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A65227 Some observations upon the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the kings of England with an appendix in answer to part of a late book intitled, The King's visitatorial power asserted. Washington, Robert. 1689 (1689) Wing W1029; ESTC R10904 101,939 296

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SOME OBSERVATIONS UPON THE Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction OF THE KINGS of ENGLAND WITH AN APPENDIX In Answer to part of a Late Book Intitled The KING' 's Visitatorial Power Asserted LONDON Printed for William Battersby at Thavies-Inn Gate in Holborn and Thomas Basset at the George in Fleet-street 1689. To the Reader A Late Declaration for Liberty of Conscience whereby the King Assum'd a Power of Suspending All Penal Laws in matters of Religion The Ecclesiastical Commission and suspending by vertue of it the Bishop of London and depriving the Fellows of Magdalen-Colledge occasioned a general dissatisfaction in the Nation and produc't some Pamphlets to justifie all those Proceedings viz. One Entituled The King 's Right of Indulgence in Spiritual Matters with the Equity thereof Asserted Another A Vindication of the Proceedings of his Majestie 's Ecclesiastical Commissioners against the Bishop of London and the Fellows of Magdalen-Colledge A Third The Legality of the Court held by his Majestie 's Ecclesiastical Commissioners Defended And last of all The King 's Visitatorial power asserted Perusing these Pamphlets I could not but observe that one and the same inveterate error ran through them All viz. Their ascribing to the King all such power Jurisdiction and Authority as by the Law of England and the very Original Constitution of our Government is lodged in the Legislative body of the Kingdom and which the King is intrusted onely with the Administration of and that in his Courts of Justice I had attempted the answering more than one of those Pamphlets but I found that at every turn I met with that mistake in the Authors who either through Ignorance or Design or both argue for the King's Prerogative from whatever they find to have been done in Great Councils of the Realm or in Ordinary Courts of Justice this one mistake together with some rash and unwarranted expressions glean'd out of a few late Writers will be found to be the main strength of their Cause I thought therefore that it might be a work of some use especially at this time to endeavour the removal of this rubbish and the laying open in some measure the nature of the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of the Crown of England both because we have lately seen how dangerous and fatal these mistakes are and because although much has been written since the Reformation by Mr. Prynn Sir Roger Twisden and others to vindicate the Ecclesiastical Supremacy from Forein Pretensions and Vsurpations yet I know not whether any has yet taken in hand to give an Account of it as stands by Law here at home I do therefore offer these few Observations upon it to the publick desiring the Judicious Reader 's pardon for what slips and imperfections he may find herein and have added in an Appendix an Answer to a Section in the Book concerning Visitatorial Power wherein I hope the Reader will be satisfied how groundless and weak most of the arguments are which our Prerogative-mongers pretend to draw from Antiquity These following Observations are brought down no lower then to the latter end of King Henry the eighth's Reign I design a Continuation with Remarks upon some Judicial Presidents that have pass't since the Reformation if these Papers are well received if not I shall save time and be eas'd of trouble SOME OBSERVATIONS Upon the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction Of the King 's of ENGLAND IT is obvious enough to judicious and intelligent Persons by what unhappy Circumstances it comes to pass that one great Mean of our Preservation seems at present in a manner hid from our Eyes But since Experience is said to be the Mistress of Fools it is hoped that at least in this our Day we may see the things that belong to our Peace Luke 19.42 and remember that the reason why the Ostrich leaveth her Eggs in the Dust Job 39.13 14 15 17. forgetting that the Foot may crush them is because God hath deprived her of Wisdom neither hath he imparted to her Vnderstanding If Interest or Ambition have swayed with some of us Prov. 22.28 as far as in them lay to remove the antient Land-Marks which our Fore-Fathers have set Josh 7.19 let such give Glory to God and take Shame to themselves In the mean time what effect soever these ensuing Papers may have upon our Friends at least let our Adversaries see that there is a Remnant left in Israel 1 Kings 19.18 that have not bowed their Knees to Baal An Arch-Bishop may tell us The Legality of the Ecclesiastical Commission defended pag. 6 7. that the King may take what Causes he pleases to determin from the Determination of the Judges and determin them himself and that it is clear in Divinity that such Authority belongs to the King by the Word of God. But as we are not to receive even the Word of God it self under the Sanction of a Human Law from the Mouth of an Arch-Bishop or from the whole Body of the Clergy much less are we bound to submit to any Courtly Glosses upon that Sacred Text concerning the Power of Kings whose Authority as we suppose it to be grounded wholly upon Municipal Laws so we know the Law to be a better Foundation and a better Security than any imaginary Authority pretended from Scripture And if the Defender would have observed what the Lord Coke in the Presence and with the clear consent of all the Judges and Barons of the Exchequer Coke 12. Rep. pag. 63 64 65. answered upon that occasion before the King himself both from Reason and Authority he would have silenced the Arch-Bishops Divinity and saved me the trouble of taking notice of that part of his Discourse It was their Opinion that the King could not in Person adjudge any Case Which they confirm with such Reasons and Authorities from judicial Records and Acts of Parliament that it seems very imprudent in the Defender to urge that as an Authority which received so solid so learned and so honest an Answer Judges and Serjeants may entertain themselves with what Discourse they please post prandium Legality of c. defended pag. 10 11. Coke 12. Rep. pag. 19 c. and in their mooting upon one extrajudicial Point may talk of another by the by and if one of the Company put this transient Discourse into Paper so that afterwards it gets into the Press Good God! what condition are we come into when Tablechat must be obtruded upon us for Law To go a little further Judges in Courts of Justice may pretend to resolve what Points of Law they please but if their Resolutions are not pertinent to the Matter depending before them in Judgment and necessary for the deciding it such Resolutions go for nothing because the Judges had no Authority so to resolve And I am fully assured that this Point Legality of c. defended Pag. 8.9 Coke 5. Rep. Cawdry's Case viz. Whether any King or Queen of England for the time being might issue an
cum aliis Proceribus Normanniae simul adesse praecepit ut Rex jussit factum est Igitur 8. Anno Papatus Domini Gregorii Papae 7. Celebre Concilium apud Jullam bonam Celebratum est Et de Statu Ecclesiae Dei totiusque Regni Providente Rege cum Baronum suorum consilio utiliter tractatum est Then he inserts the Laws made there all concerning Ecclesiastical Matters In the next Reign that of King William Rufus there was a Schism in the Popedom between Clement and Vrban Anselme whilst he was Abbot of Bec in Normandy had Sworn Obedience to Vrban and being Elected Archbishop of Canterbury desired leave to go out of the Realm to fetch his Pall from him This the King opposed for that Vrban had not been received for Pope in England and told the Archbishop he could not keep his Fealty to him his Prince saving the Obedience which he owed to Vrban Anselme upon this referred himself to the Judgment of the Archbishops Bishops Proceres c. in Parliament who accordingly were Convened at Rochingham Ex Regia Sanctione and the matter discussed before them If the Archbishop had had any Notion of a Personal Supremacy in the King separate from and independant of the Great Council of the Realm it had been absurd in him not to acquiesce in the King's Judgment but Appeal to a Parliament If the King himself had been possessed with an opinion of any Legislative or Supreme Judicial Power in Ecclesiastical Matters lodged in his Person he would never have consented to call a Parliament to determine a cause which himself as far as in him lay had determined already The History may be read at large in Eadmer Hist Nov. Lib. 2 page 24 25 26 c. In King Henry the First 's time Anno Dom. 1102. A Council was held at London in which at Anselm's request to the King the Laity were present Quatenus quicquid ejusdem Concilii authoritate decerneretur utriusque Ordinis curâ sollicitudine ratum servaretur Sic enim necesse erat Quum multis retro annis Synodali culturâ cessante vitiorum vepribus succrescentibus Christianae Religionis fervor in Angliâ nimis tepuerat This is a clear Testimony that the Assent of the Laity was necessary to the Enacting such Ecclesiastical Laws as they were to be bound by And that neither the King by his Prerogative nor the King and the Clergy could impose any Constitutions upon them without their Assent Eadmer Histor Nov. Lib. 3. Will. Malmesb. De Gest Pontif. Anglor Lib. 1. p. 129. But tho' the King could not make Laws Himself could he not permit a Legate to exercise his Legatine Power here King Henry the Eight indeed permitted Wolsey to exercise his Office here and afterward brought the whole Clergy under a Premunire for submitting to him and owning his Authority But the Statutes of Praemunire were then in being Could not our ancient Kings that Reigned before any Act of Parliament now upon Record was extant they that must needs have had all the inherent Prerogatives that are involved in the Notion of Imperial Soveraignty Doctor Hicks they that understood their power somewhat better perhaps than it is now understood because they lived nearer to the creation of it and exercised it before it was sophisticated could not they I say by vertue of their Ecclesiastical Supremacy permit the Popes Legate to domineer a while within the Realm Why King Henry the First was very well satisfied that himself had no such power For when Petrus Monachus Cluniacensis was sent hither by Calixtus the Pope to exercise his Office of Legate within this Realm the King would not suffer him so much as to Lodg upon the Road in any Religious House And when he came into his presence and had told him his Errand Rex obtensâ expeditione So Anno Dom. 1225. Magister Otto Domini Papae nuncius in Angliam veniens promagnis Ecclesiae Rom. negotiis Regi literas praesentavit sed Rex cognito literarum tenore Respondit quod solus non potuit definire nec debuit negotium quod omnes Clericos laicos totius Regni tangebat Matth. Paris p. 325. in quâ tunc erat nam super Walenses eâ tempestate exercitum duxerat dixit se tanto negotio operam tunc quidem dare non posse cum Legationis illius stabilem authoritatem non nisi per conniventiam Episcoporum Abbatum Procerum ac totius Regni Conventum roborari posse constaret Eadmer Hist Nov. p. 138. And so the Legate went back as he came He tells it him as a known truth Constaret that the giving him leave to exercise his Office here was too great a work for him to go about as his affairs then stood for that it could not be done but in and by the Parliament If the Parliament had not a share in the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction how came their Assent to be necessary If they had when did they lose it If the King's Supremacy was personal why might not he if he would have licensed him himself If it was not personal then but is so now then do not assert over and over that the late Acts of Restitution are all declarative and give no new power If the Pope's power de facto exercised be translated to the King shew the conveyance This same King in a Letter to Pope Paschall about Investitures tells him that if himself should be so mean in tantâ me dejectione ponerem as to part with them yet Optimates mei imò totius Angliae Populus id nullo modo pateretur Decem Scriptores 999. The Investitures were performed by the King in person but subsequent to an Election by the Parliament and yet the Parliament were so concerned in them that they were not nor could be parted with but by an Act of Parliament Which accordingly ensued notwithstanding the King's resoluteness at first for when Anselme came from Rome the King was perswaded to with-draw his claim and it was granted in a Parliament held at London Astantibus Archiepiscopis caeteraque multitudine maxima Procerum Magnatum ut ab eo tempore in anteâ nullus electus per dationem Baculi pastoralis vel Annuli de Episoopatu vel Abbathia investiretur per Regem vel aliam quamcunque personam secularem Ibid. Et Sim. Mon. Dun. 228 229 230. But tho' Investitures were lost Elections remained as they were at least of right till King John's time Concessit Rex Johannes liberas in omnibus Ecclesiae Anglicanae electiones Matth. Par. p. 262 263. The Charter it self which was certainly an Act of Parliament See Presidents of many Bishops and Abbots Elected in Parliament in the Reigns of King Stephen and King Henry the Second In Spelm. Conc. Second Part. p. 42 119. Innumerable are the instances of Canons and Constitutions made in the Reigns of the first Norman Kings in their Great and General Councils concerning Churchmen and Church Matters
either allowed or condemned The principal Cases in our Modern Books in which the conceits of latter times are display'd are these following Coke's 8th Report the Princes Case The Case of the City of London 11th Report the Case of the Taylors of Ipswich and the Case of Monopolies Dyer 52. a. 54. a. 224. b. 270. a. 303. a b. Plo. Com. Grendon against the Bishop of Lincoln Vaughan's Reports Thomas and Sorell's Case V. Roll's Abridgment Second Part p. 179 180. Lett. Y. Co. 12th Report p. 18 19. Sir John Davie's Reports Le Case de Commenda p. 68 c. Moor's Reports p. 244 245 c. cs 384. But how correspondent the reason of some of these Judgments is to the sense of former Parliaments and consequentially to the Judgment of the whole Nation and the very Constitution of this Government take a hint from a notable Record in the Fiftieth Year of King Edward the Third whereby it appears That Richard Lyons Merchant of London was impeached and accused by the Commons of many Deceits Extortions and other evil Deeds committed by him against our Lord the King and his People as well in the time that he had been belonging to the House and Council of the King as otherwise during the time that he was Farmer of the Subsidies and Customs of the King and more especially for that the said Richard by Covin had between him and some of the Privy Council of our Lord the King for their singular Profit and Advantage had procured and gotten many Patents and Writs of Licence to be made to carry great Faith and Credit whereby Skins Wool and other Merchandizes were transported otherwise than to the Staple of Calice against the Ordinances and Defences made in that behalf concerning the same before time in Parliament He was charged with other particular Crimes to some of which he offered to make a Defence but to others and this amongst the rest he made no answer Wherefore the said Richard was a warded to Prison during the King's pleasure and distrained to Fine and Ransom according to the quantity of his Trespass and that he should lose his Freedom of the City of London and be no more in Office under the King and to incur other Penalties and Forfeitures as may be seen at large in the Record printed by Mr. Selden in a Book entituled The Priviledges of the Baronage of England pag. 34 35 36 c. So that Licences for the shipping of Wool contrary to an Act of Parliament tho mentioned by Rocliffe in the Book of King Henry the Seventh as legal and grantable by the King with a Non Obstante and countenanced sufficiently by latter Judicial Authorities Vide Dyer 52. a 54. a c. Yet appeared otherwise to antient Parliaments and if the Judgment of a Parliament be of greater Authority than that of a Court in Westminster-Hall or indeed than that of all the Judges put together and if Judicial Presidents do not make the Law but ought to declare it only then is the Legal Perogative in dispensing with Acts of Parliament much straiter if any at all than modern Opinions would represent it to us And that Parliamentary Presidents are of the highest Authority in this Nation will appear by considering that in former Times it was very frequent with the Judges in Westminster-Hall if any Case of Difficulty came before them especially if it depended upon the Construction of an Act of Parliament to be so cautious of making any new unwarranted Presidents that they frequently adjourned the Matter ad proximum Parliamentum By the Statute of Westminster the Second made Anno 13. Edwardi primi cap. 23. It 's enacted That Quotiescunque de caetero evenerit in Cancellaria quod in uno Casu reperitur breve in consimili casu cadente sub eodem Jure simili indigente Remedio non reperitur concordent Clerici de Cancellariâ in brevi faciendo vel atterminent querentes in proximum Parliamentum escribantur Casus i● quibus concordare non possunt referant eos ad proximum Parliamentum My Lord Coke in his Second Institutes pag. 407. tells us That before this Act the Justices did punctually hold themselves to the Writs in the Register because they could not change them without an Act of Parliament And pag. 408. That Matters of great Difficulty were in antient Times usually adjourned into Parliament to be resolved and decided there And that this was the antient Custom and Law of the Kingdom Bracton bears witness Si aliqua nova inconsueta emerserint quae nunquam priùs evenerunt obscurum difficile sit eorum judicium tunc ponantur judicia in respectu usque ad Magnam Curiam ut ibi per Concilium Curiae terminentur And hereof the Lord Coke says There are infinite Presidents in the Rolls of Parliament and quotes in his Margent many Presslents out of the Year Books Observable to this purpose is the Statute of 14 Edw. 3. cap. 6. which reciting that divers Mischiefs have hapned for that in the Chancery King's Bench Common Bench and Exchequer Judgments have been delayed sometimes by Difficulty and sometimes by divers Opinions of the Judges and sometimes for some other Cause It is assented established and accorded That from henceforth at every Parliament shall be chosen a Prelate two Earls and two Barons which shall have Commission and Power of the King to hear by Petition delivered to them the Complaints of all those that will complain them of such Delays and they shall have power to cause to come before them at Westminster or elsewhere the Tenor of Records and Processes of such Judgments so delayed and cause the same Justices to come before them which shall be then present to hear the cause of such Delays Which Cause and Reason so heard by good Advice of themselves the Chancellor Treasurer the Justices of the one Bench and of the other and other of the King's Council as many and such as they shall think convenient shall proceed to take a good Accord and make a good Judgment So that our Parliaments of antient Time looked upon the Judges not as absolute Oracles of the Law but as Men that were both liable to Mistakes and under the Regulation and Direction of Parliaments even in their Ordinary Proceedings The Nation did not so far intrust them as they themselves would persuade us of late In the Three and thirtieth of H. 6. a Question arose in the Exchequer Chamber Whether a Record then and there certified as an Act of Parliament were really an Act of Parliament or no Fortescue who gave the Rule says They would be well advised before they annulled an Act of Parliament and the Matter was adjourned to the next Parliament that they might be certified by them of the certainty of the Matter 33 Hen. 6. Fol. 18. Indeed the Question Whether such or such a Record certified were an Act of Parliament or no may seem too high for
Anselm about Anselm's going to fetch his Pall from Vrban And that betwixt Lanfrank Arch-bishop of Canterbury and Thomas Arch-bishop of York concerning the Profession of Canonical Obedience which the former required of the Latter the Chusing Bishops and Arch-Bishops the Controversies betwixt King Henry the 2d and Thomas Becket all heard debated and determined in General Assemblies of Clergy and Laity and not by our Kings apart from their Great Councels The Eleventh is That they permitted No appeals to Rome 'T is true nor did they ever determine them themselves either in person or by Commission And therefore the Statute of Clarendon which gives Appeals from the Arch-Bishop to the King was never understood to be to the King in person but to the King in his Court. As we may see by what Ger. Dorobern Anno 1176. Coll. p. 1433 And Hoveden fol. 313 314 tell us of the statute made at Northampton in King Henry the second 's time Which both of them call a renewing of the Assize of Clarendon Now in these Laws made at Northampton there is this close Expression concerning Appeals Justiciae faciant quaerere per consuetudinem terrae illos qui à Regno recesserunt nisi redire voluerint infrà terminum nominatum stare ad Rectum in Curià Domini Regis Vtlagentur So that though King Henry as far as in him lay had given ways to Appeals to Rome for when he was absolv'd of the Guilt that he was supposed to have contracted by having occasioned the death of Thomas Becket part of the satisfaction enjoyn'd him was quod licebit Appellationes libere fieri Radulph de Diceto p. 560 yet the Kingdom afterward meeting in Parliament at Northampton would not quit their interest But renew'd the Laws of Clarendon against forein Appeals And explain the Appeals ad Regem to be meant of Appeals ad Curiam Regis But it is a common errour with Men that are ignorant of our Laws wherever they find they King's name in any Acts of Parliament or Judicial Proceedings to imagine that the King has some Personal Authority out of his Courts But for the present I will give but one Instance to detect that mistake The Stat. of Westm 1. Enacts cap. 15. what persons shall be replevisable and what not Amongst others those that are taken by Commandement le Roy are appointed not to be bayl'd by that Statute My Lord Coke in his Commentary upon that Law 2d Institut pag. 186. says thus viz. 1. The King being a body Politick cannot command but by matter of Record for Rex praecipit and lex praecipit are all one For the King must command by matter of Record according to Law. 2. When any Judicial Act is by Act of Parliament referred to the King it is to be understood to be done in some Court of Justice according to Law. The words of the Statute of Rich. 2. cap. 12. are si non que il sort per briefe ou auter maundement del Roy. And yet it was resolved by all the Judges of England that the King cannot do it by any Commandment but by Writ or by Order or Rule of some of his Courts of Justice where the Cause dependeth And Fortescue speaking to the Prince to instruct him against he should be King Melius says he per alios quàm per teipsum Judicia reddes quo proprio ore Nullus Regum Angliae usus est tamen sua sunt omnia Judicia Regni licet per alios ipsa reddantur sicut judicum ●lim sententias Josaphat asseruit esse judicia Dei. The Great Case in tertio Caroliprimi of Habeas Corpus turn'd upon this point The Judges indeed betray'd the Nation in that cause as they have done in others in these Hundred years last past as far as in them lay but how that Judgment was resented in Parliament the Reader may inform himself out of the 1st Vol. of Rushworth's Collections and the 1st part of Doctor Nalson The Law was declared upon that occasion to be that Voluntas Regis est secundum legem et Justiciarios suos in Guriâ suâ non in Camerâ according to 2 R. 3. f. The Twelfth particular is that Our Kings bestowed Bishopricks on such as they liked and translated Bishops from one See to another concerning our Kings bestowing Bishopricks something has been said already As for their translating Bishops from one See to another I desire to hear any one Instance in any age of any Bishop translated by the King against his own will. The Pope pretended to such a power and sometimes Exercised it and that was one of the mischiefs which occasioned the making of the Statutes of Provisors But could never yet find that any of our Kings attempted it The Thirteenth particular is Erecting New Bishopricks The Instances given by Sir Roger are 1st the erecting of the Bishoprick of Ely by King Henry the 1st Anno 1009. taking it out of Lincoln-Diocess And yet nothing is more evident then that this was done by Act of Parliament The Instrument Runs thus viz. In Nomine sanctae individuae Trinitatis Patris Filii spiritus sancti Anno ab Incarnatione Domini MCVIII Indictione Anno Pontificatus Domini Paschalis Papae 2. decimo Regni quoque mei similiter decimo Ego Henricus Providente Divina Clementia Rex Anglorum Normannorum Dux Wilhelmi Magni Regis Filius qui Edwardo Regi Haereditario jure successit in Regnum videns Ecclesiae messem in Regno meo multam esse Agricolas quidem paucos et ab hoc plurimum laborantes in Messe et in ipsa Lincolniensem Ecclesiam multa plebe foecundam ex Authoritate Consilio predicti Papae Paschalis Assenfu simul prece Roberti Lincolniensis Episcopi totius Capituli sui cum ipso annuente Domino Anselmo Beatae memoriae Cantuariensi Archiepiscopo Thoma secundo Venerabili Eboracensium Archiepiscopo Universis Episcopis Abbattibus totius Angliae sed omnibus Ducibus Comitibus Principibus Regni mei Elyense Monasterium c. in Episcopalem sedem sicut caeteros Episcopatus Regni mei liberam absolutam perenniter statuo confirmo vid. Mr. Selden 's Notas Spicilegium ad Eadmer Et Dugdale's Monasticon And what if All the Bishopricks of England Erected both before and after were Erected by Acts of Parliament and not by the King's Letters Patents only In King Edward the Elder 's time upon the Letter of Pope Formosus Congregata est synodus Senatorum Procerum Populorum Nobilium Gentis Angliae In quâ Presidebat Plegmundus Archiepiscopus Tum sibi Rex cum suis et Plegmundus Archiepiscopus salubre Concilium iniverunt and Constituted and Elected five Bishops in the Province of the Gewissi where there had till then been but two dividing those two Bishopricks into five by Act of Parliament Spelman's Counc Volum 1. pag. 387 388. Malmesbury de Gestis