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A26141 An enquiry into the jurisdiction of the Chancery in causes of equity ... humbly submitted to the consideration of the House of Lords, to whom it belongeth to keep the inferiour courts within their bounds / by Sir Robert Atkyns, Knight ... ; to which is added, The case of the said Sir Robert Atkyns upon his appeal against a decree obtained by Mrs. Elizabeth Took and others, plaintiffs in Chancery, about a separate maintenance of 200£ per annum, &c. Atkyns, Robert, Sir, 1621-1709. 1695 (1695) Wing A4137; ESTC R16409 49,475 54

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AN ENQUIRY INTO THE JURISDICTION OF THE CHANCERY IN Causes of Equity I. Upon what Ground and Foundation that Jurisdiction is Built II. At what time the Chancery began to Exercise that Jurisdiction and upon what Occasion III. How Modest and Moderate the Exercise of it was at first IV. How wonderfully it is Grown and Enlarged And V. What is the best Remedy for Restoring and Maintaining the Common Law Humbly submitted to the Consideration of the House of Lords to whom it belongeth to keep the Inferiour Courts within their Bounds By Sir ROBERT ATKYNS Knight of the Honourable Order of the BATH To which is added The CASE of the said Sir Robert Atkyns upon his Appeal against a Decree obtained by Mrs. Elizabeth Took and others Plaintiffs in Chancery about a separate Maintenance of 200 l. per Annum c. London Printed in the Year 1695. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE THE LORDS Spiritual and Temporal IN Parliament Assembled My Lords THE following Treatise together with the state of the Case annex'd to it is Humbly Presented to your Lordships to whom it properly belongs the Subject matter of both relating to that Supream Jurisdiction in Cases of Appeals from Courts of Equity which is exercis'd by your Lordships as being the last Resort Your Lordships being also the true and just Moderators in all Disputes between other Courts in points of Jurisdiction you having the Coercive and Directive Power of keeping the rest of the Courts within their due Bounds set them by the Law and Constitution of the Nation that they do not Overflow their Banks nor Usurp nor Encroach one upon another Your Lordships besides have a more peculiar Right and Title to the Service of the Composer of this Treatise who hath had the Honour to serve your Lordships for some Years and in several Parliaments in an Eminent Station and with a large Testimony and favourable Acceptance from your Lordships as appears by that hearty and kind Address which your Lordships made on his behalf besides his ordinary Attendance and Assistance as one of the Judges which he began about Four and twenty years since If what he hath written seem too free and plain he hopes he is excuseable the Necessity and Importance of the Case so requires And he may be allowed a more than common Zeal for the Common Law he having sat so many Years as a Judge in several of the Courts in Westminster-Hall he himself and his Three immediate Ancestors having been of the Profession for near Two hundred Years and in Judicial places and through the Blessing of Almighty God have Prospered by it His Great Grandfather living in the time of King Henry VII and they all have in their several turns undergone the Charge and Labour of Readers of Lincolns-Inn And your Lordships and your Noble Ancestors have always and upon many great Occasions constantly Testified a true and hearty Zeal for the Common Law of England as will largely be manifested by this Treatise and the Conclusion of the stated Case annexed to it The only Design of this Treatise being meerly to Assist and Serve your Lordships in your Discharge of that Mighty Trust reposed in your Lordships to whom the Treatise and Case is entirely submitted by My Lords Your Lordship 's most Humble And Faithful Servant Robert Atkyns AN ENQUIRY INTO THE Jurisdiction of the CHANCERY IN Causes of Equity c. IT cannot nor as to the present Occasion and Enquiry it need not be denied but that the Names of Chancellor and Chancery are very Ancient not only in Foreign Countries but even in this Nation both in the times of the Saxons and continued from thence down to our times But our proper business at present is to Enquire what those Great and High Names did at first import and signifie and what Change hath been introduced in their signification by process of time derived down to this present Age. Sir Henry Spelman that Learned Antiquary in his Glossary printed in the year 1687. pag. 109. gives us a Series of the Chancellors in this Nation and begins with Turketulus Chancellor to Edward the Elder as he is called in our History of the Saxon times in the year of our Lord 924. near 800 years since Rembaldus was Chancellor to Edward the Confessor Roll. Abr. Tit. Chancellor 1 part 384. Sir Francis Bacon sometime Lord Chancellor of England in his Resus●…itatio at the end of that Book sets down a Catalogue of our Chancellors beginning with Mauritius in the time of our William the First Anno 1067. And Dugdale in his Origines Juridiciales gives the same See Sir Edw. Cooke 4 In●…tit 78. in the Chapter of the Chancery are the Names of several Chancellors n ancient times This shews the Antiquity of the Names but our business is to learn the Nature of them and what their Business and Employment was at first and when and how it changed Nomen ab Officio We may learn what the latter the Officium is from the Name so that the Nomen may be a true Notamen of the thing as it ought to be The Name of an Office or Employment generally imports the most eminent and noted part of the Employment though it consists of divers parts Cowel in his Interpreter upon the word Chancellor deduces it from Cancellare id est Literas vel scriptum line â per medium deductâ damnare Which as the word now in use with us is to Cancel or make void and it is performed by drawing cross Lines over the Letters Patents or other Writings to signifie they are made void and are to be of no farther use And this 't is likely was borrowed from the Lettices of Wood or Iron laid Croswise one over another to divide or enclose one part of a Room from the rest of that Room so that a Man might see through them within which Inclosure the Judge or Officer sate so as to be seen and spoken with but yet defended from the press of those that resorted to them As it is used in Churches where the Chancel is divided from the Body of the Church and the Clergy from the People in the first design of that partition And this rather relates to the place called the Chancery than to the Chancellor But from the resemblance of this partition the word is also applied to the Office or Duty of the Chancellor which was Cancellare to draw cross Lines over a Writing that is to Cancel it From hence it may be collected that at first the Chancellors principal Imployment was to Cancel Writings for he had his Name from it And Cowel cites Lupanus as testifying the same That the Name of Cancellarius was belonging to every Register who also was styled Grapharius a Scribe a writer of Writs or Actuary a Register of the Acts and Proceeding of a Court not a Judge but an Officer attending upon Judges Qui conscribendis Judicum actis dat operam It appears by Sir
Rigour of the Law by Equity in their own Persons alone and afterwards did delegate the same Power of Equity to a single Person the Chancellor who as they phrase it hath the dispensing of the King's Conscience as well as the Custody of it And that to the King alone in such Cases an Appeal doth lie which by what hath been already said is manifestly untrue as shall yet be further made out Sir John Fortescue who was a Lord Chancellor in his Book De laudibus Legum Angliae pag. 64. says to Prince Edward Son to King Henry VI proprio ore Nullus Regum Angliae Judicium proferre visus est tamen sua sunt omnia Judicia regni licet per Alios ipsa reddantur Just as all our Laws are said to be the King's Laws not that he hath the sole Legislature as Sir Robert Filmer doth weakly or rather wilfully tho groundlesly infer but Denominatio sumitur à Majore as is most frequent in common Use it is but an Embrio till he quicken it by passing the Bill In the next place Let us enquire at what time and by what occasion this Jurisdiction of the Chancery in Equity began by which it may appear whether it be Entitled to it either by Prescription or by Act of Parliament for Non datur Tertium The same Proofs and Authorities will serve to manifest these ●…7 H. 7. Keilway 42. b. by Vavasor The Sub-Paenâ began in the time of Edw. III. and that says he was against the Feoffee upon Confidence that is to Uses Mr. Lambert who was a Master of the Chancery Sir Edward Coke 2 Instit. 552 in his Archeion pag. 72 74 75. says that the Kings used to refer matters in Equity to the Chancellor from whence the Chancellor was anciently Styled Referendarius as was noted before or to him and some other of the Council And tho' this doth not as he observes plainly erect any Court of Equity yet as he supposeth it is the laying the first Stone of the Chancery Court and pag. 73. That in the time of Edward III. it was a Newly Erected Court which may be understood of its Latin Pleas. The Book called The Diversity of Courts written in the Reign of King Edward III. Treats of the Jurisdiction of the Chancery according to its ordinary Power which are the Latin Proceedings or by the Rules of the Common Law but says nothing of that which the Chancellor holdeth in Equity Et quod non invenis usquam esse putes nusquam It was enabled to deal in some special and particular Cases by Parliament which were but Temporary neither which proves that in such or in the like Cases the Chancellor could not meddle without the help of Acts of Parliament Nor were those Cases referred to his Equitable or Arbitrary Power neither as some misapprehend For Sir Edw. Coke 4 Instit. fol. 82. says That Acts of Parliament giving Power to the Chancellor to hear and determine Causes in Chancery are ever intended of the Court of Record there proceeding in Latin Secundum Legem consuetudinem Angliae which Power is not contested And Mr. Lambert pag. 74. ut supra says he does not remember that in our Reports of the Common Law in which Reports under the Titles of Conscience or Sub-Paena in Fazh or Brook's Abridgment many Cases of Equity in the Chancery may be found there is any mention of Causes before the Chancellor for help in Equity but only from the time of King Henry IV. in whose days by reason of those intestine Troubles between the Two Houses of York and Lancaster Feoffments to Use did either first begin or first grew common for Remedy in which Cases chiefly the Chancery Court was then fled unto No Book-case says that great Champion for the Common Law Sir Edward Coke 2 Instit. 552. nor Reports of the Law make any mention of any Court of Equity in the Chancery used before or in the Reign of King Henry V. but they speak of the Chancellor's ordinary Jurisdiction which is at the Common Law and by Latine Proceedings which proves they were very rare at that time The few Causes heard by the Chancellor in the Reigns of King Henry VIth and Edward IVth in Equity by English Bill are most of them concerning Uses of Land And how great an Invasion that new Invention of Uses was upon the Laws of England both the Common Law and the Statute Law and how pernicious they have been to Men's Estates and what occasion they have been of Contention and multiplying Suits shall appear by what follows See Doctor and Student pag. 71. to that purpose Sir Coke's 2 Instit. 553. affirms That no Act of Parliament printed or unprinted gave the Chancellor any power to hold any Court of Equity The Stat. of 36 Edw. III. Cap. 9. without question says that Grave and Reverend Judge and true lover of his Nation refers to the ordinary power of the Chancellor but gives him no shadow of any Absolute Power meaning a Power of Equity See the 2 Instit. fol. 553. See that remarkable Case of Sir Richard le Scrope in Sir Cotton's Abridgment of the Records of the Tower pag. 351. Numb 10. exceeding pertinent and useful in many respects to our present Enquiry and gives great light to us in many things It is mentioned also in Coke 2 Instit. 553. it happened Anno 17 of King Richard II. John de Windsor complain'd by Petition to the King against Sir Richard le Scrope and Sir John Lisley for detaining divers Mannors in Cambridgshire from him to which as he alledged he had a Right and Title Both Parties submitted the matter to the King's Arbitration The King committed it to the Council not to the Chancellor alone the Council decreed it for Windsor then Plaintiff under the Privy Seal they sent to the Chancellor to confirm that Decree or Award under the Great Seal which was done and a Special Injunction to Sir John Lisley and a Writ to the Sheriff to Execute it A strong Case in all its Circumstances Sir John Lisley one of the Defendants not satisfied with the Decree or Award Petitions the King in Parliament that is Appeals from it and prays the Matter may be determined at the Common Law notwithstanding the Decree or Award so confirm'd The King by Privy Seal Orders the Chancellor to Supersede the Injunction and the Writ and Decree The Decree was revers'd and both Parties order'd to stand to the Common Law and Windsor's Petition was dismissed Sir Edward Coke says that this Decree so made by the Council was the first Decree in Chancery that he could find and that upon a deliberate hearing of the whole matter by the Lords in Parliament it was adjudg'd that Sir John de Windsor should take nothing by his Suit but stand to the Common Law that is according to our now usual Language His Petition or Bill in Equity was dismiss'd and the Parties sent to the Common
Law I desire that both these Authorities last cited may be compared together viz. Sir Cotton's Abr. and Sir Coke's 2 Instit. 553. the one gives light to the other Juncta juvant This Instructs us in the method of Proceedings in Equity used in the time of King R. II. and most likely in the times preceding Not to the Chancellor alone but to the King himself to be referr'd to the Councel And the Case of Sir Richard le Scrope was in a matter where there was remedy at Law so that they were out of their way in Petitioning to the King in it and therefore the Decree was revers'd by the Lords in Parliament before whom the Appeal did properly lye nor would the Lords themselves determine it upon the Merits of the Cause viz. who had the right but referred the Parties to the Common Law to the right course and yet it was a Decree made by the Submission of all Parties to the Arbitration So ready were the Lords at that time to do right to the Common Law Sir Edward Coke says this was the first Decree made by the Chancellor in the Chancery who did as it seems in limine titubare stumble at the very Threshold which some say is ominous The Proceedings in this Case of Sir Richard le Scrope was as I find when Thomas Arundel Bishop of Ely and afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury was Chancellor who no doubt did much influence the King and Council in making the Decree They have been Churchmen and divers of them of the highest rank Cardinals who are upon good ground supposed to be the first Setters up and promoters of this absolute Power in Chancery the Chancellors generally in those elder times being of the Order of the Clergy And they began as is usual in beginnings with great modesty and to exercise their Power in some few Cases which failed of ordinary help and when Parliaments were not so frequent as formerly to whom recourse should have been and who would have censured such assuming of new Jurisdictions as they afterwards very frequently did And the Setters up of this new Jurisdiction would not at first adventure to do it by One single Person alone tho never so high but with the Concurrence of the Judges and they too not sent for into the Chancery to attend and assist the Chancellor but those new Cases of Equity were sent into the Exchequer Chamber where the Chancellor himself resorted to the Judges with their Causes in Equity and these are many of them reported in our Year-Books of those times And those Causes were constantly determin'd by the opinion of the Judges and this method took off the Judges whose Superiour the Chancellor was in Dignity and Grandeur from opposing that new Jurisdiction by granting Prohibitions to stop the Proceedings of the Chancery in such Cases as it was their Duty to have done See Mr. Selden's Notes upon Fleta How the Clergy who anciently had their Sole dependence upon the Bishop of Rome and held themselves not Subject to the Temporal Power still promoted and endeavoured to introduce the Civil Law into this Realm but yet were still withstood by the Lords and Commons who were always hearty Friends to the Common Law Sir Coke's 2 Instit. fol. 626. at the end of that folio it is said in the Indictment against Cardinal Wolsey and charged upon him that he intended Antiquissimas Angliae Leges penitùs subvertere enervare Universumque hoc Regnum Angliae ejusdem regni populum Legibus Imperialibus vulgò dictis Legibus Civilibus earundem Legum canonibus imperpetuum Subjugare subducere c. Cardinal Wolsey's being in the height of Favour and Authority with King Henry VIII hated both Parliaments and the Common Laws and he was the means that but one Parliament was holden in Fourteen Years The Common Law was the true Natural and Original Law of England used ever since the departure of the Romans and brought in by the English Saxons again Qui suis tantummodò quas secum è Germanià whether they had transplanted them attulerant Moribus usi sunt only their ancient Customs and no other Caesarei Juris says learned Selden usus plane reperitur Nullus per Annos amplius Septingentos more than 700 years There was no Chancery-Law to determine matters of fact much less titles of Freehold by Depositions of Witnesses only or by an Absolute or Arbitrary Power in all that time of 700 years No Man was suffer'd to have a Civil Law Book in his keeping King Stephen by his Edict did forbid it The Saxons Danes and Normans owned no other Law than that Law which Anglorum Commune vocitamus says the famous Selden in his Dissertatio ad Fletam pag. 502 503 505 506 508. And Johannes Balaeus tells us that Theobaldus Cantuariensis Archiepiscopus quasdam Leges in Angliam attulerat sed eas ut Reipublicae nocivas Rex Stephanus perpetuo Parliamenti Decreto damnavit delevit incendi fecit The Common Law was in King Stephen's time and before says Selden the Study of Men that were otherwise Learned too Sed Moribus Majorum tantum patrioque utebantur illi Jure qùod ante ad nostra usque tempora Angliae Commune vocitatur and their Studies were furnished with the Presidents of Judgments and Copies of Reports of Law-Proceedings like those of our Year-Books and no other were cited in their Courts And the Students and Residents at the Inns of Courts who afterwards were the Countors or Pleaders were not Clerks or Sollicitors as many now adays are to the declining of that Noble Profession But the Sons of Noble Men and of the best of the Gentry as we read in Sir John Fortes●…ue in his Treatise De Laudibus Legum Angliae Juris Anglicani says Excellent Selden ut Supra 537. quod Commune vocitamus quae Gentis hujus Genio ab intimâ Antiquitate adaptatum fuit Singularis aestimatio atque inde non immeritò in eodem adhaesio constans sane pertinax In that great question says Selden in his Dissertation ib. 539. concerning the right of Succession to the Crown of Scotland referred by all Parties and Pretenders to the Decision of our King Edward I. Anno Regni 19. Anno Dom. 1292. about which they met at Norham in the Bishoprick of Durham It was Debated as a Praeliminary whether it should be judged and decided by the Law of England or of Scotland or the Caesarean or Civil Law as being the Jus Gentium see Riley's Placita Parliamentaria 143. in the middle of that Page our King Edward I being the Soveraign or Superiour Lord of Scotland It was concluded before Roger de Brabazon a Judge of the King's-Bench Sir Edw. Coke says Ch. Justice 2 Instit. 554. the King 's Delegate or Substitute for that Great and Noble Occasion That the Caesarean or Civil Law should by no means be allowed of Nè inde Majestatis Anglicanae Juri
taken in the largest sence but rather contra-distinct and indeed opposite to it and destructive of it Sir Henry Spelman at last takes leave of this great Officer and of his Court by shewing what a mighty encrease came flowing in from that ill Weed the Invention of Uses or Trusts which are still the same But to this point there are plenty of far greater Authorities and Authors for whose Testimony herein I shall reserve it Another thing to be premised is that as the King had no such Power himself singly and in his own Person only to decide Causes of Equity and therefore could not Delegate it to any one Man as 't is pretended he might so and upon the same ground and reason the King by our Law could not by his Commission Erect any Court of Equity It can be grouned and warranted only upon a Prescription or an Act of Parliament neither of which can be pretended to in the matter in hand it was so adjudged 26 Eliz. in the King's-Bench Sir Edw. Coke 4 Instit. fol. 87 97. That a Court of Equity cannot be Erected but only by Act of Parliament or Prescription And the like in the Lord Hob. Rep. 63. Resolv'd also in Langdale's Ca. 12. Rep. 52. That the King cannot raise a Court of Equity the reason is because a Court of Equity proceeds by the Rules of the Civil Law and not by the Common Law 6 Rep. 11. b. and 2 Instit 71. The King may appoint a new Court and new Judges but cannot change the Law Hill 8. H. 4. fol. 79. by Gascoign That the King by his Charter cannot out the People of their Inheritance which they have in the Common Law So note the Common Law is the People's Inheritance In the next place Let us proceed to examine about what time and upon what occasion this Court of Equity exerted its Power which hath in part fallen in among our former Enquiries For the time and occasion too Mr. Lambert in his Archeion pag. 75. refers it to the time of King Henry IV. and the occasion was taken from Feoffments to Uses For remedy in which Cases the Chancery was fled unto With this agrees Sir Henry Spelman in his Glossary pag. 107. at the lower end Doctor and Student fol. 98. Sir John Davy's Rep. in his Preface Mr. Hunt's Argument for the Bishop's Right c. pag. 144. And to prevent mistakes herein it must be observ'd That the word Equity hath been very anciently used long before this Jurisdiction began in Chancery but not in a Contradiction or in Opposition to the Common Law of the Land as now it is but either in a mild and merciful Expounding of the Law by the known and sworn Judges of the Law or as synonimous and signifying the same thing as Law Justice and Right For the Laws of England were not looked upon then as being like the Laws of Draco Sanguinary and Cruel and Rigorous but merciful and equitable in themselves and so expounded and administred by the Judges of the Common Law Mulcaster the Translator of the Chancellour Fortescue being a Student of the Common Laws of England in the Reign of King H. VIII could readily observe to his Reader from his Study of those Laws and from the Arguments used by his Author the Excellent Sir John Fortescue Easdem nostras Leges non solum Romanorum Caesarum sed omnium aliarum Nationum Constitutiones multis parasangis prudentiâ Justitia equitate praecellere facilè perspicias See his Preface Non quod principi placet Legis vigorem habet non quicquid de voluntate Regis tho his Will be not Arbitrary neither but guided by Discretion and tho he define secundum aequum bonum sed quod Magnatum suorum Concilio Regiâ authoritate praestante habita super hoc deliberatione tractatu rectè fuerit definitum So writes Bracton Lib. 3. Cap. 9. fol. 107. and so Britton Sir Gilbert Thorneton Ch. Justice in the time of King E. I. and Sir John Fortescue Chief Justice and afterwards Chancellor These invincibly prove the Nature of our Laws The Kings of England were from the first Foundation of the Government Sworn to observe the old known Laws of the Realm which were called Usus Consuetudines Regni and that they would not suffer any Innovasion which was often attempted by the Pope and his Clergy who endeavoured to introduce into this Realm the Civil and Canon Laws King Henry I. writing to the Pope upon such an occasion tells the Pope stoutly Notum habe at Sanctitas vestra quod me vivente Usus Regni Angliae non imminuentur Et si ego in tanta medejectione ponerem Optimates mei totus Angliae populus id nullo modo paterentur And all the Nobles of England by Consent of the Commons wrote to Pope Boniface upon the same occasion Non permittemus tam insolita tam indebita Dominum nostrum Regem etiamsi vellet facere seu quo-modo-libet attemptare The Lord Chancellor and Lord Keeper is also Sworn to do Right to all after the Laws and Usages of this Realm not secundum aequum bonum nor other Rules of Equity 2 E. 3. fol. 20. It is said in that Book by the Chancellor sitting in the Chancery and speaking of that Court This says he is a place of Equity where we grant a Writ to every one that Sues for his Inheritance So that to issue out Writs as Officina Brevium is by the Chancellor's own acknowledgment a proper work of Equity It seems to be the only use of the word Equity at that time 2 Instit. 53. The Civilian Vinius in his Comment upon Justinian's Institutes pag. 20. Nomen Aequitatis says he duplicitèr accipitur vel in genere pro aequo quod cum omni jure conjunctum est vel in specie pro eo quod est à Jure Civili diversum Omnibus Legibus aequitas inesse creditur Nomenque juris non meretur quod ab omni Aequitate destitutum est He mentions no Equity contrary to Law or to Controul the Law nor any other than what was to be exercised by the very Judges of the Law themselves in all Cases that came before them Plowd Comment 466 467. In the Case of Eyston and Studde it is said No Makers of Law can forsee all things that may happen and therefore it is convenient that the fault be reform'd by Equity This the Chancery-men will catch at as making much for their practise of relieving in such unforeseen Cases where the Law looks severe and rigorous But the Case cited proceeds further and makes not at all for the Chancery if it be heard out And the Sages of our Law have deserved great Commendation says that Case in using Equity in Cases of Rigour in the words of a Law for by that they have mollified severe Texts and have made the Law tolerable Who are meant generally in our Law-Books and Arguments by the
Statutes were made but to no very great purpose for means were found out to evade them At last came forth the Stat. of 27 H. 8. cap. 10. and this undertook and plainly so intended to pluck up this unwholsome Weed by the Roots Which good Law first reciting the excellent quiet and repose that Men's Estates had by the wholsome Rules of the Common Law but cunning Men had sought out new Inventions by fraudulent Feofments and Conveyances craftily made to secret Uses and Trusts to the utter subversion of the ancient Common Laws of this Realm as the Preamble speaks for the utter EXTIRPATING and EXTINGUISHMENT of all such subtil practis'd Feofments Abuses and Errors It is Enacted That the Possession of the Land shall be in him that hath the Use and that he shall have the like Estate in the Land as he had in the Use. How strangely hath all this good Intention Pains and Care been made of little or no effect and the mischiefs still continued by a distinction invested between Trusts and Uses directly against the often repeated Clauses and manifest plain meaning and express words of this good Act For thô the Judges of the Common Law were now by this Act to judge of Uses which before was the work of the Chancery they being now converted by this Act into Estates at Law Yet some Men perfectly to elude this good Act have confidently maintain'd asserted and allow'd a distinction between an Use and a Trust. And thô they are content because they cannot help it that the Judges of the Common Law may determine of Uses the Courts of Equity shall hold a Jurisdiction in matters of Trust. And most of the great Estates in England have by colour of this fallen under their determination and controulment and now have a dependence upon a Jurisdiction of Equity Whereas Were there the least colour left by that Act of 27. H. 8. for any distinction between an Use and a Trust as most certainly and plainly there is none yet as certainly and clearly that Act of Parliament meant to extirpate those Trusts as well as Uses as any ordinary Capacity well perusing that Statute to this purpose may easily perceive I humbly and heartily beg that favour of every Lord to read over deliberately this Stat. of 27 H. 8. cap. 10. for this very purpose for it will plainly discover this gross abuse As to the length of time wherein such a Power and Jurisdiction of Equity hath been exercised in the Chancery yet it plainly appears not to be grounded upon Prescription the Original being known and not so very ancient neither and modest too and moderate at first as most such are in the beginning and having from the first starting of it been hunted and pursued with full Cry and upon a fresh Scent and in view and having hardly any Colour of an Act of Parliament That length of time were it much longer would be no Plea for it See Dr. Barrow in his Treatise of the Pope's Supremacy pag. 154. He that has no right says he to the thing that he possesses cannot plead any length of time to make his possession lawful King Henry VIII by Acts of Parliament restored the Regal Ecclesiastical Sovereignty after it had been usurp'd upon by the Popes and their Prelates near 400 years that is from the time of William the Conquerour For then began their Encroachment And the Act of Parliament of 1 E. 6. C. 2. Sect. 3. calls it a power that had been Usurp'd by the Bishop of Rome contrary to the Form and Order of the Common Law used in this Realm in high derogation to the King 's Royal Prerogative from whence we may observe That Usurping upon the Common Law and Usurping upon the King's Prerogative go together The Bishops Courts here in England took their Original from a Charter of William the Conquerour so that this Jurisdiction was a great Limb lopp'd off from the Primitive Common Law of England For before that Charter of King William Ecclesiastical Causes were determin'd in the Hundred Court and not by Witnesses only and not by the Canon Law but by the Law of the Countrey But this Charter was made by advice of the Arch-Bishops Bishops Abbots Princes and Temporal Lords See Fox his Acts and Monuments Vol. 〈◊〉 Lib. 4. pag. 2●… says Mr. P●…inn in his first Tome of his Vindication of the Supream Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of our English Kings The Charter it self says he recites that it was done Communi Concilio for which he cites Seldeni ad Eadmerum Notae pag. 167 168. So that still the old Common Law of England hath been upon the losing hand The Civilians hold that Possessor malae fidei ullo tempore non praescribit yet I heartily concur with that Reverend Chief Justice Sir Edw. Coke a most true and hearty lover of his Countrey and an high honour to and honourer of the Profession of the Common Law in his 4 Instit. 246. at the end of that folio in Respect says that Good and Great Man that this Court of Equity hath had some continuance and many Decrees made by it it were worthy of the Wisdom of a Parliament for some Establishment to be had therein and to this intent have I chiefly used this freedom for I never loved Quiet a movere but in order to a better Security And for that end I chuse to make this Humble Address to the House of Lords It is the House of Lords who are theSupreme Court of Justice that can set the true and legal Bounds and Limits to the Jurisdiction of Inferiour Courts and can say to the biggest of them Hitherto shalt thou come and no further and here shall thy proud waves be stayed And such their Judicial Declarations are not to be controul'd by any but the Legislative Power Almighty God gave a strict charge to his own chosen People of Israel to observe those Ordinances and Laws which he gave them by Moses which were very particular and wherein nothing was left to the Discretion of the Magistrate nor had the Magistrate any Latitude whereby he could depart from the plain and common sence and Judge Secundum Aequum Bonum Arbitrarily But they were commanded Deut. 4. 2. Yee shall put nothing to the word which I command you says God by Moses neither shall ye take ought therefrom and the 12 Deut. the last verse in Cases of Difficulty that might arise upon the Construction of those Ordinances and Laws a Provision is made by Almighty God that in such Cases resort should be had to the Priest and to the Judge who should declare the Sentence of Judgment This seems to refer to some special Revelation of the mind of God in such difficult Cases which God made known to the Priest that stood before the Lord to minister 17 Deut. 8 ●…2 verses but here was nothing entrusted with the Priest or Judge of relieving against the pretended rigour or extremity of the Law in
the Chancellor will relieve and where not then neither the Subject can be assur'd how or when he may possess his own in peace nor the Practiser in Law be able to inform his Client what may become of his Suit Misera est Servitus ubi jus est vagum Cancellarius Angliae says Sir Hen. Spel. non aliter tenetur Decretis suae Curiae vel sui ipsius quin elucente novà ratione Recognoscat i. e. he reviews quae voluerit mutet deleat prout suae videbitur Prudentiae A certain late Author in his Preface to his Book entituled The happy future State of England Printed 1688. cites Leo Afer who tells us That the Inhabitants of the Mountain Magnan on the Frontiers of Fez have not any settled Judicature nor certain Law but for deciding of Controversies when they happen they stop some Travellers passing that way to give Judgment in them and they desray the charges of their stay This is speedy and cheap but very uncertain in the Decision they might as well determine by casting Lots But we in England have contrary Laws as some do imagine so that we serve two Masters that are divided in their Commands and command contrary things and the one undoes what the other does These are like divers Weights and Measures which are an Abomination to the Lord Prov. 20. 10. In one Court they measure Men's Actions and Rights by one Rule in another Court the same Actions again by contrary Rules as if there were Two contrary first Principles and Deities in Nature as the Marcionites and Manichees held the one benign kind and indulgent the other rigorous and destructive to Mankind The People of England have a Right to be Govern'd and their Lives and Estates Subjected to no other Laws but such as are of their own chusing to which they consent according to that most excellent Preamble to the Stat. of the 25. H. 8. Cap. 21. The Laws of England as the Preamble tells us have been taken by the People of England at their free Liberty by their own Consent to be used among them as the Customs and Ancient Laws Originally Established and not otherwise Sir Francis Bacon in his Resuscitatio pag. 65. in his Speech upon taking his place of Chancellor tells us that the Roman Praetors whose Office had the greatest Affinity with the Jurisdiction claim'd in the Chancery used to set down at their Entrance how they would use their Jurisdiction and he acquaints us with the Excellent charge given him by King James I. at the delivery of the Seal to him viz. To contain that Jurisdiction in its due limits without swelling or excess The excess or tumor says Sir Fr. arises ist from that Courts embracing Causes meerly determinable and fit for the Common Law For the Chancery is ordain'd says he to supply the Law not to subvert it Tho' by his favour the supplying of a Law is the proper work of a Parliament 2. The Tumor arises says Sir Fr. from neglect of the Assistance of the Judges in Cases of Difficulty especially if they touch upon Law The Power says he in his advancement of Learning of moderating Laws little differs from the power of making them Vinius the Civilian sets forth the true Office of the Roman Praetor pag. 16. Neque praetor aliud quam Magistratus fuit Juridicundo non Condendo Custos Juris non Arbiter and again pag. 12. Neque ante Lex vi suâ constat Civesque ad Observationem vel paenam obligat quam populo innotescere potuerit quod sine promulgatione sive publicatione aliquâ fieri non potest To every good Law of Man it is requisite that it be manifest among other Properties says Dr. and Student 4 Chap. pag. 7. b. Now How is that Law manifest that depends upon the sudden Opinion and Judgment of One Person who guides that Opinion and Judgment not by any positive certain and particular Rule or Law clearly defin'd but according to that large and indefinite Rule Secundum Aequum Bonum which is directly contrary to the temper and mind of the Common Law of England which delights in certainty Sir Fr. Bacon in his Advancement of Learning pag. 436. The first Dignity of Law says he is That they be certain Certainty is so Essential to a Law as without it a Law cannot be just and pag. 444. That is the best Law which gives the least Liberty to the Arbitrage of the Judge and he is the best Judge that takes the least Liberty yet afterwards this Grave Chancellor is not steddy to himself but is for allowing to Praetorian Courts of Equity Power of supplying the defects of Law which as I said before does belong to the Parliament only and herein he seems under favour not to be so consistent with what he himself writes in his other Treatise It is very well observ'd by Dr. Barrow in his Treatise of the Pope's Supremacy pag. 255. The means and methods by which Power and Jurisdiction from small and modest Beginnings arrive at last to a strange Height and Exorbitancy The Patriarchate Power says he of the Pope can no otherwise be claimed but by his Invasion and Assumption ibid. 256. The Pope's universal Sovereignty and Jurisdiction hath no real Foundation either in Scripture or elsewhere and pag. 257. he shews by what means so groundless a Claim and Pretence gained Belief and Submission to it Eminency of any kind in Might in Place c. does easily pass into advantages of real Power and Command over those that are inferiour c. Any small Power is apt to grow says he and spread it self into a Flame c. and pag. 261. All Power is attended by dependencies of Persons enjoying subordinate Advantages under it which do grow proportionably by its encrease enjoying Wealth excessive Fees Credit Support Privileges and Immunities thereby Let us look into the beginning of that late Jurisdiction of the President and Council in the North. In the Annals of Queen Eliz. Printed 1630. Lib. 2. pag. 68. in the Reign of King H. 8. says that nameless Author when the Rebellion in the North about suppressing the Abbies was pacified whilst the Duke of Norfolk stayed in those parts many Complaints were brought unto him of Wrongs done in the Rebellion Some of them he compounded himself and some of them he committed to Men of Wisdom under his Seal to be by them Compounded which when the King understood he sent him a peculiar Seal to use in these Causes and the same Seal he committed after the Duke was called back to Tunstall Bishop of Duresme and appointed to him Assistants with Authority to hear and determine the complaints of the poor He was then first of all named President and the Authority of his Successors hath ever since encreased very much This Presidentship says the Annals which is now full of Honour hath from a poor beginning grown up in a short time to this Greatness See Sir
or at any time should be where there might be the same mischiefs viz. by Impeaching Judgments given in the King's Courts which are so often declared to be in Subversion of the Law He affirms That the Proceedings by English Bill in Chancery are not Coram Domino Rege in Cancellaria as the Latine Proceedings are but by a Bill or Petition directed to the Lord Chancellor and not to the King This Case was adjourn'd and we heard of no further Proceeding I was then of Council for the Plaintiff at Law to maintain the Stat. of 4 H. 4. and the Demurrer Crompton's Jurisdiction of Courts in the chapter of the Chancery fol. 67. he allows of the Statute of 4 H. 4. and agrees it extends to the Chancery and mentions what is written by Doctor and Student upon that point So that here are all sorts of Resolutions in this very point and from all sorts of Authorities in Law and in several Reigns Ancient and Modern by the whole Parliament declared by several Statutes by the House of Lords by all the Twelve Judges at several times by all the Courts of Law in Westminster-hall and in particular by the Court of Exchequer most of whose business is to Relieve in Equity grounded upon a Power and Jurisdiction vested in them by Act of Parliament if not by Prescription the two onely ways whereby a Jurisdiction in Equity can be given as has been often resolved and was before observed And all these are Unanimous not one Judge dissenting or doubting not any one Resolution Book or Authority in the Law to the contrary And yet as I am informed the Court of Chancery constantly and without any hesitancy or scruple made of it proceeds to Relieve in Equity after Judgment at Law The Plea and Argument for it on the Chancery side which we may find in a late Author the Title of whose Book is Reports of Cases in the Court of Chancery Printed 1693. to which is added Arguments to prove the Antiquity Dignity Power and Jurisdiction of that Court And much to that purpose is recited in Sir Edw. Coke 3 Instit. fol. 125. in the beginning of that folio It is a Privy Seal 14 Jac. Anno 1616. whereby that King assuming to himself a Power to Arbitrate between the Courts of the Common Law and the Chancery in questions concerning their Jurisdiction and more especially in the great Dispute between the Judges and the Chancellor Whether the Chancery could Relieve in Equity after a Judgment obtained at Common Law which Dispute did arise upon the construction of the Stat of 4 H. 4. cap. 23. whichdid by Law belong to the Judges to determine and resolve as hath been proved and they had determined it King James taking it to belong to his Kingly Office to Arbitrate in such Cases Decides as they would believe the Controversie by adjudging it with the Chancery which he signifies under his Privy Seal and thereby does Will and Command the Chancellor shall from thence-forward proceed to give such Relief in Equity And this was done against the Unanimous Resolution of all the Judges of England and without calling the Judges to Debate it and without any Hearing of them looking upon them as Parties concerned and practical which is a Scurvey Reflection and Scandal upon the Justice of the Nation See the 2d Instit. of Sir Edw. Cok. fol. 617. The Answer of the Twelve Judges to the Twenty fourth Objection to this purpose so that the King upon hearing his own Council Learned in the Law only took upon him to Over-rule all the Twelve Judges in a point of Law and to Interpret and Expound an Act of Parliament which properly belongs to the Judges next under the Supream Court And no wonder is it if King James I. took this Arbitrage upon him as belonging to his Kingly Office and resolved it under his Privy Seal when his constant Opinion was that he was above the Law and that it was Treason to affirm the contrary which yet all the Twelve Judges stoutly did and cited Bracton for it Rex sub Deo Lege See a Collection of King James's Works in a large Folio Printed 1616. pag. 203. where he affirms that the King is above the Law and that he may Interpret it And pag. 534. That it is his Office to make every Court to contain it self within his own Limits See the Act for regulating of the Privy Council c. 16 Car. 1. cap. 10. before-mentioned in the 5th Paragraph it is Declared and Enacted That neither his Majesty nor his Council have or ought to have any Jurisdiction Power Authority by Petition Articles or any other way to draw into question determine or dispose of the Lands or Goods of any of the Subjects of this Kingdom but the same ought to be Tried and Determined in the ordinary Courts of Justice and by the ordinary Course of Law See the several ancient Statutes that require and command the Judges to proceed to administer Justice without Regard had to the Great or Privy Seal that command the contrary Magna Charta cap. 29. 2 E. 3. c. 8. 14 E. 3. c. 14. 20 E. 3. c. 11. Some will argue for the Jurisdiction of the Chancery in Equity from the Statute of Westminster the 2d 13 E. 1. cap. 24. which directs That Nemo recedat à Curia Regis sine Remedio from hence they Collect that where there is matter of Equity wherein the Common Law cannot Relieve there the Chancery by this Statute is enabled to provide Remedy Whereas the Design and Scope of that Statute extends no further than to the framing of Writs in order to Relief by Actions at the Common Law where the Register of Writs that ancient Book of Law had for some new and special Cases provided no Writ which is the first step in every Action and is proper work for the Chancery which is therefore styled Officina Brevium It is very far from giving that Court any Jurisdiction in Equity but it shews what Remedy is to be given towards a Proceeding at the Common Law and not to Relieve against it But it may be noted from this ancient Statute that neither the Chancellor nor the Chancery could alter an Original or so much as frame a new Writ were there never so great Necessity for it till enabled by this Statute It could be done only by the Parliament and in such Cases the Parties were forced to wait till the meeting of a Parliament tho they had manifest Right and clear Equity on their side but no Remedy at Law If it were then a Court of Equity why did not the Chancery Relieve in Equity because the Party was without Remedy at Law Note in the next place That the Parliament by that Statute doth not entrust the Chancellor alone nor any one Person with the framing of new Writs fitted to such new Cases tho they were Cases that had a manifest Right but not a Legal Remedy and yet Writs