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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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are to doe even law and execution of right d 20 E. 3. c. 1. The supreme of these Benches after this alteration dealt in pleas criminall called placita Coronae in the books e 4 Inst 71 Stamp Pleas of the crown examined and corrected errors misdemeanors and offences against the peace granted the Habeas corpus and upon return of the cause relieved prisoners held pleas by Bill for debt detinue covenant promise of all personall actions of ejectione firmae and the like against any in the custody of the Marshall or any Officer of the Court who may implead others in those actions of all trespasses with force and armes of Repleviu● Quare im●●dit c. of Assise of Novel disseisin These Justices are the soveraign Justices of Oyer and Terminer of Gaole delivery and conservators of the peace c f 4 Inst c. 7. This Bench may grant prohibitions to all other Courts to keep them in their bounds The Chancery as before supplies the wants and relieves against the rigour of the Law in its extraordinary ju●isdiction The Ordinary held pleas of s●ire facias to repeale the Kings Letters patents of Petitions monstrance of right Traverses of offices of partitions there of scire fac upon recognizances there Writs of Audita querela and scire fac ' in the nature of it to avoid executions there endowment might be there by the Writ de dote assignands upon offices found execution upon the Statute staple or recognisance in nature of it upon the 23 of Hen. the 8. Personal actions might be brought there by or against an Officer or minister of the Court it is the officina justitiae hence all Writs issue it grants the Habeas Corpus out of Term g Ibid. c. 8. In the Court of Common pleas or commune bench all real actions are determined and all common pleas mixt and personal Besides the Stationary Courts at Westminster there were the Justices in Eyre the sitinerant Justices Charles the bald in the yeere 853. divided France into twelve parts and over every of the parts placed men famous for Religion and Law who yeerly travelling their own Divisions took cognisance of wrongs done betwixt party and party and of the publique offences according to justice By which pattern King Hen. the 2. of England in the yeer 1176. divided this Kingdom into six parts over every of which he appointed three Justices yeerly to goe their Circuits h Hoved. 548. M. VVestm l. 2.39 though I know not why this institution is made more ancient by others These were followed by the Justices of Assize since in being by whom they are swallowed up their circuits are twice the yeere and at certaine times having the power of Gaol-delivery added with the authority of the Justices of Nisi prius annexed also the inquiry and determinations of many things else given by latter Statutes and by another Commission of Oyer and terminer the power to deale with Treasons Murders Felonies and all misdemeanours whatsoever they have one other Commission of the peace in the Counties of their circuits by vertue of all which together they sit More perhaps cannot be devised for the ease of the people Thus is justice brought to their own dores the same thing with a fixed standing Court and as it may chance more safe The lesse the Judge is known in the Countrey the lesse is the danger of siding or biassing I speak not this as if I had more feares then other men or were for any of the new jealousies these are the feares of severall of our Parliaments There is aprohibition in two Statutes That no man of the Law shall be from henceforth Justice of Assises or of the common deliverance of Gaoles in his own Countrey i 8 R. 2. c. 2. 13 H. 4. c. 2. and a third Statute of confirmation is more full it sayes That whereas it is enacted that no man learned in the Lawes of this Realm should c. be Justice of Assise in the Country where he dwelleth since divers men learned in the Lawes c. have by their means and policy and for their own commodity c. obtained to be Justices of Assises in the Countries and Counties where they were born or were inhabiting whereby some jealousies of their affection and favour to their kinsmen alliance and friends c. hath been conceived and had c. enacted c. that no Justice c. use nor exercise c. as before k 33 H. 8. c. 24. Upon such like reason is there another Statute enacting to this purpose that no Lord or other in the Countrey sit upon the Bench with the Justices of Assise l 10 R. 2. And as nothing humane I might say divine too fathered somewhere as high as upon Lycurgus his Apollo or the whispers of a Numa and his Eugeria where Gods might be fancied to descend for the production and caelestiall wisdom to flow into it never so excellently contrived can please all men so perhaps whatsoever production shall or can be it may have if not its mischiefes and inconveniences yet some failings incident to the imperfections of man in it selfe and by corruptions from without their grace and flourish may be but short nothing is so incertain in the taking as new Lawes much must be ventured much committed to fortune and if according to the Saxon form which is shewn is not yet extinguishd and what is lost in jurisdiction or rather in use in the lower Courts is supplyed as is shewn too by a way if not better yet equal to it standing Courts were every where and what is more daily open at the Countreymans doore This would not perhaps so much ease the honest just man ever upon the defensive who ever sues but for his peace and the quiet preservation of his own right as it would multiply vexatious prosecutions some the greater number and the worst men composed of malice and contention would be incouraged by it to molest others the trouble and expence being so little and the way to imbroyle so ready and neere there would be nothing but complaints the Law and its remedies would quickly he abused they would be as great a plague as some men who onely say so would have them imagined to be actions would fly thick and swarm so fast one yeere would bring forth Volumes more swelling then all the Annals now read and if every man might be the patron of his own Cause often his in justice nothing would be wanting to make the confusion periect all decency and respect would be forgotten for which nothing would be had but prodigious noise and rude tumults Farther those who now are kept off by the conscientiousnesse of the knowing Lawyer who has made a discovery into the injustice of the cause and oftentimes restreines the heady client to run on would presently be at the shock fall into the danger of a trial which being blinded with their own fury their malice onely
6. And again there in the Chapter of the Maletot u c. 7. The ill Toll or Charge of 40 s. upon every sack of Wool is taken away where are these words We have granted for us and our Heirs not to take c. without common consent and good will By the Statute called de Tallagio non concedendo No Tollage nor aid was to be set or levied but by common consent w 34 E. 1. All new Offices with new Fees are within this Statute x 2 Inst 533. No man is to be charged by any benevolence which is condemned by a Statute as against the Law y 1 R. 3.2 He who judges things impartially must confesse the English ever to have been the most happy and most free of all people while they enjoyed the benefit of these lawes and are likely yet to continue ●s happy under them for the time to come But as some there are as is noted who will allow no authority but their own not reason it selfe nothing without themselves so some there may be rather for a Sect then the truth more willingly following a great name then reason chusing number rather then weight and worth carryed away with authority as they call it such as will yeeld to nothing else If any such there be I will please them they shall have authority with truth weight and worth together Not that I bring in other vouchers as if I refused those or thought them not sufficient who as have shown before are the true and undoubted Judges of the lawes In the Councel at Oxford of the English and Danes held in the sixt yeere of King Cnut The English and Danes are said to agree about keeping the Laws of King Edward the first Wherefore they were commanded by King Cnut to be translated into the Latine Tongue and for the equity of them those are the words to be kept as wel in Denmark as in England z Mat. West flor Hist l. 1. 311. Wigorn. 311. Although it is said the English laws * Gloss ver Lex Dan. were silent spake not in the times of the Danes which might generally be true yet in the reigne of of this King it was otherwise as appeares by his excellent lawes of Winchester full of piety and justice a Concil saex 569. These were the famous lawes observed by King Edw. the Confessour after many of the laws of K. Aetheldred many of those of the renowned Councel of Aeaham under the same Aetheldred are amongst them In the Epistle of King Cnut writ to the English when he was coming from Rome He saies He bad vowed to govern the Realms subject to him justly and piously and judgement in all things to observe At his returne saies Malmesbury he was as good as his word For all the Laws by the ancient Kings and especially by his ancestour Aetheldred given under penalties be commanded to be observed for ever which now men swear to keep under the name of King Edward not that he ordained them but because he observed them b Malm●b de Gest Reg. l 2. c. 11. p. 75. How much the ancient Englishman loved and prised the Common lawes is evident by what has been before said concerning the Magna Charta and the setling them And it is more evident by the odiousnesse which subversion and the subverters of the Lawes have lain under in all ages There is a Writ in the Register as before to take the impugners of the Lawes and bring them to Newgate c Regist 64. In the complaint of the Bishops of Henry the thirds reigne against the strangers Poictouins his favourites are these words As also because the Law of the land sworn and confirmed and by excommunication strengthned this was the Magna Chaeta together with justice they confound and pervert d Ma. Pa. 396. The Earle Marshall Richard complaines of these Poictouins to this King as men who impooy themselves to the oppression of the Lawes and liberties e ibid. 384. Stephane of Segrave the chiefe Justice is charged in another place with corrupting the laws and introducing new ones f ibid. 392. The same King is told by those Bishops That if the subjects bad been governed according to justice and right judgement of the land c. those troubles had not hapned The Statute banishing the Spencers the father and son has this Article To the destruction of the great men and of the people they put out the good and fit ministers and placed others in their room false and wicked men of their Covin who would not suffer right or law to be had and They made such men Justices who were not at all conversant in the law of the land to hear and determine things Empsons indictment runs Nor having God before his eyes c. falfely deceitfully and treasonously the Law of England subverting g 4 Just 199. The Articles against Cardinal Wolsey before mentioned begin Hath by divers and sundry waies and fashions committed high and notable and grievous offences misusing altering and subverting the order of the lawes His articles are there by the introduction said to be but a few in comparison of all his enormities excesses and transgressions against the Laws These Articles were subscribed by the Dukes of Norfolk and Suffolk the Marquesses of Dorset and Exceter the Earls of Oxford Northumberland Shrewsbury the Lords Fitzwalter Rochford Darcy Mounjoye and Sandys c. all which as those others taking subversion to be so heinous an offence must needs be imagined to esteem the Lawes highly Lewis of France invited hither by the Barons in King John his time in the entrance to his new principality is made to sweare to restore to every of them the good Lawes h Ma. Pa. 282. As others to maintain ad keep the institutions of the Countrey Those who desired a stranger for their master would not be governed by new and strange laws amongst the covenants of marriage betwixt Queen Mary of England and Philip the second of Spain there is one to this effect That he the King Philip should make no invasion of State against the laws and customes of the Realm neither violate the Priviledges thereto belonging i Hollinsh p. 1118. And amongst those covenants of marriage treated betwixt Elizabeth of most happy memory and Francis Hercules of Valois Duke of Anjou the same care and warinesse is had one of the conditons is That the Duke shall change nothing in the laws but shall conserve all the customes of England k Comd. Eliz. 338. The Lord Treasurer Burleigh the Earles of Lincoln Sussex Bedford and Leicester Sir Christopher Hatton and Sir Francis Walsingham were delegates for the Queen men too wise to tie themselves and others to preserve those things which are neither worth a care nor being The Statute 28 of Edw. the 3 l An. Dom. 1363. speaks thus The good ancient Laws customes and Franchises of the said Realm The
to be that there was no such overturning of things as is believed The Title of the Lawes called the Lawes of King William the first published by M. Selden with his learned Notes upon Eadmer and since with the Saxon Lawes is this These are the Lawes and Customes which William the King granted to the whole people of England after the Conquest of the Land these were those which the King Edward his Cousen beld before him In these Lawes recited by Hoveden in the life of King Henry the second ' King Edwards Lawes are confirmed in these words This we command That all men have and hold the Law of Edward the King in all things together with those Lawes which we have added for the profit of the English g Pars Poster 661. This Confirmation was not freely given but in this manner King William having heard the Lawes of the Danes and Normans and approved them as the Chronicle of Lichfield having approved the Lawes of those of Norfolke Suffolke Grantbridge and Deira c. he commanded they should be observed through the Kingdome as more just then any others because himselfe and his Barons were Norwegians by extraction not a word is there of any resolution to introduce his Norman Laws this the English thought a more killing blow then that of his Victory they beseech him and by the soule of King Edward c. to permit them to injoy their owne ancient Laws and Customes under which their Fathers lived themselves were borne and bred up to wit the Lawes of holy King Edward and they tell him it could not but be very hard to receive Lawes unknowne and to judge of those things they understood not h The Paraphrast of these Laws Chron. Lich. The King long resolute at last yeelds and as these with much authority were venerate and through the whole Realme corroborate and before other Lawes of the Realm the Lawes of King Edward not because he found them but because be restored them sayes Gemeticensis of the same age with King William i l c. 9. The Chronicle of Lichfield and Hoveden are more large with which agrees the first Chapter of the Lawes of good King Edward thus it speaks Which King William confirmed all of them use neer the same expressions By Precept of King William say they are elected out of every of the Counties of all England twelve of the most wise men who were injoyned before King William that in what they might neither declining to the right hand nor the left in a direct way they should lay open the Constitutions of their Laws and Customes nothing omitting nothing adding nothing out of prevarication changing k Hoved. 601 Chron. L●ch ll Ed. c. ● Further yet in that Chronicle Aldred the Archbishop of Yorke not Thomas Archbishop of Canterbury as the Paraphrast would have it there being no Thomas of that See till lawlesse Beckets dayes who as this and Malmesbury crowned him l Malms● l. 3. 〈◊〉 vita Pontific and Hugh Bishop of London by command of the king writ with their own hands what the foresaid jurates said from the laws of holy mother the Church beginning c. Ingulphus Secretary to William in Normandy and after made Abbot of Crowland by him is witnesse enough alone and as he I brought this time with me from London where he had been about the businesse of his house to my Monastery the laws of the most just king Edward which my Lord William the renowned king of England had proclaimed authentick and perpetual all England over to be kept under most grievous penalties commended to his Iustices in the same tongue they were set forth m Ingulph p. ult This proclamation was not all to allay the stormes which perhaps the violation of these laws had raised for the good of peace says an ancient Monk He swears upon all the reliques of the Church of S. Albane touching the hol Gospel Abot Fretherick ministring the Oath the good and approved ancient laws of the realm which the holy and pious Kings of England his ancestors and especially King Edward set forth inviolably to keep n Vita Ab. S. A●b 8. s ●0 that the English laws were in use then I can prove out of that famous plea of Pinnende●e betwixt Lanfranck Archbishop of Canterbury and Odo Bishop of Baieux and Earl of Kent there it is said the King comanded al the County without delay to sit all the French of the County especially the English in the antient laws customes skilled to assemble o Not. ad E●d 198. William the 2. promises onely easie laws justice equity and mercy and laws desirable p Hunting l. 7.372 ead 13. Ma Par. 14 Heved in h. 1. which his successour Henry the first construes and there could be no other meaning to be meant of these laws he swears To take away all the injustices and oppressions of his brother promises the good and holy laws to keep and to strengthen the liberties and ancient customes which flourished in the realm in the time of S. Edward the King q Ead. 55. Malmsb. in Hen. 1.156 Ma. Pa. 55. and in his laws he says The law of King Edw. I grant you with those amendments made by my father with the counsel of his Barons r Ll. Hen 1. c. 2. Ma. Pa. 56. and in the same place those things which hence forward shall be done shall be amended secundum lagam according to the law of King Edward yet after he imposes a new law a medley out of the salick ripuarian and other forreign laws with some pieces out of King Cnuts Danish laws which were but a small time observed and could not take any thing from the lawes of King Edward king Stephen confirms the laws in these words all the liberties and good laws which Henry King of England my Vnkle granted them and I grant them all the good laws and good customes which they enjoyed in the reign of King Edward s Ex lib. autiqu Ll. The Londoners request of Maetildis the Empresse daughter of Hen. the 1. That they may be suffered to use the laws of Edward because as they they were the best and not the laws of her father Henry because they were grievous which she refused whence great commotions were made t Florent wig in an 11 42. cont which grievous laws certainly were that salic rapuarian Danish medly and likely enough a commotion in those boisterous times would follow the refusal many of the disquiets and tumults of those first reigns being raised upon the pretence of the breach of these laws a pretence so taking that the No●mans themselves either coloured their insurrections with it or else preferred these before their own laws and ran the hazard of their lives fortune in earnest for them Henry the 2. commanded the laws of his Grandfather to be observed u Hov p. pricr in H. 2. of which below