter be Summoned or called Staf. 8 W. 3. c. 25. Writs of Summons to Parliament to have forty Days between the Teste and Returns and be issued with all Expedition and delivered to the proper Officer to whom its Execution belongs who shall indorse thereon the Day he received it and within three Days issue out his Precept to the like proper Officer of each Borough c. who shall also indorse the Day of his Receipt of the Precept in the former's Presence and proceed to Election in
eight Days and give four Days Notice of the Day appointed there shall be forty Days between Teste and Returns of the Writs of Summons and that the Lord Chancellor Lord Keeper or Lords Commissioners of the Great Seal for the Time being shall issue out Writs for Election of Members to serve in the same Parliament with as much Expedition as the same may be done And that as well upon the calling or summoning any New Parliament as also in case of any Vacancy in Parliament the several Writs shall be deliver'd to the proper Officer to whom the Execution thereof doth belong or appertain and to no other Person whatsoever And that every such Officer upon the Receipt of the same Writ shall upon the back thereof indorse the Day he receiv'd the same and shall forthwith send his Precept or Precepts to each Borough Town Corporate Proper Officer of the Cinque-Ports allowed six Days from the Receipt of the Writ for the Delivery by a sulsequent Statute 10 11 W. 3. c. 7. Port England or Place within his Jurisdiction where any Member or Members are to be elected to serve in such New Parliament or to supply any Vacancy in Parliament and within three Days after the Receipt of the said Writ shall by himself or proper Agent deliver or cause to be delivered such Precept or Precepts to the proper Officer of every such Borough Town Corporate Port or Place within his Jurisdiction to whom the Execution of such Precept doth belong or appertain and to no other Person And every such Officer upon the back of the same Precept shall indorse the Day of his Receipt thereof in the Presence of the Party from whom he received such Precept and shall forthwith cause Notice to be given of the Time and Place of Election and shall proceed to Election thereupon within the Space of eight Days next after his Receipt of the same Precept and give four Days Notice at least of the Day appointed for the Election Neither the Sheriff nor his under Sheriff in any County or City No Sheriff c. in any County or City nor Mayor c. of any Borough Town Port or Place to whom the Execution of any Writ or Precept belongs to pay or receive any Fee c. for making out Receipt Delivery Return or Execution of the same nor the Mayor Bailiff Constable Portreeve or other Officer or Officers of any Borough England Town Corporate Port or Place to whom the Execution of any Writ or Precept for electing Members doth belong or appertain shall give pay receive or take any Fee Reward or Gratuity for making out Receipt Delivery Return or Execution of any such Writ or Precept Upon every Election to be made of any Knight or Knights of the Shire to serve in Parliament Sheriff for Election of Knights of the Shire to hold his County Court where the same has been most usually kept for forty Years last and proceed to the Election the next Court unless it happen within six Days after the Receipt of the Writ or the same Day and then to adjourn giving ten Days notice of the Time and Place If a Poll required the Sheriff c. forthwith to proceed thereon publickly and appoint Clerks to take the Poll in his c. Presence who shall be sworn to take it indifferently and set down each Free-holder's Name the Place of his Freehold and for whom he polls and to poll no Freeholder not sworn if requir'd by any Candidate the Sheriff of the County where such Election shall be made shall hold his County Court for the same Election at the most publick and usual Place of Election within the said County and where the same has most usually been for 40 Years last past and shall there proceed to Election at the next County Court unless the same fall out to be held within six Days after the Receipt of the Writ or upon the same Day and then shall adjourn the same Court to some convenient Day given ten Days Notice of the Time and Place of Election and in case the said Election be not determined upon the View with the Consent of the Freeholders there present but that a Poll shall be required the said Sheriff or in his Absence the Under-Sheriff England with such others as shall be deputed by him shall forthwith there proceed to take the said Poll in some open or publick place or places by the same Sheriff or his Under-Sheriff in his Absence or others appointed for the taking thereof as aforesaid And for the more due and orderly proceeding in the said Poll the said Sheriff or in his Absence his Under-Sheriff or such as he shall depute shall appoint such Number of Clerks as to him shall seem convenient for the taking thereof which Clerks shall all take the said Poll in the presence of the said Sheriff or his Under-Sheriff or such as he shall depute and before they begin to take the said Poll every Clerk so appointed shall by the said Sheriff or his Under-Sheriff aforesaid be Sworn truly and indifferently to take the same Poll and to set down the Names of each Free-holder and the Place of his Free-hold and for whom he shall Poll and to Poll no Free-holder who is not Sworn if so required by the Candidates or any of them which Oath of the said Clerks the said Sheriff or his Under-Sheriff or such as he shall depute are hereby impowered to administer and the Sheriff or his Under Sheriff shall appoint for each Candidate such one Person as shall be nominated to him by each Candidate to be Inspectors of every Clerk England who shall be appointed for taking the Poll Sheriffs c. to appoint for each Candidate one Person nominated by such Candidate to be Inspectors of every Clerk of the Poll. And to sweareach Free-holder before his Poll to be taken if by any Candidate required to his Freehold and every Free-holder before he is admitted to Poll at the same Election shall if required by the Candidates or any of them first take the Oath in this Act contained Which Oath the Sheriff by himself or his Under-Sheriff or such sworn Clerks by him appointed for takeing the said Poll as aforesaid are hereby authorized to administer The said Sheriff Sheriff c. at the Place of Election to proceed to the Poll and not adjourn the County Court to any other Place without the Candidates Consent nor without such Consent delay or discontinue the Poll. or in his Absence his Under-Sheriff or such as he shall depute shall at the Place of Election proceed to the Polling all the Free-holders then and there present and shall not adjourn the County Court then and there held to any other Town and Place within the same County without the Consent of the Candidates nor shall by any unnecessary Adjournment in the same Place of Election protract or delay the Election but shall duly and orderly proceed to take the said Poll from Day to Day
House to the Lord Chancellor for awarding Writs of Supersedeas 3 Martii Ibid. 18 Jac. 1. Upon a Report from the Committee appointed to consider of a Way of staying Trials against Members of the House that by several Precedents the Custom appeared to be in such Cases That on Motions and Orders in the House Letters were written to the Justices of Assize for stay of Trials against Members of the House which Letters were entred in the Journal-Book and that it belongeth to the Clerk to write the the same It was thereupon Resolved That the former Course of writing Letters to Justices of Assize should be held according to former Precedents 10 Junii 1607. Sir Robert Johnson Id. 95. a Member of this House moved for a Letter to stay a Trial against him in the Exchequer Which was granted as appeareth by the Entry on the 13th Day when a Petition of Sir Robert Brett was read against that Privilege The Privilege formerly granted was affirmed upon this Reason That no Man should have any Thing to withdraw him from his Service in the House The like 14 Feb. 18 Jac. 1. The Privilege of the House is so much insisted on that it hath been a Question Ibid. Whether any Member of the House could consent that himself might be sued during the Session because the Privilege is not so much the Person's as the House's And therefore when any Person hath been brought to the Bar for any Offence of this Nature the Speaker hath usually charged the Person in the Name of the whole House as a Breach of the Privilege of the House 3 Junii Ibid. 1607. Sir Thomas Holcroft a Member of the House had occasion to sue at Law and was sued with which he was content and desired the Leave of the House There was a Question Whether the House should give Leave for a Breach of Privilege and it was resolved The House might give Leave 7 Maii Id. 96. 1607. Sir Thomas Bigg and Sir Thomas Love being returned upon an Attaint in the King's Bench it being moved That in this Case they ought to have Privilege it was so ordered and the Serjeant sent with his Mace to deliver the Pleasure of the House to the Secondary the Court sitting 22 Nov. 1597. Ibid. Vide Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 560. Col. 2. Sir John Tracey a Member of this House being at the Common Pleas Bar to be put upon a Jury the Serjeant at Arms was presently sent with his Mace to fetch him thence to attend his Service in the House April Scobel 96. 12 Jac. 1. Sir William Bamp-field was committed by the Lord Chancellor for a Contempt after the Writ of Summons but before the Election Ordered upon the Question That he shall have his Privilege by Writ of Habeas Corpus 1 Jac. 1 Sess 2. Ibid. Sir John Peyton returned Knight for Cambridge the last Session and since chosen Sheriff Resolved That he shall attend his Service here 28 Martii 1542. Herbert's Hen. 8. 539. During this Session of Parliament some Wrong was offered to their ancient Privileges a Burgess of theirs being arrested Whereof the King understanding not only gave Way to their releasing him but Punishment of the Offenders Insomuch that the Sheriffs of London were committed to the Tower and one Delinquent to a Place called Little Ease and others to Newgate 2 Martii 1592. Scobel 112 113. Vide Moor. fo 340. n. 461. Fitzherbert's Case Vide Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 479 480 490 Col. 2. Upon a Report from the Committee of Privileges That one Mr. Fitzherbet was returned a Burgess and excepted against because he was alledged to be Outlaw'd and detained upon such Outlawry the House ordered That Mr. Speaker should move the Lord Keeper for an Habeas Corpus cùm Causà to bring up the Body and the Cause of Mr. Fitzherbert But the Lord Keeper returned That in regard of the ancient Liberties and Privileges of this House the Serjeant at Arms be sent by Order of this House for Mr. Fitzherbert at his own Charge by Reason whereof he may be brought without Peril of being further arrested by the Way which was approved of 1 Jac. 1. Scobel 104 105 106 107. Vid. Petyt's Miscel Parl. 222 123 124 125 The first Day of sitting Complaint was made That Sir Thomas Shirley chosen a Member of the House was arrested four Days before the Sitting of this Parliament a Warrant issued to the Clerk of the Crown for a Habeas Corpus to bring him to the House being then a Prisoner in the Fleet and the Serjeant and his Yeoman were sent for in Custody who being brought to the Bar and confessing their Fault were remitted for that Time 17 April Upon hearing Council in the House at the Bar for Sir Thomas Shirley and the Warden of the Fleet it was ordered That Simson at whose Suit and the Serjeant by whom the Arrest was made should be committed to the Tower 4 Maii A Habeas Corpus was awarded to the Warden of the Fleet to bring Sir Thomas Shirley to the House The Warden deny'd to execute it For which the 7th of May following he was sent for by the Serjeant and brought to the Bar who denying to bring his Prisoner a new Writ of Habeas Corpus was awarded and the Warden was committed to the Serjeant with this Order That if that Writ were not executed that then he should be delivered over to the Lieutenant of the Tower as the House's Prisoner 8 Maii The Serjeant was sent with his Mace to the Fleet the House sitting to require the Body of Sir Thomas Shirley But the Serjeant being deny'd a Warrant was made to the Serjeant to deliver the Warden of the Fleet to the Lieutenant of the Tower to be kept close Prisoner 11 Maii The Warden was again sent for and brought to the Bar and refusing to deliver up his Prisoner he was committed to the Place called the Dungeon or Little Ease in the Tower 14 Maii A new Warrant was ordered for a new Writ of Habeas Corpus and that the Serjeant should go with the Writ that the Warrant should be brought to the Door of the Fleet by the Lieutenant himself and there the Writ to be delivered to him and the Commandment of the House to be made known to him by the Serjeant for the executing of it that in the mean Time the Warden to be presently committed to the Dungeon and after to be returned thither again 18 Maii The Warden did deliver Sir Thomas Shirley and so was not put into the Dungeon 19 Maii He attending at the Door was brought into the Bar where upon his Knees confessing his Error and Presumption and professing he was unfeignedly sorry he had so offended this Honourable House Upon that Submission by Direction of the House the Speaker pronounced his Pardon and Discharge paying ordinary Fees to the Clerk and to the Serjeant Mr. Belgrave Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 688. Col. 1. being a Member of the House of Commons had
of 7 H. 4. which prescribes the Manner of the Election of Knights and Burgesses it is Enacted That the Election shall be by Indenture between the Sheriff and the Freeholders and that the Indenture shall be the Return of the Sheriff It was also said That the Precedents do warrant this Judgment viz. 1. One Precedent of 39 H. 6. where a Person outlawed was adjudged a sufficient Member of Parliament Another 1 Eliz. and at that Time one Gargrave who was a Man learned in the Law was Speaker and of the Queen's Council 2. Another was the Case of one Fludd in the 23d of the Queen who being outlawed was adjudged That he should be privileged by Parliament and at that Time the Lord Chief Justice Popham was Speaker And 3. In the 35th of Elizabeth there were three Precedents scil one of Fitz-Herbert another of one Killegrew being outlawed in fifty two Outlawries and the third of Sir Walter Harecourt being outlawed in eighteen Outlawries But after this Sentence and Judgment of the Parliament the King's Highness was displeased with it because the second Writ emanavit by his Assent and by the Advice of his Council And therefore it was moved to the Judges in the Upper-House Note Whether a Person outlawed could be a Member of Parliament who gave their Opinions that he could not And they all except Williams agreed That the Pardon without a Scire facias did not help him but that he was outlawed to that Purpose as if no Pardon had been granted And upon this the Lords sent to the Lower-House desiring a Conference with them concerning this Matter which Conference the Lower-House after some Deliberation denied for these Reasons 1. Because they had given their Judgment before and therefore they could not have Conference de re Judicata as in like Manner they did 27 Queen Eliz. upon a Bill that came from the Lords and was rejected by Sentence upon the first Reading Sir Walter Mildmay being then of the Privy Council and of the House 2. Because they ought not to give any Accompt of their Actions to any other Person but to the King himself This Answer the Lords did ill resent and therefore refused Conference in other Matters concerning Wards and Respite of Homages and Purveyors and also they sent to the King to inform him of it But before their Messengers came to the King two of the Privy Council scilicet Sir John Stanhope and Sir John Herbert were sent to the King by the Lower-House to inform him that they had heard that his Grace was displeased with the House for their Sentence given for Sir Francis Goodwyn as well as in the Matter of the Sentence which was as they heard said to be against Law as also for the Manner of their Proceedings being done hastily without Calling to it either Sir John Fortescue or his Council or without making his Grace acquainted with it And therefore they desired his Grace to understand the Truth of this Matter and also told him That they were ready with his good Leave with their Speaker to attend his Majesty to give him Satisfaction about their Proceedings But the King told them they came too late and that it ought to have been done sooner calling the House Rash and Inconsiderate But yet notwithstanding he was content to hear their Speaker in the Morning at Eight of the Clock Upon this Message Committees were chosen to consider of the Things and Matters aforesaid which should be delivered to the King in Satisfaction of the Sentence given by the House which afterwards were considered of and digested by the Speaker and Committees in three Points viz. 1. In the Reasons and Motives of their Resolutions 2. In the Precedents which were those I before have reported 3. And in Matters of Law Which were those Matters of Law also before reported by me with another Addition That in the Time of Henry the Sixth the Speaker of the Parliament was arrested in Execution at the Suit of the Duke of York and the Question being put to the Judges at that Time See Bohun's Col. p. 277. Whether the Speaker ought to have his Privilege it was said by them That they were Judges of the Law and not Judges of Parliament The Reasons and Motives were the free Election of the County the Request of one of the House the double Return of the Sheriff with a Commemoration of the Length of the Time since the Outlawries and with that the Payment of the Debts To this Report the King answered That he now ought to change his Tune which he used in his first Oration scilicet Thanksgiving to Grief and Reproof But he said That it was as necessary they should be reproved as congratulated and therefore he cited a parcel of Scriptures wherein God had so done with his People Israel nay with King David the People whom he tendered as the Apple of his Eye and David who was a Man after his own Heart He said It seems antiently to be a Privy Counsellor was incompatible with being a Member of Parliament or Publick Counsellor That since Sir Francis Goodwyn was received by the House upon Reasons and Motives inducing the House thereunto so the King upon Reason too took Consideration of Sir John Fortescue being one of the Council an ancient Counsellor a Counsellor not chosen by the King but by his Predecessors and so he found him and therefore he endeavoured to grace him being the only Man of them that had been disgraced the King protesting that he would not for any Thing in the World offer unjustly any Disgrace to any Man in the Nation Besides he did not proceed rashly as they had proceeded but upon Deliberation with double Advice as well with that of his Council as with that of his Judges And in his answering the Precedents Quere If the King himself was not here too over weening he said That those were his own proper Records and to use them against himself was over-great Weenings But in Precedents he said that they ought to respect Times and Persons and therefore said That Henry the Sixth's Time was troublesome he himself Weak and Impotent And as for the other Precedents they were in the Time of a Woman which Sex was not capable of Mature Deliberation and so he said where Infants are Kings whom he called Minors For the Law Part he referred to the Answer of his Judges who by the Lord Chief Justice gave these Resolutions They all unanimously agreeing in them 1. That the King alone and not the Parliament House had to do with the Returns of the Members of Parliament for from him the Writs issued and to him the Sheriff is commanded to make his Returns but when a Man is returned and sworn the Parliament-House hath to do with him and the Sheriff ought to Return the Outlawry if he knew it before his Return 2. They resolved clearly Thatan outlawed Person cannot by the Law be a Member of the Parliament-House but for that Cause