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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A66455 Jus appellandi ad Regem Ipsum a cancellaria, or, A manifestation of the King's part and power to relieve his subjects against erroneous and unjust decrees in chancery collected out of the authorities of law / by Walter Williams ... Williams, Walter, of the Middle Temple. 1683 (1683) Wing W2774; ESTC R7919 45,013 145

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too much as I conceive of the King's Power but not this of referring the examination and correcting of erroneous and unjust Decrees in Chancery to fit persons for that purpose I am sure 't is not prohibited by that Statute by any particular words nor are there any general words therein contain'd that according to the rules of Law and construction of other Statutes can be construed to extend to the taking away of that course of proceeding For the clearing of which point it is requisite that the Statute should be taken strictly into consideration the prohibiting part whereof is as followeth Be it Ordaiued and Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That the said Court commonly called the Star-Chamber and all Jurisdiction Power and Authority belonging to or exercised in the same Court or by any Judges Officers and Ministers thereof be from the first day of August 1641. clearly and absolutely dissolved taken away and determined and that from the said first day of August neither the Lord Chancellor nor the Kéeper of the Great Seal of England the Lord Creasurer of England the Kéeper of the Kings Privy-Seal or President of the Councel nor any Bishop Temporal Lord Privy-Councellor Judge or Justice whatsoever shall have any Power or Authority to hear examine or determine any matter or thing whatsoever in the said Court commonly called the Star-Chamber or to make pronounce or deliver any Judgment Sentence Order or Decree or do any Judicial or Ministerial act in the said Court and all and every Article Clause and Sentence in them and every of them by which any Jurisdiction Power or Authority is given limited and appointed unto the said Court commonly called the Star-Chamber or unto all or any the Judges Officers or Ministers thereof or for any proccedings to be had or made in the said Court or for any matter or thing to be drawn into question examined or determined there shall for so much as concerneth the said Court of Star-Chamber and the Power and Authority thereby given unto it be from the said first day of August repealed and absolutely revoked and made void And be it likewise Enaded That the like Jurisdiction now used and exercised in the Court before the President and Councel in the Marches of Wales and also before the President and Councel established in the Northern-parts and also in the Court commonly called the Court of the Dutchy of Lancaster before the Chancellor and Councel of that Court and also in the Court of Exchequer of the County-Palatine of Chester held before the Chamberlain and Councel of that Court the like Jurisdiction being exercised there shall from the first day of August 1641. he also repealed and absolutely revoked and made void any Law Prescription Custom or Usage c. to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding and that from thenceforth no Court Councel or place of Judicature shall be erected ordained constituted or appointed within the Realm of England or Dominion of Wales which shall have use or exercise the same or the like Jurisdiction as is or hath haen used practiced or exercised in the said Court of Star-Chamber Be it likewise Declared and Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That neither His Majesty nor His Privy-Councel have or ought to have any Jurisdiction Power and Authority by English Bill Petition Article Libel or any other arbitrary way whatsoever to examine or draw into question determine or dispose of the Lands Tenements Dereditaments Goods or Chattels of any of the Subjects of this Realm but that the same ought to be tryed and determined in the ordinary Courts of Justice and by the ordinary course of Law These are all the prohibitory words of that Statute I will not say any thing of the reasonableness or unreasonableness of it but that it was made in 41. But taking it as it is I think it deserves no further construction to disable the King from performing his Oath that is to see that Justice should be done to his Subjects than the very express words will bear and for the right understanding of it it is to be considered in all the parts thereof without relying on any one single Clause alone and thereby it will appear how far the whole may be construed to take away any Power that was before in the King It takes away the Star-Chamber and the Power thereof and prohibits the erecting of any Court of the like Jurisdiction by express terms but by so doing it meddles not with this Power of the Kings to refer the examination of an unjust Decree made in Chancery by One man to Three or Four or more men fit for the purpose neither in terms nor in construction And it is a great argument that it was never intended to be taken away by that Act because it is not taken away by express words for if it had been intended to have been taken away it might have been express'd by particular words it being no new invention since the making of that Act but a course long practis'd before that Act was made as appears by what is aforesaid and that without the least contradiction but on the contrary with the greatest approbation that could be viz the approbation and direction of the Lords House in Parliament at one time and of all the Judges of England at another time as is aforesaid and of all the great Writers of the Law of those times so that there was then no apparent reason for taking it away The next part of the Statute and that which seems most to oppose me is That the King nor His Privy-Councel have or ought to have any Jurisdiction Power or Authority by English Bill Petition Article Libel or any other arbitrary way to examine draw into question determine or dispose of the Lands Tenements c. but that the same ought to be tryed and determined in the ordinary Courts of Justice and by the ordinary course of Law For the understanding of this it is to be remembred the King for the execution of the Law had two sorts of Powers in Him by the Common-Law He had Power and Authority thority in Person to hear Ordinaria Jurisdictio pertinet ad Regem Bract. fol. 108 412. Ordinaris Juris dictio remanet cumipso Rege Bract. fol. 55. determine and dispose of the Estates of his Subjects upon Controversie arising between them and complain'd of to him and this is properly called Jurisdiction Designatio Justiciariorum est à Rege Jurisdictio vere ordinaria à Lege Co. 4 Inst fo 74. and he had also designatio Judiciorum a power of nominating and appointing Judges under him to hear determine and dispose of the Estates of the Subjects touching which any Controversie did arise and was brought before them to be decided as appears in the beginning of this Treatise Sect. 2. per tout So that if he should be excluded himself by this Statute from hearing and determining in