Selected quad for the lemma: judgement_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
judgement_n according_a law_n time_n 1,531 5 3.5321 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A20768 The yonger brother his apology by it selfe. Or A fathers free power disputed for the disposition of his lands, or other his fortunes to his sonne, sonnes, or any one of them: as right reason, the laws of God and nature, the ciuill, canon, and municipall lawes of this kingdome do command. By I. Ap-Robert Gent. J. A. (John Ap Robert) 1618 (1618) STC 715; ESTC S115725 30,207 72

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

tymes when the land is let to the Heyre generall to alter the estate if the land so conueyed shall come to Daughters and to leaue it to a Brothers sonne or to some other of the same name though peraduenture many degrees remoued for preseruation of the name and family If this may be deemed lawful and no sinne being done against a well deseruing child for whom Nature and her deserts plead her worthy to be her Fathers heyre then without all compare if the preseruation of a name and family might not iustly be laboured for according to power giuen by the law of God and man what may be lawfully acted against an vnthrifty heyre who in any reasonable mans iudgment is likly in his shrowd to bury the memory of all his Ancestors vertues which should liue in him and his ofspring as his forefathers haue done in theirs It is neyther new nor straung in the practise of our tymes in causes of this Nature to ouerthrow in tended perpetuities and by act of parliament to giue leaue vpon som good considerations to sell lands which otherwise by no lawes can be sold from the heyre the Father being but tennant only for tearme of his life Which surely by no power vnder God could be done if the thing in it self be vnlawful sinne Out of which it may be argued a fortiori If power may be giuen to a Father being tennant for tearme of life to sell his sonnes lands onely to pay his owne debts peraduenture idly made though it be to the ouerthrowe of his Familie because naturall equity say they doth wil that euery one should be relieued with his owne for so it may be deemed though in loue to his child hee hath passed the estate yet that he ought to be preserued from thraldome therewith in his necessity which if it be so as all men do confesse it how reasonable a thing yea how comendable and farre from sinne is it for a Father truely Lord of his owne without all tye of law either deuine or humane as I haue proued to dispose of his lands to the honour of God and comfort of his family to a yonger sonne when as it is most probable that the elder will neither vse it to the one nor the other but rather to nourish sinne and sensuality CHAP. VIII That vnthriftines is one knowne name of many hidden sinns and is alone a sufficient cause of disinherison proued by the Law of God and Man HAVING thus vpon good consideration beyond my first intention as it appeareth by my Preface enlardged this my discourse with the precedent Chapter I haue resolued my selfe vpon my Readers fauour and on the former grounds to argue one question more which I hold verie necessary for the perfecting of this small work which is whether a Father may disinherite his eldest sonne or heire at common law for such an vnthriftines as in most mens iudgements is like to be the ruine of his family Though many foule sinnes besydes the abusing of gods blessings be concomitant to vnthriftynes yet because they are not apparant to the world and de abscondit is non iudicat Praetor I will only breifly argue whether in reason or conscience a desperate vnthrift may be disinherited It is well knowne to all the wise and temperate whose iudgments passion doth not ouersway how great an enemy prodigality or vnthriftynes is to all manner of goodnes and how cunningly she not onely hinders the increase of all vertues in those in whome she reigneth but also vniustly oftentymes cuts off the vertuous reward of many a worthy predecessor yea giues occasion to the euill to detract to the good to suspect their deserts All which how great a wrong it is to a Noble family I leaue to the indifferent reader to censure I will not deny but there may be many sinns in a man which in the sight of God and iudgment of men of themselues are more heynous and deserue afar greater damnation then Prodigality doth yet since that sins in this world are to be punished Those sinnes more punishable which are more offensiue to common society though lesse heinous in their particuler Nature not as they are in themselues but as they by circumstance are offensiue to the society peace and honour of mankind which God and Nature euer as the reward to all morall vertues and as the chief end of mans life intended For otherwise vsury detraction forgery adultery fornication swearing and drunkennesse all which and many more which are as greiuous offences in the eye of heauen as theft should be punished with death as theft is But since they do not offend so much the peace of a publique weale at which the Ciuill magistrate aymes as theft doth they are not censured with such seuere punishment at it is All which shewes directly that offences by circumstance are made in a Ciuill society against which they are committed either great error lesser and are accordingly to be punished and no lesse doth the reason and righ rule of state commaund Out of which grounds it is euident that all formes of gouernement do most punish that offender who directly or indirectly seeks to disturbe the peace or ouerthrow the liberty or disgrace the state wherin he liues yet many greater offences then these may be committed as Incest and Apostasy which are not so sharpely punished by the Ciuill Magistrate For euery one to whome God hath giuen power on earth doth chiefly seek the end for which his power from aboue is giuen vnto him and doth censure and punish in the highest degree those offences which tend to the ouerthrowe of a well setled state and by good and lawfull power confirmed Now to come vpon these premisses to the matter in question to apply that which hath beene sayd to our purpose It is well knowne to the world that a family is a ciuill society yea the only common weale which God and Nature first ordayned and from which all societyes Common-wealths species of Gouernement first tooke their originall For the mantainance of which society there is no question but God hath giuen many priuiledges to a Father as well to reward the well-deseruing as to punish an euill child or member of his body not onely by depriuing them of their expected fortunes but by cutting them of from his body either by banishment or by death it selfe For it is euident by the Ciuill law that a Father had for many yeares not onely free power to disinherit but also power of life and death our his children who should greiuously offend him or his liuing vnder his Ciuill gouernement But since that things vnknowne are growne out of vse and may seeme as well incredible as straunge I cannot in discretion passe ouer the matter in question so lightly as that it may worthily be subiect to sharpe censure or rashly be branded with the mark of vntruth Therefore laying aside the testimony of the old Roman lawes in the case