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A86077 Londons lawless liberty: or A Gozmonian partie licensed. Being a true discoverie of a pack of prodigious knaves, who have under pretence of an act of Common Councell of the City of London, seized (as they tearme it) and taken away from divers free-men of the same city, their true aud [sic] proper goods, and that in such a horrid and uncivil[l?] manner, as no heathens whatsoever, could with more cruelty have exercised the same. Together with a particular of the names of some of those persons which have had their goods illegally taken away, as the same was attested under their hands, and presented to the adjutators of the army, under the command of his Excellency Sir Thomas Fairfax, Captaine Generall of all the forces in England and Wales, the 27. of August, 1647. / Published by Iohn Harvey Gentleman. Harvey, John, gentleman. 1647 (1647) Wing H1082; Thomason E407_9; ESTC R201941 9,634 13

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LONDONS LAWLES LIBERTY OR A Gozmonian partie licensed Being a true discoverie of a pack of prodigious knaves who have under pretence of an Act of Common Councell of the City of London seized as they tearme it and taken away from divers free-men of the same City their true and proper goods and that in such a horrid and uncivil manner as no heathens whatsoever could with more cruelty have exercised the same Together with a particular of the names of some of those persons which have had their goods illegally taken away as the same was attested under their hands and presented to the Adjurators of the Army under the Command of his Excellency Sir Thomas Fairfax Captaine Generall of all the forces in England and Wales the 27 of August 1647. Published by Iohn Harvey Gentleman Isaiah 1.23.24 Thy Princes are rebellious and Companions of Theeves every one loving gifts and followeth after rewards they judge not the fatherlesse neither doth the cause of the Widow come unto them therefore saith the Lord the Lord of Host the mighty one of Israel Ah I will ease me of my adversaries and avenge me of mine enemies Zachariah 5.4 J will bring it forth saith the Lord of Host so that it shall come to the house of him that falsely sweareth by my name and shall remaine in his house and consume it with the timber and stones thereof Zephaniah 3.3 Her Rulers within her are as roaring Lyons her Iudges are as Wolves in the evening which leave not the bones till the morrow London Printed for the good of all free-men who desire to maintaine their own priviledges in their calling in the yeare 1647. LONDONS LAVVLES LIBERTY OR * Gozm●● or the Spanish Rogue A Gozmonian Party licenced YOu worthy Citizens Freemen and Apprentizes of the City of London and all others who have taken the late Nationall Covenant I doubt not but you well remember that you thereby solemnly ingaged your selves to maintaine preserve and defend the fundamentall lawes of this kingdome and to square your actions accordingly imprecating the wrath and vengeance of the great God of heaven and earth to fall upon you when you cease to performe what you then swore to and declared Now therefore Gentlemen that you may the better performe what you then vowed and protested to maintaine I shall hereby acquaint you with a most illegall and as the same is executed a tyrannicall Act of Common Councell of the City of London the Contents whereof is as followeth Commune Concil● tent in Communia Guihald Ciuitat London Sexto die Iulii 1602. WHereas by the priveledges and Franchises of the City of London confirmed by Parliament every Ware-House shop and other place within the City of London and the liberties of the same having open shew into any of the streets or laines of this City hath time out of mind been reputed and known to be and so ought and hath been accustomed to be and in very deed is an open and publique market place for shew and sale of wares and Merchandise within the said City and the liberties of the same And whereas in antient time the open streets and laines of the said City have been only used and accustomed and so ought to be used and accustomed for open passage as the common high way only and not for Huxters Pedlers and Haglers to stand and sit to sel their wares in and to passe from street and place to place hawking and offering their wares to sel other then certain places of the said City which have been of ancient time accustomed to be specially used for country people to stand and sit to fell victuals in and that only upon certaine dayes in the weeke and certaine houres of the day And whereas now of late yeares there be two sorts of people which are greatly increased and doe greatly hinder the ordinary and honest trades men being shop-keepers in their severall trades within the City and the liberties of the same and impover●sh others and utterly undoe many of them the one of which two sorts be Fattiners and others which wa●ke up and down the streets hawking with wa●es and offering the same to be sold openly to all sorts of people as they stand sit or passe and likewise come to men or womens doores and into their houses or roomes and offereth the said wares to sell And the other of the two sorts be for the most part women and some others also sitting or standing at mens doors or stalls with their wares lying or hanging for shew and sale there and some of them standing or sitting with their wares upon tables or stooles in the open streets laines on high wayes of the said City ordained and appointed for passage and not for sale or wares by reason whereof very many househoulders who have been in great trade and raised great profit by retailing in their shops are very much hindred and some forced to set Haglers and Hawkers at worke to carrie abroad their wares up and down the streets to the end to take some mony to h●lpe to relieve themselves and their families which inconveniences if due remedie be not in time provided are like to g●ow in a very short time to doe very much hurt not only in abating or her Maiesties profit in her subsidies and other services but also in weakning the Citizens in such sort as they shall not be able to yeeld their aid in baring Scor and Lo● and other charges ordinarie and extraordinary for the maintenance of the good estate of the said City and very many of them only by meanes of the said inconveniences made utterly unable to maintaine their own housholds and families For remedy therefore of the said inconveniences Be it inacted ordained and established by the right honourable the Lord Major of the City of London and his right worshipfull Brethren the Aldermen of the said City and the Commons in this present Common Councell assembled and by authoritie of the same that no person or persons whatsoever inhabiting or which hereafter shall inhabite within the City of London or the liberties of the same shall at any time hereafter by any collour wayes or meanes whatsoever let or willingly suffer to be used any stall incroachment or purprestures scituat or being before his her or their house shop or other place whatsoever in any open street or laine of this City whatsoever to or by any person or persons whatsoever which shall there sell utter or put to sale any Linnen cloath or any ware made of Linnen cloath or any Starch or other wares or merchandize whatsoever nor shall willingly suffer any person or persons whatsoever to sell shew offer or put to sale any Linnen cloath Starch wares or merchandize whatsoever upon any stoole seat or other thing before his her or their house or stall upon paine to forfeit the sum of 20 s. of lawfull money of England for every time wherein he she or they shall offend contrary to
the true meaning hereof And be it further inacted by the authority aforesaid that no person or persons whatsoever shall at any time hereafter by any colour wayes or meanes whatsoever directly or indirectly sell utter or put to sale by way of hawking or as a Hawket any Linnen cloth or any other ware made of Linnen cloth Starch or any other wares or merchandizes whatsoever in any open street or laine within the said City or the liberties thereof victuall in the market place and in market time only excepted otherwise then upon the stall of his her or their own shop or dwelling house or in his her or their ware house shop or dwelling house upon paine to forfeit for every time he she or they shall so offend all the Linnen cloath or other ware whatsoever to be sold uttered or put to sale contrary to the true meaning hereof and to forfeit also the sum of 20 s of lawful money of England And be it further enacted ordained and established by the authority aforesaid that the one mo●tie or halse part of all the paines penalties and forfeitures to be forfeited by vertue of this Act shall be to the Chamberlin of the City of London for the time being to the use of the Major and Commonalty and Citizens of the same City And the other moity thereof to him or them that will therefore sue by Action of debt Bill or information to be affirmed exhibited or commonsed and prosecuted in the Queens Majesties Court to be hosden before the Major and Aldermen of the said City in the chamber of Guild Hall of the same City wherein no wager of Law shall be admitted for the Defendant And that it shall and may be lawfull to all and every person or persons whatsoever thereunto authorized by the Lord Major and Court of Aldermen of the City aforesaid for the time being who shall see or know any Linnen cloath wares made of Linnen cloath Starch or other wares or merchandizes whatsoever which shall bee bought sold uttered or offered to be put to sale contrary to the true meaning of this present Act. And thereby shall be forfeited by vertue of this Act to seize the same and to carrie and convey the same to the Guild Hall of the said City or to some place neer unto the same there to remaine in safe custodie untill the same shall be disposed of according to the true meaning of this present Act. This Act of Common Counsel City of Londons ●ase Devinets ase an 2. ●hil and ●ary 7 2. Edw. ● 1 ●o Hen. ● 14 is utterly void and against law for that no Citizen or free man of London can be restrained by an act of Common Councell to sell or proffer his wares in the street upon pain of forfeiture Secondly This Act of Common Councell is void for that every act of Common Councell ought to have these quallifications First it ought to be agreeable to law Secondly it ought to be moderate imposing a pecunary and not a corporall paine and no forfeiture of goods Thirdly for suppressing of evill things Fourthly agreeable to reason Fifthly for common profit This Act is void of all these It is not agreeable to law neither is there any moderation but extremitie by penall paine and forfeiture here is no evill suppressed for there is no evill done by a Citizen of London to sell his goods in London London is an open market every day in the yeare but Sunday for a free man to sell his goods in open marker is no evill It is not agreeable to reason to debarre a free man of a City to trade freely therein reason being the fountaine of honest lawes gives to every man propriety and liberty property of interest freedom of enjoyment and improvement to his best advantage It is not for the common profit the sellers being manufactors and freemen of the City pay taxes and tallages This Act is in effect to raise prices for the manufactor selleth cheaper then the shop keeper who endeavouring to bring all the custome to their shops is only to advance a kind of a monopolie which the law abhorteth For as Sir Edward Cooke in the third part of his Institutions fol. 181. commenting upon the Statute of the 21 Iames 3. which Statute is absolutely against Monopolists and Monopolizers he there possitively saith that they are against the antient and fundamentall lawes of this Kingdom and that he may be the better understood what he means by Monopolie he thus defines it A Monopolie is an institution or allowance by the Kings grant Commission or otherwise to any person or persons bodies politique or corporate o● or for the sole buying selling making or useing of any thing whereby any person or person bodies politique or corporate are sought to be restrained of any freedome or libertie that they had before or hindred in their lawfull trades Deut. 24 6. And he there saith that the law of this Realm against Monopolies is grounded upon the law of God No man shal take the nether or upper milstone to pledge for he taketh a mans life to pledge Whereby it appeareth that a mans trade is counted his life the Monopolist or shop keeper which taketh away a mans trade taketh away his life and therefore he is so much the more odious because he is Vir sanguinis a man of blood against those inventors and propounders of evill the holy Ghost hath spoken Rom. 1.30 Inventoris malorum c. digni sunt morti the Inventors of evill c. ate worthy of death This Act of Common Councell is also contrary to the light of nature which teacheth men to walk by congruety and equallity not to oppresse because they would not be oppressed nor to take away another mans right because they would not have another to use the same measure to them which principle of nature is ingrav●n upon the hearts of Heathens who certainly wil one day rise up in judgment against them which would make us slaves in our own land contrary to the honour of nation because by it the people are put into a condition of vassalage in their owne country This Act of Common Councell being also against the common right and profit of the people and not approved before the execution thereof by the Lord Chancellor Treasurer both the chiefe Iustices or three of them the partie which put the Act in execution forfeit 40. l. 19. Hen. 7.7 Neverthelesse although it be the knowne freedome of every free man of London handicrafts man shop keeper or merchant to sell his goods Manufactors wares or commoditie either to free man or Farriner English man or stranger in ware house shop private house or Inn yet the shop keepers have and doe unconscionably repine at the use of this libertie in the Manufacterors and as time have favoured injustice have accustomed to struggle against this their lawfull libertie to the great oppression and hindrance of multittudes of the poorer sort
of trades men and to the extream miserie and affliction of their families for that if in vacations and dead times necessit us people had not this libertie but were in effect bound up to the shop keeper or to sell to f●ee men they would so frequently be put either upon pawning their goods to Userers or selling them to extream losse for money to buy their food that they would be thereby undone an brought to beggery All which the Shopkepers well knowing the better to accomplish their unjust unlawfull and unconscionable design petitioned Mr. Alderman Adams when he was Major for a warrant to seize and take away such goods and commodities as the Manufacture● should conveigh or send to his Merchant or Chapman upon which petition they obtained a warrant the contents whereof is as followeth viz Adam Major Martis 16 Die Junii 1646. Anno 2. Regis Carrol 2 This day upon the humble petition of divers Citizens for redresse of abuses and inconveniences by Huxiers Pediets and H●g●ers hawking and offering their wares to sell in the open streets of this City this Court doth hereby appoint and authorize that Edward Hancock Robert Petly John Co●pson Nicholas Wainew●ight and Perigrin Stevenson Free men of this City according to an Act of Common Counsell made the sixt day of July 1602 joyntly and severally to see that one said Act for the future be duly executed in its particular branch according to the tenor and true meaning thereof Which Act albeit the same was never put in execution against Freemen in above fortie years before the patties authorized being persons of a meane cond●●on but of cruel and malicious spirits have according to their unconscionable and unchristianlike will and pleasures cruelly and maliciously put the same in execution and have taken from divers weavers other Manufacturors being free men of London severall parcells of wares to a 〈…〉 the same tending to the utter ruin and undoing of them and their families and in particular from the persons here after mentioned viz Vpon the second day of September 1646. they by force and violence took from the person of William Smith at Besomes 〈◊〉 in L●wtence laine London a parcell of Silke Ribb●ns being his own Manufactory to the value of 20 l or thereabouts and upon the 12 day of January following Iohn Crown Merchant bought of him the said Smith another parcell of Silke Ribbins to the value of 70. l or thereabouts some of which parcell he the said Mr. Crown carried a vay with him and the residue Smiths wife carried to Rude laine London to a place where the said Merchant appointed at which place the above named parties did by force and violence take the same ●rom her together with her basket and cloath in which the warn was to the value of 5. s more putting her in great feare and danger of her life she being then great with child That upon or about the second day of September 1646. Iohn Williams bought of Thomas Poole a parcell of Silke Ribbins being his own Manufactory to the value of 30 l the same being by the direction of the said Merchant to be carried to Bosoms J●n in Lawrence laine London Poole sent the same by his wife and Elizabeth his daughter to the place so appointed where the said Petly Hancock Compson Wainright and Stevenson by force and violence took the same parcell of R●bbins from Elizabeth the daughter of the said Poole most inhumainly and barbarously abusing both her and her mother so that they were by them inforced to cry out murther That upon the 8 day of June last Richard Russell sold unto Thomas Hind Merchant a parcell of Silke Lace to the value of 5. l 10. s being his own Manufactory and according to the direction of the said Hind he the said Russell delivered the same to him at his lodging at the bare in Basing shawstreet London where the said Petly Hancock Compson Wain Wright and Stevenson did by force and violence take the said parcell of Lace from the said Hinde under pretence of their warrant aforesaid That upon the 23 day of June last one Mr. Ogliby a Merchant bought of Roger Rockly Cutler a parcell of Swords to the value of 3. l being his owne manufactury which comodities were by Rocklyes wife carried to Mr. Coles in Rude laine London where the said Compson Hancock Petly Wainwright and Stevenson by force and violence took the same from her and inhumainly beat thrust and abused her she being great with child cryed out to them to have pittie upon her to which Compson answered that he neither cared for her or her child upon which fright and abuse she presently sell in labour and the child dyed and with in 7 dayes after she also dyed all the time she lived crying our for justice against the murtherer but as yet none can be had They also took from the wife of Nicholas Govers a parcell of Silke Ribbins being his own Manufactury to the value of 7. l which parcell of wares was sold to Andrew Dove Merchant They the said Hancock Petly Compson Wain Wright and Stevenson also took from George Persons a parcell of Silke Ribbins being his own Manufactury to the value of three pounds Which said wrongs and oppressions were by the parties above mentioned presented unto the Adjutators of the army under the Command of his Excellencie Sir Thomas Fairfax Captaine Generall of all the forces raised in England and Wales the 27 of August 1647. All which said and divers other such illegall and unwarrantable seizures since the making of the said warrant by Mc. Alderman Adams as aforesaid have so cu●ely and with such rigor and unchristian like demeaner been acted by them the said Edward Hancock Robert Petly Iohn Compson Nich. Wainwright and Perig●in Stevenson as no Heathens or Infidels whatsoever could with more cruelty have exercised the same But should I particularly mention all the free men of London from whom they have by force and violence taken away their crue and proper goods together with the manner of their uncivill and inhumaine carriage towards them a quire of paper would not be sufficient to containe the same And further to make their sufferings more grievous the parties thus wronged and abused can neither have Law nor justice against their oppressors For when Roger Rockly complained against Compson for murthering his wife to Sir Iohn Woollaston Knight and desired him to bind Compson over to answer the same at the Sessions he refused so to do And when divers free men complained to Mr. Alderman Geares now Lord Major of London for reliefe against the said Hancock Compson and their confederates for taking away their goods the same have been denyed the parties offending countenanced in their actions approving the same to be good and warrantable willing them to persist therein By reason whereof the parties thus wronged being denyed justice they have sought their reliefe at common law and Smith and Poole have brough their