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A75208 An Account of the affairs of Scotland in answer to a letter written upon the occasion of the address lately presented to His Majesty by some members of the Parliament of that kingdom. 1689 (1689) Wing A229A; ESTC R225109 30,888 46

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in this present Parliament the King had but one Officer of State But Concessions to persons that are not resolved to take satisfaction have never good effects This Overture was rejected and some persons must have all or nothing But all that are indifferent must be convinced that the King had fairly retrinched his Interest in the Parliament having not only consented to the Parliaments Abolishing of the Bishops but he was willing to have taken the Sting out of the Articles and secured the Nation for ever that the Articles could never be packt nor the Parliament imposed upon Article 2. Grievance THat the first Act of Parliament 1669 is inconsistent with the establishment of the Church-Government now desired and ought to be Abrogate This second Article of the Grievance is Answered by the Fourth Instruction thus Instruct 4. YOu are to pass an Act Establishing that Church-Government which is most agreeable to the Inclinations of the People Rescinding the Act of Parliament 1669 and all other Acts inconsistent therewith By the Instruction the King doth entirely Remit to the Parliament to establish what kind of Church-Government was most agreeable to their Inclinations as the Representative of the People without proposing Qualification or Limitation And because the Act of Parliament 1669 doth Recognize and Declare an extraordinary Power in the Kings of Scotland without Consent of Parliament in relation to Ecclesiastical Affairs whereby any Government of the Church established by Act of Parliament might be changed by the King therefore the King Condescends to Rescind that Law and to pass from the Prerogative of the Crown as it is established and asserted by that Act whereof the Tenor follows ACT Asserting His Majesties Supremacy over all Persons and in all Causes Ecclesiastical November 16. 1669. THe Estates of Parliament having seriously Considered how necessar it is for the good and peace of the Church and State that His Majesties Power and Authority in relation to Matters and Persons Ecclesiastical be more clearly Asserted by an Act of Parliament Have therefore thought fit it be Enacted Asserted and Declared Likeas His Majesty with Advice and Consent of His Estates of Parliament Doth hereby Enact Assert and Declare that His Majesty hath the Supreme Authority and Supremacy over all Persons and in all Causes Ecclesiastical within this His Kingdom and that by vertue thereof the ordring and disposal of the External Government and Policy of the Church doth properly belong to His Majesty and His Successors as an Inherent Right to the Crown and that His Majesty and His Successors may Settle Enact and Emit such Constitutions Acts and Orders concerning the Administration of the External Government of the Church and the Persons employed in the same and concerning all Ecclesiastical Meetings and Matters to be Proposed and Determined therein as they in their Royal Wisdom shall think fit Which Acts Orders and Constitutions being Recorded in the Books of Council and duly Published are to be Observed and Obeyed by all His Majesties Subjects any Law Act or Custom to the Contrary notwithstonding Likeas His Majesty with Advice and Consent foresaid Doth Rescind and Annul all Laws Acts and Clauses thereof and all Customs and Constitutions Civil or Ecclesiastick which are contrary to or inconsistent with His Majesties Supremacy as it is hereby Asserted and Declares the same Void and Null in all time coming Never did Law give a King such a Power nor ever did a King part with such a Law. There was an Act Brought in and Voted for Rescinding the Act of Supremacy it was not Touched which cannot be Imputed to the King there being an express Instruction for Rescinding that Act. Article 3. Grievance THat Forefaultures in prejudice of Vassals Creditors and Heirs of Entail are a great Grievance This Article is Answered by the fixth Instruction Instruction 6. YOu are to pass an Act that Forefaultures shall only be extended to what Interest the Rebel had and that innocent Vassals or lawful Creditors for Debts upon Record shall not be prejudged nor such Heirs of Entail whose Rights of Succession are established by publick Infeftment The Laws of Scotland in relation to Treason are very many and therefore Forefaultures there are too frequent the Feudal Laws and Customes takes place in Forefaultures and Treason being the greatest Ingratitude the Rebels Fee returns to the King in that same condition that it was Originally given out without the burden of his Debt or regard to any Deed done by the Rebel after committing of the Crime or to any Deeds or Alienations made before the Crime which were not consented to or Confirmed by the Superior and rendred Real and Publick by Infestment and not only Heirs of Entail are cut off from their hope of Succession ●or the Delinquency of the Fiar but the Rebels innocent Vassals who are not Confirmed by the Confiscation of the Dominium Directum which was in the Rebel the Dominium utile falls in consequence There have been so many sad instances of the severe effects of Forefaultures in Scotland to the Ruin of many Families who had no accession to the Treason that of late this single Concession would have been purchast by that Nation at the dearest rate but Courtiers and Ministers who had hopes to make advantage and procure Gifts of Forefaultures they have alwayes resisted the good design of Restricting the prodigious effects of Forefaultures till now that the King hath resolved Never to consider His Own Advantage and Greatnesse in opposition to the Interest and Ease of His Subjects He hath by this Instruction secured lawful Creditors whose Debts are not Collusive but upon Record and innocent Vassals though not Confirmed and likewise Heirs of Entail whose Rights of Succession are not Privat and Clandestine and so might be antedated though they were truly made after or in prospect of Rebellion but where the Rights are nottour and publick which must be Recorded in that case even the Rebels Heirs are safe which is one of the most considerable and universal Favours which could be done to that Nation Article 4. Grievance THat the obliging the Leidges to Depone upon Crimes against Delinquents otherwise than when they are adduced in special Process as Witnesses is a great Grievance This Article is Answered by the tenth Instruction Instruction 10. WE are satisfied that an Act should be past for securing the Leidges against Inquiries by way o● Inquisition but in respect of the present Junctur● of Affairs this Matter would be well Considered by the Parliament an● therefore when the Terms of this Act shall be Adjusted you are to Transmit the same to Vs that We may give you particular Instructions thereanent By the Custom of Scotland any person might be examined summarly in relation to other persons against whom there was no Process depending and without confronting the persons And albeit such Expiscations did not amount to a Probation except these Depositions had been renued in presence of the Jury yet being taken upon Oath
the desires of His People or to shift them off upon the Generality of their Desires But what they plainly desire He gives a distinct Instruction to it and when they point at any thing which they do not distinctly Express He Remits the whole Affair to themselves and in this Case because there was no necessity of Adjusting Narratives but only to Rescind some Acts of that Parliament therefore the King doth not Require His Commissioner to Transmit the Proposals as in many other Articles but Authorizeth him to give the Royal Assent in this Matter and in the Settling of Church-Government and in Redressing of Fines and Restoring of Forfaultures which were the greatest Tokens of his Intire Confidence in the Parliament and that He did not Proceed Cautiously or Narrowly with them Who could have expected such unsuitable Returns that some persons should press to proceed to Votes in Matters new not offered in their Grievances without Representing to His Majesty any thing of the Matter before they were previously engaged and put the King to the necessity of a Refusal But that you may have a Swatch of the Acts of that Parliament and how far our Great Men did Outvey one another to Depress the Nation and Raise the Prerogative I have set down the Second Act of that Parliament by which you will see that they have not rested in the Doctrine of Passive Obedience but for what I see we owne Active Obedience without Reserve and yet I am told this Act passed with very few or no contrary Votes A Declaration and Offer of Duty by the Kingdom of Scotland with an Annexation of Excise to the Crown April 28. 1685. THe Estates of Parliament now Conveened by His Majesties Soveraign Authority Taking into their Confideration how the Nation hath continued now upwards of 2000 years in the unaltered Form of our Monarchical Government and uninterupted Line of 111 Kings whose Sacred Authority and Power hath been upon all Signal Occasions so Owned and Assisted by Almighty God that Our Kingdom hath been Protected from Conquest Our Possessions Defended from Strangers Our Civil Commotions brought into Wished Events Our Laws Vigorously Executed Our Properties Legally Fixed and Our Lives Securely Preserved so that We and Our Ancestors have Enjoyed those Securities and Tranquillities which the greater and more Flourishing Kingdoms have frequently wanted Those great Blessings We Owe in the first place to Divine Mercy and in Dependance on that to the Sacred Race of Our Glorious Kings and to the Solid Absolute Authority wherewith they were Invested by the First and Fundamental Laws of Our Monarchy Nor can either Our Records or Our Experience Instance Our being Deprived of those happy Effects But when a Rebellious Party did by Commotions and Seditions Invade the Kings Sacred Authority which was the Cause of Our Prosperity yet so far hath Our Primitive Constitution and Fundamental Laws Prevailed against the Innovations and Seditions of Turbulent Men as that these Interuptions never Terminated but either in the Ruine or at least the Suppression of these who at any time did Rebell or Rise in Opposition to Our Government And since so many Ages hath Assured to Us the great Advantages that flow down to all Ranks of People from the happy Constitution of Our Monarchy and that all Our Calamities hath ever arisen from Seditious Invasions upon these Sacred Rights Therefore the Estates of Parliament for Themselves and in Name of the whole Kingdom Judge Themselves Obliged to Declare and They Do Declare to the World that they Abhor and Detest not only the Authors and Actors of all preceeding Rebellions against the Soveraign but likewise all Principles and Positions which are Contrary or Derogatory to the Kings Sacred Supreme Absolute Power and Authority which none whether Persons or Collective Bodies can Participat of any manner of Way or upon any Pretext but in Dependance on Him and Commission from Him and as Their Duty formerly did Bind them to Owne and Assert the Just and Legal Succession of the Sacred Line as Unalterable by any Humane Jurisdiction so now they Hold Themselves on this Occasion Obliged for Themselves and the whole Nation Represented by Them in most Humble and Dutiful Manner to Renew the Hearty and Sincere Offer of their Lives and Fortunes to Assist Support Defend and Maintain King James the 7th their present Glorious Monarch and his Heirs and Lawful Successors in the Possession of Their Crowns Soveraignty Prerogatives Authority Dignity Rights and Possessions against all Mortals And withall to Assure all His Enemies who shall Adventure on the Disloyalty of Disobeying His Laws or on the Impiety of Invading His Rights that such shall sooner weary of their Wickedness than they of their Duty And they firmly Resolve to give their intire Obedience to His Majesty without Reserve and to Concur against all His Enemies Forreign or Intestine and they solemnly Declare that as they are Bound by Law so they are voluntarly and firmly Resolved that all of this Nation betwixt Sixty and Sixteen Armed and Provided according to their Abilities shall be in Readiness for His Majesties Service where and as oft as it shall be His Royal Pleasure to Require them And since the Excise of In-land and Forreign Commodities Granted to King Charl. 2 of ever blessed Memory by the 14th Act of the Parliament 1661 during all the days of his Lifetime and Prorogat by the 8th Act of the Parliament 1681 for five years thereafter will shortly Terminat And the Estates of Parliament Considering the Usefulness of this Grant to Support the Interest of the Crown Do as the first Evidence of their Sincerity in the foresaid Tender of their Duty Humbly and Unanimously Offer to His most Sacred Majesty King James the 7th their present Monarch and to His Lawful Heirs and Successors in the Imperial Crown of Scotland the said Excise of In-land and Forreign Commodities exprest in the said 14th Act of Parliament 1661 to be Collected in the manner Prescribed by the said 8th Act of the Parliament 1681 for ever And His Majesty and Estates of Parliament by the force of this Act have United Annexed and Incorporated and Unites Annexes and Incorporats the same to the Crown of this Realm to Remain therewith in Annexed Property in all time coming And in respect that the Alteration in the method of Collecting the In-land Excise from what it was by the Act 1661 to that Prescribed by the 8th Act of the Parliament 1681 will require some time to establish it in Collection Therefore His Majesty with Consent of the Estates continues the Collection Prescribed by the 14th Act of the Parliament 1661 for the said In-land Excise for six Moneths from the first of May next allenarly Art. 12. Griev THat the Marriage of a King or Queen of this Realm to a Papist is dangerous to the Protestant Religion and ought to be provided against This is Answered by the Fourteenth Instruction Instruct 14. YOu are to pass an Act that
in absence of the party concerned to sugest any thing for clearing of himself the privat Informers became engaged to hold by what they had once Declared under the pain and disgrace of Perjury by this Instruction which is fuller than the Grievance His Majesty consents to secure His Subjects from such Inquisitions But in regard of the Machinations and Plots which may be necessar for the Government to be discovered at this present Juncture Therefore His Majesty doth Remit to the Parliament to Consider what is proper at this time that they might fall upon some Temporary Remeid as the Parliament of England had done in relation to the Habeas Corpus or Suspending the Commensment of this Law for some time Article 5. Grievance THat Assises of Error are a Grievance and that Juries be considered by Parliament This Article is Answered by the seventh Instruction Instruction 7. YOu are to pass an Act either to take away Assises of Error or otherwaies that they shall take place as well against the Jurie that Condemns as against the Jurie that Assoilȝies any Pannel By the Law and Custom of Scotland the Criminal Judge doth Cognosce and Determine the Relivancy of an Inditement and the Jury doth only Consider the Probation adduced and give their Verdict whether the Pannel be guilty or not guilty And this is a singular Custom in Scotland that when upon the Juries Verdict the Pannel or Party accused is Absolved that Jury was lyable to be Conveened before a Grand Jury and the persons might be found guilty as Temere Jurantes super Assisam for acquiting ●he Criminal but in case they did Condemn the Jury was not lyable to an Assise of Error This hath been introduced in the simplicity of antient times when Juries were more prone to Mercy than Severity because it was presumed no man would pass upon a Jury willingly to Condemn his Neighbour if he did thereby expose himself But in the latter times this has been found a great Inconveniency and Juries may be affrighted and imposed upon to Condemn persons because the King's Advocat may Protest for Assise of Error in case they acquit whereas they are secure if they Condemn and therefore the King hath consented that the Parliament make their own choice whether they will take away Assise of Error in all cases or if they will make Juries lyable for Condemning as well as acquitting Pannels Article 6. Grievance THat the 18 Act of Parliament 1681. Declaring a Cumulative Jurisdiction is a Grievance This sixth Article of the Grievance is Answered by the eight Instruction thus Instruction 8. YOu are to pass an Act Rescinding the eighteenth A●… of Parliament 1681. Asserting the Prerogative i● point of Jurisdiction This sixth Article of the Grievances and eighth Instruction i● Answer thereto will be best understood by the Act it self to whic● they relate Follows the Act. ACT Asserting His Majesties Prerogative in point of Jurisdiction September 16. 1681. THe Estates of Parliament Considering That all Goveenment an● Jurisdiction within this His Majesties Antient Kingdom o● Scotland does originally Reside in His Sacred Majesty Hi● lawful Heirs and Successors And though His Majesty and His Royal Predecessors have bestowed Offices and Jurisdictions upon severals o● His well deserving Subjects yet these are not privative of His Jurisdiction They do therefore in a dutiful and humble Recognisance of His Majesties Royal Right and Prerogative as to this Point Declare That notwithstanding of these Jurisdictions and Office● His Sacred Majesty may by Himself or any Commissionat by Him take Cognisance ●nd Decision of any Cases or Causes He pleases Shortly after this Act there was a Commission under the Great Seal to the Lords of Session rendring their places Arbitrary and ●d placitum in which the Lord Stair President of the Session Lord Newbyth and others were left out These the King hath now Restored to their places according to His Declaration and even Heretable Jurisdictions were Invaded and not only matters Civil but the highest Points of Criminal Jurisdiction were commit●ed to Soldiers and other persons who were Impowered Summarly to Execute to the Death free Subjects without any formality of Process or Jury and many persons were taken off that way whereby the ordinary Legal Judicatures might be rendred ●neffectual And the King had Power to Judge every Scots-man either for his Life or Fortune by himself or such persons as he pleased to appoint and to Avocat Causes to be Cognosced by His Courtiers at Whitehall This gave the King the greatest latitude ●f Arbitrary Power imaginable and more than is practised in any ●lace of Europe And when such Laws are once Established in ●avours of the Crown we seldom see Princes willing to Renounce ●hem but only to moderat the Execution in ordinary Cases re●erving alwayes the Power and Capacity to themselves But by ●his Instruction our King was willing to part with this extravagant Power and it is matter of Surprise that He was not taken at His Word Article 7. Grievance THat the Commissariot Courts as they are now Constitute are a Grievance This is Answered by the ninth Instruction ●nstruction 9. YOu are to pass an Act for Regulating the Abuses in the Commissary Courts and all other inferior Courts The Commissars were a most Antient Constitution the Nomination of them was committed to Church-men but after the Reformation the Bishops being excluded the Nomination of the Commissars did fall to the King and after the Restitution of Episcopacy in Anno 1606 the Nomination of the Commissars was given to the Bishops as their Officials and they are the sole Judges in the first Instance of Scandel Matrimony Divorce and several other Matters which have alwayes been reserved in the hands of the Clergy as the Confirmation of Testaments and ordering the performance of the Wills and Legacies of Defuncts and the Provisions of Relicts and Orphans In this Grievance it is Represented That there are Errors according to the present Constitution of this Court yet these Errors are not specified Nevertheles● the King remits it to the Parliament to Rectifie whatsoever they thought amiss in this Court and the Instruction is much larger tha● the Grievance for thereby the King Remits it to the Parliamen● to Regulat all inferior Courts Article 8. Grievance THat the 27 Act of the Parliament 1663. Giving th● King power to Impose Custom at His Pleasure upo● Forraign Import and Trade is a Grievance an● prejudicial to the Trade of the Nation This is Answered by the seventeenth Instruction Instruction 17. YOu are to endeavour to procure an Act or Act● for the encouragment of Trade and if the 2● Act of the Parliament 1663. be found inco●venient it may be Regulat or Rescinded and when the Prop●sals are Adjusted you are to transmit them to Us that you ma● receive Our Instructions thereanent For the better understanding of this Grievance I have set dow● the Act it self ACT Asserting His Majesties Prerogative in the Ordering and