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A54632 Lex parliamentaria, or, A treatise of the law and custom of parliaments shewing their antiquity, names, kinds, and qualities ... : with an appendix of a case in Parliament between Sir Francis Goodwyn and Sir John Fortescue, for the knights place for the county of Bucks, I Jac. I.; Lex parliamentaria. English Petyt, George. 1690 (1690) Wing P1944; ESTC R8206 195,455 448

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against his Body and the like And by this it appeareth what Persons are de Jure triable by the Lords in Parliament viz. their Peers only which Bishops are not Judgments in Parliaments for Death have generally been strictly guided per Legem Terrae i.e. Lex Parliamenti d. 168. The Parliament hath three Powers Sir Rob. Atkyns Argument c. 36. a Legislative in Respect of which they are call'd the three Estates of the Realm a Judicial in respect of this it is call'd Magna Curia or the High Court of Parliament a Counselling Power hence it is call'd Commune Concilium Regni The Parliament gives Law to the Court of King's-Bench Id. 49. and to all other Courts of the Kingdom and therefore it is absurd and preposterous that it shou'd receive Law from it and be subject to it The greater is not judged of the less All the Courts of Common Law are guided by the Rule of the Common Law Id. 50 but the Proceedings of Parliament are by quite another Rule The Matters in Parliament are to be discussed and determined by the Custom and Usage of Parliament and the Course of Parliament and neither by the Civil nor the Common Law used in other Courts Ibid. The Judges of all the Courts of Common Law in Westminster are but Assistants and Attendants to the High Court of Parliament And shall the Assistants judge of their Superiors The High Court of Parliament is the dernier Refort Ibid. and this is generally affirm'd and held but it is not the last if what they do may yet again be examin'd and controlled Because the High Court of Parliament proceeds by a Law peculiar to that High Court Id 52. which is call'd Lex Consuetudo Parliamenti and not by the Rules of the Common Law and consists in the Customs Usages and Course of Parliament no Inferior Court can for this very Reason judge or determine of what is done in Parliament or by the Parliament A Statute Arc. Parl. 85. or Act of Parliament need not be proclaim'd for the Parliament represents the Body of the whole Realm for there are Knights and Burgesses of every County and Town But otherwise where it is ordained by the Act that it shall be proclaimed A Man Attainted of Felony Id. 100. or Treason shall not be restored in Blood without Parliament 28 Ed. 1. Petyt's Appendix to Miscel Parliam n. 38. A Truce being concluded between the English and French by King Edward's Ambassadors who therein had dishonourably agreed to include the Scots the Ambassadors at the ensuing Parliament were sharply rebuked and corrected not only by the King himself the Prelates and Nobles but by the Commons The Court of Parliament was the Sanctuary Turner's Case of Bankers 36. whether the distressed Subject in his Exigence fled for Shelter and Refuge and alway found it Into the Sacred Bosom of Parliaments it was Ibid Vide Several Precedent and Records that they poured out their Sighs and Groans with constant Success and when in Cases of high Nature the Common Law was arrested and stopt in her proceedings Parliaments evermore ran into ther Rescue and in dutiful ways discharged those Locks and Bars which had been unjustly fastned on the Exchequer The Right of the Crown of England Stat. Prov. 25 Ed. 3. Rast Stat. 99. and the Law of the said Realm is such that upon the Mischiefs and Damages which happen to the Realm the King ought and is bound by his Oath of the Accord of his People in Parliament thereof to make Remedy c. To conclude this Chapter Le Parliament ad Absolute poiar en touts Cases come a faire Leys d'adjuger Matters en Ley a trier vie del home a reverser Errors en Bank le Roy especialment lou est ascun Commune Mischief que l'ordinary Course del Ley n'ad ascun means a remedier en tiel Case ceo est le proper Court Et tonts choses que ils font sont come Judgments Et si le Parliament mesme erre Finche's Nomotecnia l. 2. c. 1. f. 21. 22. come il poet ceo ne poet estre reverse en ascun Lieu forsque en le Parliament Which because it is omitted as several other things are in the Book translated into English I will thus give it the Reader that does not understand French The Parliament hath Absolute Power in all Cases as to make Laws to adjudge Matters in Law to try Men upon their Lives to reverse Errors in the King's Bench especially where there is any Common Mischief which the ordinary Course of the Law hath not any means to remedy in such Case this is the proper Court And all things which they do are as Judgments And if the Parliament it self errs as it may that cannot be reversed in any place but in Parliament Sir Robert Cotton See Sir Robert Cot. Treatise of Parliaments p. 44 45 c in his Discourse of the Privilege and Practice of Parliaments says thus by Parliaments all the wholesom Fundamental Laws of this Land were and are Establish'd and Confirmed By Act of Parliament the Pope's Power and Supremacy in this Kingdom and the Romish Superstition and Idolatry were abrogated and abolished By Act of Parliament God's true Religion Worship and Service are or may be establish'd and maintain'd By Act of Parliament the two Universities of Oxford and Cambridge with other Cities and Towns have had many Privileges and Immunities granted em By Parliament one Pierce Gaveston a great Favourite and Misleader of King Ed. 2. was remov'd and Banished and afterwards by the Lords Executed Also by Parliament the Spencer's Favourites and Misguiders of the same King were Condemned c. and so was Delapool in H. 6. Time and others since By Parliament Empson and Dudley two notable Polers of the Common-wealth by exacting Penal Laws on the Subjects were Discover'd and afterwards Executed By Parliament the Damnable Gunpowder Treason hatch'd in Hell is recorded to be had in Eternal Infamy By Parliament one Sir Giles Mompesson a Caterpiller and Poler of the Common-wealth by exacting upon In-holders c. was discover'd degraded and Banished by Proclamation By Parliament Sir Francis Bacon Note the Censure on the late E. of Macclesfield Quere made by K. James 1. Baron of Verulam Viscount of St. Albans and Lord Chancellor of England was for Bribery c. discover'd and displac'd By Parliament Sir John Bennet one of the Judges of the Prerogative Court being Pernitious to the Common-wealth in his Place was discover'd and displac'd By Parliament Lyonel Cranfield sometime a Merchant of London and made by K. James 1. Earl of Middlesex and Lord Treasurer of England being hurfull in his Place to the Common-wealth was discover'd and displaced By Parliament Note Sir Francis Mitchell a jolly Middlesex Justice of Peace in the Suburbs of London another Canker-worm of the Common-wealth by Corruption in exacting an Execution of the Laws upon poor Alchouse-keepers Victuallers c. was discover'd and degraded from his Knighthood and
utterly disabled from being a Justice of Peace By Parliament Ib. p. 46. the Spanish Frauds were discovered and by an Act of Parliament the two Treaties i. e. touching the Spanish Match and for restoring the Palatinate both which had cost the King and his Subjects much Money and much Blood were Dissolved and Annihilated And we may remember says the same Author That that sage Councellor of State Sir William Cecil Lord Burley and Lord Treasurer of England was oft Times heard to say He knew not what a Parliament might not do which saying was approved by K. James 1. and is cited by him in one of his publick Speeches The Parliament says one is of an absolute and unlimited Power in all Things Temporal within this Nation Sir Robers Atkins's Argument p. 50. Bract. fo 34. Fleta p. 2. 17. Another says Parliamentum omnia potest Bracton and Fleta both affirm Rex habet Superiorem in Regno Scilicet Curiam suam i. e. Comites Barones doubtless the Lords and Commons qui apponuntur Regi ut si Rex sine Fraeno i. e. sine Lege fuerit Debent ei Fraenum apponere c. Nay some great Authors have asserted Quod Concilium hoc i. e. Parliamentum Facultatem habet Deponendi Regem Malum Substituendi Novum See Mat. Paris per Watts pag. 498. Knighton de Eventibus Angliae p. 2683. in the Decem. Scriptores and that this Power is claimed ex antiquo Statuto c. Knighton has a remarkable Passage concerning the Execution of that antient Statute in the Cases of E. II. and R. II. which at this Time I forbear to Transcribe or Translate Note It appears by Mat. Paris p. 99. c. That the Commons were then i. e. 15 H. II. summoned to the Parliament held at Clerkenwell and that they also were a Part of the Parliament in the Time of K. H. I. See before p. 34. 35. c. CHAP. IV. Of the House of Lords in general THE House of Peers Rushw eol vol. 3. part 1. p. 777. are the hereditary Counsellors of the King and Kingdom as the House of Commons are the representative Body of the whole Commons of the Kingdom There certainly cannot in the whole World be seen a more illustrious Court Nalson 566. than this high and honourable Assembly of Peers in Parliament nor any Thing of greater Benefit and Advantage to the Subjects of this Monarchy No Lord of Parliament can sit there Sir Simon d'Ewes's Jour 11. Col. 1. till he be full One and twenty Years unless by special Grace of the Prince and that very rarely unless they be near upon the Age of Twenty one Years at least A Bishop elect may sit in Parliament Ibid. ante 3 4 43 44. as a Lord thereof i. e. if called thereto by Writ Q. For he is not properly a Peer or even a Bishop till his Temporalties are granted to him If the King by his Writ calleth any Knight or Esquire to be a Lord of the Parliament 4 Inst 44. he cannot refuse to serve the King there in communi illo Consilio for the Good of his Country It lies in the Favour of the Prince Sir Simon d'Ewes Journal 2.4 Col. 2. to make Heirs of Earldoms Members of the upper House by summoning them thither by Writ but then they take not their Place there as the Sons of Earls but according to the Antiquity of their Fathers Baronies The Archbishop of Canterbury is the first Peer of the Realm Id. 140. Col. 1. The Earl-Marshal's Place in Parliament is betwixt the Lord Chamberlain Id. 535. Col. 2. and the Lord Steward See the Statute No Man ought to sit in that high Court of Parliament 4 Inst 45. but he that hath Right to sit there If a Lord depart from Parliament Id. 44. without License it is an Offence done out of the Parliament and is finable by the Law 4 June 1642 Rushw Col. Vol. 3. part 1.737 Post upon an Order of the House of Lords to those Lords that had left the Parliament and repaired to the King at York requiring their Appearance as Delinquents in the Answer they returned to it there are these Words We do conceive that it is the apparent usual and inherent Right belonging to the Peerage of England that in the highest Misdemeanors whatsoever no Peer is to answer to the first Charge but in his own Person and not upon the first Charge to come to the Bar. Any Lord of the Parliament 4 Inst 12. by License of the King upon just Cause to be absent may make a Proxy 43 Eliz. 1601 Towns Col. 135. Vide Sir Simon d'Ewes Journal 605. agreed by the Lords That the antient Course of the House is That the Excuses of such Lords as shou'd happen to be absent from the House upon reasonable Occasions ought to be done by some of the Peers and not by other Information Anno Domini 1626 Rushw Col. Vol. 1. p. 365. 2 Car. 1. resolved upon the Question by the whole House Nemine dissentiente That the Priviledge of this House is That no Lord of Parliament the Parliament sitting or within the usual Time of Priviledges of Parliament is to be imprisoned or restrained without Sentence or Decree of the House unless it be for Treason or Felony or refusing to give Surety of the Peace N. B. This was upon the King's having committed the Earl of Arundel to the Tower without expressing the Cause of his Commitment All the Priviledges which do belong to those of the Commons House of Parliament Hakewell 82. a fortiori do appertain to all the Lords of the upper House for their Persons are not only free from Arrests during the Parliament but during their Lives Nevertheless the original Cause is by Reason they have Place and Voice in Parliament And this is manifest by express Authorities grounded upon excellent Reasons in the Books of Law A Proxy is no more than the constituting of some one or more by an absent Lord Sir Simon d'Ewes Journals 5. Col. 2. to give his Voice in the upper House when any Difference of Opinion and Division of the House shall happen for otherwise if no such Division fall out it never cometh to be question'd or known to whom such Proxies are directed nor is there any the least Use of them save only to shew prove and continue the Right which the Lords of the upper House have both to be summon'd and to give their Voices in the same House either in their Persons or by their Proxies As many Proxies as any Peer hath Ibid. Col. 2. so many Voices he hath beside his own and if there be two or three Proxies constituted by one absent Lord as is frequent then always the first named in the same is to give the Voice if he be present and if absent then the second sic de reliquis It is plain by the antient Treatise Ibid. 6. Col. 1. Modus tenendi Parliamentum That if a Peer neither came to the Parliament nor sent
Lex Parliamentaria OR A TREATISE OF THE LAW and CUSTOM OF PARLIAMENTS Just Published Parliamentary and Political TRACTS written by Sir ROBERT ATKINS Knight of the Bath and late one of the Judges of the Court of Common-Pleas Containing I. THE Power Jurisdiction and Privilege of Parliament and the Antiquity of the House of Commons asserted Occasioned by an Information in the King's-Bench by the Atorney-General against the Speaker of the House of Commons II. An Argument in the great Case concerning Election of Members to Parliament between Sir Samuel Barnardiston Plantiff and Sir William Soame Sheriff of Suffolk Defendant in the Court of King's-Bench in an Action upon the Case and afterwards by Error sued in the Exchequer-Chamber III. An Enquiry into the Power of dispensing with Penal Statutes Together with some Animadversions upon a Book writ by Sir Edward Herbert Lord Chief Justice of the Court of Common-Pleas intitled A short Account of the Authorities in Law upon which Judgment was given in Sir Edward Hale's Case IV. A Discourse concerning the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in the Realm of England V. A Defence of the late Lord Russels's Innocency by way of Answer or Confutation of a Libellous Pamphet intitled An Antidote against Poison with two Letters of the Author of this Book upon the Subject of his Lordship's Tryal VI. The Lord Russel's Innocence further defended by way of Reply to an Answer intitled The Magistracy and Government of England vindicated VII The Lord Cheif Baron Atkins's Speech to Sir William Ashurst Lord Mayor Elect of the City of London at the Time of his being sworn in their Majesties Court of Exchequer Lex Parliamentaria OR A TREATISE OF THE LAW and CUSTOM OF PARLIAMENTS Shewing their Antiquity Names Kinds and Qualities Of the three Estates and of the Dignity and Excellency of Parliaments their Power and Authority Of the Election of Members of the House of Commons in general their Privilege Qualifications and Duties Of the Electors and their Rights Duties and Manner of Elections Of the Returns to Parliament the Sheriff's and other Officers Duty therein Of the Manner of Election of the Speaker and of his Business and Duty Of the Manner of passing Bills and the Orders to be observed in the House of Commons Of Sessions of Parliament as also of Prorogations and Adjournments Together with the proper Laws and Customs of Parliaments With an APPENDIX of a Case in Parliament between Sir Francis Goodwyn and Sir John Fortescue for the Knights Place for the County of Bucks 1 Jac. I. The SECOND EDITION with Large Additions LONDON Printed for J. STAGG in Westminster-Hall THE PREFACE IT must be confessed that Lex Parliamentaria or Parliamentary Law cannot be meant or intended to signify any Prescription or Application of Laws to that Power which in itself is boundless and unlimited This Collection therefore only shews what Parliaments have done and not what they may or ought to do The Parliament alone can judge of such Matters as concern their own Rights Authorities or Privileges And yet seeing the Phrase Parliamentary Law or Law of Parliaments has for some Ages past obtained Lord Coke Sir Matth. Hales's c. and that too among Authors of great Name I hope the present or any future Parliament will not censure me for a Word misapplied or for endeavouring to illustrate that Authority which is improperly denominated Parliamentary Law The Parliament itself is no doubt properly to be stiled The fundamental Law and Constitution of this Kingdom as it comprehends all Legal Powers whatsoever But as God and Nature influenced the Voice and Desires of the People to this Form of Government by Parliaments so it must be confessed that the same supream Power also influenced their Voices and Desires to establish this Parliamentary Government for the Safety and Preservation of the Governed and thereby constituted the Salus Populi to be the supream Law to whose Support all other Laws Powers and Authorities ought to tend 'Tis for this End Kings are created and for this End Parliaments assemble that so the Polity and Government of the Nation may be administered with Honour and with Safety for the Good of the whole Community Nor can it be denied but that Parliaments in former Times esteem'd it as their most incumbent temporal Duty to oversee recognize and resirain within the Bounds of Law the Commands and Acts of Kings and to take care that that great and honourable Trust reposed in the Hands of the Prince for the Good of the People might be rightly and duly administered and not perverted or abused to the Invasion of their Rights or the Subversion of the Constitution Brac p. 34 Flet p. 2.17 vide hic p. 89. 'Twas the Sense of this Duty of Parliaments induced both Bracton an eminent Judge under King Henry III. and Fleta a learned Lawyer in King Edward I's Time to record this great Duty of Parliaments to succeeding Ages And from this very Motive it was See the Preface to Privilegia Londini p. 6 7. that our antient Parliaments were so cautious as to oblige our Kings to swear at their Coronations Concedere justas Leges quas vulgus elegerit That they would grant such just Laws as the common People should choose See this Oath admirably well explained in Sadler's Rights of the Kingdom Page 71 88 91. c. From all which and much more that may be added I think it clearly appears That both Kings and Parliaments Lords and Commons and all Laws of Government whatsoever were in their first Intention instituted and ordained for the sole Good and Benefit of the People And where-ever all or any of them are perverted from that View they loose the Nature of their first Intention and ought to receive a contrary Denomination And from the foregoing Particulars I at present apprehend that the Lex Parliamentaria or Fundamental Law of Government in this Nation was not originally founded on any Capitulation or Compact between the King and the People as is usually done in Contracts of Bargains and Sales or other Purchases For that would infer a separate Interest between Prince and People But who will say that a British Monarch can by Law have a distinct Interest from his People Also the mutual Obligation that is established between the Prince and People by the Laws of this Kingdom have laid an unsurmountable Bar against any such Capitulation or contracting Project For by the original and inherent Nature of our Government there is such amutual Relation and political Connection created between the King and his People as in that natural Relation and Connection between the Head and the Members of the Body so that in neither Instance can the Head say to the Members I have no need of you c. This mutual Relation between Prince and People seems to have been interwoven in the fundamental Being and impressed in the very Heart of our Constitution c. The Publisher here thinks fit to declare That this Book has
Being of this Kingdom can have no other Bottom to stand upon but the Parliament it being the Foundation upon which the whole Frame of the Commonwealth is built The Parliament is the Cabinet Ib. 201. wherein the chiefest Jewels both of the Crown and Kingdom are deposited The great Prerogative of the King and the Liberty of the People are most effectually exercised and maintained by Parliaments c. Parliaments are the Ground and Pillar of the Subject's Liberty Ib. 587. and that which only maketh England a free Monarchy Parliaments are says the Earl of Warwick Ib. 752. Admiral of the Sea to John Pym Esq July 6 1742 That Great Council by whose Authority the King's of England have ever spoken to their People Both Houses of Parliament are the Eyes in the Body Politick Ib. 702. whereby His Majesty is ought by the Constitution of this Kingdom to discern the Differences of those Things which concern the Publick Peace and Safety thereof The Parliament is the Mouth of the King and Kingdom Vox Dei c. Parliaments says K. C. 1. in his Declaration to all his Loving Subjects Rushw Coll. 3d Part Vol. 2 p 40. after his Victory at Edgehill on the 23d of October 1642 are the only Sovereign Remedies for the growing Mischiefs which Time and Accidents have and will always beget in this Kingdom That without Parliaments the Happiness cannot be lasting to King or People The Parliament is to be considered in three several Respects first Ib. p. 45. As it is a Council to advise 2dly As it is a Court to judge 3dly As it is the Body Representative of the whole Kingdom to make repeal or alter Laws L'Assemblie de Troys Estates Cestascavoir Finch's Nemotecnia lib. 2. c. 1. fo 21. Roy Nobility Commons qui font le Corps del Realm est appel un Parliament lour Decree un Act de Parliament Car sans touts troys come si soit fait per Roy Seigneurs mes rien parle del Commons nest Ascun Act de Parliament i. e. The Assembly of the three Estates to wit the King the Nobility and the Commons which make the Body of the Realm is called a Parliament and their Decree an Act of Parliament for without all three as if it be done by the King and Lords but speaks nothing of the Commons there is not any Act of Parliament On the Restoration of King Charles the 2d the Commons resolved May 1. 1660. Journal Dom. Co. That this House doth agree with the Lords and do own and declare that according to the antient and fundamental Laws of this Kingdom the Government thereof is and ought to be By King Lords and Commons The Word Parliament is used in a double Sense 1. English Liberties p. 78. Strictly as it includes the Legislative Power of England as when we say an Act of Parliament add in this Acceptation it necessarily includes the King the Lords and the Commons each of which have a Negative Voice in making Laws and without their Joint Consent no new Laws can pass that be obligatory to the Subject 2. Vulgarly the Word is used for the Two Houses the Lords and Commons as when we say The King will call a Parliament His Majesty has dissolved his Parliament c. This Court is the highest Court in England Crompton's Juris p. 1. in which the Prince himself sits in Person and usually comes there at the Beginning of the Parliament and at the End and at any other Time when he pleaseth 4 Inst 3. during the Parliament The King is the Caput Principium and Finis of Parliaments It appears by Precedents That whenever a Parliament was sitting in the King's Absence Rushw Coll. Vol. 3. Part 1. p. 772. there was always a Custos Regni or a Locum Tenens Regis appointed This Court consists of the King's Majesty 4 Inst 1. sitting there as in his Royal Politic Capacity and of the three Estates of the Realm viz. the Lords Spiritual Arch-Bishops and Bishops who sit there by Succession in respect of their Counties Vide Dyfol 60. or Baronies parcel of their Bishopricks The Lords Temporal Dukes Marquesses Earls Viscounts and Barons who sit there by reason of their Dignities which they hold by Descent or Creation every one of which both Spiritual and Temporal ought to have a Writ of Summons ex debito Justitiae And the Commons of the Realm whereof there be Knights of Shires or Counties Citizens of Cities and Burgesses of Boroughs all which are respectively elected by the Shires or Counties Cities and Boroughs by Force of the King's Writ ex Debito Justitiae and none of them ought to be omitted And these represent all the Commons of the whole Realm and are trusted for them The King and these three Estates Ib. 2. are the great Corporation or Body Politic of the Kingdom and do sit in two Houses King and Lords in one House called The Lords House the Knights Citizens and Burgesses in another House called The House of Commons That which is done by this Consent Arc. Parl. 2. is called firm stable and sanctum and is taken for Law All the Judges of the Realm Towns Coll. 5.6 Vid. Cromp ton 1. Barons of the Exchequer of the Coif the King's Learned Council and the Civilians Masters of the Chancery are called to give their Assistance and Attendance in the Upper House of Parliament but they have no Voices in Parliament 4 Inst 4. but are made sometimes joynt Committees with the Lords Every Englishman is intended to be there present either in Person Arc. Parl. 3. Smyth's Common-wealth 74 or by Procuration and Attorney of what Preeminence State Dignity or Quality soever he be from the Prince be it King or Queen to the lowest Person in England And the Consent of the Parliament is taken to be every Man's Consent In antient Time the Lords and Commons of Parliament did sit together 2 Bulstro 173. See Cotton's Records 12.13.348 Post 60. in one and the same Room but afterwards they were divided to sit in several Rooms and this was at the Request of the Commons but yet still they remain but one Court And of all this I have seen the Records one in the Time of H. 1. where all of them did sit together and mention is there made of the Degrees of their Seats so in the Time of E. 3.39 No Man ought to sit in the High Court of Parliament 4 Inst 45. but he that hath Right to sit there For it is not only a personal Offence in him that sitteth there without Authority but a publick Offence to the Court of Parliament and consequently to the whole Realm It is to be observed 4 Inst 2. That when there is best Appearance there is the best Success in Parliament At a Parliament 7 Hen. 5. of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal there appeared but Thirty and there was but one Act pass'd of no great Weight In 50 Ed. 3. all the Lords appeared in Person and not one by
Proxy and so many excellent Things were done that it was called Bonum Parliamentum At the Return of the Writs Ib. 6. the Parliament cannot begin but by the Royal Presence of the King either in Person or Representation The King's Person may be represented by Commission under the Great Seal to certain Lords in Parliament authorizing them to begin the Parliament or to prorogue it c. When a Parliament is call'd Ib. 28. and doth sit and is dissolved without any Act of Parliament passed or Judgment given it is no Session of Parliament but a Convention It is an Observation proved by a great Number of Precedents Ib. 32. that never any good Bill was preferred or good Motion made in Parliament whereof any Memorial was made in the Journal-Book or otherwise Tho sometimes it succeeded not at the first yet it hath never dy'd but at one Time or other hath taken effect Matters of Parliament are not to be ruled by the Common-Law Ib. 17. If Offences done in Parliament might have been punish'd elsewhere Ibid. Vide 1 Inst Sect. 108. it shall be intended that at some Time it would have been put in Ure It doth not belong to the Judges Ib 50. to judge of any Law Custom or Priviledge of Parliament The Judges in Parliament are the King or Queen Sir Tho. Smith's Common-wealth 74 the Lords Temporal and Spiritual the Commons represented by the Knights and Burgesses of every Shire Borough-Town These all or the greater Part of them and that with the Consent of the Prince for the Time being must agree to the making of Laws It is the just and constant Course of Parliament Seld. Judic 95. to bring the Party accused to his Answer Yea tho he fly Justice yet to send out Proclamation into the Countries that he appear at a Day or else such and such Judgments shall be given against him What is done by either House Sir R. Atkyns Argument c. 14. according to the Law and Usage of Parliament is properly and in the Judgment of the Law the Act of the whole Parliament And what concerns the one must of Necessity concern the whole not meerly by Consequence but by an immediate Concernment as being one and entire The three Estates of Parliament are one entire Body and Corporation Ib. 34 41 51 55. Vide Rast St. 2. 3. E. 6. c. 36. Pref. All their Powers and Priviledges in the Right of them and in the Title to them are entire per my per tout and belonging to the whole Body of the Parliament tho in the Exercise of those Powers and sometime in the Claim of them they are distinguish'd and in the Practise of their Powers they are in many Things distributed into Parts All the Estates in Parliament are call'd by one common Name Ibid. as Commune Concilium Regni Magna Curia they are one Body Politic. It is said by Fineux Chief Justice That the Parliament at the Common-Law consists of the King Lords and Commons and they are but one Body corporate The Liberties and Franchises of the Parliament in the Right of them Ib. 55. are entire and due to both Houses for both make up the Parliament Knighton one of our best Historians doth notably disclose the antient Ends of calling Parliaments Knyghton de Eventibus Augliae l. 5. f. 2681. col 1.2 Pettyt's Rights c. in Pref. p. 43. 44. Hollings f. 1055. col 1. in saying Quod ex Antiquo Statuto Consuetudine landabili approbata c. That by an antient Statute and Custom laudable and approved which no Man could deny the King was once in the Year to convene his Lords and Commons to his Court of Parliament as to the highest Court in the whole Realm In qua omnis Aequitas relucere deberet absque qualibet Scrupulositate vel nota tanquam Sol in Ascensu Meridiei ubi Pauperes Divites pro Refrigerio Tranquilitatis Pacis Repulsione Injuriarum Refugium Infallibile quaerere possent ac etiam Errata Regni reformare de Statu Gubernatione Regis Regni cum Sapientiori Concilio tractare ut Inimici Regis Regni Intrinseci Hostes Extrinseci destruantur repellantur qualiterquoque Onera incumbentia Regi Regno levius ad Ediam Communitatis Supportari potuerunt i. e. In which Court all Equity ought to shine forth without the least Cloud or Shadow like the Sun in its Meridian Glory where Poor and Rich refreshed with Peace and Ease of their Oppressions may always find infallible and sure Refuge and Succour the Grievances of the Kingdom redressed and the State of the King and Government of the Realm debated with wiser Councels the Domestick and Foreign Enemies of the King and Kingdom destroy'd and repelled and to consider how the Charges and Burthens of both may be sustained with more Ease to the People Minshieu But these six Degrees were never allowed to be six Estates of Parliament in his Etymological Dictionary tit Parliament says In a Monument of Antiquity meaning the antient Modus Tenendi Parliament shewing the Manner of holding the Parliament in the Time of K. Edward the Son of K. Etheldred which as the Note saith was delivered by the discreeter Sort of the Realm to William the Conqueror and allowed by him tis said That the Parliament consisted of six Ranks or Degrees it begins thus Rex est Caput Principium et Finis Parliamenti ita non habet Parem in suo Gradu Et sic a Rege solo primus Gradus est Secundus Gradus est ex Archiepiscopis Episcopis Abbatibus Prioribus per Baroniam Tertius Gradus est de Procuratoribus Cleri Quartus Gradus est de Comitibus Baronibus et aliis Magnatibus Quintus Gradus est de Militibus Comitatuum Sextus Gradus est de Civibus et Burgensibus Et ita est Parliamentum ex sex Gradibus En Antient temps tout le Parliament sea Insimul Rolls 1. Report fol. 18. ante 54. et le Separation fuit perle desire del Commons Mes nient obstant ils font forsque un Mese jen aie view un Record 30 H. 1. de lour degrees et seats 39 E. 3. per Choke ch Inst It is generally believed Reform'd vol. 2. p. 49. That the whole Parliament sate together in one House before E. 3. Time and then the inferior Clergy were a Part of that Body without Question But when the Lords and Commons were divided the Clergy likewise sate in two Houses and granted Subsidies as well as the Temporalities My Lord Chief Justice Coke says 1 Inst Sect. 164. fol. 109. The Parliament is the highest and most honourable and absolute Court of Justice of England consisting of the King the Lords of Parliament and the Commons And again the Lords are here divided into two Sorts viz. Spiritual and Temporal And the Commons are divided into three Parts viz. Into Knights of Shires or Counties Citizens out of Cities and Burgesses out of Boroughs In the High Court of Parliament all the whole Body
c. 6 7. the Lords may proceed in Judgment against the Delinquents of what Degree soever and of what Nature soever the Offence be For where the Commons complain the Lords do not assume to themselves Trial at Common Law Q. Neither do the Lords at the Trial of a Common Impeachment by the Commons decedere de Jure suo for the Commons are then instead of a Jury and the Parties Answer and Examination of Witnesses are to be in their Presence Post 120. or they to have Copies thereof and the Judgment is not to be given but upon their Demand which is instead of a Verdict so the Lords do only judge not try the Delinquent 28 Hen. 6. Id. 98. Tho' the Lords refused to commit the Duke of Suffolk upon the Commons complaint of him of a common Fame of Treason yet when they accused him of a particular Treason he was Committed and brought Prisoner to his Answer But in Cases of Misdemeanors it is otherwise Then the Party accused whether Lord or Commoner answers as a Freeman viz. The Lord within his Place Ibid. the Commoner at the Bar and they are not committed till Judgment unless upon the Answer of a Commoner the Lords find Cause to commit him till he find Sureties to attend c. lest he should fly Prout Jo. Cavendish upon the Lord Chancellor's demand of Justice against him for his false Accusation was Committed after his Answer until he put in Bail Anno 7 Rich. 2. and before Judgment In Cases of Misdemeanors only Id. 105. the Party accused was never deny'd Counsel If the Commons do only complain Id. 163. and do neither impeach the Party in Writing nor by Word of Mouth in open House nor demand Trial to be in their Presence Post 120. in these Cases it is in the Election of the Lords whether the Commons shall be present or not In Complaints of Extortion Id. 173. and Oppression the Lords awarded Satisfaction to the Parties wronged which sometime was certain sometime general but alway secundum non ultra Legem It appeareth plainly by many Precedents Id. 176 177. that all Judgments for Life and Death are to be render'd by the Steward of England or by the Steward of the King's House and this is the Reason why at every Parliament the King makes a Lord Steward of his House tho' he hath none out of Parliament And at such Arraignment the Steward is to sit in the Chancellor's Place and all Judgments for Misdemeanors are by the Chancellor or by him who supplies the Chancellor's Place In Case of Recovery of Damages Id. 187. or Restitution the Parties are to have their Remedy the Parliament being ended in the Chancery and not in any other inferior Court at the Common Law But the Lords in Parliament may direct how it shall be levied The Judges who are but Assistants to the Upper House have leave from the Lord Chancellor or Keeper Sir Simon d'Ewes Journal 527. Col. 2. to sit cover'd in the House but are alway uncover'd at a Committee 3. Car. 1. Petyt's Msscel Parliam 212 213. The Sentence of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal pronounced by the Lord Keeper against Ensign Henry Reynde for ignominious Speeches uttered by him against the Lord Say and Seal and for his Contempt of the High Court of Parliament was thus 1. That he never bear Arms hereafter but be accounted unworthy to be a Soldier 2. To be imprisoned during Pleasure 3. To stand under the Pillory with Papers on his Head shewing his Offence at Cheapside London or at Banbury 4. To be fined at 200 l. to the King 5. To ask Forgiveness here of all the Lords of Parliament in general and of the Lord Say and his Son in Particular both here and at Banbury And the Court of Star-Chamber ordered by the Lords to put the said Sentence in Execution out of Time of Parliament Id. 213. Vide a Sentence pronounced by the Lords Die Martis 26. Julij 1642. against one John Escot of Launceston in the County of Cornwall for speaking Scandalously of the Parliament in Rush Col. Vol. 1. f. 759 760. And likewise against John Marston Clerk Rector of St. Mary Magdalen in the City of Canterbury ibid. See divers particulars touching the Power and Jurisdiction of the House of Lords in Prynn's Plea for the House of Lords c. as also a Book printed Anno 1669. Entitled The Grand Question concerning the Judicature of the House of Peers Stated c. See also Sir M. Hales of Parliaments Pa. 138 139. and ibid 140 c. where Attendants on the upper House may be Members of the House of Commons Q. CHAP. VI. House of Commons THE House of Commons was originally Sir R. Atkyns Argument c. p. 13. and from the first Constitution of the Nation the Representative of one of the three Estates of the Realm and a part of the Parliament It is assirmed by Mr. Lambard Lambard's Archeion 257 258. that Burgesses were chosen to the Parliament before the Conquest The antient Towns call'd Boroughs Littleton Sect. 164. are the most antient Towns that are in England for the Towns that now are Cities or Counties in old Time were Boroughs and call'd Boroughs for that of such old Towns came the Burgesses to the Parliaments Knights of the Shire to serve in Parliament Sir Rob. Atkyn's 18. and the paying Wages to them for their Service has been Time out of Mind and did not begin 49 Hen. 3. for that is within Time of Memory in a Legal Sense The House of Commons Id. 34. as a Member of the High Court of Parliament have been as antient as the Nation itself and may in the Sense of Julius Caesar be accounted among the Aborigines and that they have had a perpetual Being to speak in the Language of the Law a Tempore cujus Contraria memoria Hominum non existit and that they are therefore capable by Law together with the rest of the three Estates in Parliament to prescribe and claim a share in all Parliamentary Powers and Priviledges I do not mean seperately but in conjunction with those other Estates which they could not otherwise legally have done if their Original and Commencement could have been shewn During the British Saxon Petyt's Preface to the antient Rights of the Commons c. p. 3. and Norman Governments the Freemen or Commons of England as now call'd and distinguish'd from the great Lords were pars essentialis constituens an essential and constitutent part of the Wittena Gemot Commune Concilium Baronagium Angliae or Parliament in those Ages It is apparent Id. 12. and past all Contradiction that the Commons in the Times of the Britons Vid. Ch. 1 ante Saxons and Picts were an essential Part of the Legislative Power in making and ordaining Laws by which themselves and their Posterity were to be Govern'd and that the Law was then the golden Metwand and Rule which Measured out and allowed the Prerogative of the Prince and
Parliament began in October 28. Mor. rep 551. Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour 441 442. Moor 551. Eliz. and continued 'till the 29th Tho. Egerton Solicitor General was by Writ commanded to attend in Parliament upon the Lords in the upper House and after he had attended there three Days he was chosen a Burgess for Reading in Com. Berks and upon the Return of him the Commons went to the House of Lords and demanded that he might be dismissed from further attendance there and come into their House But upon Consultation and Defence made by himself the Lords retain'd him and the main Reason was because they were first posessed of him And in 5. Mor. ut Sup. Simon d'Ewes Jour 121 Col. 1 2. Eliz. Ouslow being a Member of the lower House upon a Prorogation of Parliament was made Solicitor General and when the Parliament met again he was commanded by Writ to attend the Lords House tho' chosen Speaker of the House of Commons but the Commons demanded him and it was granted because he was a Member of the lower House first so that this was the difference between his Journ Dom. Co. 21. Jac. 1.10 Martij Vid. Petyts Miscell Parl. 174. and the case above Sir Dudley Diggs said that in that Parliament when Bacon Attorney was in Question whither he ought to sit in the House of Commons or no twas over-ruled he ought not but yet in favour of him he was suffered to sit there and an Express order was made that never any other Attorney after should So careful were our Ancestors not to admit any to be a Representative of the People who was a Dependant on or could be influenc'd by the Court c. 18 Eliz. 1585. Concluded by the House Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour 249. Col. 1. that Mr. Serjeant Jeffreys being one of the Knights returned for Sussex may have Voice or give his Attendance in this House as a Member of the same notwithstanding his Attendance in the Upper House as one of the Queen's Serjeants for his Counsel there where he hath no Voice indeed nor is any Member of the same 23 Eliz. 1580. Popham Solicitor General Id. 281. Col. 1. upon demand made by the House was restored to them by the Lords beause he was a Member of the House of Commons and they possessed of him before he was Solicitor or had any Place of Attendance in the Upper House No Sheriff shall be chosen for a Knight of Parliament nor for a Burgess why Book of Entr. 41.1 Crompton's Jur. 3. 4 Inst 48. because nominated by the Crown 1. Car. 1. The Sheriff of the County of Buckingham was chosen Knight for the County of Norfolk and return'd into the Chancery and had the Priviledge of Parliament allow'd to him by the Judgment of the whole House of Commons Vide de hoc Pro Con Sir Simon d'Ewes Journal 38 436 624 625. 1 Jac. 1. Scobel 96. Sess 2. Sir John Peyton Kt. returned the last Session and since chosen Sheriff Resolv'd upon the Question that he shall attend his Service here The Personal Residence and Attendance of Sheriffs is required within their Bailywicks Rush Coll. vol 1.684 685. during the time of their Sheriffwick Mr. Walter Long being Sheriff of Wilts was after chosen Citizen for Bath and for that Offence was committed and fined viz. because he sate and served in Parliament Sir Andrew Noel Touns Col. 185. Vid. de hoc Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour 38. Col. 1 2. 624. Col. 2. Kt. Sheriff of Rutland returned himself Knight and adjudged a void Return and a Warrant ordered for a new Election For said Serjeant Harris we know in Law that a Man cannot make an Indenture to himself no more can he here between himself and the County for there are required two Persons Yet Sir Edward Hobby said That the House might well receive him and vouched a Precedent when the Bailiffs of Southwark returned themselves Burgesses and were received See also Bohun's Collection 81.143.153.188.243.253.254 The Fee for the Knight of any County is four Shillings per Diem England and every Citizen or Burgess is to have two Shillings per Diem 4 Inst 46. Where one Person is chosen and returned to serve in several Places Scobel 18. Vide Sir S. d'Ewe's Jour passim it is in his Election to make his Choice in the House in his own Person for what Place he will serve and wave the other Election so as a Writ may issue for a new Election that the Number may be full No Tallage or Aid shall be taken or levied by Us or our Heirs St. So. E. I. c. 1. Of the Elected vide ante 14.21 in our Realm without the Goodwill and Assent of Archbishops Bishops Earls Barons Knights Burgesses and other Freemen of the Land The King wills and commands Stat. 5. R. 2. c. 4. Persons and Commonalty summoned to attend c. as of old and it is assented in Parliament by the Prelates Lords and Commons That all Persons and Commonalties which shall have the Summons of Parliament shall come to the Parliaments in the Manner as they are bound to do and have been accustomed within the Realm of England of old Times And if any Person of the same Realm Knights Citizens and Burgesses absenting to be a merced and punish'd as in Old Times which shall have the said Summons be Knight of the Shire Citizen of City Burgess of Borough or other Person Commonalty do absent himself and come not at the said Summons except he may reasonably England and honestly excuse him to our Lord the King he shall be amerced and otherwise punished as in old Times hath been used c. That Knights of Shires which shall be chosen in every Shire St. 1. H. 5. c. 1. Knights of Shires to be elected of such only who reside within the Countries at the Dat. of the Writ be not chosen unless they be resident within the same Shire the Day of the Date of the Writ of Summons And that the Citizens and Burgesses of the Cities and Boroughs be chosen Men Citizens and Burgesses to reside in and be free of the Cities and Boroughs Citizens and Burgesses resient dwelling and free in the same Cities and Boroughs and no other in any wise That such as have the greatest Number of them that may expend 40 s. by the Year Knights of Shires shall be such as have the majority of those that can expend 40 sa Year or more and be resident and above shall be returned Knight of the Shire c. and that they which shall be chosen shall be dwelling and resient within the same Counties Ordained St. 23. H. 6. c. 15. Citizens and Burgesses only to be elected by Citizens and Burgesses and the Sheriff to direct his Precept accordingly c. That every Sheriff after the Delivery of any Writ of Election to him shall make and deliver without Fraud a sufficient Precept under his Seal to every Mayor and Bailiff or to Bailiffs or Bailiff where no Mayor
Burgesses of the said High Court have had used c. Vide ante 176. That every Person which hereafter shall be elected a Knight Stat. 5. Eliz. c. 1. Knights Citizens c. before their sitting in Parliament to take the Oath of Supremacy before the Lord Steward or his Deputies and for the contrary to lose their Memberships and incur such Penalties as if they had sat without Election Return c. Citizen or Burgess or Baron for any of the Five Ports for any Parliament or Parliaments hereafter to be holden shall before he enter the Parliament House or have any Voice there openly receive and pronounce the Oath The Oath of Supremacy mentioned in this Act is abrogated by the Stat. 1 W. M. ch 1. and a new one appointed which see ante p. 177. expressed in the Stat. 1 Eliz. ch 1. England commonly called the Oath of Supremacy before the Lord Steward of the Queen's Houshold or his Deputy or Deputies for that Time to be appointed and that he which shall enter into the Parliament House without taking the said Oath shall be deemed no Knight Citizen Burgess nor Baron for that Parliament nor shall have any Voice but shall be to all Intents Constructions and Purposes as if he had never been returned nor elected Knight Citizen Burgess or Baron for that Parliament and shall suffer such Pains and Penalties as if he had presumed to sit in the same without Election Return or Authority That all and every the Knights Citizens Stat. 7. Jac 1. c. 6. Knights Citizens c. at any Parliament or Sessions to take the Oath of Allegiance before the Lord Steward c. ere they be permitted to sit Burgesses and Barons of the Five Ports of the Commons House of Parliament at any Parliament or Session of Parliament before he or they shall be permitted to enter into the said House shall make take and receive the Oath of Obedience mentioned in the Statute of 3 Jac. 1. ch 4. commonly called the Oath of Allegiance The Oath of Allegiance mentioned in this Act is abrogated by the Stat. of 1 W. M. c. 1. as aforesaid post 198. before the Lord Steward of the King's Houshold his Deputy or Deputies That none which shall be a Member of the House of Commons England shall vote in the said House St. 30 C. 2. c. 1. Members of the House of Commons shall not vote or sit there during any Debate after their Speaker chosen until they have taken the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and subscribed the Test between Hours of 9 and 4 in a full House or sit there during any Debate in the said House after their Speaker is chosen until such Member shall first take the several These Oaths are abrogated by Stat. 1 W. M. c. 1. Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and make subscribe and audibly repeat the Declaration in this Act contained commonly called the Test which said Oaths and Declaration shall be in this and every succeeding Parliament solemnly and publickly made and subscribed betwixt the Hours of Nine in the Morning and Four in the Afternoon by every such Member at the Table in the Middle of the said House and whilst a full House of House is there duly sitting with their Speaker in his Chair and that the same be done in the House in such-like Order or Method as the House is called over by If any Member of the House of Commons shall presume to do any thing contrary to this Act Members acting contrary shall be adjudged Popish Recusants convict and suffer as such and be disabled to hold any Office or Place of Profit or Trust in England or is Dominions to sit or vote in Parlia ment bring any Action or Information at Law or Suit in Equity be Guardian of any Child Executor or Administrator of any Person or capable of any Legacy or Deed of G●● and forfeit 500 l for every Offence to any that will sue by Action of Debt c. where no Essoign c. every Member so offending shall from thenceforth be deemed and adjudged a Popish Recusant Convict to all Intents and Purposes and shall forfeit and suffer as a Popish Recusant Convict and shall be disabled to hold or execute any Office or Place of Profit or Trust England Civil or Military in any of His Majesty's Realms of England or Ireland Dominion of Wales or Town of Berwick upon Tweed or in any of His Majesty's Realms Islands or Foreign Plantations to the said Realms belonging and shall be disabled to sit or vote in Parliament or to sue or use any Action Bill Plaint or Information in course of Law or to prosecute any Suit in any Court of Equity or to be Guardian of any Child or Executor or Administrator of any Person or capable of any Legacy or Deed of Gift and shall forfeit for every wilful Offence against this Act the Sum of 500 l. to be recovered or received by him or them that will sue for the same and to be prosecuted by any Action of Debt Suit Bill Plaint or Information in any of His Majesty's Courts at Westminster where no Essoign Protection or Wager of Law shall lie It shall be lawful to and for the House of Commons as often as they shall see Occasion Members obliged to take the said Oaths and subscribe the Test in the House as often as the House shall think fit and Members acting contrary and presuming to sit incapacitated during that Parliament to order or cause all or any of the Members of Parliament openly in their House to take the said Oaths England and to make and subscribe the said Declaration at such Times and in such Manner as they shall appoint And if any Member of the House of Commons shall contrary to such Order made by their House wilfully presume to sit therein without taking the said Oaths and making and subscribing the said Declaration every such Member so presuming to sit shall be adjudged and is declared to be uncapable and disabled in Law to all Intents and Purposes to sit in the said House or give any Voice therein during that Parliament And in Case any Member of the House Such Members Election declared void and the Speaker by Order of the House to issue his Warrant for a new Election shall by virtue of this Act be disabled to sit or vote in the House then without any further Conviction or other Proceedings against such Member the Place for which he was elected is hereby declared void and a new Writ shall issue out of Chancery by Warrant from the Speaker and by Order of the said House for the Election of a new Member in the Place of such Member so disabled to all Intents and Purposes as if such Member or Members were naturally dead c. During the taking the Oaths and subscribing the Test all other Proceedings in Parliament to cease and the Oath Declaration and Subscription with a Schedule of the Names of the Persons taking and
Great Britain or of Commissioners for choosing Burgesses in Scotland to administer the Abjuration upon Oath or Affirmation to Quakers and Electors refusing it incapable to vote or being a Quaker shall refuse to declare the Effect thereof upon his solemn Affirmation as directed by an Act of Parliament made 7 W. 3. to be administred by the Sheriff President of the Meeting or chief Officer taking the Poll at any Election of Members to serve in the House of Commons for any Place in Creat Britain or Commissioners for choosing Burgesses for any Place in Scotland at the Request of any Candidate or other Person present shall not be capable of giving any Vote for any Election of any such Member to serve in the House of Commons for any Place in Great Britain or Commissioner to choose a Burgess for any Place in Scotland That no Register for the Registring Memorials of Deeds St. 6 Ann. c. 35. The Register for the East-Riding of Tor●shire c. or his Deputy incapacitated Conveyances Wills c. within the East-Riding of the County of York or the Town and County of Kingston upon Hull or his Deputy for the Time being be capable of being chosen a Member to serve in Parliament Vide ante 212. That no Person shall be capable to sit or vote as a Member of the House of Commons St. 9 Ann. Persons incapacitated to sit or vote in the House of Commons who have not an Estate Freehold or Copyhold for Life or greater in England of 600 l. for a Knight of the Shire manfully and 300 l. for a Citizen Burgess c. and if any such elected c. the Election c. void for any County City c. within that Part of Great Britain called England c. who shall not have an Estate Freehold or Copyhold for his own Life or for some greater Estate either in Law or Equity to his own Use in Lands Tenements or Hereditaments above what will satisfy and clear all Incumbrances within that Part of Great Britain called England c. of the annual Value of six hundred Pounds above Reprizes for every Knight of a Shire and of three hundred Pounds above Reprizes for every Citizen Burgess c. And if any Persons elected or returned to serve in any Parliament as a Knight of a Shire or as a Citizen Burgess c. shall not at the Time of such Election and Return be seized of or intituled to such an Estate before required such Election and Return shall be void Nothing in this Act contained shall extend to make the eldest Son or Heir Apparent of any Peer or Lord of Parliament Eldest Son or Heir Apparent of a Peer or Person qualified to serve as a Knight of a Shire excepted Universities in England also excepted or of any Person qualified by this Act to serve as Knight of a Shire uncapable of being elected and returned and sitting and voting as a Member of the House of Commons Nor extend to either of the Universities in that Part of Great Britain called England but that they may elect and return Members to represent them in Parliament as heretofore they have done No Person shall be qualified to sit in the House of Commons No Person qualified by Virtue of a Mortgage unless in Possession of the mortgaged Premisses for seven Years before his Election by virtue of any Mortgage whereof the Equity of Redemption is in any other Person unless the Mortgagee shall have been in Possession of the mortgaged Premisses for seven Years before the Time of his Election Every Person except as aforesaid who shall appear as a Candidate Candidates to be sworn to their Estates if required by any other Candidate or two Electors or shall by himself or any others be proposed to be elected shall upon Request at the Time of such Election or before the Day to be prefixed in the Writ of Summons for the Meeting of the Parliament by any other Person who shall stand Candidate at such Election or by any two or more Persons having Right to vote at such Election take a Corporal Oath in the Form in this Act contained which see ante The respective Oaths aforesaid shall be administred by the Sheriff or Under-Sheriff Before the Sheriff or other Officer by whom the Poll is to be taken or Return made or 2 or more Justices of the Peace The Election and Return of Candidates refusing to take the Oath void for any County or by the Mayor Bailiff or other Officer or Officers for any City Burrough c. to whom it shall appertain to take the Poll or make the Return at such Election or by any two or more Justices of the Peace within England c. And if any of the said Candidates c. shall wilfully refuse to take the Oath the Election and Return of such Candidate or Person shall be void That from and after the Determination of this present Parliament 2 St. 12 Ann. No Conveyance or Right whereon Infeoffment is not taken and Seisin registred a Year before the Teste of the Writs shall intitle the Person to be elected in any Shire or Stewartry in Scotland The like as to Inoffments not taken a Year before the Date of the Warrant for a new Writ during 〈◊〉 Continuance of a Parliament Any Elector present su●pecting Persons to have Estates in Trust may require the Praeses of the Meeting to swear such to their Estates no Conveyance or Right whereupon Infeoffment is not taken and Seisin registrated one Year before the Teste of the Writs for calling a new Parliament shall upon Objection made in this Behalf intitle the Person so infeost to be elected at that Election in any Shire or or Stewartry in Scotland and in case any Election happen during the Continuance of a Parliament no Conveyance or Right whatsoever whereupon Infeoffment is not taken One Year before the Date of the Warrant for making out a new Writ for such Election shall upon Objection made in that Behalf intitle the Person so Infeoft to be elected at that Election and that it shall be lawful for any of the Electors present suspecting any Person or Persons to have his or their Estates in Trust and for Behoof of another to require the Praeses of the Meeting to tender the Oath in this Act contained intituled The Form of the Freeholders c. Oath to be taken upon Objection made by Stat. 12. Annae and is the same mutatis mutandis to any Elector and the said Praeses is required to administer the same In case such Elector Electee Q. refuse to Swear On Refusal to swear and subscribe the Oath incapable to be elected Stat. 1 G. 1. c. 13. and also to subscribe the said Oath such Person or Persons shall not be capable of being Elected at such Election That after the 29th of September 1715 no Person that now is or hereafter shall be a Member of the House of Commons shall Vote in the House of Commons or
and must be amended there Sed aliter nunc Every Sheriff or other Officer St. 33 H. 8. c. 1. in Ireland returning any Knight Citizen or Burgess chosen in any other Manner than is prescribed in the Statute to forfeit a 100 l. Vide Post If one be duly Elected Knight 4 Inst 49. It cites in the Margin Rot. Parl. 5 H. 4. n. 38. Citizen or Burgess and the Sheriff Return another the Return must be reformed and amended by the Sheriff and he that is duly Elected must be Inserted for the Election in these Cases is the Foundation and not the Return 18 Jac. 1. Scobel 115. The Sheriff of Leicestershire having Returned Sir Thomas Beaumont upon Report from the Committee for Elections that Sir George Hastings was duly chosen the Sheriff was ordered to Return Sir George Hastings to the Clerk of the Crown and he to accept it and file it 21 Jac. 1. Ibid. Upon Report from the Committee of Privileges That in the Election of Mr. John Maynard for Chippingham John Maynard was Chosen but by a Mistake Charles was afterward written in stead of John It was Resolved The Return shou'd be amended without a new Writ and that the Bailiff shou'd do it and not the Clerk of the Crown and that it shou'd be sent down to the Bailiff in the Country and he to Return John Maynard Esq the first Burgess 1. Febr. 1640. Ibid. It being Resolved That the Election of Mr. Erle for one of the Burgesses of Wareham is a good Election Ordered That the Officer when the Return was made or his Deputy or the Electors shou'd amend the Return But the next Day it was Ordered That Edward Harbin the late Mayor of Wareham 's Deputy shou'd come to the Bar of the House and amend the Return 20 Febr. 1640. Ibid. 116. The Bailiff of Midhurst in Sussex came to the Bar being sent for by Order of the House and amended one of the Indentures of Return of Burgesses for that Town and the other was taken off the File If a Sheriff shall Return One for Knt. of the Shire who was unduly Simon d'Ewes Jour 283. Col. 2. or not at all Elected yet he that is so Return'd remains a Member of the House till his Election be declared Void Of double Returns England and new Writs Ex Memorials of Parliament That if any Sheriff be henceforth negligent in making his Returns of Writs of Parliament St. 5 R. 2. c. 4. Sheriffs neglecting to make Returns or leaving out the Returns of Cities or Borought shall be amerced or otherwise punished as in old Times or that he leave out of the said Returns any Cities or Boroughs which be bound and of old Time were wont to come to the Parliament he shall be amerced or otherwise punished in manner as was accustomed in the said Case in times past That from henceforth in order to the Elections of Counties at the next County after the Delivery of the Writ England Proclamation shall be made in full County of the Day and Place of the Parliament St. 7. H. 4. c. 15. Proclamation to be made at the next County-Court after the Delivery of the Writ to the Sheriff for the Election of knights of the Shires and that all they that be there present as well Suitors duly summoned for the same Cause as other shall attend to the Election of the Knights for the Parliament and then in the full County they shall proceed to the Election freely and indifferently notwithstanding any Request or Commandment to the contrary And after they be chosen Sheriff's Return after the Election shall be by Indenture containing the Persons chosen sealed by the Electors and annexed to the Writ the Names of the Persons so chosen be they present or absent shall be written in an Indenture under the Seals of all them that did choose them and tacked to the same Writ which Indenture so sealed and tacked shall be holden for the Sheriff's Return of the said Writ touching Knights of the Shires In Writs of Parliament hereafter to be made this Clause shall be put Et Electionem tuam in pleno Comitatu factam sub sigillo tuo sigillis eorum qui electioni illi interfuerant nobis in Cancellaria nra ad diem locum in brevi contentu certifices indilate England Forasmuch as in the Statute 7 H. 4. ch 15. no Penalty was ordained or limited in special upon the Sheriffs of the County if they make any Returns contrary of the same Statute St. 11. H. 4. c. 1. Of Returns made by Sheriffs contrary to the Statute 7 H. 4. c. 15. Justices of Assize impower'd to inquire and on Inquest and Proof made thereof such Sheriffs to pay 100 l. to the King It is ordained that the Justices assigned to take Assizes shall have Power to inquire at their Assizes of such Returns made and if it be found by Inquest and due Examination before the same Justices that any such Sheriff hath made any Return contrary to the Tenor of the said Statute the same Sheriff shall incur the Penalty of 100 l. to be paid to our Lord the King That all Sheriffs shall have their Answer and Traverse to Inquests and Offices St. 6 H. 6. c. 4. Sheriffs shall have their Traverses to Inquests c. upon the St 7.4 c. 15. 11 H. 4. c. 1. before any Justices of Assizes hereafter to be taken upon the Stat. 7 Hen. IV. chapter 15. and 11 Hen. IV. ch 1. and the said Sheriffs shall not be endamaged unto our Lord the King or his Successors for any such Inquest taken until they be duly convict according to the Form of Law That such are to be chosen Knights of the Shire as have the greatest Number of them that may expend 40 s. by Year and above England and shall be returned by the Sheriffs of every County St. 8 H. 6. c. 7. See Cromp. Juris 3. Hakewell 48. Knights for Parliament by Indentures sealed betwixt the said Sheriffs and the said Choosers And every Sheriff of the Realm of England shall have Power to examine upon the Evangelists every such Chooser how much he may expend by the Year And if any Sheriff return Knights to Parliament contrary to the said Ordinance the Justices of Assizes in their Sessions shall have Power thereof to inquire And if by Inquest the same be found before the Justices and the Sheriff thereof be duly attainted he shall incur the Penalty of 100 l. to be paid to our Lord the King and also that he have Imprisonment by a Year without Mainprize or Bail And that in every Writ hereafter to go forth Quere mention shall be made of this Ordinance That every Sheriff St. 23 H. 6. c. 15. Sheriff after the Receipt of the Writ to deliver a Precept under his Seal to every Mayor Bailiff c. of the Cities and Boroughs within his County reciting his Writ and commanding them to choose c. after the Delivery of any Writ of Election shall
made in like Manner and Form to all Intents Constructions and Purposes as is used within the County Palatine of Lancaster or any other County and City within England which said Knights and Burgesses and every of them shall be returned by the said Sheriff into the Chancery of England in due Form and upon like Pains as is ordained that the Sheriff or Sheriffs of any other County should make their Return England Sheriff of Chester to make like Returns and on like Pains as other Sheriffs That the Burgesses of all Cities Stat. 35 H. 8. c. 11. Mayors Bailiffs c. of the twelve Shire-Towns in Wales and of Monmouth-Shire shall summon the Burgesses as well of all other Cities Boroughs and Towns in those Counties as of Burgesses of those Towns themselves to come to Elections Boroughs and Towns in the twelve Shires within Wales and County of Monmouth not finding Burgesses for the Parliament themselves and contributary to Wages of Burgesses of such Shire Towns shall be lawfully admonished by Proclamation or otherwise by the Mayors Bailiffs and other Head Officers of the said Towns or by one of them to come and give their Elections for the Electing the said Burgesses at such Time and Place lawful and reasonable as shall be assigned for the same by the said Mayors Bailiffs and other Head Officers of the said Shire Towns or by one of them That the County Palatine of Durham may have two Knights for the same County St. 25 C. 2. c. 9. Writ of Election under the Great Seal for Elections in Durham to be directed to the Bishop of Durham c. and his Precept thereon to the Sheriff of that County and the City of Durham two Citizens to be Burgesses for the same City to be elected by Writ to be awarded by the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper to the Lord Bishop of Durham or his Temporal Chancellor of the said County England and a Precept to be thereupon grounded and made by the said Lord Bishop or his Temporal Chancellor to the Sheriff of the said County and the same Election to be made in Manner following viz. the Elections of the Knights to be made by the greater Number of the Freeholders of the said County Palatine which shall be present at such Elections as is used in other Counties of this Kingdom and that the Election of the said Burgesses for the City of Durham to be made by the major part of the Mayor Aldermen and Freemen of the said City which shall be present at such Elections which said Knights and Burgesses Sherish of Durham to make like Returns and under like Pains as other Sheriffs St. 7 and 8 W. 3. c. 7. continued by St. 12 and 13 W. 3. c. 5. False Returns illegal and prohibited and all made contrary to the last Determination of the Right of Election in the House of Commons adjudged a false Return so elected shall be returned by the said Sheriff into the Chancery in due Form and upon the like Pains as be ordained for the Sheriff or Sheriffs of any other County in like Cases That all false Returns wilfully made of any Knight of the Shire Citizen Burgess Baron of the Cinque-Ports or other Members are against Law and are hereby prohibited and in case that any Person or Persons shall return any Member for any County City Borough Cinque-Port or Place contrary to the last Determination in the House of Commons of the Right of Election in such County England City Borough Cinque-Port or Place such Return is hereby adjudged a false Return The Party so grieved to wit He that shall be duly elected for any County Officers c. making such false Return liable to an Action at the Suit of any duly elected in any of the Courts at Westminster with double Damages and full Costs City Borough Cinque-Port or Place by such false Return may sue the Officers and Persons making or procuring the same and every or any of them at his Election in any Court of Record at Westminster and shall recover double Damages with his full Costs Any Officer that shall wilfully Officers c. falsly c. making double Returns liable to the like Action falsly and maliciously return more Persons than are required to be chosen by the Writ or Precept on which any Choice is made the like Remedy may be had against him or them and the Party or Parties that willingly procure the same by the Party grieved All Contracts Contracts Bonds c. given to procure the Return of any Member adjudged void and such as make or give them to procure any false or double Return forfeit 300 l. one third to the King another to the Poor of the County City c. and a third to the Informer with his Costs to be recovered by Action of Debt c. wherein no Essoign c. Promises Bonds and Securities whatsoever hereafter made or given to procure any Return of any Member or any thing relating thereto be adjudged void and that whoever makes or gives such Contract Security Promise or Bond or any Gift or Reward to procure such false or double Return England shall forfeit 300 l. one third Part to his Majesty another third Part to the Poor of the County City Borough or Place concern'd and one third Part to the Informer with his Costs to be recovered in any Court of Record at Westminster by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information wherein no Essoign Protection or Wager of Law allowed nor more than one Imparlance The Clerk of the Crown to keep a Book of Entry of every single and double Return and of every Alteration and Amendment in every such Return whereto all Persons to have Access and take Copies of so much as desired at a reasonable Fee And if the Clerk of the Crown makes not such Entry in Six Days after any Return or alters any Return without Order of the House of Commons or gives a Certificate of any Person not returned or wilfully neglects or omits his Duty herein to forfeit 500 l. for each Offence to the Party grieved to be recovered as aforesaid and lose his Office England and be for ever incapable of holding it Every Information or Action brought upon this Statute Informations or Actions on this Statute to be brought within two Years after the Cause shall be brought within the Space of two Years after the Cause of Action shall arise That when any New Parliament shall at any Time hereafter be Summoned or called Staf. 8 W. 3. c. 25. Writs of Summons to Parliament to have forty Days between the Teste and Returns and be issued with all Expedition and delivered to the proper Officer to whom its Execution belongs who shall indorse thereon the Day he received it and within three Days issue out his Precept to the like proper Officer of each Borough c. who shall also indorse the Day of his Receipt of the Precept in the former's Presence and proceed to Election in