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A06786 Consuetudo, vel lex mercatoria, or The ancient law-merchant Diuided into three parts: according to the essentiall parts of trafficke. Necessarie for all statesmen, iudges, magistrates, temporall and ciuile lawyers, mint-men, merchants, marriners, and all others negotiating in all places of the world. By Gerard Malynes merchant. Malynes, Gerard, fl. 1586-1641. 1622 (1622) STC 17222; ESTC S114044 480,269 516

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the Sea is adioyning and in proprietie to bee esteemed accordingly taking their names of the Countries and Kingdomes adiacent or of their scituation as Mare Britannicum Mare Germanicum Mare Hibernicum and for scituation Mare Mediterraneum obserued by Cosmographers Historiographers and Mathematicians this is performed with the helpe of the Compasse counting of courses soundings colour of the grauell or sands and other wayes to designe Finitum ab ' i●finito By the Ciuile Law so farre as is expedient for the certaine reach and bounds of Seas properly apppertaining to any Prince or people wherein the Doctors of the Ciuile Law haue recorded excellent obseruations By the Law of Nation and Customes Baldus saith Vidimus de iure gentium in Mare esse Regna distincta sicut in terra Auda Ad legem 1. de ter diuisione In §. nullius in tratt de i●sula Bartolas doth in his opinion allow for princes and people at the sea-side Centum mitliaria which is one hundreth leagues of sea from their coast if they extend their protection so farre called by them Districtus maris territorium which is most plaine in those seas where the Isles of Garnesey and Iarnesey are so sensible and visible to the realme of England Visible Markes of Dominion or where there are such rockes or eminent marks as the Washes at the West seas thereof to which purpose Paulus a renowmed Ciuilian saieth That it is not needfull for him who would possesse himselfe of any land to go about and tread ouer the same but it is sufficient to enter in vpon any part thereof with a mind to possesse all the rest thereof euen to the due marches to be made apparant by the instruments of Geometricians And the like may be designed vpon the seas notwithstanding the soliditie of the one and the continuall flowing too and fro of the other This distinction of dominion hauing continued so many hundreth yeares needeth not to be corroborated with other proofe and arguments yet let vs note obiter That if the same were not distinguished as aforesaid Cases of ciuile Law or Admiraltie one borne vpon the seas should haue no countrie or nation to appeale vnto and a man dying intestate vpon the seas should minister occasion of question to know who should administer his goods and making of a Will how the same should be proued and executed by law without approbation of some Court or Iurisdiction whereas we find many Admiralls of the seas and their seuerall iurisdictions vpon the seas as deputies to their Princes or States who are alwaies absolute Commanders in their precincts according to the treaties and contracts made betweene Princes which are in the nature of lawes and inseperable of the said Princes right on the land concerning the possession of their Kingdomes or Common-weales as the fundamentall cause of their dominion wherein discontinuance of any part of their right cannot be pleaded against them The Kings of England neuerthelesse haue beene prouident and carefull herein for Historiographers haue recorded That King Edgar one of the Saxon Kings long before the Conquest made a suruay yearely of the foure great seas Mathew of Westm. and stiled himselfe lord thereof euen vntill Norway Ranulph Cestriensis and his progresse was most towards the North. It is also affirmed Anno 973. That the said King Edgar caused an inscription to be made vpon his Tombe for a monument calling himselfe Dominus quatuor Marea and as Papinian the Iurisconsult saieth In finalibus questionibus vete ra monumenta sequenda sunt Mare Britanicum But this for the dominion of the Kings of England ouer their seas Mare Hibernicum is not needfull For afterwards William Duke of Normandie after he had subdu●d the realme of England by conquest Mare Germanicum caused himselfe not onely to be proclaimed King Mare Deucalidon but also that all the goods of the subiects were his and so caused the land to be diuided and yet was contented to change the title of a Monarchie by conquest into a Monarchie Royall and was also Lord of the said foure seas Io Bodinus de Resp. by the former assumpsit which had then continued 200 yeares and his progresse by sea was most Westward For when Princes or Kings do stile themselues by proclamation then the continuance thereof without opposition of other princes is holden and obserued as inuiolable and permanent Now King Henrie the second succeeding William the Conqueror Graftons Chronicle within one hundreth yeares did ioine Ireland to the crowne of England and did reduce Normandie and other places in France to the crowne taking as it were a new possession of the said seas and Henrie the first euerie yeare or within three yeares at the furthest crossed ouer into Normandie hauing taken Robert Duke of Normandie prisoner In the time of King Edward the third Chro. Malmesbu●e there was a disputation held with France concerning the fishing of the seas about Brittaine in which it was proued to belong to England Ioh. Hayward and thereupon Fraunce disclaimed therein By ancient records and Treaties c. as appeareth by the said King Edward the third his Proclamation yet extant Which arguments and contracts are as a law effectuall And here I must remember the singular care which the right reuerend father in God doctor Abbot now Archbishop of Canturburie A rare booke remoining with the Archbishop of Canturburie and Metropolitane of England hath had in procuring at his great charges for the good of our posteritie an excellent great Volume or Manuscript which was heretofore taken at Calice in France when the Spaniards tooke the same Anno 1596 and caried to Bruxels in the Low-countries whereof I haue had the perusall and made an Abstract of the Chapters of the same viz. The Treatie of Peace betweene Edward the third king of England and Iohn king of France for themselues and their eldest sonnes namely Edward the Blacke Prince of Wales and Charles Duke of Normandie Regent the French King his father being prisoner to the said King Edward which Treatie was made the eight of May 1360 in Britanie neere Chartres and confirmed at Calice whereupon sixteene Hostages were giuen to the King of England by the French King who was to come thither in person and to pay three millions of crownes for his ransome of two crownes to bee reckoned for an English noble called in King Henrie the eight his time Angell noble being some 750000 〈◊〉 sterling The ransome o' King Iohn of France The ship whereof vpon the one side did signifie the dominion of the seas whereunto old Chaucer the Poet did allude in Henrie the fifth his time This money was to be paied to weet six hundreth thousand crownes at Calice within 4 months after King Iohns arriuall there more foure hundreth thousand crownes within the yeare and so much yearely vntill the full paiment made
within the citie of London being the kings Chamber After this follow the particular Letters for the deliuerie of seuerall countries and townes as Caours Carsin Monstreull Calice Rochell Turaine Poitiers Poitou Xantes Xantogne Dagonois Perigot and diuers others besides many Letters concerning the French Kings libertie and his Hostages and of the homage to be made by the Earles and Barons to the King of England who remaineth with the title of Soueraignetie and Domayne besides many other memorable things so that all matters concerning the seas and land were established for those seas and King E●ward tooke sixe pence a tunne for fishing ships King Henrie the fifth who did conquere all France and had the possession of Mare Britanicum lost nothing of his right no more did Henrie the sixth and King Henrie the seuenth as may appeare by their Proclamations Treaties Chro Holl●ngshed and Contracts not onely with the French but with the Archdukes of Burgondie as by Guicchardins Chronicle Chr. Froiszart Guicc●ar●in and the said Treatise or Historicall description of the Low-countries appeareth And as Docter d ee in his booke of Nauigation affirmeth King Henrie the seuenth in consideration of the fishing trade properly belonging vnto England in his seas and dominions had resolued to settle a trade thereupon which he preferred aboue all voyages for in those daies there was no fishing trade established in the Low-countries By original antiquitie And it is not yet one hundreth yeares compleate that one Violet Stephens and other discontented Fishmongers departed the realme of England and went into Holland to the towne of Enckhusen where they procured the inhabitants to fish for them in his Maiesties of great Brittaine seas streames and dominions which inhabitants vpon the decease of the said Englishmen Fishmongers tooke the whole trade to themselues dispersing the same into many other townes whereby the same is admirably increased Queene Marie being maried with King Philip the second of Spaine vnder whom all the seuenteene Low Prouinces were vnited granted a lease vnto the said King for the fishing of his subiects in the North parts of Ireland for one and twentie yeares for a certaine fine and paying one thousand pound yearely into the Treasurie of Ireland and Edward Fitton knight then Treasurer And the Companie of the old Haunce in primo of the said Queene Marie had also libertie to sish within the said seas vpon certaine conditions as appeareth in the Chappell of the Rolls of the Chancerie And for England Northwards licences were giuen at Scarborough Castle To this distinction of dominion of the Seas Inuention of the Porteullis I call to memorie the proceedings of that victorious King Henry the eight who during the time that Calice was vnder the Crowne of England as it hath beene full 211 yeares vsed the inuention of the signe of the Portcullis signifying the power of locking vp of the narrow Seas betweene Douer and Calice which was thought conuenient to bee vsed vpon the coyne made for the East-Indies at the beginning of that trade being peeces of the value of eight Royalls of Spaine whereof there was coyned in the Tower of London for a triall in Ianuarie 1600 some six thousand pounds which could not be made currant there because the Spanish peeces of eight Royalls had beene before that time counterfeited by other nations which made the East-Indians to doubt of our coyne although without cause This noble King Henrie hauing procured the Emperor Charles the fifth to meet with the French King went ouer in person with a great power to besiege the towne of Bulloigne in France and when he saw that the Emperors Tent or Pauillion was made with the two pillars of Hercules and the inscription Plus vltra and likewise the French Kings Tent with the three Flower deluces and the title of Primus Christianorum Rex He caused an Archer to be made vpon his Pauillion with Bow and Arrowes and his inscription was Cui adherio praeest declaring thereby his present strength whereby hee did qualifie those warres and peace was made between the Emperor and the said French King it being true that the state of a Prince doth as much consist by reputation as by strength Our Soueraigne Lord King Iames hath also beene mindfull of his right of distinct dominion for the great blessings which almightie God hath allotted to the Kingdomes of Great Brittaine Ireland and the Isles adiacent vnder his Maiesties Dominions is so visible to all the world as that thereby they are rauished with admiration For albeit that the earthly blessings are produced in seasonable times yet the blessings of the Seas are directed and pointed at by the finger of God at infallible seasons causing those watrie creatures to offer themselues for our sustenance and for the generall good of all creatures in places certaine within his Maiesties Seas Streames and Dominions and not into the maine where fishing cannot bee effected Whereupon his Maiestie before his comming into England did let the fishing of Scotland to the Hollanders for fifteene yeares it being agreed by more ancient Treaties betweene them that the fishing then agreed vpon should be eightie miles from the Coast to the end the Scoles of Herrings should not bee interrupted His Maiestie in the fourth yeare of his Raigne of Great Brittaine made a Graunt to one Collyns of Couentrie for twentie one yeres for the fishing in some parts of Ireland Graunts made for fishing and the like Graunts haue beene made for the Isles of Garnesey and Iarnesey according to the Common Law of England By the Common Law which in this point concerning his Maiesties right of dominion is very copious the handling whereof I leaue to the learned and judicious of the said Law In the seuenth yeare of his Maiesties said raigne his Highnesse caused a Proclamation to be made concerning his Dominion of fishing which being compendious and substantiall I thought conuenient here to be inserted Verbatim IAMES By the Grace of God King of Great Brittaine France and Ireland Defendor of the Faith c. To all and singular persons to whom it may appert●ine greeting Although We doe sufficiently know by Our experience in the Office of Regall dignitie in which by the fauour of Almightie God Wee haue beene placed and exercised these many yeares as also by obseruation which Wee haue made of other Christian Princes exemplarie actions how far the absolutenesse of Our Soueraigne Power extendeth it selfe And that in regard thereof Wee need not to yeeld account to any person vnder God for any action of Ours which is lawfully grounded vpon that iust Prerogatiue Yet such hath euer beene and shall be Our care and desire to giue satisfaction to Our neighbour Princes and friends in any action which may haue the least relation to their Subiects and Estates as We haue thought good by way of friendly Praemonition to declare vnto them all and to whomsoeuer it may appertaine as followeth Whereas Wee
as for the erecting of Schooles and Vniuersities maintenance of the poore and of widowes and orphanes repairation of Churches and high-wayes and ditches for the plantation of Collonyes of people in other Countries and building of Townes and Castles for their maintenance as also to erect Pawne-houses to supply the necessitie of the mechanicall poore suppressing intollerable vsurie whereof we shall intreate in the second Part of this Booke concerning monyes The Etimologie of the word Lotarie is deriued from the word Lot And albeit all Lotaries are things casuall in respect of man to whom the Lot falleth yet in regard of the prouidence of God they are certaine in effect by the said Diuine disposing of the Lot Insomuch that howsoeuer the words Fortune Chaunce Fate Destinie and Casualtie are borrowed from the Heathens it cannot bee denied but that respecting the effects and operations of God towards man they are proper distinctions of Gods Diuine Prouidence And hence ariseth the Prouerbe Nemo sua sorte contentus viuit * ⁎ * CHAP. XLII Of Associations Monopolies Engrossings and Forestallings ASsociations are twofold the one is done by publike authoritie of Princes or States vpon Graunts made by Letters Patents which are properly called Societies as the Companie of Merchant Aduenturers Societie of the Merchants Aduenturers which are of 400 yeares standing or thereabouts reckoning from the yeare 1248 when the said Merchants obtained priuiledges of Iohn Duke of Brabant and were called the Brotherhood of Saint Thomas Becket of Canturburie which were confirmed by King Edward the third Henry the fourth Henrie the fifth Edward the fourth Henrie the sixth Richard the third and King Henrie the seuenth who gaue them the name of Merchants Aduenturers after him also confirmed by King Henrie the eight Edward the sixth Queene Marie Queene Elizabeth and lastly by our Soueraigne Lord King Iames not without many enemies and oppositions and most especially of late taxing them to be Monopolizers and vnprofitable to the common-wealth being that all our Clothes were not dressed and dyed in England Whereupon their Patent was for a time suspended but afterwardes confirmed again vnto them by his Maiesties ample Proclamation As this Societie is of ancient estimation so is their gouernement verie commendable and preserueth the amitie and entercourse betweene the Realme and other neighbour Princes and States venting the best commodities of the Kingdome yet so that euerie man selleth freely at his pleasure without any combination or limitation to the great honour and seruice of the State wherein they may daily see and obserue more and more as is heeretofore declared Societies of East-Indies Virginia c. The East-India Merchants are also a Societie but their aduenturers runne all into maine Stockes and is gouerned and carried all ioyntly vpon benefit or losse This Company beganne in the yeare 1599. So the Merchants of Turkie are a Societie Also the Virginia and Barmuda Merchants and diuers others are Societies incorporated by his Maiesties Letters Patents as aforesaid The other Association is done by and betweene Merchants of their owne authoritie Partnership by Contract ioyning themselues together for to deale and trade either for yeares or voyages and this is properly called Partnership where one man doth aduenture a thousand pounds another fiue hundreth pounds another three hundreth pounds and another foure hundreth pounds more or lesse as they agree amongst themselues to make a stocke euerie man to haue his profit or to beare losses and aduenture according to their seuerall stockes in one or many voyages for one or more yeares besides the moneyes taken vp at vse to trade withall proportionably according to the rates of their stocks by parts and portions to be diuided into so many parts as they agree wherein the conditions be diuers which must be obserued truely and the accounts accordingly otherwise all will run into a Laborinth and confusion And by the common Law one partner cannot proceed against another and in Chauncerie the suits may be prolonged for the life of a man vnlesse the Law-Merchant be better vnderstood and the Auditors Office be enabled to end these businesses with breuitie and expedition There is another branch of this maner of partnership Partnership by imployment which commeth to passe when Factors beyond the seas dealing for diuers Merchants will sometimes make imployment of seuerall mens money in one kind of commoditie to be diuided amongst them Here one may become a partner vnawares and vnknowne as of late I know the like did happen in a great bargaine of Tabacco whereupon all the partners being seuen in number are fallen out and diuers of them are in law This course althoug vsed is verie dangerous especially when they vse many Factors One Merchant sendeth commodities to his Factor to be sold in Spaine and giueth order that by that meanes he shall prouide money for his part of the imployment of Tabacco to be made another Merchant he sendeth a Letter of credit of a friend of his that so much money shall be taken vp by exchange for Antuerpe or London as shall be needfull for his part another Merchant he causeth so much money to be made ouer to his Factor by exchange ●●om Antuerpe as will furnish for his part Two other Merchants dwelling in Spaine doe furnish their parts there themselues And amongst them all they admit in Spaine one Factor dwelling there to buy the Tabacco and he hath a part with them but findeth the meanes to disburse no money for his part because he buyeth the said parcell of Tabacco amounting to some twelue thousand ducats and conditioned to pay a good part of it at six or more moneths And the seuenth Merchant he prouideth not any money and neuerles wil haue his part because he gaue order to his Factor to take it vp by exchange for London vpon him promising that he would pay the same here Hereupon the bargaine and imployment of Tabacco is made the goods receiued and sent ouer to London where it is diuidedly deliuered to some of the said partners to be sold with one and others priuitie for the generall account of them all to be made vp amongst them to cleere the said account and euerie man to haue his part of the benefit and profit and likewise to beare such losses as may decrease their profit according to equitie and conscience Interim it happened that the Factor who bought the said Tabacco dyed insoluent who did not only leaue his own part vnpaid but a far greater summe which the other two partners were faine to pay being bound for it in all amounting to 1300 ll sterling● Now the question is How this losse shall be borne amongst them The first Merchant he saieth I did send commodities and by the prouenue thereof my part was payed by him that dyed and that dependeth vpon accounts to be cleered betweene him and the partie deceased the second Merchant he sayeth My part was paied in readie mony in Spaine taken vp
six pence and withall he did write vnto other Princes concerning the same and Commissioners came ouer about it but all was in vaine whereupon he gaue an absolute authoritie to Cardinall Wolsey by letters patents as followeth HENRIE the eight by the grace of God King of England and of Fraunce defendor of the Faith Lord of Ireland to the most reuerend Father in God our most trustie and most entierly beloued Councellor the Lord Thomas Cardinall of Yorke Archbishop Legat de Leicester of the See Apostolicke Primat of England and our Chauncellor of the same greeting For as much as coynes of moneys as well of gold as of siluer be of late daies raised and inhaunced both in the realme of France Francis the French King and Charles the fifth Emperor as also in the Emperors Low-countries and in other parts vnto higher prices than the verie poiz weight and finesse and valuation of the same and otherwise than they were accustomed to bee currant by meanes whereof the money of this our realme is daily and of a long season hath beene by sundrie persons as well our subiects as strangers for their particular gaine and lucre conueyed out of this realme into the parts beyond the seas and so is likely to continue more and more to the great hinderance of the generalitie of Our subiects and people and to the no little impouerishing of our said realme if the same be not speedily remedied and foreseene We after long debating of the matter with you and sundrie other of Our Councell and after remission made vnto outward Princes for reformation thereof finding finally no manner of remedie to be had at their hands haue by mature deliberation determined That Our coynes and moneys as well of Gold as of Siluer shall bee by our Officers of our Mint from henceforth made at such finesse lay standard and value as may be equiualent correspondent and agreeable to the rates of the valuation inhaunced and raised in outward parts as is afore specified whereupon Wee haue giuen commaundement by Our other Letters vnder our great Seale to the Master Warden Comptroller and other Officers of Our said Mint and to euerie of them to see this Our determination put in execution of the said coynes by Proclamation or otherwise as in the print coyne stroake of the same Wherefore by these presents Wee will and authorise you to proceed not onely from time to time when you shall seeme conueniently by aduice of such other Our Councell as you shall thinke good to the limitation description and deuising how and after what manner and forme Our said coynes and moneys may be brought vnto the rates and values finesse lay standard and print by you and them thought to be requisite but also to appoint Our said Officers of Our Mint duely to follow execute obey and fulfill the same in euerie point according In which doing these Our Letters vnder our great Seate shall be your sufficient warrant and discharge any Act Statute Ordinance or Law or other thing whatsoeuer it be to the contrarie notwithstanding In witnesse whereof We haue caused these presents to be sealed with Our great Seale at Westminster the 23 day of Iulie in the eighteenth yeare of Our raigne c. Graftons Chronicle doth record that all was to no purpose for the inhauncing might on both sides haue run ad infinitum Afterwards in the two and twentieth yeare of his raigne finding that Merchants did transport still the moneys or made them ouer by exchange and made no imployment vpon the commodities of the realme he caused a Proclamation to be made according to an old statute 14 Richard 2 Statute of imployment That no person should make any exchange contrarie to the true meaning thereof vpon paine to be taken the Kings mortall enemie and to forfeit all that he might forfeit Hereupon it fell out that lawlesse necessitie did run to the other extreame of imbasing the moneys by allay whereby all things came to be out of order For base money maketh euerie thing deere Base moneys and ouerthroweth the course of exchange betweene Merchants and causeth much counterfeit money to be made to buy the commodities of the realme and to destroy the good moneys like vnto the seuen leane Kine of Pharaoth which deuoured the seuen fat Kine in a short time as appeared of late within the realm of Ireland which is more dangerous in those kingdomes where their moneys are of a rich standard whereby many commotions happen Commotions about base money as in Fraunce during the raigne of Philip le Bell. And Peter the fourth King of Aragon did for this cause confiscate the Islands of Maiorca and Minorca now kingdomes in the Mediterranean sea whereas the policie of those nations which do vse seuerall standards of moneys doth preuent the same because that promiscuously they make and coine moneys of seuerall standards according to the occasion which is worthie the obseruation ☞ and as all extreames are vicious and defectiue so doth it befall those countries which will haue no base money at all and are made a prey vnto other nations by the exchange for moneys which must be maintained withall as I haue made and shall make more apparant Proportion betweene gold and siluer The third effect or alteration of the Kings Valuation of money is the Proportion betweene gold and siluer being in most countries twelue to one that is to say one pound of siluer for one ounce of gold wherein there is more operation than most men do imagine For you cannot aduance or inhance the one but you abate and diminish the other for they ballance vpon this paralell And whereas England by continuance of eleuen to one hath beene a great looser of gold so now by aduancing the same not onely to twelue to one but to 13 ⅕ for one there hath followed a verie great losse of our siluer which is ouer much abated as may appeare if we do but consider that the French Crowne of sixe shillings was answered with six shillings in siluer and is now full seuen shillings and foure pence and our six shillings in siluer are the verie same for twelue ounces of Crown gold of twentie and two carrats at 3 ll 6 ss maketh 39 ll 12 ss and 108 French Crownes the which are made out of the pound weight of twelue ounces at seuen shillings foure pence maketh also 39 ll 12 ss Hereupon to equalize the siluer vnto gold againe will breed a generall inhauncing of things within the realme for the alteration of the measure of moneys causeth the denomination to follow in number to make vp the tale which requireth great prouidence Exchange fallen by the inhauncing of gold in the Low-countries For we find that other nations perceiuing our gold to be inhanced haue abated the price of exchange according to which the prices of commodities are ruled so that the same goeth at thirtie and foure shillings six pence or thirtie
they shall speake truth to that which shall be demanded of them 3 That they shall not require without iust cause any time of prolongation 4 That they haue not nor wil attempt to corrupt witnesses 6 The sixth time vpon the contestation and interlocutorie sentence you must obserue nine things 1 That the witnesses be presented in presence of the partie against whom they are produced 2 That they bee freemen and honest and not hired nor corrupted 3 That they bee sworne and the producent payeth his charges 4 You may inquire of the partie that doth produce the witnesses as also of the witnesses by certaine articles what may appertaine to the cause in regard of their admittance for to bee sworne because their deposition is the ground of the matter 5 That the plaintife hauing had three seuerall times to produce his witnesses shall not haue any other time to examine any more vnlesse he do sweare that he knoweth not what the former witnesses haue deposed and the Iudge do assent thereunto 6 If the witnesses haue declared any thing obscurely they may declare the same more plainely if the Iudge do desire the same at the intreatie of the partie according as he shall direct 7 After publication of the witnesses depositions there may not any other witnesses be deposed vpon the said interrogatories or any matter touching the same 8 That the witnesses be examined of the time of the place and of the case it selfe whether they haue seene or heard the same what they beleeue or know thereof or of the report they haue heard 9 That to auoid charges there be not too many examined A Maximo of the Law of Arragon The seuenth time is when all must bee alledged which may any manner of waies make for the state of the cause and if it fall out that two witnesses tell one tale as it were verbatim their euidence is voide and the eight time the Iudge proceedeth to a definitiue sentence and the ninth time which must be done within tenne daies the partie may appeale and therupon for the tenth time the pleyto or suite with all the records goeth out of that Iudges court to a higher court where it may not depend aboue a limited time The obseruations doe minister an occasion that many controuersies are ended without law for the parties are not sure to obserue these times and the defendants which seeke delaies are not contented with so short a time of pleading the complainant also may know whether it be safe for him to take his oath as aforesaid that hee is in conscience persuaded of his right To abridge the multiplicities of suits and moreuer paying a fine for wrong molestation abridged with them heretofore the multiplicities of suits Omitting now to speake of other courts of equitie and calling law and Equitie to bee the Common Law so much commended aboue the Ciuile Law by the said M r. Fortescue sometimes Lord chiefe Iustice of the Kings Bench in the time of King Henrie the sixth who hath obserued fiue points wherein the same consisteth let vs obserue many more to extoll the excellencie of the said Common Law as followeth summarily 1 First because of the antiquitie thereof Excellencie of the Common Law of England for that in all the times that the Realme was inhabited by fiue seuerall nations the same was still ruled by the said Customes that it is now gouerned withall which if they had not beene good some of the Kings of these seuerall nations mooued either with justice or with reason and affection would haue changed or abolished the same especially the Romanes who iudged all the world 2 Secondly for that the Kings of England at their Coronation doe take a solemne oath to cause all the Customes of the Realme to be faithfully obserued according to the former institution 3 For that the said ancient Customs or Maximes therof are inexpugnable and doe stand of their owne authoritie as Principles which need no reason to confirme their authoritie as the Lawes of Solon Draco Carondas Licurgus Numa Pompilius and the Law of twelue Tables c. 4 Because all differences and controuersies which happen betweene the King and his subiects are tried and determined by the Law and if it be done in Parlement or by the Iudges it is still according to the Law 5 Because the King personally giueth not any iudgement especially when himselfe is a partie seeing it is against the Law of Nature to be both judge and partie 6 For that notwithstanding the decease of the Kings of England from time to time the Iudges of the Courts of Record that is to say of the Chancerie of the Kings Bench of the Common Pleas which doe sit as Iudges by the Kings Letters Pattents doe remaine authorised and their power ended not immediately with the King howbeit the succeeding Kings doe confirme them in their offices whereby all seditions are preuented during the inter Regnum 7 For that with indifferencie without regard of persons it commandeth as well the Nobilitie and other persons of dignitie by way of vtlagare or outlaw as the meanest subiects 8 For exercising a power ouer the Iudges which are not to judge of the Law but by the Law and therefore is the word Iudicium properly attributed to their determinations euen as the word Decretum is vnderstood of the ordinances or sentences of the Magistrates following equitie as it were without Law For there is the like proportion betweene the Law and the execution thereof called Legis Actio as there is betweene Equitie and the dutie of a Magistrate called Iudicis Officium 9 For that the officers thereof are authorised according to the qualitie and due execution of it by a proportionable distribution namely The Iudges for terme of life and officers subalterne changing from yeare to yeare to the end the administration of justice may bee more indifferent 10 For the diuersitie of the triall thereof in seuerall Courts according to Law and Equitie is the cause of an agreeing and most necessarie discord as it were Concordi Discordia whereby the bodie of justice is supported by striuing as the stones vpholding a vault as Cato saith 11 For that the Iudges in criminall causes doe change from time to time their circuits and inferiour Iudges of the Court doe execute the place as well as superiour Iudges whereby partialitie is preuented 12 For that the Law tendeth most carefully for the good and preseruation of life and goods of euerie good and honest man seeing that euen in criminall causes it hath prouided as much as may stand with justice a helpe and fauour permitting the Iudges to order the pleading of offendors and to instruct them to auoid mispleading and giuing them leaue to except against the Iurors which they dislike 13 For that it doth forbid the sale of offices thereby intending due administration of justice for where offices are sold as it were by the Great there justice is commonly solde by
which they doe affect Plato saith That it is a generall rule in State matters That Princes doe not only giue Lawes vnto their subiects but also by their example they do change the manners of men The example of Princes doth change the manners of men to which purpose hee doth vse the example of their King Francis the first who being hurt in the head caused his haire to bee cut off wherein the people did presently imitate him We haue seen saith he three great Princes striuing as it were who should haue the most learned men and best artificers namely the said great King Francis the first Henrie the 8 King of England and Pope Paul the third insomuch that the King of England could neuer haue the learned and reuerend Beda and the French King did pay seuentie two thousand Crownes for a Diamond rather than King Henrie should haue had it Hereupon presently the people did giue themselues to studie and to buy precious stones when the Nobilitie did imitate the King and when the King gaue ouer the same the price of them was much abated If any man should here obiect saith Monsieur Bodin that if things should still become deerer partly through the waste and partly for the aboundance of gold and siluer no man should be able to liue because of the dearth of things It is true but the warres and calamities happening to a Common-wealth doe stay the course of it as wee may note that the Romanes haue liued with scarsitie and to speake properly in want and miserie almost fiue hundreth yeares when they had but copper moneys of a pound weight Copper moneys of one pound weight and without stampe for their gold and siluer came vnto them in one hundreth and twentie yeares by the spoile of all the world which was brought to Rome by the Scipions Paul Emilyus Marius Sylla Lucullus Pompey and Caesar especially by the two last for Pompey did conquer so much land Great wealth of the Romanes as made the reuenue of the Empire to bee eight millions and a halfe of Crownes Caesar notwithstanding all his prodigalities brought to the treasurie fortie millions of Crownes hauing giuen at one time vnto Paul Consull 900 thousand Crownes to hold silence and vnto Curion Tribune 1500 thousand Crownes to take his part Marke Anthonie went further as Plutarch and Appian haue written for he gaue vnto his armie for their seruice done 200 thousand Talents being 120 millions of Crownes so did Adrian the Emperour to haue the good will of fortie Legions giue ten millions whereby appeareth great aboundance of gold and siluer to haue been at Rome but it did not last euer for in lesse than three hundreth years the Parths Goths Hercules Hongres and other cruell Nations did ouercome the Empire and all Italy and ouercame the Romanes burned their Citie and tooke the spoile of them The like doth happen vnto all Common-weales to waxe and increase by little and little and to flourish for a time in wealth and power The propertie of Common-weales and afterwards to grow old and decline vntill they bee vtterly ruinated and destroyed Touching the last cause of the dearth of things by the alteration of money hee sheweth how Monsieur Malestroit hath mistaken the matter in the monies themselues made within three hundreth yeares For whereas he saith That Saint Lewis caused the first sols to be coyned worth twelue deniers whereof sixtie foure peeces went to the marke weight of eight ounces and that in Philip de Valois his time the Crowne of the Flower de Luce without number and as good as the Crownes now was valued but at twentie sols and that afterwardes King Iohn caused the Frankes to be made of sine gold which were but valued twentie sols and that the sols of siluer was worth fiue of our sols he doth not say of what weight and finenesse the moneys were in those dayes and in conclusion hee saith That the price of things is not altered by the Valuation of moneys But if Monsieur Bodine according to his wisedome and deepe iudgement in other matters had duely considered of these two Paradoxes hee would haue made a direct answere thereunto before he would haue proceeded in his former discourse The first Paradox being considered with the second will shew a manifest contradiction or contrarietie The contratierie of the Paradoxes for the first doth consist in giuing of more gold and siluer for commodities now than in times past which hee denieth and the second in receiuing lesse commodities for the gold and siluer now than in times past which hee affirmeth which both wayes is to bee taken in nature of commutation Now if wee doe not giue more quantitie of gold and siluer for commodities than in times past how can we receiue lesse commodities for the gold and siluer and thereby receiue a losse as in the second Paradox is alleaged Againe if we doe receiue lesse quantitie of commodities for gold and siluer than in times past according to the second Paradox whereby we sustaine a losse how can the first Paradox bee true That nothing is growne deere for that wee giue no more quantitie of gold and siluer than in times past commodities and moneys lying by this comparison in an equall ballance But let vs admit that Monsieur Malestroit had an intention which hee might haue expressed in few words if hee had the true ground and vnderstood the matter hee went about by proouing onely that when moneys doe alter in weight or in finenesse or in valuation Causes of the denomination of moneys c. or in all three the price of things doth alter onely by denomination if the valuation bee made accordingly yet Monsieur Bodine had not made a good interpretation of the said Paradoxes and mistooke the true ground of the matter in question touching the prices of commodities which hee compared within themselues in the Realme of France whereas the comparison ought to bee of the inhauncing of the price of the commodities of one countrey with the price of the commodities of other countreys and thereby find out whether things are growne deere with vs or with them in effect So that they both mistaking their grounds we haue shewed in the said Treatise That they hauing lost Ariadne her line wherewith they entred into the laborinth of moneys and their properties before declared are like vnto a man who hauing lost his way amongst the woods the further hee goeth the more hee erreth from the right way To intreate therefore of commodities and money in the course of trafficke betweene Kingdomes and Common-weales is not sufficient but the exchange of moneys being the publike measure betweene them must bee regarded as the principall and ouerruling part thereof For if a man should frame a silogisme in manner following he shall find the same full of fallacies and misprision nay a verie Dilemma Nothing causeth Merchants to export more money out of the Realme than they bring
That is to conuert the inhabitants or neighbours to Christianitie and to the end such temporal blessings may be enioyed as the land and seas do affoord most requisit to be done in the Island of New found-land bordering vpon the coast of America from which it is diuided by the sea so far distant as England is from the neerest part of Fraunce and lyeth betweene 46 and 53 degrees North latitude as Captaine Richard Whitbourne hath verie well declared in his discouerie affirming the spaciousnesse thereof to be almost as Ireland and therein he hath noted many disorderly courses committed by some Traders and fishing Merchants in setting forth to the New-found-land which are worthie the obseruation and knowledge of Merchants because that the like errors may not be committed in other voyages which by this good aduice may be preuented or reformed It is well knowne saieth he Worthie considerations for plantation for the fishing trade That they which aduenture to New-found-land a fishing beginne to dresse and prouide their ships readie commonly in the moneths of December Ianuarie and Februarie and are readie to set forth at sea in those voyages neere the end of Februarie being commonly the fowlest time in the yeare and thus they do striuing to be there first in a Harbour to obtaine the name of Admirall that yeare and so to haue the chiefest place to make their fish on where they may do it with greatest ease and haue the choice of diuers necessaries in the Harbors And thus by their hasting thither oftentimes there comes not only dangers to themselues but also great mischiefe and losses to many others which arriue there after the first as it may by that which followes truely appeare For by the hasting forth as now they vse they greatly endanger themselues being many times beaten with rough and stormie windes and oftentimes they are thereby forced to returne backe with great losse both of mens liues and goods as it is well knowne so that to get the superioritie to arriue there first in an Harbour they will beare such an ouerprest saile and in so desperate a maner as there are no true vnderstanding sea-men that vse the like to any place of the world For albeit when the fogs are thicke and the nights darke that sometimes they cannot discerne the length of three ships in the way before them and the yee often threatning much perill vnto them yet on runnes the ship amaine so fast as po●sibly she may when commonly most part of the companie are fast a sleepe euen with extreame hazard of their liues Thus many times both ships and men haue beene cast away suddenly to the vtter vndoing of many aduenturers and families And also this vntimely setting forth consumeth a great quantitie of victualls that might be saued to better purpose and it forceth them to carrie and recarrie many more men in euerie ship euerie voyage than they need if they once take a fitter course Such Stages and Houses that the first arriuers find standing in any Harbors wherein men set diuers necessaries and also salt their fish some men haue vsed to pull downe or taken their pleasures of them by which vnfit disorders of some first arriuers there yearely those which arriue after them are sometimes twentie daies and more to prouide boords and timber to fit their boats for fishing and other necessarie roomes to salt and drie their fish on whereby much time is lost and victualls consumed to no purpose and thereby also the voyages of the after-commers are often greatly hindered and prolonged to the generall hurt of the common-wealth and the mariners themselues which commit those great abuses are thereby also much wronged as themselues may conceiue Wherefore if such as henceforth aduenture to that countrie take some better course in that trade of fishing than heretofore they haue vsed they shall find the greater safetie of their aduentures and much good thereby Penefits arising by reformation about fishing For whereas heretofore they haue vsed to make readie their ships to saile in those voyages in such vnseasonable time of the yeare whereby they often receiue such hinderances and losses they need not then to go in the said voyage vntill the fiue and twentieth day of March which is a fit time of the yeare to put forth to sea from our coast to that countrie the Winter stormes beginning then to cease and then any such ship which carries in her thirtie men in euerie voyage may well leaue six men there behind them or more all the Winter season vntill the ships returne to them againe and these six mens victuals will be saued and serue to better vse and thereby also cut off that moneths setting forth in those voyages so soone in the yeare as now men vse to do and then the victualls for that moneth which is so vainely and with such great danger consumed may well maintaine those men which are left in the countrie all the Winter season till the ships returne to them againe with a verie small addition to it Couenient priuiledges to be granted And it may be thought reasonable That men which will vndertake to settle people in New-found-land shall haue this priuiledge that in case he leaue there a fifth person of such as he carries thither in his fishing voyage to inhabite whereby those men so left might keepe a certaine place continually for their fishing and drying of it whensoeuer their Ship arriueth thither then would all such as leaue people there build strong and necessarie roomes for all purposes and then in some necessarie houses and roomes they may put their fish when it is dryed which fish now standeth after such time it is dryed vntill it is shipped which is commonly aboue two moneths in great heapes packt vp vncouered in all the heat and raine that falleth whereby great aboundance of good fish is spoiled yearely and cast away for want of such necessary rooms And for the want of such fit houses some mens voyages haue beene ouerthrowne and then a meane place to make fish on wil be made more commodious than the best place is now that men so dangerously and desperately runne for euerie yeare And thus euerie mans fishing Pinnaces may bee preserued in such perfect readinesse against his Ship shall yearely arriue there againe which Pinnaces are now often lost and sometimes torne in pieces by the first arriuers there very disorderly and if such Pinnaces Stages and Houses may bee maintained and kept in such readinesse yearely it would bee the most pleasant profitable and commodious trade of fishing that is at this time in any part of the world For then euerie Ships companie might fall to fishing the verie next or second day after their arriuall whereas now it is twentie dayes before they are fitted and then such Ships should not need so soone to hast away from England by one moneth at the least mens liues might be thereby much the better saued lesse victualls wasted