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A87520 The vvorks of that grave and learned lavvyer Iudge Ienkins, prisoner in Newgate. Upon divers statutes, concerning the liberty, and freedome of the subject. With a perfect table thereto annexed. Jenkins, David, 1582-1663. 1648 (1648) Wing J574; Thomason E1154_2; ESTC R20801 80,714 206

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Commissioners to tax men secundum facul●ates and so make all mens estates Arbitrary the answer is that in l●vying of publicke aydes upon mens goods and estates which are variable and probably cannot be certainly knowne by any but the owners it is impossible to avoyd discretion in the assesments for so it ever was and ever will bee By this appeares that the Votes of the two Houses against the Commission of Array were against the Law The death of the King dissolves the Parliament H. 9. if Kings should referre to the politick capacity it would continue after his death 2 H. 5 ● par● instit ●6 4 pars Iust 46 which proves that the King cannot be said to be there wh●● he is absent as now he is there is no inter regnum in the Kingdome the dissolution of the Parliament by hi● death shewes that the beginning and end thereof referrs to the naturall person of the King and therefore he may lawfully refuse the Propositions 2. H. 5 Chap. 6. to the King onely it belongs to make Leagues with Forraigne Princes this shewes where the supreame power is and to whom the Militia belongs 8. H. 6. numb 57. Rott Parl. Cooks 4 pars instit 25. H. 6. No priviledge of Parliament is grantable for treason felony or breach of the peace if not to any one Member not to two not to ten not to the major part 19 H. 6.62 The Law is the inheritance of the King and his people by which they are ruled King and people And the people are by the Law bound to ayd the King and the King hath an inheritance to hold Parliaments and in the ayds granted by the Commonalty If the major part of a Parliament commit treason they must not be Judges of it for no man or body can be Judge in his own cause and aswel as ten or any number may commit treason the greater number may aswell The King by his Letters patents may constitute a County palatine and grant Regall rights 32 H. 6.13 Plowd 334. this shewes where the supreame power is 17. Ed. 4. Rot. Parl. numb 39. Ed. 4. No priviledge of Parliament is grantable for treason fellony or breach of the peace if not for one not for two or more or a major part The same persons must not bee Judge and party Calvins Case 7. pars fol. 11 12. A corporate body can commit no treason nor can treason be committed against a corporate body 21. E. 4.13 and 14. but the persons of the men who make that body may commit treason and commit it against the naturall person of him who to some purposes is a body corporate but quatenus corporate no treason can bee committed by or against such a body that body hath no soule no life and subsists onely by the fiction of the Law and for that reason the Law doth conclude as aforesaid Plow com 213. therefore the Statue of 25. E. 3. must bee intended of the Kings naturall person conjoyned with the politique which are inseparable and the Kings naturall person being at Holmby his politique is there also and not at Westminster for the politique and naturall make one body indivisible If all the people of England should breake the league made with a forraigne Prince 19 Ed. 4.46 22 Rd. 4. Fitz. jurisdiction ●●st plaeite without the Kings consent the league holds is not broken and therefore the representative body is inferiour to his Majesties The King may erect a Court of Common pleas in what part of the Kingdome he pleaseth by his letters patents can the two Houses do the like 1 Ed. 5. fol. 2 It cannot be said that the King doth wrong 1 Ed. 5. 4 Ed. 4.25 5 Ed. 4 29. declared by all the Judges and Serjeants at Law then there The reason is nothing can be done in this Common wealth by the Kings grant or any other act of his as to the Subjects persons goods Lands or liberties but must be according to established Lawes which the Judges are sworne to observe and deliver betweene the King and his people impartially to rich and poore high and low 2 Pars instit 158. and therefore the Justices and the Ministers of Justice are to be questioned and punished if the Lawes be violated and no reflection to be made on the King All Counsellors and Judges for a yeere and three moneths untill the tumults began this Parliament were all left to the ordinary cause of Justice what hath been done sithence is notorious For great Causes and considerations an Act of Parliament was made for the surety of the said Kings person R. 3. 1 R. 3. cap. 15. if a Parliament were so tender of King Rich. the 3. the Houses have greater reason to care for the preservation of his Majesty The Subjects are bound by their allegiance to serve the King for the time being H●n 7. 11 H. 7. c. 1. against every Rebellion power and might reared against him within this Land that it is against all Lawes reason and good conscience if the King should happen to be vanquished that for the said deed and true duty and allegiance they should suffer in any thing it is ordained they should not and all Acts of processe of Law hereafter to be made to the contrary are to be void This Law is to be understood of the naturall Person of the King for his politick capacity cannot be vanquished nor war reared against it Relapsers are to have no benefit of this Act. It is no Statute ●● H. 7.20 4 H. 7.18 Henry 8. 7 H. 7.14 if the King assent not to it and he may disassent this proves the negative voice The King hath full power in all causes to do justice to all men 24 H. 8. c. 12. 25 H. 8. c. 28 this is affirmed of the King and not of the two Houses The Commons in Parliament acknowledge no superiour to the King under God the House of Commons confesse the King to be above the representative body of the Realm Of good right and equity the whole and sole power of pardoning treasons fellonies c. 27 H. 8. c. 2● Note belong to the King as also to make all Justices of Oyer and Terminer Judges Justices of the peace c. This Law condemns the practice of both Houses at this time The Kings Royall Assent to any Act of Parliament signed with his hand expressed in his Letters patents under the great Seale and declared to the Lords and Commons shall be as effectuall 33 H. 8. cap. 21. as if he assented in his owne person a vaine Act if the King be virtually in the Houses The King is the head of the Parliament the Lords the principal members of the body Dier 38. H. 8. fo 59.60 the Commons the inferiour members and so the body is composed therefore there is no more Parliament without a King then there is a body without a head There is
THE VVORKS OF THAT GRAVE and LEARNED LAVVYER Iudge Ienkins Prisoner in Newgate UPON Divers STATUTES Concerning the Liberty and Freedome of the Subject With a perfect Table thereto annexed Plebs sine Lege ruit LONDON Printed for J. Gyles and are sold at his shop at Furnivals-Inne MDCXLVIII Here JENKINS stands who thundring from the TOWER Shook the bold Senat 's Legislative Power Six of whose words twelve Reames of votes exceed As mountaines mov'd by graines of mustard-seed Thus gasping Lawes were rescu'd from the Snare He that will save a Crowne must know and dare Sould by I. Giles at Furnivals-Inn-gaw J. Berkenhead The Contents The Law of the Land The King Treason A Parliament The present Parliament Certaine Erroneus Positions and Proceedings of both Houses of Parliament The like of the House of Commons The Propositions of the Parliament of both Kingdomes sent to New-Castle The Kings Party The Parliaments Party are Delinquents The Army serving the two Houses The Army Rescuing the King The Liberty of the Subject Messellan●a The Law of the Land THE Law of the Land hath for its ground 1. Custome 2. Judiciall Records 3. Acts of Parliament The two latter being Declarations of the Common Law and custome of the Realme pag. 5.21.23 The Law of Royall Government is a Law Fundamentall p. 5. The Kings Prerogative and the Subjects Liberty are determined and bounded by the Law p. 131. The King claimes no power but by the law of the land p. 131. The Law the onely Rule and Direction of the Subject in this present Warre pag. 42 131. Vbi Lex non distinguit ●bi non est distinguendum p. 132. The King THE King of England hath his Title to the Crowne and to his Kingly Office and Power not by way of trust from the two Houses of Parliament or from the people but by inherent Birth-right from God Nature and the Law p. 24 25. 38. 52 53 54 56. 57. There was never King Deposed but in tumultuous and madde times and by the power of the Armyes and they who were to bee the succeeding Kings in the head of them as Ed 3. and Hen. 4. p. 54. Usurpers were Kings de fact● not de jure p. 54. The King is assisted by the advice of the Judges his Counsell at Law Sollicitor Atturney Masters of Chancery and counsell of State hence the Law hath setled severall Powers in the King p. 27.28 The Kings of England enjoyed that Power in a full measure till King Iohns time p 6 7 8. How Rights of Soveraignty continued in practise from Hen. 3. till 1640 p. 6. The Kings Power not separable from his Person p. 70 71. The Body Naturall and Politique in the King make but one body p. 2.38.71 Every Subject swears homage to the King p. 8. The Law gives reverence to the Person of the King p. 10. Foule mouthed Pamphlets against the King condemned p. 21. The Supream Power is in the King p. 7.13.14.16.57 58. The Oath of Supremacy in relation to the Parliament p. 67.133 The King Supream in Ecclesiasticall causes p. 10. The King the onely Supreame Governour and all other persons have their power from him by his Writ Patent or Commission p. 20 21 22.36 37. 64 65. The power of the Militia is in the King p. 8.37 In the time of Parliament p. 8. The Commission of Array in force p. 13.36 The Power of making League with Forreigners is in the King p. 8.15.17 The power of War in the King p. 20.21 The power of making Officers in the King p. 8. The King onely hath power to make Justices of Peace and of Assize p. 45 100.12● The power of coynadge in the King p. 8. The power of pardoning onely in the King by Law p. 8.66.74.78.84.128.130 The King hath power to remove the courts at Westminster p. 45. The King can do no wrong but his Judges Counsello●●s and Ministers may p. 37.41 So long as men manage the Laws they will be broken more or lesse p. 29. Treason IN the Reign of Ed. 2. the Spencers the Father and the Sonne to cover their Treason hatched in their hearts invented this damnable and damned opinion that Homage and Oath of Allegiance was more by reason of the King● Crowne that is his Politique Capacity than by reason of his person upon which opinion they inferred three execrable and detestable Consequences First if the King do not demeane himselfe by reason in the right of his Crowne his Leidges are bound by Oath to remove the King Secondly seeing the King could not be reformed by suit of Law that ought to be done per asperte that is by force Thirdly his Leidges be bound to Governe in aid of him and in default of him p. 9.70 Severall Treasons by the Statute 25. 8d 3. p. 12 13 14 15 16 76. The word King in the 25. Edw. 3. must be understood of the Kings natural Person p. 12 13 77. Other Treasons not specified in that Act are declared to bee no Treasons untill the King and his Parliament shall declare otherwise p. 77.101 To seize the Kings Forts Ports Magazine of Warre is High Treason p. 11. 22● 37.77 To remove Counsellours by Arms is high Treason p. 22.40 To leavie Warre to alter Religion is high Treason p. 40. To leavie war to alter the Law is high Treason p. 11.40.77 To counterfeit the great Seal is high Treason p. 37. To adhere to any State within the Kingdom but the Kings Majesty is high Treason 24.39 To imprison the King untill hee agree to certaine demands is high Treason p. 1● 22.77 They who imprison the King purpose to destory him p. 163. Deposers of the King adjudged Traitors by the Law of the Land p. 54. A Body Corporate cannot commit Treason but the persons can p. 16. Noble men committing Treason forfeit their Office and Dignity p. 143. Treason how punished by the Law p. 42. Treason doth ever produce fatall destruction to the Offender and never attaines to the desired end and there are two incidents inseparable thereunto p. 135. A Parliament THe word Parliament cometh from the French word Parler to Treat p. 81. The King is Principium Caput Finis Parl. p 26.48.122 The King assembles the Parliament by his Writ Adjournes Prorogues and dissolves the Parliament by the Law at his pleasure p. 57. The Writ whereby the King assembled the two Houses which is called the Writ of Summons at all times and at this Parliament used and which is the warrant ground and foundation of their meeting is for the Lords of the House of Peers to Consult and Treat with the King that is the Parler of great Concernments touching 1. The King 2. The defence of this Kingdome 3. The defence of the Church of England p. 24.34 p. 25.81.120 121. Counsell is not command Councellors are not Commanders p. 26. The Writ of summoning the Judges Counfell of L●w and 12 Masters of Chancery is to appeare and attend the Parliament to give Counsell p.
England and having many adherents And that Statute to that end affirmes no such power in the two Houses which is the question but in Queene Elizabeth and the two Houses which makes against the pretence of this time Master Prynne fol. 104 of his booke intituled the Parliaments supreme power c. Objecting the Statute of the first of Queens Elizabeth and his owne Oath that the King is the onely supreame Goverhour of this Realme Answers The Parliament is the supreme power and the King supreme Governour And yet there he allowes him a Nega●ive Voyce and fol. 107. confesseth that Acts of Parliament translated the Crowne from the right Heires at Common-Law to others who had no good Title then the Parlimentary Title makes not the King so powerfull in truth that it escapes from a man unawares To make a distinction betweene supreame Governour and supreame power is very strange for who can governe without power The King assembles the Parliament by his Writ adjournes Vide Speep 645.4 par Instit 27. 2. prorogues and dissolves the Parliament by the Law at his pleasure as is evident by constant practise the House of Commons never sate after an adjournement of the Parliament by the Kings Command Where is the supreame power The King by his Oath is bound to deny no man right 18 Ob. much lesse the Parliament to agree to all just and necessary Lawes proposed by them to the King This is the substance of the discourse against the Kings Negative Voyce The King is so hound as is set downe in the Objection Sol. but who shall judge whether the Bill proposed be just and necessary For all that they do propose are so pretended and carried in either House sometimes by one or two Voyces or some sew as aforesaid and certainly it hath been shewen the King his Counsell of State his Judges Sergeants Attorney Sollicitor and twelve Masters of the Chancery can better judge of them then two or three or few more Mr. Prynne fol. 45. In his Booke of the Parliaments interest to nominate Prnvy Councellors calleth the opinion of the Spencers to divide the Person of the King from his Crowne Calvins case 7 pars fol. ●1 a stringe opinion and cites Calvins Case but leaves out the conclusions therein mentioned fol. 11. Master Prynne saith there But let this opinion be what it will without the Kings Grace and Pardon it will goe very farre and two Acts of Parliament there mentioned are beyond an opinion And in his Book of the opening of the Great Seale fol. 17. The Parliament hath no jurisdiction to use the Grear Seale for Pardons Generall or Particular Where is the supreme power then Mr. 19. Ob. Prynnes opening of the Seale pag. 19. saith the Noblemen and State the day after the Funerall of King Henry the third King Edward the first his Sonne being in the Holy Land made a new Great Seale and Keepers of the same And in Henry the sixts time in the first yeare of his Reigne the like was done in Parliament A facto all jus Sol. is no good Argument for than in Edward the firsts time it was no Parliament for King Henry the third was dead which dissolyed the Parliament if called in his time and it could be no Parliament of Edward the firsts time for no Writ issued to summon a Parliament in his Name nor could issue but under that New Seale it was so suddainely done after● Henry the thirds death King Edward the first being then in the Holy Land it was the first yeare of his Reigne and no Parliament was held that yeare nor the second yeare of his Reigne The first Parliament that was in his Reigne was in the third yeare of his Reigne as appeares by the printed Acts Also the making of that Seale was by some Lords then present What hand had the Commons in it Concerning the Seale made in Henry the sixths time the Protector was vice-Roy according to the course of Law and so the making of that Seale was by the Protector in the Kings name and that Protector Humphrey Duke of Gloucester as Protectour in the Kings Name summoned that Parliament and was Protector made by the Lords and not in Parliament as appeareth plainely for that Parliament was in the first of Henry the sixth and the first holden in his time and power given by Commission to the said Duke then Protector to summon that Parliament Prynne ibid. fol. 19. But the new counterfeit Seale was made when the King was at Oxford in his owne Kingdome and not in the holy Land Mr. 20 Ob. Prynne in his Booke of the two Houses power to impose Taxes restraines Malignants against any Habea● Corpus c. saith that the Parliament is above Magna Charta and fol. 15. ibid. The Parliament hath power over Magna Charta to repeale the same when there is cause This Argument supposeth that they have the Kings power Sol. which hath appeared formerly they have not But suppose they had Magna Charta containes many Morall Lawes which by the Law of the Land a Parliament cannot alter 21 H. 7.2 D. and Student 2 Dialogue For example it saith cap. 11. Justice shall not be sold delayed nor denyed to any man but by this Argument the Parliament may make Law to delay deny and to sell Justice which surely is a very ill position to maintaine What they would have doth now by the Propositions sent to Newcastie to his Majesty appeare whereby they would have him divest himselfe and settle in them all his Kingly power by Sea and Land and of themselves to have power without him to lay upon the people of this Land what taxes they thinke meet to abolish the Common prayer-booke to abolish Episcopacie and to introduce a Church Government not yet agreed but such as they shall agree on His Majesty finding a prevailing party in both Houses to steere this course and being chased away with Tumults from London leaves the Houses for these Reasons viz. First because to alter the Government for Religion is against the Kings Oath Secondly against their Oaths For every of them hath sworne in this Parliament That His Majesty is the onely supreme Governour in all Causes Ecclesiasticall and over all persons Thirdly this course is against Magna Charta the 1. Chap. and the last Salve sint Episcopis omnes liber tales sue Confirmed by thirty two Acts of Parliament and in the two and fortieth of Edward the third the first Chapter enacts if any Statute be made to the contrary it shall be holden for none and so it is for judgements at Law in the 25 of Edward the 1. chap. 1.2 The great Charter is declared to be the Common Law of the Land Fourthly they endeavout to take away by their Propositions the Government of Bishops which is as ancient as Christianity in this Land and the Books of Common prayet settled by five Acts of Parliament and compiled by
the Reformers and Martyrs and practised in the time of four Princes Fifthly these Propositions taking away from his Majesty all his power by Land and Sea rob him of that which all his Ancestors Kings of this Realme have enjoyed That enjoyment and usage makes the Law and a right by the same to his Majesty They are against their owne Protestation made this Parliament viz. to maintain his Royall Person Honour and Estate They are against their Covenant which doth say that they will not di●inish his just power and Greatnesse For these reasons his Majesty hath lest them and as is beleeved will refuse to agree to the said Propositions as by the fundamentall Law of the Land he may having a Negative Voice to any Bils proposed The result of all is upon the whole matter That the King thus leaving of the Houses and his deniall to passe the said Propositions are so far from making him a Tyrant or not in a condition to governe at the present that thereby he is rendred a just Magnanimous and pious Prince so that by this it appeares clearely to whom the Miseries of these times are to be imputed The remedy for all is an Act of Oblivion and a Generall Pardon God save the King DAVID JENKINS now Prisoner in the Tower 28 Aprilis 1647. The Vindication of Iudge Jenkins Prisoner in the Tower the 29. of April 1647. I Was convened upon Saturday the 10 of this moneth of Aprill before a Committee of the House of Commons wherein Master Co●bet had the Chaire and I was there to be examined upon some questions then to be propounded to me to which questions I refused to give any other answer then that which w●t set downe in a paper I then delivered to the said Mr. Corbet which followeth in these words Gentlemen I stand committed by the House of Commons for High Treason for not acknowledging nor obeying the power of the two Ponses by adhering to the King in this warre I deny this to be Treason for the supreame and onely power by the Lawes of this Land is in the King If I should submit to any examination derived from your vpwir which by the Negative Oath stands in opposition to the Kings power I should confesse the power to be in you and so condemne my selfe for a Traitour which I neither ought nor will do I am sworne to obey the King and the Lawes of the Land you have not power to examine me by those Lawes but by the Kings writ Patent or Commission if you can produce either thereof I will answer the questions you shall propound otherwiss I cannot answer thereto without the breach of my Oath and the violation of the Lawes which I will not do to save my life You your selves all of you this Parliament hive sworne that the King is our onely and supreame Governour your Protestation your Vow and Covenant your solemne League and Covenant your Declarations all of them publisht to the Kingdome that your scope is the maintenance of the Lawes those Lawes are and must be derived to us and enlivened by the onely supreame Governour the Fountaine of Iustice and the life of the Law the King The Parliaments are called by his writs the Iudges sit by his Patents so of all other D●cers the Cities aud ●ownes corporate governe by the Kings Charters and therefore since by the Law I cannot be examin●b by you without a power verive● by his M●jesty I neither can nor will nor ougte you to examine me upon any questions But if as private Gentlemen you shall be pleased to 〈◊〉 me any questions I shall really and truely answer ev●ry such question as you shall demand April 10. 1647. David Jenkins This Paper hath beene mis-represented to the good people of this City by a printed one stilling it my Recantation which I owne not and besides is in it selfe repugnant just like these times the Body fals out with the Head To vindicate my selfe from that Recantation and to publish to the world the realty of the Paper then delivered to Mr. Corb●t and the matter therein contained I have published this ensuing discourse No person who● hath committed Treason Mutter 〈◊〉 ●elony hath any assurance at all for so much as one houre of life Lands or Goods without the Kings gr●tions pardon 27. Hen. 8. cap. 24. The King is not virtually in the two Houses at VVestminster whereby they may give any assurance at all to any person in any thing for any such offence 1. The House of Commons have beelar●d to the Kingdome in their Declaration of the 28 of November last to the ●cots Papers p. 8. That the King at this time is not in a condition to gover●e No person or thing can derive a vertue to other men or things which it selfe hath not and therefore it is impossible that they should have a vertue from the King to govern which they declare he hath not himselfe to give 2 The Law of the Land is 5 Elizab. cap. 1. That no person in any Parliament hath a vayce in the House of Commons but that he stands a p●rson to all intents and purposes as if he had uev●r boeu elect●d or returned if before he sit in the Hause he take not h●s Dat● upon the holy Evangel sts that the Kings Majesty is the onely ond supreame Governour over all persons in all Canses All the Members of the said House have taken it and at all times as they are returned do take it otherwise they have no colour to intermeddle with the publick Affaires How doth this Solemne and Legall Oath agree with their said Declaration That the King is in no condition to govern 〈◊〉 By the one it is sworne he is the only supreme Governour by the other that he is not in a condition to governe 3. The Oath is not that the King was or ought to be or had been before he was seduced by ill Councell our onely and supreame Governour in all Causes over all persons but in the present tense that he i● on t only and supream Governont at this present in all causes and over all persons So they the same persons swear one thing and declare to the Kingdome the contrary of the same thing at the same time in that which concerneth the weale of all this Nation 4 The Ministers in the Pulpits do not say what they swear in the House of Commons Who ever heard fi●hence this unnaturall Warre any of their Presbyters attribute that to his Majesty which they sweare The reason is their Oath is taken at westminster amongst themselves that which their Ministers pray and preach goes amongst the people To tell the people that the King is now their only and supreame Governour in all Causes is contrary to that the Houses doe now practise and to all they act and maintaine They the two Houses forsooth are the only and supreame Governours in default of the King for that he hath lest his great Councell and
will not come to them and yet the King desires to come but they wil not suffer him but keepe him prisoner at Holmby so well doe their Actions and Oathes agree 5. They sweare now King Charies is their only and supreame Governor but with a resolution at the time of the Oath taking and before and after that he shall not be only or supreame Governour or only and supreame but not any Governour at all For there is no point of Government but for some yeares past they have taken to themselves and used his name only to abuse and deceive the people 6. That this virtuall power is a meere fiction their Propositions sent to Oxford to Neweastle to be signed by the King doe prove it so What needs this adoe if they have the virtuall Power with them at Wistminster 7. To affirme that the Kings power which is the vertue they talke of is separable from his person is High Treason by the Law of the Land which is so declared by that learned man of the Law Sir Edward Cocke so much magnified by this present Parliament who in the 7 part of his Reports in Calving case fol. 11 saith thus In the reigne of Edward the second the Supencers the Father and Sonne to cover the Treason hat hed in their hearts invented this damnable and damned opinion that homage and Oath of Legeance was more by reason of the I Kings Crowne that is of his potitick capacity theu by reason of ohe person of the King upon which ●●inion they inferred three execra●le and detestable consequences h. If the King to not demeaue himselfe by reason in the right of his Crowne his Lieges are bound ●y Oath to remove the King 2 seeing that the King ●ould not be retormed by ●nte of Law that ought so be dene per aspertes that is by orce 3. That his Lieges be beund to governe in ●yde of him and in default of him all which w●re condemned by two Parliaments one in the raigue of Edw. 2. called exilium Hugonis le Spencer and the other in anno 1. Edw 3 cap. 2. And that the naturall body and politick maks one indivisible body that these two bodies incorporate in one person make one body and not divers is resolved as the Law of Eng. 4 Ed 3 Ploydon Com. fol. 213 by Sir Co bet Catlin L. Chiefe Justice of Eng. Sir I●mes D●er L. Chief Justice of the Common pleas the L. Sanders L. Chief Baron of the Exche●ner by the rest of the Judges viz. Justice Restall Justice Browne Justice Corbet Justice weston Baron Frevyl● Carus and Pow●rel Sergeant to the Queene Gerrard Auturny Generall Carell Atturney of the Dutchy P●owdon the learnedest man of that age in the knowledge of the Law and Customes of the Realme 8. The Law in all ages without any controversie is and hath been that no Act of Parliament bindes the Subjects of the Land without the assent of the King ● H●● 3 Mogn Charta So in every Age till this d●y and in every Kings time as appeares by the Acts in Print 1 part of the Iustit Sect. 234. 〈◊〉 fine where many of the Law-Bookes are ●iied 7 Hen. 7.14.12 of Hen. 7.20 either for Person Lauds Goods or Fame No man can shew any sillable letter or line to the contrary in the bookes of the Law or printed Acts of Parliament in any age in this Land If the virtuall power be in the Houses there needs no assent of the Kings The stiles of the Acts printed from 9 Hen. 3. to 1 Hen. 7. were either The King ordaines at his Parliament c. or the King ordaineth by the adv●ee of his Prelates and Bar●●rs and at the humble Petition of the Commons c. In Hen. 7. his time the Stile altered and hath fithence continued thus It is o●dained by the Kings Majesty and the Lords spirituall and temporall and Commons in this present Parliament assembled So that alwayes the Assent of the King giveth the life to all as the soule to the body and therefore our Law bookes call the King the Fountaine of Justice and the life of the Law 9. 2 Han. 4 Cap 22 4 pars instit 42. Mr. ●●in in his Treatise of the great Seal fol. 17.27 Hen. 8 Chap. 24. Mercy as well as Justice belongs by the Law of the Land onely to the King This is confessed by Mr. Pryn and it is so without any question The King can onely pardon and never more cause to have sufficient pardons then in such troublesome times as these and God send us pardons and peace None can give any pardon but the King by the Law of the Land The whole and sole power of pardoning Treasons and Felonies belongs to the King are the words of the Law and it is a delusion to take it from any other and utterly invalid 27. Hen. 8. c. 24. 10. Queene Elizabeth summoned her first Parliament to bee held the 23. of Jan. in the first yeare of her Majesties Raigne The Lords and commons assembled by force of the same Writ the 21 day the Queen fell sick and could not appeare in her person in Parliament that day and therefore prorogued it untill the 25 of the same Month of January Resolved by all the Judges of England that the Parliament began not the day of the returne of the Writ 3 of Eliz. Dier 2●3 viz. the 23. of January when the Lords and Commons appeared but the 25 of the said Moneth when the Queene came in person which sheweth evidently that this virtuall presence is a meere deluding fiction that hath no ground in Law reason or sence They have the King now a prisoner at Holmby with guards upon him and yet they governe by the virtuall power of their prisoner These are some few of the causes and reasons which moved me to deliver that paper to Mr. Corbet which I am ready to justifie with my life and should hold it a great honour to dye for the honourable and holy Lawes of the Land that which will save this Land from destruction is an Act of Oblivion and his Majesties gracious generall pardon the Souldiers their Arrears and euery man his own and truth and Peace established in the Land and a favourable regard had to the satisfaction of tender Consciences April 29. 1547. David Ienkins THE ARMIES INDEMNITY WITH ADDITION Together with a DECLARATION SHEWING How every Subject of ENGLAND ought to be tried for Treasons Felonies and all other Capital Crimes as is set down in the Lawes of the LAND By DAVID IENKINS now Prisoner in the Tower of London Printed in the Yeare 1648. The Armies Imdemnity c. UPon the publishing of the Ordinance of the 22 of May last for the Indemnity of the Army certaine Gentlemen well affected to the peace of the Kingdome and safety of the Army desired mee to set down in writing whether by the Law of the Land the said Ordinance did secure them from danger as to
affirmes That the sending propositions to the King and desiring his concurrence is scarce worth an answer for Subjects may humbly petition for that which is their strict right property c. The propositions sent to Newcastle are in print wherein the two Houses are so farre from humbly petitioning that they stile not themselves his Majesties Subjects as appeares by the propositions That they have a strict right or property to any one of these propositions is a strange assertion every one of them being against the Lawes now in force Have the two Houses a strict right property to lay upon the people what Taxes they shall judge meet To pardon all Treasons c. that is one of their Propositions Have they a strict right and property to pardon themselves and so for all the rest of their Propositions These propositions have been Voted by both Houses the Kings assent they being drawn into Bills makes them Acts of Parliament Hath the King no ●ight to assent or dis-assent 12 H. 7 20. 1 Iac. c. 1.1 Car. c. 7. Wa● the sending but a Complement All our Law-books and Statutes speak otherwise This Gent. and others must give an account one time o● other for such delusions put upon the people AD. 4. The Gent. saith They affirme not that the Kings power is separated from his person so as the two Spencer affirmed c. His Majesties person i● now at Hol●by under their Guards have they not severed his power from him when by no power they have left him he can have two of his Chaplains who have not taken their Covenant to attend him for the exercise of his conscience For the three conclusions of the Spencers 15. Ed 2. Exilium Hugonis Calvins case 1 E. c. 2.7 pars ●●ports 11. do not the two Houses act every of them They say his Majesty hath broken his Trust touching the Government of his people They have raised armies to take him they haue taken him and imprisoned him they governe themselves they make Laws impose Taxes make Judges Sheriffes and take upon them omnia insignia summae potestatis Is not this to remove the King for misdemeanours to reforme per asperte to govern in aid of him the three conclusions of the Spencers Doe they think the good people of England are become stupid and will not at length see these things The Gentleman saith Plowd 4. Eliz. 213. the Kings Power and his person are indivisible They doe not separate his power from his Person but distinguish it c. His power is in his legall Writs Courts and Officers when they counterfeit the Great Seal and seale Writs with the same make Judges themselves Courts and Officers by their owne Ordinances against his consent declared under his true Great Seale of England not by word of mouth letters or ministers onely their Seale is obeyed their own Writs their own Judges their owne Courts their own Officers and not the Kings The time will come when such strange actions discourses will be lamented AD. 5. The Gentleman goes on We take not from the King all power of pardening Delinguents we only say it is not proper to him quarto modo c. What doe you meane by quarte modo I am sure Omnis Rex Angliae solus Rex semper Rex can doe it and none else read the bookes of the Law to this purpose collected by that reverend and learned Judge Stanford Stanford pleas 99. 27 H. 8. c. 24. Dier 163. from all Antiquity to his time who died in the last yeare of King Philip and Queene Maries Reigne you shall finde this a truth undeniable and this power was never questioned in any Age in any Book by any untill this time that every thing is put to the question You Gentlemen who pro●esse the Law and maintaine the party against the King returne at length and bring not so much scandall upon the Law which preserves all by publishing such incredible things We hold only what the law holds Bract. lib 3 cap 14. fol. 132. 1. pars Instit pag. 344. Plow 3. Eliz 236. 237. the Kings Prerogative and the subjects Liberty are determined and bounded and admeasured by a written Law what they are we doe not hold the King to have any more power neither doth his majesty claime any other but what ●he Law gives him the two Houses by the Law of this Land have no colour of power either to make Delinquents or pardon Delinquents the King contradicting and the Army under Sir Thomas Fairfax howbeit but Souldiers doe now understand that to be Law and doe now evidently see and assuredly know that it is not an Ordinance of the two Houses but an art of Parliament made by the King Lords and Commons that will secure them and let this Army remember their exccuted fellow-Souldier and the Law was alwaies so taken by all men untill these troubles that have bego● Monsters of opinions AD. 6. This Gentleman sayes The Parliament hath declared the King to be 〈◊〉 condition to governe c. There is no end of your distinctions I and you professe the Law shew me Law for your distinctions or l●tter syllable or line in any Age in the books of the Law that the King may in one time be in no condition to govern and yet have the habit of governing and another time he may viz when the two Houses will suffer him the Law saith thus Vbi lex non distinguit non est distinguendum He saies The King is not barred from returning to His Parliament as he calls the two Houses he knowes the contrary the whole City knows the contrary Nos juris consulti sumus sacerdotes as Justinian the Emperour hath it in the first book of his Institutions and therefore knowledge and truth should come from our lips Worthy and ingenious men will remember and reflect upon that passage of that good and wise man Seneca Non qua itur sed qua eundum follow not the wayes of the Lawyers of the House of Commons God forgive them I am sure the King will if they be wise and seek it in time AD. 7. The Gent sayes ●e swear that the King is our supreme Goverour ouer all persons in all causes 5 Eliz. ch 1. Cawdreys case 5 pars fol. 1. c. Why hath he left out the word onely for the Oath the Members now take is that King Charles is now the only and supreame Governour in all causes over all persons and yet they keep their only Supreme Governour now in prison and act now in Parliament by vertue of their prisoners Writ and by a concurrent power in this Parliament and by their own strict right and property as the Gentleman affirms in his Answer These things agree well with their Oath This Oath is allowed by the common-Law Law of the Land that the King is the onely Supreame Governour in all causes over all persons This Oath is taken now in
the Parliament time by all the Members of the House of Commons and is required by the Law to be taken in all Parliaments otherwise they have no power nor colour to meddle with the publick Affaires This Oath being taken in Parliament that the King is the only and Supream Governour in al causes then it followes in Parliament causes over all persons then over the two Houses Let them keep this Oath and we shall bee sure of Peace in the Land and good Lawyers ought to desire peace both for the publicke good and their private and not dishonour that Noble profession as many doe in this miserable time The Gent. sayes Wee do not swear that the King is above all Law nor above the safety of his people neither do we so swear but his Majesty and we will sweare to the contrary and have sworne and have made good and will by Gods grace make good our Oath to the world that the KING is not above the Lawe nor above the safety of his people the Law and the safety of his people are his safety his Honour and his Strength AD 8. The Gent. concludes That Acts of Parliament are not formaly binding nor compleat without the Kings assent yet the Houses have a virtual power with out the Kings particular assent to doe things in order to publique justice and Safety viz. In setting up the Excise in raising and maintaining of Armes in Taxing the people at pleasure with Fifth and Twentieth part Fifty Subsidies Sequestrations Loans Compositions imprisoning the King abolishing the Common prayer Book felling the Churchs Lands c. all these are in order to the publick Justice and Safety Mr. H. P. you are of my profession I beseech you for the good of your Country for the Honour of our Science perswade your selfe and others as much as in you lies to beleeve and follow the monition and councell of that memorable reverend and profoundly Learned in the Lawes and Customes of the Land the Lord COOKI 3 par Inst pag 36. who writes as becomes a great and a learned Iudge of the Law a person much magnified by the two Houses in these words Peruse over all Books Records and Histories and you shall finde a Principle in Law a Rule in Reason and a Triall in Experience that Treason doth ever produce farall and finall destruction to the offender and never attains to the desired end two incidents inseparably thereun●o therefore let al men abandon it as the poysonou● bait of the divil follow the Precept in Holy Scripture SERVE GOD HONOUR THE KING AND HAVE NO COMPANY WITH THE SEDITIOVS Conclusion I say againe that without an Act of Oblivion a gratious Generall pardon from his Majesty the arrears of the Souldiers paid a favourable regard had to tender Consciences the●e will he neither Truth nor Peace in this Land nor any mans●cure of any thing he hath By me David Jenkins Prisoner in the Tower A DISCOURSE TOVCHING The Inconveniencies of a Long-continued PARLIAMENT A Perpetuall Parliament is repugnant to the Act made this Parliament for a Triennial Parliament for how can every three yeares a Parliament beginne if this bee perpetuall which may bee so if the two Houses please 2. An adjournment of the Parli●ment makes no Session 4 pars institut fol. 27. Howbeit before the adjournment the KING gives His Royall assent to some Bills Cookeibid 3. There is no Session till a Prorogation or dissolution of the Parliament 4. This Parliament as appe●res by the Act for not dissolving thereof set downe in the printed Statutes of this Parliament Plowd com 33.8 Bro. relation 35. Bro Parl. 86. D●● 1. Mariae 8 fol. 138. cannot be prorog●ed or dissolved but by Act of par liamènt There hath been as yet no Act of Parliament in that behalfe And therefore all the Acts of this Parliament are Acts of one Session 5. All Acts of one Session relate to the first day of the Parliament and all the Acts of such a Parliament are acts of one day so the Act for the Trienniall and the Act for this Perpetuall are two Acts of one day by the Law 6. 4 Ed. 3. cap. 36. Ed. 3. cap. 10. A Parliament is to be hol●en once every yeare and more often if need shall bee those Acts are confirmed by the Act for the Trienniall Parliament How doth a perpetuall Parliament agree with a Parliament once every yeare or with the intention of those Lawes How doth a Parliament every three-years agree with a Parliament for ever which may be if the two Houses please 7. The result is this at●ent day in Law this Parliament two acts have passed for howbeit the one was in 16 Carol. and the other in 17 Carol. yet both in Law are Acts of one day the one saith there shall be a Trienniall Parliament after the end of the sitting of this Parliament The other this Parliament shall sit for ever if they please The one will have a Parliament with an end the other a Parliament without an end When an Act of Parliament is against common Right or Reason 1 Pars. Doct. Bon. hams case ●o 11 8. 8. E. 3 3.30.33 E. cassa●it 32. 27. H. G. Anuity 41. 1. Eliz. D●er 113. or repugnant or impossible to be performed the Common Law shall controle it and adjudg this Act to be void they are the words of the Law An Act of Parliament that a Man shall be judg in his own Cause is a void Act. Hobbart Fol. 120. Begin with Common Right It is against Common Right that indebted men should not pay their debts That if any Member of the House of Commons doe any Subject wrong by disseising him of his land or dispossessing him of his goods or blasting of his fame or doing violence to his person that such persons during their lives should not be questioned by a Priviledg of Parliament and that extended also to many other beside themselves common right doth abhor these Enormities which a perpetuall Parliament doth beget besides the utter destruction of al mens actions real personall or mixt 21. Iac c. 16. who have to doe with Parliament-men by the statute of Limitation which confines Suites to certaine yeares For Common Reason Parliaments were ordained for remedies to redresse publique greivances it is against reason they should make publique and insufferable Grievances The Law of the Land allowes no protection for any men imployed in the service of the Kingdome but for a yeare to be free from Suites and in many Suites none at all howbeit he be in such service 39. H. 6.39 but a Parliament perpetuall may prove a protection not for a yeare but for ever which is against all manner of reason For impossibility The death of his Majesty whose life God prolong dissolves 〈◊〉 necessarily for the Writ of Summons i● Carolus Rex in hoc individuo and Carolus Rex is in this particular habiturus colloquium tractatum cum prelat is
116. The Writ of summoning the Commons is to doe and to cons●nt to such things which shall happen to bee ordained by Common Counsell there viz. in the Parliament p. 25.26.115 The Parliament is a Corporation composed of the King the head and the Lords and Commons the Subject body p. 5. l. 22. p. 19.20.49.50.80.122.142.145.146 And it hath power over our Lives Libertyes Lawes and Goods p. 118. The Court of Parliament is onely in the House of Lords where the King sits in person p. 116.122.144 The Office of the Lords is to Counsell the King in time of Peace and to defend him in time of War p. 116.142 It belongs to the House of Lords to reforme erroneous Iudgements given in the Kings Bench to redresse the delayes of Courts of Iustice to receive all Petitions to advise his Majesty with their Counsell to have their Votes in Voting or abrogating of Laws and to propose for the Common good what they conceive meet p. 33. How Errours in Iudgement are reversed by the House of Lords p. 55. At a Conferrence the Commons are alwaies uncovered and stand when the Lords sit with their hats on which shewes that they are not Colleagues in Iudgement with the Lords p. 147. Every Member of the House of Commons takes the Oath of Allegiance and Supremacy before his admission into the House p. 67.133 Briberies Extortions Monopolyes ought to bee enquired after by the House of Commons and complained of to the King and Lords p. 114. It belongs to the House of Commons to represent the Grievances of the Countrey to grant Aydes for the King upon all fit occasions extraordinary to assent to the making or abrogating Lawes p. 33.115 116 117 118. Because making of new and abrogating of old Lawes both induce Novelties and because Bils in both Houses may passe but by one or two voices or very few and perhaps of no Iudicious men who oftentimes carry it by making the Major part which involves the consent of all therefore the Law makes the King assisted therein by a great number of Grave Learned and Prudent men the Judge of those Bils whether they be necessary for the Publique Good or no. p. 32 3● 53.57.123 And the King upon all Bills hath liberty of assenting or dissenting p. 18.28.39.111 And in case of the Kings Minority the Protector hath his liberty and negative voice in respect of the King p. 52. The styles of the Acts printed from 9. Hen. 3. to 1. Hen. 7. were either the King Ordaines at his Parliament c. Or the King Ordaineth by the advice of his Prelates and Barons and at the humble petition of the Commons c. In Hen. 7. time the style was altered and hath so continued to this day p. 24.71 No Act of Parliament bindes the Subject without the assent of the King p. 71.72 When an Act of Parliament is against common Right or Reason or repugnant or impossible to bee performed the Common Law shall controle it and adjudge it to be void And such is an Act for a perpetual Parliament p. 139. An Act of Parliament that a man shall bee Iudge in his own cause is a voyd Act. p. 139. An Adjournment of the parliament makes no S●ssion p. 137. There is no S●ssion till a prorogation or dissolution of the Parliament p. 137. All the Acts of one S●ssion relate to the first day of the Parliament p 138. The two Houses ought to take care of the preservation of the Kings Person p. 18. The Lords and Commons cannot assent to any thing that tends to the disinherison of the King and his Crown to which they are sworn p. 11. The two Houses ought not to meddle with the Kings Revenue p. 11. Armes are not to be borne in London or Westminster in time of Parliament p. 8.39 The Priviledge of Parliament protects no man in case of Treason or ●elony p. 15.16 78. Parliaments are as the times are if a turbulent Faction prevailes the Parliament are wicked if the times be sober modest prudent and not biassed the Parliament are right good honourable and good Medicines and Salves p. 41.42 The present Parliament THis Parliament beganne 3. Novemb. 1640 and in the beginning thereof the King acquitted the Ship-Money Knighthood-Money seven Courts of Justice consented to a Tri●niall parliament setled the Forrest bounds tooke away the Clarke of the Market of the Houshold trusted the Houses with the Navy passed an Act not to dissolve this Parliament without the Houses assent No people in the world so free if they could have been content with Lawes Oathes and Reason and nothing more could nor can bee devised to serve us neither hath been in any time before p. 3● Notwithstanding all this Jan. 10. 1641. the King was driven away from London by frequent Tumults and 2. thirds and more of the Lords had deserted that House for the same cause and the greater put of the House of Commons left that House also for the same reason New men chosen in their places against Law by the pretended Warrant of a counterfeit Seale and in the Kings name against his consent leavying War against Him and seizing his Forts Ports Magazins and Revenue and converting them to his destruction the subversion of the Law and Land laying Taxes on the people never head of before in this Land devising new Oathes to oppose the Forces raised by the King c. p. 35. From the 3 Novem. 1640. u●●o Ian. 10 164● they had time to persecute all evil Counsellors and Iudges p 17 4● From that time the King was driven away the two Houses stood in opposition to the king and his power p. 66. This became no Parliament when the King with whom they should parley was driven away and it continues so whilst his Majestic is restrained as a prisoner p. 35.81 And the houses now severed from the King have no power at all no more than the body hath being severed from the head p. 80.112 The 2. Houses do not now act by the Kings Writ but contrary to it p. 121. And so their Acts are Null p. 122 141. The Act for continuing this parliament so long as both Houses please is voyd because it is 1. Against Common right for thereby the parliament men will not pay their debts And they may doe wrong to other men Impune besides the utter destruction of all mens actions who have to doe with Parliament men by the Statute of Limitation 21. Jacob. 2. Against common reason for parliaments were made to redresse publique Grievances not to make them 3. Impossible the Death of his Majesty whom God long preserve dissolving it necessarily 4. Repugnant to the Act for a Trienniall parliament and to the Act for holding a parliament once a yeare p. 139.140 The end of continuing this parliament was to raise Credit for mony for three purposes And the three ends of the Act being determined it agreeth with Law and Reason the Act should end p. 141. A perpetuall parliament
besides that it incites men to selfe ends will be a constant charge to the Kingdome by reason of the wages of parliament men p. 141. Mischiefs by the length of parliaments p. 121. Certaine Erroneus Positions and Proceedings of both Houses of Parliament discovered and confuted THe two Houses without the King are not the Parliament but onely parts thereof and by the abuse and misunderstanding of this word Parliament they have miserably deceived the people p. 80.156 The King is not vertually in the two Houses p. 12.13.20.21 The two Houses are not above the King but the King is Superiour to them p. 11.19.23 24.133 The tenents of the Spencers are the ground of their proceedings p. 10.22 And upon their pretences they take upon them the Government at this time They have destroyed above a 100. Acts of parliament even all concerning the King the Church and Church men and in effect Magna Charta and Charta de Forresta which are the Common Lawes of the Land p. 154. They have fifteene severall illegall wayes raised Money upon the Subject this present parliament p. 35. There is no Crime from Treason to Trespasse but they are guilty of p. 142. They are not to bee Judges in their owne cause p. 15. Of their League and Covenant with the Scots p. 158.160 The two Houses by the Law of this Land have no colour of power to make Delinquents or pardon Delinquents the King contradicting p. 119.131 Certaine Erroneous Positions and Proceedings of the House of Commons discovered and confuted THey cannot bee Members of the House of Commons who were not recident in the Counties or Burroughs for which they were elected at the time of the Teste of the Writ of Summons of parliament p. 149. If any undue Returne bee made the person Returned is to continue a Member and the tryall of the Falcity of the Returne is to bee before the Justice of Assize in the proper County this condemnes the Committee for undue Elections p. 148. The House of Commons cannot Elect and Returne Members of that House p. 144. The ejecting of a Member that hath sitten is against Law also their new elections are against Law And by this it may be judged what a House of Commons we have p. 148. Breaches of priviledges of parliament may bee punished in other Courts p. 149. And what need then of the Committee for priviledges The house of Commons by their Writ have no separate power giuen them over the Kings people p. 144. The house of Commons cannot imprison any who are not their Members or Disturbers of their Members in the service of the parliament p. 143 144 145. The House of Commons no Court p. 115 116.144 145 146 c. The Propositions sent by the Parliaments of both Kingdomes to His Majestie at New-Castle pag. 6. GEnerall Reasons against those propositions p. 11.15.128 Reasons in particular against those propositions For disabling the King to pardon p. 13. For altering Religion in point of Government 37.61.63 For sale of the Bishops Lands p. 36. For taking away the Booke of Common-prayer p. 37. For taking from his Majesty all the power by Land and Sea p. 37. For laying upon the people what Taxes they shall think meet p. 128. Besides in their propositions they doe not style themselves His Majesties Subjects p. 128. The Kings Party pag. 36 37 38. THe Subjects are commanded by Law to Assist the King in War 36. Those who adhere to the King are freed by the Statute of the 11th Hen. 7. p. 39.78.97 Master Prins objections against the King and his party answered p. 47. c. The Parliaments Party are Delinquents A Delinquent is hee who adheres to the kings enemies this shewes who are Delinquents p. 7. The Army serving the Parliament THe summe of the Ordinance for the Indempnity of the Army p. 79. It can no more free the Souldiers than repeale all the Lawes of the Land p. 78. The Judges are sworn to doe Justice according to the Lawes of the Land p. 79. An Act of Oblivion and a Generall Pardon the only means to Indempnifie the Army and the whole kingdome p. 84. And the conclusion of all the other bookes The Army Rescuing the King TO deliver the King out of Traiterous hands is our bounden duty by the Law of God and the Land p. 155. By the Law of the Land when Treason or Felony is committed it is lawfull for every subject who suspects the Offender to apprehend him so that Justice may be done upon him according to Law p. 157. As the Army hath power so adhering to the King all the Lawes of God Nature and man are for them p. 166. None by the Law of the Land can in this kingdome have an Army but the King p. 153. The Liberty of the Subject Our Liberties were allowed in the 17th of King John and confirm'd in the 9th of Hen. 3. and are called Mâgna Charta and Charta de Forresta p. 6.117.130 Magna Charta is irrepealable p. 62. Severall Bils for our Liberties passed at the beginning of this Parliament p. 34. And how secured The Liberty of the Subject violated by the two Houses of Parliament 140 Miscellanea THe Lord Cookes Institutes published by the Order of the House of Commons p. 77. Of the Bill passed this parliament for taking away the Bishops Votes in Parliament p. 31. Against that saying that the King got away the Great Seal surreptitiously from the Parliament p. 45. Of Jack Cade p. 160. Treasons Murthers Felonies and Capitall Crimes to bee tryed by Iuries and not otherwise but by Act of parliament p. 102. The Chancellors or Keepers Oath 174. The present Commissioners have no Court Seal nor commission 175. The King the Laws and kingdome cannot bee severed The only quarrell was for the Militia which the Laws have ever setled upon the King 177. No peace can possibly bee had without the King ibid. No man can devise lands till he be 21 years of age 1. 84. An Infant of 17 years may dispose of goods by will by the opinion of some but by others not till 18. 181. The Court of Wards had no jurisdiction over the personall estate 185. Peace and plenty abounded during his Majesties Government 187. Since the two Houses have usurped the power the kingdom hath been in a sad condition 19. Nothing delivered in this book for Law but what the house of commons have avowed for Law this Session 194. The 24 positions of Law set out in divers books by the House of commons order p. 196. It is honourable to dye for the Laws 202. Good counsell for them if it be taken in time 203. That which will save this Land from destruction is an Act of Oblivion and his Majesties Gracious Generall pardon the Souldiers their Arrears and every man his own and truth and peace established in this Land and favourable regard had to the satisfaction of tender Consciences God save the King To the Honourable Societies of Grayes
Soveraigne Lord at all seasons when need shall be Here the supreame power in the time of Parliament by both Houses is declared to belong to the King At the beginning of every Parliament all Armes are 7. Ed. 2.4 pars instit 14. or ought to be forbidden to be borne in London Westminster or the Subburbs This condemnes the multitudes comming to Westminster and the Guards of armed men All who held by Knights service 1 Edw. 2. de Militibus and had twenty pounds per annum were distraynable ad Arma militaria suscipienda This agrees with the Records of ancient time continued constantly in all Kings times but at this Parliament 3. November 1640. The King out of his grace discharged this duty which proves that the power of warre and preparation thereto belongs not to the two Houses but only to the King The two Spencers in Edw. 2. Edw. 3. Ca●vins Case Cook●e 7. fol. 11. time hatched to cover their Treason this damnable and damned opinion viz That Ligeance was more by reason of the Kings politick capacity then of his person upon which they inferred these execrable and detestable consequences First if the King demeaned not himselfe by reason in the right of his Crowne his Lieges are bound by Oath to remove him Secondly seeing the King could not be removed by suit of Law it was to be done by force Thirdly that his Lieges be bound to governe in default of him All which tenets were condemned by two Parliaments the one called exilium Hugonis in Ed. 2. time the other by 1. Edw. 3. cap. 2. All which Articles against the Spencers are confirmed by this last Statute the Artiles are extant in the booke called vetera Statuta The separation of the Kings person from his power is the principall Article condemned and yet all these three damnable detestable and execrable consequents are the grounds whereupon this present time relies and the principles whereupon the two houses found their cause The Villeine of a Lord in the presence of the King cannot be seized ●●●nden com 322. ●y ass pl. 49 for the presence of the King is a protection for that time to him This shewes what reverence the Law gives to the person of a King Regis 33 Ed. 3. ●yde de roy 203 Fitz 30 H. 7.16 sacro oleo uncti sunt capa●es spiritualis jurisdictionis But the two Houses were never held capable of that power Rex est persona mixta cum sacerdote ha●et Ecclesiasticam spiritualem jurisdictionem This shewes the Kings power in Ecclesiasticall Causes The Lands of the King is called in Law Patromoni●n sacrum Com. Sur. Littl Sect. 4. The Houses should not have meddled with that sacred Patromony 3 Ed. 3.19 The King hath no Peere in his Land and cannot be judged Ergo the two Houses are not above him The Parliament 15. Ed. 3. was repealed for that is was against the Kings Lawes and prerogative 4 part instit● fol. 25. This shewes cleerely the Propositions sent to Newcastle ought not to have beene presented to his Majesty For that they are contrary to the Lawes and his Prerogative The Lords and Commons cannot assent in Parliament to any thing that tends to the dis-inherifion of the King and his Crowne 4 Part Cooke in●●it fol. 14. 42. E. 3. to which they are sworne This condemnes the said Propositions likewise To depose the King Parliamen● Rol. num 7. Rex 〈◊〉 suetud● Par●amenti to imprison him untill he assent to certaine dedemands a warre to alter the Religion established by Law or any other Law or to remove Councellors to hold a Castle or Fort against the King are offences against that Law declared to be treason by the resolution herein after mentioned by that Law men are bound to ayd the King when warre is levied against him in his Realme 25 Ed. 3. cap. 2. King in his Statute must be intended in his naturall body and person that only can dye for to compasse his death and declare it by overt Act is declared thereby treason to incounter in fight such as come to ayd the King in his warres is treason Compassing of the Q●●ens death of the Kings Eldest Sonne to coyne his money to counterfeit his Great-Seale to levy Warre against him to adhere to such as shall so doe are declared by that Act to be high treason This Statute cannot referre to the King in his politique capacity but to his naturall which is inseperable from the politick for a body politick can have neither Wife 〈◊〉 13. nor Childe nor levy Warre nor doe any Act but by the operation of the naturall body A Corporation or body politick hath no soule or life but is a fiction of the Law and the Statute meant not ●●ctitious persons but the body naturall conjoned with the politique which are inseperable The clause in that Act that no man should sue for grace or pardon for any offence condemned or forfeiture given by that Act 21 Ed. 4.14 ● 2.11 an was repealed by a subsequent Act in 21. R. ● holden unreasonable without example and against the Law and custome of the Parliament This condemnes the Proposition for disabling the King to Pardon 4 pars instit fol. 42. 4. Pars instit fol. 42. The Act of 11. R. 2. so much urged by the other side was an Act to which the King consented and so a perfect Act yet Note the Army then about the Towne Note that that Law is a-against private persons and by the 3. cap. thereof the treasons there declared are declared to be new treasons made by that Act and not to be drawne to example it was abrogated 21. R. 2. and revived by an usurper 1 H. 4. to please the people and by the tenth chap. thereof enacts that nothing shall be treason but what is declared by 25. Ed. 3. 16. Ed. cap. 5.16 R. 2. cap. 5. H. 4. The Regality of the Crowne of England is immediately subject to God and to none other Plaine words shewing where the supreame power is The Commission of Array is in force and no other Commission Rot. Parlm 5. H. 4. numb 24. an Act not printed this Act was repealed by 4. and 5. P. M cap. 2. this repealed by the Act of 1 Iacobi and so it is of force at this day for the repealing Statute is repealed 4. pars institu● fol. 51. 125 published fithence this Parliament by the desire of the house of Commons their Order is printed in the last leafe of the commentaries upon Magna Charta Sir Edward Cooke A booke alowed by Sir Na Brent called the reason of the War fol. 65. by their party is holden for the Oracle of the Law who wrote the said fourth part in a calme and quiet time and I may say when there was no need to defend the authority of the Commission of Array For that objection that that Commission leaves power to the
a Corporation by the Common-Law 14 H. 8. f. 3. as the King Lords and Commons are a Corporation in Parliament and therefore they are no body without the King The death of the King dischargeth all mainprise to appeare in any Court or to keepe the peace 34 Ed 3.48 1 Ed. 4.2 The death of the King discontinues all Pleas by the Common-law 2 H. 4.8 1 H. 7.10 1 Ed. 5 1. which agreeth not with the virtuall power insisted upon now Writs are discontinued by the death of the King Ed 6. 2 Ed. 6. c. 7. Patents or Judges Commission for Justices of the Peace Sheriffs Escheators determined by his death where is the virtuall power All authority and jurisdiction spirituall and temporall is derived from the King 1 Ed. 6. c. 2. therefore none from the Housess His Majesties Subjects ● 3 Ed. 6. c. 2. 11 H. 7. c. 1. Calvins Case s● part Cooke 1 Pars instit 69. according to their bounden duties ought to serve the King in his warres of this side or beyond the Seas beyond the seas is to be understood for wages This proves the power of warres and preparation for warre to be in the King It is most necessary both for common policy and duty of the Subject 5.6 Ed. c. 11. to restraine all manner of shamefull standers against their King which when they be heard cannot but be odible to his true and loving subjects upon whom dependeth the whole unity and universall weale of the Realme This condemnes their continuing of the weekely Pamphlets who have beene so foule mouthed against his Majesty The punishment of all offendors against the Lawes Q. ●●ary 1. Mar. Pl. 2. cap. 2. belongs to the King and all jurisdictions do and of right ought to belong to the King This leaves all to his Majesty All Commissions to leavy men for the warre 4.5 P. M. c ● Q Eliz. 10 Eliz. Pl. 315. are awarded by the King The power of warre onely belongs to the King It belongs to the King to defend his people and to provide Armes and Force No speech of the two Houses Roy ad sble governmeni de ses subjects Plow 234.242.213 Calvins case 7. pars fol. 12. Plow com 213. Corps naturall le Roy politique sunt un corps That is the king hath the sole government of his Subjects the body politick and the naturall body of the King make one body and not divers and are inseperable and indivisible The body naturall and politique make one body Plou 914.243.213 Calvins case 7. pars fol. 12 and are not to be severed Ligeance is due to the naturall body and is due by nature Gods Law and Mans Law cannot be forfeited nor renounced by any meanes it is inseparable from the person Every Member of the House of Commons 1 Eliz cap. 1 Candries case 5 pars fol. 1 at every Parliament takes a corporall Oath That the King is the supreame and onely Governour in all causes in all his Dominions otherwise he is no Member of that House The words of the Law are in all causes over all persons The said Act of 1 Eliz. is but declarative of the ancient Law 4● Eliz. 3. pars instit fol. 6.2 Candries Case ibid. The Earle of Essex and others assembled multitudes of men to remove Councellors adjudged Treason by all the Judges of England To depose the King 39 Eliz. Hil. 1 Iacobi ibid or take him by force to imprison him untill he hath yeelded to certaine demands adjudged Treason and adjudged accordingly in the Lord Cobbams Case Atising to alter Religion established 39 Ed. Brad case f. 9. 16. By all the Judges of England ibid. 10. Eli. Plow 316 or any Law is treason so for taking of the Kings Castles Forts Ports or Shipping Brooke treason 24.3 4. Philip and Mary Dier Staffords Case concerning Scarborough The Law makes not the servant greater then the Master nor the subject greater then the King for that were to subvert order and measure The Law is not knowne but by Usage and Usage proves the Law 10 Eliz. Plow 31● and how Usage hath been is notoriously knowne The King is our onely rightfull and lawfull Leige Lord and Soveraigne K. Iames 1 Iac. cap. 1 9 Ed 4 fol 8 we doe upon the knees of our hearts adnize constant Faith Loyalty and Obedience to the King and his Royall progeny in this high Court of Parliament where all the body of the Realme is either in person or by representation We doe acknowledge hat the true and sincere Religion of he Church is continued and established by the King And doe recognize as we are bound by the Law of God and Man the Realme of England and the Imperiall crowne thereof doth belong to him by inherent birth-right and lawfull and undoubted succession and submit our selves and our posterities for ever untill the last drop of our blood be spent to his rule and beseech the King to accept the same as the first fruits of our Loyalty and faith to his Majesty and his posterity for ever and for that this Act is not compleat nor perfect without his Majesties assent the same is humbly desired This proves that the Houses are not above the King that Kings have not their titles to the Crown by the two Houses but by inherent birth right and that there can be no Statute without his expresse assent and destroyes the Chimera of the Kings virtuall being in the Houses To promise obedience to the Pope or any other State 3 Iae. cap. 4. 23 Eliz. c. 1. Prince or Potentate other then the King his heyres and successors is treason and therefore those persons who call the houses the Estates offend this Law Such Bils as his Majesty is bound in conscience and justice to passe K. Charles Collection of Ordinances fol. 727. 1 pars ib. fol. 728. are no Law without his assent To designe the ruine of the Kings person or of Monarchy is a monstrous and injurious charge Vbi l●x non distinguit non est distinguendum ibid. fol. 865. all the aforesaid Acts and Lawes do evidently prove the Militia to belong to the King that the King is not virtually in the two Houses that the King is not considerable separately in relation to his politick capacity that the King is not a person trusted with a power but that it is his inherent birth-right from God Nature and Law and that he hath not his power from the people These Lawes have none of those distinctions of naturall and politicke abstractum concretum power and person in Caesars time this Island had Kings and ever since which is almost 17 hundred yeares agoe No King can be named in any time made in this Kingdome by the people A Parliament never made King for they were Kings before the Parliaments are summoned by the Kings Writs which for Knights Citizens and Burgesses begins thus
Roys ' avisera or n● veul● it was against Magna Charta Articuli Cleri and many other Acts of Parliament And might have farther given these reasons if it had so pleased him for the same First that this Bill destroyes the Writ whereby they are made two Houses of Parliament 14 Hen. 7. fol. 22. Evesque est signior de grand honne●r the King in the Writ being ●um praelaris colloquium habtre Secondly they have been in all Parliaments since we had any and voted but in such wherein they themselves were concerned And there have been Bishops here sithence we were Christians and the Fundamentall Law of the Kingdome approves of them If any of them were conceived offensive they were left to Justice and his Majesty would put in inoffensive men in their places but sithence his Majesty hath passed the Bill for taking away their Vores in Parliament it is a Law that bindes us so farre Upon the whole matter the Law hath notably determined that Billa agreed by both Houses pretended to be for the publick good are to be judged by the King for in all Kings Reignes Bils have been preferred by both Houses which alwaies are pretended to be for the publique good and many times are not and were rejected with Roy's auisera or Roy ne veult This Parliament began the 3 of Novemb. 1640. before that time in all the kings reign no armed power did force any of the people to doe any thing against the Law what was done was by his Judges Officers Refers and Ministers from that time untill the 10. os Ia. 1641. when the King went from London to avoyd the danger of frequent tumults being a year and 3 months Privie Counsellors and all his Justices Ministers were lest to the Justice of the Law there wanted not time to punish punishable men The Sphere of the House of Commons is to represent the grievances of the Countrey to grant aydes for the King upon all fit occasions extraordinary to assent to the making or abrogating of Lawes The Orb of the House of Lords to reforme erroneous judgements given in the Kings Bench to redresse the delayes of Courts of Justice to receive all Petitions to advise his Majesty with their Councell to have their Votes in making or abrogating of Lawes and to propose for the common good what they conceive meet Lex non cogit ad impossibilia Subjects are not to expect from Kings impossible things so many Judges Councellours Sheriffes Justices of the Peace Commissioners Ministers of State that the King should over-looke them all cannot be it is impossible The King is vertually in his ordinary Courts of Justice so long as they continue his Courts their charge is to administer the Lawes in being and not to delay deferre o● sell Justice for any Commandment of the King We have Lawes enough Instrumenta boni saeculi sunt bon● viri good Ministers as Judges and Officers are many times wanting the houses propose new Lawes or abrogation of the old both induce novelty the Law for the reasons aforesaid makes the King the onely Judge who is assisted therein by a great number of grave learned and prudent men as aforesaid For the considerations aforesaid the Kings Party adheared to him the ●aw of the Lnnd is their Birth-●ight their Guide no offence is committed where that is not violated they found the Commission of A●●ray warrauted by the Law they found the King in this Parliament to have quitted the Sh●-money Knighthood-money seven Courts of Justice consented to a Triennall Parliament setled the Forrest hounds tooke away the Cearke of the Market of the houshold trusted the House with the Navy passed an Act not to d●●olve this Parliament without the Houses assent no people in the world so free if they could have been content with Lawes Oathes and rea●●● and nothing more could or can be devised to secure us neither hath been in any time Notwithstanding all this we found the King driven from London by frequent tumults that two thirds an dt more of the Lords had disserted tha House for the same cause and the greater part of the House of Commons left that House also for the same reason new men chosen in their places against Law by the pretended Warrant of a connterfet Seale and in the Kings name against his consent leavying Warre against him and seizing his Ports Forts Magazines and Revenue and converting them to his destruction and the subversion of the Law and Land laying Taxes on the people never heard of before in this Land devised new Oathes to oppose Forces raised by the King nor to adhere to him but to them in this Warre which they call the 〈◊〉 the Oath and the V. W. and Covenant By severall wayes never used in this kingdome they have raised Monies to foment this Warre and especially to inrich some among them namely first Ex●is secondly Contributions thirdly Sequestrations fourthly Fift-parts fiftly Twentieth-parts sixtly 〈◊〉 money seventhly Sale of Plundered gpods eightly Loanes ninthly Benedolentes tenthly 〈◊〉 upon their fast-dayes eleventhly new Impo●tions upon Merchand●res twelfely G●ards maintained upon the charge of private men thirteenthly Fifty Sub●●dies at ●●e time fourteenthly Composs●●ons with such as they call Delinquents fifteentlaly Sale of Bishpp● Lands c. From the Kings Party meanes of subsistance are taken 〈◊〉 R 3. cap. 3 Bract. li. 3. c. 8. Stanford 192. Sir Ger. Fl●●twoods Case S. pars Cook 7. H. 〈◊〉 ●ast leafe before any Indictment their Lands seized their goods taken the Law allowes a Traytor or Fellon attained Necessaria sibi familiae suae invictu vestitu where i● the Covenant Where is the Petition of Right Where is the liberty of the Subject First we have ayded the King in this Warre contrary to the Negative Oath and other Votes Our Warrant is the twenty fifth of Edward the third the second Chapter and the said resolutions of all the Judges Secondly 〈◊〉 Ins●it a 25. a Instit 696 The Law so at the Edition of that booke Hutton and Crook we have maintained the Commission of Array by the Kings Command contrary to their Votes We are warranted by the Statute of the fifth of Henry the fourth and the judgement of Sir Edward Cooke the ●●cle of the Law as they call him Thirdly we maintained Arch● Bisho●● and Bishops whom they would suppresse Our warrant is Magna-Charta and many Statutes more Fourthly we have maintained the Booke of Common may●r they suppresse it Our warrant is five acts of Parliament in Edward the fixt and Queene Elizabeths time 5 Pelchae 35 Elizabeth inter placita Coronae in Ban●● Regis New booke of Entries fol. 252. Penry for publishing two scandalous Libels against the Church Government was indicted arraigned attainted and executed at Tyburne Fiftly we maintained the Militi●● of the Kingdome to belong to the King they the contrary Our warrant is the Statute of the seventh of Edward the first and many Statutes ●●thence
the practise of all times and the Custome of the Real●●e Sixthly we maintained the co●●ter●eiting of the great Seal● to be high Treason and so of the usurpation of the Kings forts Do is Shipping Casties and his Revenue and the co●●ing of Money against them We have our warrant● by the said Statute of the twenty fifth of Edward the third Chapter the second and divers others since and the practise of all times Seventhly we maintaine that the King is the onely supreme Governour in all causes They that his Majesty is to be governed by them Our warrant is the Statutes of the first of Queene Elizabeth Chapter the first and the fifth of Queene Elizabeth the first Eightly We maintaine that the King is King by an inherent birth-right 9 Ed. 4. fol. ● by nature by Gods Law and by the Law of the Land They say his Kingly right is an Office upon trust Our warrant is the Statute of the first of King James Chapter the first And the resolution of all the Judges of England in Calvins Case Ninthly wee maintaine that the politick capacity is not to be severed from the naturall They hold the contrary Our warrant is two Statutes viz. exilium Hugonis in Edward the seconds time and the first of Edward the third Chapter the second and their Oracle who hath published it to Posterity that it is damnable detestable and execrable Treason Calvins Case yeers 7. fol. 11. Tenthly wee maintaine that who ●●des the King at home or abro●d ought not to be molested or questioned for the same they hold and practise the contrary Our warrant is the Statute of the eleventh of Henry the seventh Chapter the first Eleventhly wee maintaine that the King hi●h power to disassent to any Bill agreed by the two Honses which they deny Our warrant is the Statute of the second of Henry the fifth and the practice of all times the first of King Charles Chapter the seventh the first of King James Chapter the first Twelfthly wee maintaine that Parliaments ought to be holden in a grave and peaceable manner without tumults 3. They allowed multitudes of the meanest sort of the people to come to Westminster to cry for justice when they could not have their will Coll. of Ord. fol. 31. and keepe guards of armed men to wait upon them Our warrant is the Statute of the seventh of Edward the second and their Oracle Thirteenthly wee maintaine that there is no State with●n this Kingdome but the Kings Majesty and that to adhere to any other State within this Kingdome is high Treason Our warrant is the Statute of the third of King James Chapter the fourth and the twenty third of Queene Elizabeth Chapter the first Fourteenthly wee maintaine that to ●evy a wa●●e to remove Cou●sellours to a●ter Religion or any Land established is high Treason They hold the contrary Our warrant is the resolutions of all the Judges of England in Queene Eliznbeths time and their Oracle agrees with the same Fifteenthly wee maintaine that no man should be impusoned put out of his Lands but by due co●rse of Law and that no man ought to be adjadged to death but by the Law established the C●●stames of the ●●●●me or by Act of Pa●●tement They practise the contrary in London Bristol Ke●t c. Our warrant is Magna Chanta Chapter the twenty ninth the P●●ition of Right the third of King Charles and divers Lawes there mentioned Wee of the Kings party did and do detest Monopolies and Ship-money and all the grievan●es of the people as mu●h as any men living wee do well know that our estates lives and fortunes are preserved by the Lawes and that the King is bound by his Lawes wee love Parliamenss if the Kings Judges Counsell or Ministers have done amisse they had from the third of November 1640. to the tenth of January 1641. time to punish them being all left to justice Where is the King● fault The Law saith the Kings can do no Wrong 11. pars Cooks Reports Magdalen Colledge Case that he is medicus Regni pater patriae sponsus Regni qui per annulum is espoused to his Realme at his Coronation The King is Gods Lieutenant and is not able to do an unjust thing these are the words of the Law 〈◊〉 matter is pretended that the 〈◊〉 are not sure to enjoy the Acts passed this Parllament A succeeding Parliament may repeale them The objection is very weake a Parliament succeeding to that may repeale that repealing Parliament That ●eare is endlesse and remedilesse for it is the essence of Parliaments being compleat and as they ought to be of Head and all the Members to have power over Parliaments before Parliaments are as the times are If a turbulent faction prevailes the Parliaments are wicked as appeares by the examples recited before of extreme wicked Parliaments if the times be sober and modest prudent and not biassed the Parliaments are right good and honourable and they are good medicines and salves but in this Parliament excessit medicina m●dum In this cause and warre betweene the Kings Majesty and the two Houses at Westmiester what guide had the Subjects of the Land to direct them but the Lawes What meanes could they use to discerne what to follow what to avoid but the Lawes The King declares it Treason to adhere to the Houses in this warre The Houses declare it Treason to adhere to the King in this warre The Subjects for a great and considerable part of them Treason being such a crime as forfeits life and estate also renders a mans Posterity ●ase beggerly and infamous looke upon the Laws and finde the Letter o● tho Law requ●res them to a 〈◊〉 the King as before is manifested was ever Subject criminally punisht in any age or Nation for his pursuit of what the Letter of the Law commands The Subjects of the Kingdome finde the distinction and interpretation now put upon the Lawes of Abstractum Concretum Powe● and Person body politick and naturall personall presence and virtuall to have beene condemned by the Law and so the Kings Party had both the Letter of the Law and the interpretation of the Letter cleared to their judgments whereby they might evidently perceive what side to adhere to what satisfaction could modest peaceable and loyall men more desire A verbo legis in crimin●bus poenis non est recedentum hath been an approved maxime of Law in all ages and times Coll. of Ordinances 777. If the King be King and remaine in his Kingly Office as they call it then all the said Lawes are against them without colour they say the said Lawes relate to him in his Office they cannot say otherwise they make Commissions and Pardons in the Kings name and the person of the King and his body politick cannot nor ought to be severed as hath beene before declared 5 Eliz. cap. 1. 1 Eliz. cap. 1. And the Members of both Houses have sworne
constantly in this Parliament that the King to the onely supreme Governour in all causes ever all persons at this present time For what of verball or personall commands of the King which is objected we affirme few things to be subject thereto by the Law But his Majesties Command under his Great Seale which in this warre hath been used by the Kings Command for his Commission to ●savie and array men that is no personall command which the Law in some cases disallowes but that is such a command so made as all men hold their Lands by who hold by Patents all Corporations have their Charters which hold by Charters and all Judgesa and Officers their places and callings It is Objected 〈…〉 the King cannot suppresse his Courts of Justice and that this warre tended to their suppression The answer is Sol. 7 pars The ●a le of Westmerlands Ca e. 1 Eliz. Dier 165. 7 p●rs Cooke the King cannot nor ought to suppresse Justice or his Courts of Justice nor ever did but Courts of Justice by abuser or non user cease to be Courts of Justice when Judges are made and proceedings in those Courts holden by others then Judges made by the King and against his command under the great Seale The case of discontinuance of Processe and his Majesty is not obeyed but the Votes of the Houses and his Judges breaking that condition in Law of trust and loyalty implyed in their Patents are no longer his Judges they obey and exercise their places by vertue of Writs and Processes under a counterfet Seale The King onely can make Judges the twenty seventh of Henry the eighth Chapter the twenty fourth Justices of the Peace c. The Kings Patent makes Judges 28 H. 8. D●●r 11. The chiefe Justice of the Kings Bench is made by the Kings Writ onely of all the Judges The Great Seale is the key of the Kingdome Arti●uli super chartas cap. 5. 2 pars instit 552. and meet it is that the King should have the key of his Kingdome about him which confutes their saying that the King got the Seale away surreptitiously The King Britt●n sol 23. and he only may remove his Courts from Westminster into some other place at Yorke the Tearmes were kept for seven yeares in Edward the first 's time but for the Court of Common Pleas the plac● must be certaine for the Kings Bench and Chancery the King by the Law may command them to attend his person alwaies if it seeme so meet unto him but the removing of the Common Pleas must be to a place certaine and so notified to the people All the Bookes of Law in all times agree that the King may grant conusance of all Pleas at his pleasure within any County or Precinct to be holden there onely and remove the Courts from Westminster to some other place for the Common Pleas 6 H. 7.9 6 Eliz Dier 226. the place must be certaine and so notified to the people and adjourne the Tearmes as he sees cause All which the two houses have violated Some seeming objections of Master Prinn's scattered in divers books answered and the truth thereby more fully cleered THE first of Henry the fourth 1 Ob. revived the Statute of the eleventh of Richard the second and repeales the one and twentieth of Richard the second whereby certaine persons were declared Traytors to the King and kingdome being of the Kings Party by 11 Rich. 2. True but note the eleventh of Richard the second Sol. a Parliament beset with 40000. men and the King assents to it so an Act and besides the first of Henry the fourth declares that the Treasons mentioned in the Act of the eleventh of Richard the second being but against a few private men shall not be drawne into example and that no Treason should be but such as the twenty fifth of Edward the third declares 9 Ed. 4. fol. ●0 All these are Acts passed by the King and the three Estates nor to be drawne into example in a tumultuous time by a besieged Parliament with an Army and Henry the fourth being an Usurper makes that Act of the first of Henry the fourth to secure himselfe Also what is this to the Votes of the two Houses onely at this time The Court of Parliament is above the King 2. Ob. for it may avoyd his Charters Commissions c. granted against the Law And the Law is above the King By the same reason you may say that the Courts of Chancery Sol. or any of the Courts of Law at Westminster are above the King for they make of no effect the Kings Charters which are passed against the Law and the King is subject to Law and sworne to maintaine it Againe it is no Parliament without the King and the King is the head thereof he is principium capus finis of a Parliament as Modus tenendi Parliament hath it and two houses onely want principiwn caput finis of a Parliament and it is a sorry Parliament that wants all these And therefore to say that Parliaments are above the King is to say the King is above himselfe The Parliament can enlarge the Kings Prerogative 3. Ob. therefore it is above him If the King assent Sol. otherwise not and then it is an Act of Parliament and otherwise no Act. Bracton saith God the Law 4 Ob. and the Kings Court viz. his Earles and Barons are above the King viz. in Parliament as Mr. Prynne expounds it Where is then the House of Commons Indeed take God the Law Sol. and Earles and Barons together it is true but to affirme that the Earles and Barons in Parliament are above the King the King being the head of the Parliament and they one of the members how an inferiour member is above the head is hard to conceive besides that position destroyes all Mr. Prynnes discourse who attributes much to the House of Commons The King is but one of the three Estates of Parliament 5 Ob. and two are greater then one therefore above The Legs Armes Sol. and Trunke of the body are greater then the Head and yet not above nor with life without it the argument holds for quantity but not for quality and in truth the King is none of the three Estates but above them all the three Estates are the Lords Spirituall the Lords Temporall and the Commons Cake their Oracle in his Chap. of Parl. f. 1 In Corporations the greater number of voyces make all the Acts of the Corporation valid 6 Ob. therefore so in Parliament By this reason the Kings assent is needlesse Sol. and to no end and all the Acts of Parliament formerly mentioned and Law-bookes have quite mistaken the matter which with unanimous voyce requires the Kings assent as necessary besides the Corporations are so constituted by the Kings Charters and the greater number of votes shall make their Acts valid The King
Subject is bound to govern in ayd of him we only say that his power is distinguishable from his person and when he himselfe makes a distinction betwixt them commanding one thing by his legall Writs Courts and Officers and commanding another thing extrajudicially by word of mouth Letters or Ministers we are to obey his power rather than his person 5. We take not from the King all power of pardoning Delinquents we onely say it is not proper to him quarto modo For if the King pardon him which hath murthered my son his pardon shall not cut me off from my appeal and 't is more unreasonable that the Kings pardon should make a whole State which hath suffered remedilesse than any private man So if the King should deny indemnity to those which in the furie of war have done things unjustifiable by the Lawes of peace and thereby keep the wounds of the state from being bound up 't is equitable that an Act of Indemnity should be made forcible another way And if his will not hold yet this is no good consequence the King is absolute in point of pardons therefore he is absolute in all things else and the parliament hath no power to discharge Delinquencies therefore it hath no power in other matters 6. The Parliament hath declared the King to be in no condition to governs but thir must not be interpreted rigidly and without distinction for if the King with his Sword drawn in his hand and pursuing the Parliament and their Adherents as Rebels be not fit for all Acts of Government yet it is not hereby insinuated that he is divested of the habit or right of Governing if he be unqualified now he is not unqualified for the future if he may not do things destructive to the parliament he is not barred from returning to the parliament or doing justice to the parliament This is a frivolous cavil and sub●erfuge 7. We swear that the King is our supreme Governour over all persons and in all causes but we do not swear he is above all Law nor above the safetie of his people which is the end of the Law and indeed Paramount to the Law it selfe If he be above Law or liable to no restraint of our Law then we are no freer than the French or the Turks and if he be above the prime end of Law common safety then wee are not free as the French or Turks For if the totall subversion of the French or Turk were attempted they might by Gods Law imprinted in the book of Nature justifie a self-defence but we must remedilesly perish when the King pleases to command our throats Besides how atchieved the King of England such a Supremacy above all Law and the community it selfe for whose behoofe Law was made If Gods donation be pleaded which is not speciall to him or different from what other Kings may pretend to then to what purpose serve our Lawes nay to what purpose serve the Lawes of other Countryes for by this generall donation all Nations are condemned to all servitude as well as we If the Law of this Land bee appealed to what Bookes hath Mr. Ienkins read where hath he found out that Lex Regia whereby the people of England have given away from themselves all right in themselves Some of our Bookes tell us that we are more free than the French that the King canot oppresse us in our Person● o● Estates by imprisonment denying justice or laying Taxes without our consents Other Books tell us that the safety of the people is the supreme Law and that the King hath both God and the Law for his Superiour But all this is nothing to learned M. Jenkins 8. We admit that no Acts of Parliament are compleat or formally binding without the Kings assent yet this is still to be denied that therefore without this assent particularly exprest the two Houses can do nothing nor have any virtual power at all no not to examine M. Ienkins nor to do any other thing of like nature though in order to publike justice and safetie I have done and wish M. Ienkins would call in and lick up again his black infamous execrable reproaches so filthily vomited out against the Parliament To the first I Was examined by a Committee appointed by the House of Commons I say and said that the House of Commons have no power to examine me for that it is no Court every Court hath power to examine upon Oath this power the House of Commons never claimed The Court of Pye-powders court-Baron Hundred court County court and every other Court of Record 5. H. 4. c. 3. 3 H. 6.46 19 H. 6.43 ●5 H. 6.5 or not of Record hath power to examine upon Oath and an examination without Oath is a communication onely examination in Law is upon Oath There is no court without a power of tryall Sir Anthony Maynes ●ase Cook 1. par Reports Lit. 2. lib. Sect. 194. 6. H. 4.1 the House of Commons have no power to try any offence nor ever practised it by Bill Indictment Information Plaint or Originall Writ to reduce it to tryall nor to try it by Verdict Demurrer or Examination of Witnesses upon oath without which there can be no condemnation or judgement and that which can attaine to no reasonable end the Law rejects as a thing inutile and uselesse Sapiens incipi●a ●ine The Writ whereby they are called gives them power Ad faciendum consentiendum ● pa●s instit fol. ● 9. To what To such things Quae ibidem de communi consilio ordi●●● contingerint viz. in the Parliament This makes nothing at all for a Court for the House of Commons that consilium which that Writ intends is cleared partly by the Writ for chusing Knights c. For the King by that Writ is said to resolve to consult and treate with the Prelates and Peeres of the Kingdome for and touching the great concernments of the Common-wealth for the King never sits in the House of Commons and this also is made evident by the Writs to the Prelates Peeres Judges and to his Counsell at Law The words in the Writ are To appeare and attend the Parliament Consilium impensuri the one doth con●ulere the other sacere conse●tire The House of Lords where the King sits in person assisted by His Lords Judges Serjeants Atturney 7 H. 6.28 1 H. 7. ●0* 13 Ed. 3. c. 5. 4 pars inst p. 21. Sollicitor Masters of the Chancery is a court of Record to many purposes set down in the Bookes of Law and the Statutes of the Land and that court is onely in the House of Lords where the King sits A court must either bee by the Kings Patent Statute Law or by the common Law Plowd Com. 319. which is common and constant usage the House of commons hath no Patent to bee a court nor Statute Law to bee a court nor common usage they have no Journall Booke but since Edward