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A96344 For the sacred lavv of the land. By Francis Whyte. White, Francis, d. 1657. 1652 (1652) Wing W1765; Thomason E1330_2; ESTC R209102 136,470 313

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the nature and disposition of the people or whether they will breed any inconvenience or no but a custome never bindeth till it hath been tryed and approved time out of minde during which no inconuenience did arise for if it had been found inconvenient it had been used no longer but had been interrupted and so had lost the vertue of a Law This is declared to be so by the Lords and Commons in Parliament in the 25 yeare of King Henry the eight which I shall cite below and if the Judgements and Declarations of Parliaments be not regarded I know not what can give satisfaction * Vid. 3. c. Ancient liberties and customes which have been usitatae approbatae used and approved m c. 9. Stat. Mert. make the Common law The statute called dictum de Kenelworth speakes thus the party convict shall have judgement according to the custome of the land n 57 Hen. 3. c. 25. The 27 of King Edw. the first of Fines Contrary to the lawes of our Realme of ancient time used The 34 of the same King confirmes to all Clerks and Laymen their lawes liberties and free customes as largely and wholely as they have used to have the same at any time when they had them best o c. 4. law and custome of the Realme are made the same p 1. E. 2.34 E. 3. Abjuration is called custome of the Realme q 9. E. 2. c. 10. The 25 of King Edward the third saies According to be lawes of the land of old time used r C. 2. The title of the 27 of this King speaks in maintenance of the lawes and usages the Statute 36 of the same King Lawes Customes and Statutes Å¿ C. 15. Statute 42. according to the old law t C. 3. In the time of Richard the second Law and usage are the same u 1 R. 2. c. 2. It would be tedious to heap up more of this kinde I will only adde the declaration of the Houses of Parliament in the time of Henry the eight which is thus Their words being directed to that King This your Graces realme c. hath been and is free from subjection to any mans lawes but only to such as have been devised made and ordeined within this realme for the wealth of the same or to such other as by the sufferance of your Grace and your Progenitors the people of this your realme have taken at their free liberty by their owne consent to be used amongst them and have bound themselves by long use to the observance of the same c. as to the customed and ancient lawes of this realme originally established as laws of the same by the said sufferance consents and custome and none otherwise w 25. Hen. 8. c. 21. Now if what the people of England have taken up out of long use custome and consent be not good agreeable and convenient after so much and so long triall they would appear the most foolish of all people They would not deserve that free liberty which themselves by their repraesentors tell us at the submitting to and taking these lawes they had and if they be good agreeable and convenient they would appeare the most foolish of all people by their change No lawes ever were or can be made with more equity then these to which besides use and custom and experience free liberty and consent of those who were to observe them gave life There is custome of Courts which is law too part of the Common law x Plowd Com. 320. as the Statute of Kenelworth If any man shall take revenge because of the late stirres be shall be punished according to the custome of the Court c. y C. 26. Six times is the Common law called by Littleton common right It is sometimes called right sometimes justice z Mirc c. 2 Sec. 16. Fleta 6. c. 1. Mag. Ch. c. 29. Magna charta calls it justiciam vel rectum justice or right Westm 1. Common right and the King wills these are the words That the peace of holy Church and of the land bee well kept in all points and that common right be done to all as well to poore as rich c. later statutes have Justice and right a 1. R. 2. c. 2. full justice and right b 2. H. 4.1 good justice and even right c 7. H. 4. c. 1. Common droiture in a statute d West 1. c. 1. is rendred Justice according to the law and custome of England e 2 Just 161. called common right as the Lord Cooke Because the common law is the best and most common birth-right the Subject hath for the safegard and defence not only of goods lands and revenues but of his wife and children body life and fame also f 1 Just 142 2 Just 56. That which is called common right in the second of King Edward the third g C. 8. In the first of that King h C. 14. is called common law Not onely as Fortescue doe the lawes of England favour liberty i C. 42. But they are notioned by the word The word liberties in Magna Charta signifie the lawes k C. 1.29 and in that respect is the great charter called the charter of the liberties l 2 Just 47 The Statute de Tallagio non concedendo has these words That all the Clerkes and Laymen of our realme have all their lawes liberties and free customes c. m C. 4. In the 38 of Edward the third the Laws are called Franchises in the old Bookes the great Charter the fountain of all our * Just 81. Foundamentall Lawes is called the Charter of Franchises the common Liberty the Liberties of England n Bract. 291 414. Pleta l. 2. c. 48 Brit. 178 because so the Lord Cooke they make frecmen o 1 Jnst 1 The customes of England bring a freedome with them therefore in Magna Charta are they called Free Customes p 2 Just 47. Mag. Char. c. 29. the Courts of Justice are also called Liberties because in them as the same book the Law which maketh free-men is administred q Mich. 17. Epist 1. in com berot 221. 2. 2 Jnst 4. the Law then is Liberty it selfe Liberty and Law are convertible nor is this Liberty titular onely and a Liberty of words In the expressions of the Petition of right out of Magna Charta cited in the first Chapter and out of the 28 of Edward the third No free man shall be taken imprisoned or disseased c. but by lawfull judgement or by Law of the land and no man of what estate or condition soever shall be put out of his lands or tenements nor taken imprisoned nor dis-herited nor brought to death without being brought to answer by due process of Law which is as after in that Petition of right either Customes of England or Acts of Parliament r 3 Car. Reg
who has not heard of the father of Venice If any such there now be as well there may nature we see by these examples of the last times is no weaker then she has been of so firm memories of so happy judgements they are exceptions to my limitation and are not to be confined if they be not too delicate to adventure they may be ranked amongst those who do not invade Such men have reputation to lose which they will not hazard slightly they will consider of things and know well what it is they censure Whensoever they appear they cannot appear but as friends there can be no danger in them Haste and ignorance are onely to be feared if haste as Livie of it be improvident and blinde what can ignorance be thought to see Every man ere he gives his censure of Laws ought to read them over from the beginning to the end to look into them throughly according to that In civile est nisi tota lege perspecta una aliqua particula proposita judicare c c Leg. in Civivile st de leg upon one particle proposed the whole is not to be judged To the understanding of laws the words alone are not enough the intent of the Legislator the reason and end why they were given are to be enquired By the words of the Law is meant their propriety and signification which will not quickly nor without pains be known The intent of the Legislator is his preceptive will seldome found by the words abstractedly and nakedly but by the adjuncts the matter or circumstances This is the intrinsecal form The reason of the law is only the end moving the Legislator to make it not composing substantially the law constitutive to which the precept and will of the Legislator is to be accommodated This if not expressed in the law but devised by the interpreters is but a probable conjecture Every disadvantagious act of a drunken man by our law touching his lands or goods binds him Nay and touching his life too if he kill a man he is hanged for it f rep 4.124 Plow Com. 19. By Pittacus his law amongst the Greeks allowed by Aristotle g Polit. l. 2. c. ult if he had struck any man he was to suffer double as much as if he had done it sober Some lawlesse good fellows would thinke all this very unreasonable in a law onely intended to punish the wrong done according to the grievousnesse of the offence Since it is evident that mischiefs deliberately done as they may say perhaps with advice and malice are naturally lesse pardonable and therefore worthy of more severe punishment But as M. Plowdens report although the drunken man kill out of ignorance it helps not This ignorance was his own act and folly he might have resisted it and shall not be priviledged by it as the Court in that place of the Lord Cooke His drunkennesse is a great offence in it self and extenuates not but aggravates that which follows whatsoere colourable reasons may be given this boldnesse is rather tolerable in an Hotoman a stranger then an English man The law is the act of the whole body politique and ought to over-rule every part of it to binde every man the actual assent of every single man is not material nor does the dissent of a single man disoblige we are tyed by our forefathers their publique submission to these lawes at their free liberty and with their consent made h 25. H. 8. c. 21. their acceptance of them long since bindes us unlesse the revocation be by the same universal agreement which I believe is not like to be had As a most reverend Lord chiefe Justice strangers by living here do tacitely submit themselves to our lawes and forms of Law-making their grant and consent is involved in the consent of Parliament i ch Iust Hubard rep 271. Much more of the naturals and if all mens judgements which may be as unlike as full of diversity as their faces must be satisfied with reasons of laws long since established or to be set up it wil be impossible any old law shoud hand or any new law take Besides all publique authority to which onely the power of lawgiving belongs would lose its reverence As the Mirrour No creance no belief is to be given to the vain voice of the people The Iudges they are to obey the laws not to dispute them We have have our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as well as the Athenians who are judges of the laws of the reasonablenesse of them and who are to see them observed King Edward the first said by a most reverend chief Justice long ago to be the wisest king that ever was k 5. E. 3. c. 14. speaks thus in a Statute where we may see what antiquity attributed to the honourable Judges of the laws The king wills that the Chancellour and the Justices of his Bench shall follow him so that be may have at all times neer him some sages of the law which be able duly to order all such matters as shall come unto the Court at all times c l 28. E. 1. c. 5. All the Justices of England and Barons of the Exchequer as the Lord Cook are assistants to the Lords in Parliament m 4 Inst 56 They were more then assistants to the Barons their Writ was for they had their Writs too Quod intersitis nobiscum cum caeteris de consilio nostro super pramissis tractaturi vestrumque consilium impensuri They were to treat with the king and his Councel and to give Counsel As Mr. Crompton they were to be demanded for the Law n Jurisd 2. Postnat 22 23. a Statute more antient then the former begins All of the Councel as well Justices as others agreed that the constitutions underwritten c o Vid. Stat. de Bgam And again It is agreed by the same Justices c p Ibid. i. 6. The Statute of Marlbridge sayes For default another day is to be assigned according to discretion of the Judges q c. 13. Mar●b and discretion of the Justices and the Common Law are joyned 1 c. 26. ibid The Statute of Westm 2. for damages in appeals has According to the discretion of the Justices ſ W. 2. c. 12 in another place Whereas the Justices in the plea of Mortdancester have used to admit the answer of the tenent t c. xx the Statute 27 of Fines is according to discretion of the Justices u 27. E. 1. All the Judges of England gave their Answer to the Articles of the Clergy 3. Jacobi which the Lord Cooke calls Resolutions of the highest authority in law w 2 last 001. as upon the xx chap. of Westm 2. by that he says it is confessed That admission and allowance of the Iustices ought to be holden for Law x 2. Inst 399. In the Parliament 19 of Edward the first Sir Thomas of Weyland
The Lord Chancellours oath is thus That he shall doe right to all manner of people poore and rich according to the lawes and usages of the Realme s 10. R. 2. rot Parl. 8. The Barons of the Exchequer sweare no mans right to disturbe let or respite contrary to the lawes of the land t 4. Jnsti 109. which must be meant of the knowne and certain Law of the Land called in Magna Charta Legemterrae upon which all Commissions are grounded wherein is the clause to do what belongeth to Justice according to law and custome of England u 2. Jnsti 51. The illustrious Viscount of St Albane amongst his Aphorismes of universall Justice has this Let no Court deale in cases capitall our Lawes say Civill too but out of a knowne and certaine law God denounced death then he inflicted it nor is any mans life to be taken away who knew not first he had sinned against it w Augm. scient 402. By this Law of the Land although there is not nor cannot be any liberty which should protect the transgressors of it yet have all Offenders a legal tryall nor are possessours of the worst faith thrown out without the hand of the Law onely against those who attempt to subvert or weaken the Lawes there is a Writ to the Sheriffe in nature of a Commission to take the impugners and to bring them as the Register to the Gaole of Newgate x Regist 64 2. Justi 53. This as the Lord Cooke is lex terrae The Law of England to take a man without answer or summons in this case and the reason given is He that would subvert all Lawes deserves not the benefit of any Amongst the articles exhibited to King Henry the eight against Cardinall Wolsey he is charged with oppression in imprisoning Sir John Stanly and forcing him to release a farme taken by Covent Seale of the Abbot of Chester c. as the words by his power and might y Artic. 38. And that he threatned the Judges to make them deferre judgement z Artic. 39 that he granted many Injunctions the parties not called nor any bill put in by which diverse were cast out of their possessions of their Lands and Tenements a Artic. 21. The close was That by his cruelty iniquity and partiality he hath subverted the due course and order of the lawes His Inditement went higher and accused him That he intended the most ancient lawes of England wholly to subvert weaken and this whole Realme of England and the people of the same to the Lawes Imperiall commonly called the Civill Lawes and to their Canons for ever to subiugate c. b Mich. 21. H. 8. Coram Rege Now although the Civill Law deserves as much honour as can be given it and commands and is obeyed much abroad yet this Law of the Land held the possession here by a long unquestionable prescription and after the tryall of many ages got the affection of the people whose fathers grew up happily under it which was not easily to be removed the rather because seldome doth any Nation willingly submit to or welcome the Customes and Laws of another which they have not been acquainted with and our Judges who wil not in our Books part with one of its Maximes c 2. Jnst it 210. would not have fallen downe before the shrive of any unknown Themis and have offered up the whole tables It were no hard matter to heape up testimonies Vid chap. 3 if some would thinke it lawfull to trust men in their owne arts or professions and can it not but be more reasonable that such should be heard in the defensive then that those who professe full Hostilitie bringing with them onely mistakes of their owne prejudice should sit Judges of the tryal which is in their own cause and if thus far the reines be given to turbulent desperate spirits every thing how sacred soever may be arraigned at these tribunalls the articles of our faith will quickly totter nor will any principle be safe This discent will be fatall there being no stay in the precipice the bottome onely must receive men where he that falls is crushed to pieces what is worse those unhappy ones who follow cannot see their danger Thus we have seen what the common Law the Liberty and Franchise of the free people of England the law of the land is The law of antient time d. 27. E. 1. of old time used e 25. E. ● the old law f 42. E. 3. for ages according to the judgement of these Parliaments makes the law more venerable it is an addition of honour to it Now it followes in order to speake something of the Antiquity of this law The Antiquity of the Law But as the beginnings of things sometimes are rather guessed at then knowne it is no wonder that there should be no generall agreement here of opinions some will make the Law a Colossus of the Sun knocking the Starres with its head more ancient then the Dipthera or Evanders mother others a late small spark struck from the clashing of the Norman Swords the child rather of Bellona then Jove terrible in the Cradle the truth being mistaken by both To relye upon the authority of a Chancelour or rather chiefe Justice in the time of King Henry the sixth upon which the * r. 2. Epi. r. 6. Epist antiquity should be raised was lesse then that of Aventine who professed History where after a prodigious linke of German Kings before the Arcadian Moone he will needs bring his Dutch to the Wars of Troy which he proves out of the laws of Charles the 4. who lived lesse then two hundred yeare before Aventine and some three hundred yeares before us from which he is peremptory there must be no appeal g Boicar Hist 49. for a great Lawyer continually imployed in the publick affaires or in his study where his many volumes upon the law show the whole man might well be taken up to faile in a piece of History if he may justly be said to faile this way who onely trusted another who was carelesse It is no blemish such as can deserve the censorian rod of our Criticks besides all men love to consecrate their originalls This is allowed to antiquity saies Livie mixing things humane with divine to make the beginnings of Cities more majestick and we may say as he doth of his Rome of our Lawes if it be lawfull to canonize any to carry them up to Heaven or fetch them downe from thence that glory alone is due though it needs not to the most sacred lawes of the land Sir John Fortescue his words are to this effect That if the lawes of England had not bin most excellent the Romans who cry up their Civill Law Saxons Danes or Normans had altered them h de lg Ang l. c. 17. by which our Lawes must be Brittish at least and our