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A54680 The ancient, legal, fundamental, and necessary rights of courts of justice, in their writs of capias, arrests, and process of outlary and the illegality ... which may arrive to the people of England, by the proposals tendred to His Majesty and the High Court of Parliament for the abolishing of that old and better way and method of justice, and the establishing of a new, by peremptory summons and citations in actions of debt / by Fabian Philipps, Esq. Philipps, Fabian, 1601-1690. 1676 (1676) Wing P2002; ESTC R3717 157,858 399

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demand in the Writ specified be under 20. pounds are by the Rules and Custom of the Court of Common Pleas not to be insisted upon or if above not at all in the Case of Defendants being Executors or Administrators and if the Defendant for want of Bail for his appearance do continue in Prison three terms and no habeas Corpus be brought or declaration given or further prosecution made he is to be delivered by a Writ of Supersedeas made of course upon the apparance to the action only without any special Bail put in before a Judge or Bond given to the Sheriff and where special Bail is very seldom given it is but that if Judgment be obtained against the Defendant he shall render his body to Prison or satisfie the condemnation Our Writs of Arrest ad respondendum being ad Cautionem custodiam non ad poenam but to enforce a gage or pledge or to detain or put a Debtor or Defendant into the Custody of the Law to the end he may give Bail Judicatum solvere to abide the Judgment of the Court or if no Bail be required to appear to the Action And the Proces of Utlary which although they were not ordinarily used in Actions of debt before the making of the Statute of 25 E. 3. was notwithstanding in cases of trespas for breach of the Peace and for Contumacy and Contempts in not appearing warranted by the Laws of King Edgar Canutus Edward the Confessor and the practise of our Saxon Ancestors borrowed and deduced from the Ancient Customs of other Nations is not now so dreadful as it was in former Ages when as Bracton and Stamford do agree the Partie outlawed did forfeit Patriam Amicos omnia terras tenementa bona Catalla sua all that he could entitle himself unto was out of the protection of the King and his Laws and could not bring any action until he had rendered himself to Prison obtained his Charter of Pardon brought his Writ of Error and given Bail to answer the Action but may now without Bail unless specially required be admitted to reverse the Utlary before Judgment upon defect of Proclamation only or some small Error without a Writ of Error or the Record certified into the Court of Kings Bench or Errors assigned with other the many troubles and charges which that way produced The Plaintifs for fear of obstructing or narrowing the wayes of Justice are not put as they were anciently to find real Sureties to prosecute and make good their actions or to pay a Fine to the King if they do not as our Laws do intend they should or to make Oath of their debts or de non calumniando that the Action is not prosecuted in malice or upon sinister ends as the Civil Law enjoyned And the Statute of Westminster the second doth in Writs of Execution against the Goods and Chattels of a Defendant except Boves Affros de Caruca sua Oxen and Horses of Husbandry and the Writ imports as much in the tenor of it the Judges do without any Inquisition or proof that there were not other goods sufficient to satisfie the Execution permit for the Creditors more speedy attaining to his satisfaction all the goods to be taken in Execution which in more Ancient times was so unusual as a Defendant hath brought his Action against the Sheriff and the Plaintif for taking them in Execution when there was other personal Estate sufficient And do also suffer the Plaintiff to prosecute the Sureties upon a Bond when the Principal hath not been sued and was sufficient to pay the Debt or dammage which by the former course and practise of the Law was not allowed And our Writs of Exigent and Outlary were truly and properly only to be made use of where the Defendant refuseth to appear in contempt of a Court of Justice and the Proces thereof is fugitive or incertain where to be found taken or arrested hath no visible or certain Estate or lurketh in some Liberty of which there are many in England and Wales where the Kings ordinary Writs and Proces do not run or have any power or force and a Capias utlegatum carrieth with it in the same Writ a Non omittas propter aliquam libertatem and impowereth the Sheriff to enter into any Liberty and arrest the Defendant and by a special Capias utlegatum to seize and take at the same time all the Defendants Lands Goods Chattels and Estate into the Kings hands as forfeited for his Contempt and that seisure transferred into the Court of Exchequer bringeth the Plaintif an advantage to take a Lease of the King of the Lands so seised at a very low rent until the Defendant purge himself of the Contempt reverse the Outlary give Bail and appear unto the Action which being so consonant to the Outlawries Bannes and proscriptions of Germany and other Nations Kings and Princes in the like Cases to preserve their own Authority in that of their Courts of Justice and requiring some severity and a more then ordinary Proces hath been all the means which without force and violence and a greater disturbance of the People our Laws and a long Custom and usage of time have hitherto prescribed can contrive to bring unwilling Men to Judgment CHAP. VI. The delayes and inconveniences of the Proces of Summons Pone and Distringas were a great if not the only cause of the disuse thereof FOr the way and Course of Summons Pone and Distringas so much in use before that Statute of 25 E. 3. was unto Plaintifs as full of delayes as they were of increase of Charges and trouble which a view of the old Records of the Court of Common-Pleas before the making of that Statute by the many Writs of Alias and Pluries Distringas with issues forfeited and returned upon them occasioning a great pro●it to the King and less to the Subjects and the many Writs of testatum Distringas made into other Countries where the Plaintifs averred that the Defendants had Lands and Estate suffi●ient and Writs of Averment and Enquiry made out upon too small issues returned directed unto the Justices of Assize to certifie if there might not be more issues returned and such a Writ of Enquiry to be executed in the Lent or Summer Vacations could not but cause a more long chargeable and troublesome delay to get better issues to be returned may help to attest the more necessary and better use of the Proces of Capias and Arrest and that Writs of Exigent and Outlawry will in the Cases aforesaid propter inevitabilem necessitatem be everlastingly necessary especially when in the same Parliament of 25 E 3. wherein Proces of Outlawry in Actions of Debt were granted a great complaint was made that the Steward and Marshal of the Kings House or their Deputies did upon Actions attach and distrain men by ten Marks of their Goods one day and by as much the next
a magis and minus and variatioe of Circumstances in such kind of Offences which may either lessen or heighten them Nor do those Rules which are given by Bracton for the reason of Arrests or Restraints of liberty in personal Actions before judgment that a Habeas Corpus which amounteth in effect to a Capias or Restraint of the person or his liberty is presently to be granted propter privilegium eruce signatorum mercatorum in respect or favour of those that were to go to the Holy War or were Merchants or propter causam sive necessitatem for some urgent cause or necessity of dispatch or in Trespas propter atrecitatem injuriae the horridness or evil of the Offence or propter personam contra quem injuriatum est ut si injuriatus sit Domino Regi vel Reginae vel eorum liberis vel Fratribus vel Sororibus vel eorum Parentibus Propinquis in respect of the Person against whom the wrong is done as the King Queen their Children Brothers Sisters or their Parents or Kindred come up to the Rules of Justice for urgency of Affairs necessities or occesions considerations or respect of Persons can of themselves be no cause of making Justice which is not to be a respecter of Persons to be Eccentrick or go a step out of her way or to do any thing in one case which should not or ought not to be done in other Cases having the like ground of reason and justice attended with the same circumstances neither can atrocitas facti vel injuriae the grandeur and oughliness of the offence be the sole cause or ground of Arrest in common or petty actions of Trespas or for words if there could properly be any atrocitas or hainousness in them or where it is done involuntarily as in Cases of Trespass or damage done by a mans Cattle for Trespass may be greater or lesser and if every Trespass could be understood to be of the greater size or magnitnde and so horrid and enormous yet there can be no reason to make the Caption or Arrest to be in part of Corporal punishment before the Judge or Magistrate be ascertained of the guilt of the Party or instructed how to keep the order which the Laws of God Nature and Nations and our Magna Carta have enjoyned that is to say to punish only secundum quantitatem delicti according to the nature of the offence And that supposed ground or reason given by Sir Edward Coke will be as deficient that the Common Law of England abhorring all force as the capital Enemy to it subjects the body to imprisonment until it hath made agreement with the Party and fined to the King bring any better reason with it For if the King shall as he conceiveth punish force by a Capias to Arrest the body before the party be permitted to defend him-or a Tryal had by Jury whether he be guilty or not that would be more against Magna Carta then any Process of Capias or Arrest in Debt can be dreamed or fancied to be and a Capias pro fine after a Tryal and finding guilty will either shew that it was not the arresting of the body in Trespass which was intended or inflicted for the punishment but the Capias pro fine and if both the Capias in Trespass before Judgement and the Capias pro fine after Judgement should be inflicted for one and the same offence They would not be secundum modum sive quantitatem delicti proportionate to the offence and the Capias to Arrest would be before the King or his Courts of Justice could be ascertained that there was an offence Nor will that other cause or ground given by him in the Report of the said Sir William Herberts Case that the King may by the Common Law arrest the body of the Debtor for that Thesaurus Regis est vinoulum bellorum nervus The Money and Treasure of the King is the Bond of Peace and Sinuwes of War obtain the conclusion which he aims at For that were to make a King or supream Magistrate which ought to be Lex viva and Justice it self to destroy that which he was sworn to protect and give him licence to break Laws who is not in ordinary Cases against the Rules of Justice and right reason to give such a liberty to himself or any others or to do an act for an advantage or necessity which the even and adequate Rules of Justice common right or right reason cannot allow So as by the favour of so great an autho●●ty in our Laws as Sir Edward Coke is and with as much reverence as is or can be due to so great a lover of the Laws of England and the veneration which he justly merits I must of necessity by what appears in the Cabinet and Treasury of time and Antiquity and what is clearly to be perceived in those pure streams which the Fountains of Justice and right reason have imparted unto Mankind assert what I have done and conclude that he was a man and hath as the best Authors may in their Books sometimes do which are not Scripture and Canonical erred in averring that there was no Process of arresting the body of a Debtor either before or after judgment until the Statute of 25 Ed. 3. which gave Process of Outlawry in Actions of Debt When in allowing Process of Arrest in debt in the Kings Case as he doth in Actions of Trespass he must acknowledge the same reason and necessity which is a just and rational coertion to appear before the Tribunals of Justice and of caution to be given to abide their judgments to be in Actions of Debt and other personal Actions And he himself in many of his Books and Writings hath as well as the Civil Law and our Common Law and the Law of Nations affirmed that the same Reason may claim the like Law For the reason that Joseph would have imprisoned his Brethren upon a suspition that they were come to espie the Land and kept Simeon a Prisoner until their words and denials were proved gives us the reason necessity and justice of arresting in personal Actions and Debt as well as Trespass until cause or caution be given of appearing in Courts of Justice and performing the judgments And that learned Judge could if he were now living very well remember that he hath often said as well as found that many of our Acts of Parliament are but declaratory of the Common Law and that which was long before used and understood to be as it was reasonable That the matter or thing excepted in an Act of Parliament is not included in any purvieu or provision of it but is out of the reach and gun-shot thereof and that when in the Statute of Magna Carta made in 9 H. 3. ca. 29. it is said That no Freeman shall be taken and imprisoned or be disseised of his Freehold or Liberties or free Customes or be outlawed or exiled
and divers other Commissioners therein named to call before them such Prisoners and their Creditors in and upon Actions of Debt Gase Trespasses Trover Detinue or other Personal Actions Judgements and Executions whatsoever thereupon and to treat for Compositions and Agreements some of the Judges of the Court out of which such prisoners have been committed to be privy to such Compositions and Agreements to the end that the said Prisoners night be relieved and have such reasonable years dayes and times of payment for such debts and damages as they shall not be presently able to satisfie and with such Security for payment thereof as in equity and good Conscience having respect to the ability of the Prisoners and charge of Wife and Children and other incidents to pious Cases considered And if any Creditor should refuse to appear before them the Commissioners were impowred to punish them and take such Order for their Appearance as they should think meet and to use all lawful wayes to make them take such reasonable Compositions as to any Three or more of them should be thought meet And his Majesty therein Declared that his meaning was to be aiding and assisting with his Grace and Fa●vour to the misery and calamity of such as be truly poor and distressed and not unto such as lye in Prison rather of wilfulness and obstinacy and out of a resolution to retain large and ample Estates to themselves and therefore straightly charged the said Commissioners to be very vigilant and circumspect therein and did in the said Commission mention that Queen Elizabeth did upon the supplication of the Prisoners in the Prisons of the Fleet and Kings Bench in the Eight and twentieth Year of her Reigne Authorize certain Commissioners under the Great Seal of England for the ordering and compounding of the Controversies and Causes between the distressed Prisoners and their Creditors and such others by whom tbey were detained Prisoners or in Execution and contined the said Commission nntil her Decease And that King James being informed that certain Clauses in the said Commission were Derogatory to the Common Laws of England and that by colour of the said Commission which was intended for the Charitable relief of poor miserable and distressed Prisoners certain refractory and obstinate Debtors which rather wanted will then meanes to satisfie their just Debes took occasion to molest and trouble their Creditors did to prevent all occasions of Inconveniencies to his loving Subjects especially such as tended to the breach of his Laws forbear for many years to renew the said Commission and finding that his forbearance had wrought a good effect by discouraging obstinate and wilful Debtors that sought nothing more then Evasions to avoid the payment of their just Debts so also that for want of that or some other charitable course for the relief of such as were truly and indeed poor distressed and miserable and wanted meanes to satisfie their Creditors it had been occasion to pester and fill his Prisons with the bodies of such persons whose punishment could no way ava●l their Creditors but rather was an hindrance to the satisfaction of their Debts for that during the time of their restraint they were no wayes able to go about or attend their lawful business but must of force consume themselves and that little that they had miserably and in Prison did by his Commission under the Great Seal of England in the Sixteenth Year of his Reigne by the advice of the then Lord Chan●cellor of England and also of divers of his principal Judges of his Courts at Westminster authorize the Commissioners therein named to proceed according to the Tenor of the said Commission for the relief of the said poor Prisoners in the said Prisons and afterwards being informed that his said Commission had not taken that good Effect which was expected renewed the said Commission and thereby prescribed and directed such a moderate course as that neither the Insolence of wilful and obstinate Debtors should be thereby incouraged to the derogation of his Laws nor yet his Grace and Clemency be wanting unto such to whom it should be meet to Extend the same did upon the humble suite of the distressed Prisoners in the Prisons of the Marshalsea and other Prisons in and about the Cities of London and Westminster and the places near adjoyning to the same whose Cases were as much to be commiserated and lamented as the said Prisoners in the said Prisons of the Kings Bench and the Fleet by another Commission under the Great Seal of England in the Two and twentieth Year of his Reigne authorize certain Commissioners therein named for the Ordering and Compounding of the Causes of the distressed Prisoners in the Prisons within the places aforesaid and that his Majesties Royal Father did by Two several Commissions under the Great Seal of England the one bearing Date in the Fourth Year of his Reigne and the other in the Sixth impower divers Persons therein named to the same or the like purpose Nevertheless the Good Old Cause as they are pleased to mis●name it with all its hypocritical tricks of State must not by any meanes be abandoned but they which did so much adore that Empusa or Witch called the Publique Faith which like the Golden Calf made by the Idolatrous children of Israel helped them to great store of money plate and Rings to furnish out and maintain a Rebellion could not now forbear to be as violent as they could to pull Down the ever to be re●spected and honoured better Publiqe Faith and Justice of the Nation and Disturb his Majesty his subordinate Judges Magistrates in the administration thereof and therefore some Synon or Trojan horse was of necessity to be made use of or introduced under a colour of publique Good or some stratagem or mine prepared to accomplish that by cunning and circumvention which by suit or force of Law reason and arguments they could not before be able to obtain and for that had as they thought a pattern or way cut or chalked out by the before-mentioned S. D. and some of his levelling Clerks and Attornies associating with him in their aforesaid proposals presented to the Committee for Regulation of the Laws in the year 1650 wherein they alledged that what they had proposed was not that the Writ of Capias should be taken away first but humbly conceived that it would be better by finding out nearer and cheaper wayes to bring the old road to be neglected then to deprive the suitors of the Old before they can have experience of the new and it was only proposed by way of supplement not to take away the antient course of proceeding● by way of Capias and ●●igent if the case shall require it CHAP. XIX That the Proceedings at the Common Law desired by the new way of a peremptory Summons or the old by Writs of Summons Pone and Distringas or Writs of Capias at the Plaintiffs pleasure are not consistent or agreeable
to be so unjust as where they gave a Plaintiff but three hours to Plead they allowed the Defendant nine And it is not yet gone out of the memory of Man that in the year 1642 or 1643 the course of stealing or hurrying of Judgments now unhappily borrowed from the Innovation of the late wicked times of Usurpation in Actions of Ejectment was believed by Justice Bacon in the Court of Kings Bench and Justice Reeve in the Court of Common Pleas to be such a vioviolation of our Laws as they Publickly declaimed against it and threatned to imprison any Attorney that should practice in such a manner And with great authority and warrant of our Lawes and right reason for that as it was justly and truely said by the Judges in the Reign of King Edward the first that non summonitus nec attachiatus per Legem terre prejudiciari non potest and Fleta an approved Lawyer in the Reign of that King and King Edward the second his Son hath published it to be a great and known Truth that the Court of Common Pleas cannot hold Plea in real and personal Actions without the Commission or Authority of a Writ original out of the Chancery and that without it nec Warrantum nec Jurisdictionem neque Coercionem habent and our Laws did then and long after not proceed upon such warrant or commission until the Plaintiff had actually given sureties to prosecute and maintain his action and the Sheriff to whom such original Writ was directed for to summon or attach the debtor to appear before the said justices had returned that he was summoned or attached as the nature of the Action required or had nothing whereby to be summoned or attached When but a few years preceding that well deserved indignation of those two worthy Judges that excellent most just lawdable and rational course of justice had been endeavoured to have been subverted by one Elsliot of a degree betwixt an Attorney and a Barrister and a man very bold able enough to make and contrive tricks and abuses in Law proceedings who having about the middle of the reign of King Charles the Martyr as a Reprobate and Cast away in the Law shifted himself from England into Ireland and from thence after some bad prancks there played returning back again with as much poverty as impudence attending upon him and having a desire to get some money by a contrivance to gain a sudaine possession of some Lands or houses for one as bad as himself upon a judgment by default against the Landlord or his Tenant who were to know nothing of it caused a declaration to be prepared in an action of Ejectment against a feigned Def t. or ejector in the name of a feigned Lessee upon a short Lease pretended to be made by his naughty Clyent and left at the house of the Tenant who not well apprehending the force and extent of the project a judgment by default was entred possession surprized and taken for which upon complaint made to the Judges of the Court of Kings Bench in which Court the action was supposed to have been laid and examination of the fact the judgment was made void possession restored and Master Elsliot the contriver committed and told by Justice Barkley that it was a shame that ever he should come or shew his face in a Court of justice Howsoever getting himself afterwards enlarged and the confusion and troubles of the late civil Warrs disturbing and breaking in upon the Law and all the Courts of Justice Mr. Elsliot began again to appear to be somebody engages in another exploit which was to gain by the like device accompanied with force some other naughty ways possession of an house and a very considerable estate in Lands in the County of Essex of Sir Adam Littletons the Father of Sir Thomas Littleton Knight now a member of the house of Commons in Parliament who to his great cost and trouble endeavouring to extricate and free himself and his Fathers Estate from the peril and danger of such a villany may well remember that a counterfeit record was in that pretended suit privatly layd in the office of the Records in the Tower of London sworn unto and offered to be justified but was at length taken as it ought to be for a Roguish piece of Forgery and Sir Adam Littleton and his Estate freed from any further disturbance Whilst that no smal parcel of Knavery being in great respect with the Agitators of the then called Parliament Army Levellers other State moulders and stiling himself the Esquire at armes being somtimes a Prisoner in New-gate and somtimes out wanted not a Liberal maintenance from his Patrons and great Masters until death shortly after unexpectedly rid the world of him From which reasonless and ungodly formula or way of proceeding rather to be exploded then embraced in actions of Ejectment and so utterly against the Law evil examples being oftner followed then good by some of his proselites and the connivance or want of courage in some of the Judges in the time of the Cromwelian usurpation dum sui non fuerunt knowing better but doing worse the same came again to be revived and creep into an allowance with a note indorced by the Attorney in the name of the incognito or casual ejector directed to the Tenant or Landlord requiring them to appeare and look to the action and confess Lease Ouster and Entry otherwise he must and would confess a judgment or let it pass by default As if such a judgment acknowledged by practice and confederacy could not with a great deal of ease have been reversed by a court that should not be so abused and the parties contrivant severely punished Of which kind of irregularity in the Law and wandring out of the old Paths never to be justified the Justices of the court of Kings-bench have been so sensible as they have for some years last past caused a Writ of Latitat which antiently was used to be warranted by a VVrit Original of the Chancery to be awarded and sued out against the feigned ejector And it is not half a yeare agoe since the Pillory of Westminster proclaimed a Brewer to be more Crafty then wise or honest when to gain an indirect possession of some houses by Judgments upon defaults having fudled the Tenants with Drink and Tobacco And giving them peices of the declarations as waste paper when they knew not what had been written therein to give fire to their tobacco thought he had snapt them with judgments upon defaults when he made oath that he had left declarations at their houses where they were in that manner made drunk and could neither say or sware to the contrary But unde or from whence soever it came or if this new manner of Law proceedings could have derived its pedegree from any more Noble an Ancestor It will if every Client and his Attorney who is no member of the court but only
non prospexit recourse is to be had to the Body of the Tenant and if he be not to befound the Landlord is to impute it to his own negligence that he did not look better to it Cum quis ad warrantum vocatus fuerit Christianus vel Judaus qui terram non tenuerit in feodo quae capi possit in manum domini Regis per quam distringi possint pracipiatur vicecomiti quod habeat corpora eorum when any man is vouched to warranty be he Christian or Jew and hath not Land which may be taken into the Kings hands or by which he may be distrained the Sheriff shall be commanded to take his Body or bring him And a Bishop being Summond in a quare non admisit cum non venit nec se excusat per nun-nec per Essoniatorem attachietur when he neither comes nor sends his excuse nor essoins shall be attached Upon a writ awarded to a Bishop to command him to bring before the Kings Justices a Clark or Minister in holy Orders refusing to find Pledges because he was in holy Orders and had no lay Fee whereby he might be distrained if the Bishop did not after a Summons pone Distringas awarded against himself cause him to come the Court did proceed against the Clark upon the contempt and cause him to be arrested nor could the Sheriff or his Bayliffs incur any punishment for doing of it for the execution of the Law saith Bracton wrongeth no man By the Statute of Marlebridg made in the 52 year of the Reign of that King if any shall not obey or suffer Summons attachments or executions of the same according to the Law and customs of the Kingdom they were to be punished The word Attachment being saith the learned Vossius derived from a French word to apprehend or detain An Attachment is to arrest force or compel a man denying to come to judgement saith Sir Henry Spelman And by Skene a learned Scotch Lawyer is defined to be a certain Bond or Constraint of the Law whereby a Defendant is unwillingly compelled to answer in Judgment to the Party complaining In the Statute of 52 Henry the third where a Capias is given against accomptants it is said they shall be Attached by their bodies An Attachment made for disobeying a Writ of prohibition is in the very form of a pone the awarding and entry of a pone is that the defendant should be Attached And saith Bracton the course or solemnity of Attachments to compel the Defendant to come to the Court to answer his contempt was not so always observ'd but in trespas for the greatness of the offence or in favour of Soldiers that were going to the Wars or of Merchants or such as required haste in Actions of Debt and it is probable that the Actions or Suits of Merchants were most commonly of that nature the Judges granted an Habeas Corpus which to that purpose was in effect as much as a Capias whereby the Sheriff was commanded all delays set apart in regard of such haste and priviledge to bring the Body of the Defendant to answer the Plaintiff in an Action of Debt or Trespas as the case required with a Clause in the Later end or perclose of the Writ that the Sheriff should be grievously amerced if he refuse to do it By an Act of Parliament made in the 52 year of the Reign of the aforesaid King in a Plea of Common custody or guard by reason of ward if the deforcers came not at the great distress the Writ was to be renewed twice or thrice within the half year following and if after the Writ read and proclaimed in open County the deforceant absent himself and the sheriff cannot take his Body to bring before the Justice then as a Rebe●●e shall loose the Seisin of his ward By the Statute made in the third year of the Reign of King Edward the first if any under Sheriff or other do withhold Prisoners replevishable after they have offerd sufficient security he shall pay a grievous amerciament to the King in which act of Parliament men committed by the King or his Justices are excepted and declared to be not replevishable By a Statute of the aforesaid King made in the same year the title of it being against the arresting of men in Liberties great men and their Bayliffs the Kings Officers only excepted to whom special authority sayeth the Statute is given were not to attach men passing thorough their Jurisdictions with their goods compelling men to answer before them upon contracts and covenants c. And the writ of prohibition in the Register awarded upon that Statute is for attaching a man to answer upon contracts and covenants Britton who wrote his Book by the command of King Edward the first saith if any man will complain of a debt under forty shillings let him find Pledges to prosecute his debtor and if he that is sued in Trespas maketh default let him be distrained And that in an action of debt if there be not a sufficient distress the Difendants might be taken by their Bodies be they Clarks or Laymen Fleta or whosoever was the Author of the Book so called reciting the then manner of proceedings at law as an old and accustomed course saith they were by Summons Attachments and distress in personal actions the entries and awarding thereof upon record being the very same with little difference as they are now used If a debtor had bound himself to be in default of payment distrained by the Steward and marshal of the Kings house then upon security given by the Creditor to prosecute a distringas was awarded against the debtor until he found Pledges so as he were within the virge and if he were personally to be found was to be Attached by his body until he should by Pledges acquit himself and if he had not Pledges was to be held in Custody until that he answered the Creditor non tamen in vinculis or if he found Pledges and after made default the Pledges were to be amerced and the Defendant arrested and detained and not be bailed or let loose by Pledges before he had answered And that not only Marescallus sub suo periculo omnes captos infra virgam custodire debet sed de eis coram Senescallo respondere de Judicatis plenam facere executionem the Marshal should at his Peril keep all that were taken within the virge but answer for them before the Steward and ought to take in execution those against whom Judgment should be given and the Steward did of course command the Clark that keepeth the placita Aulae pro Rege Rolls and Records of the Kings Court to direct his writ Marescallo quod ipsum de quo fit sine dilatione attachiari faciat to the Marshal that he do without delay attach him of whom any complaint should
their wisdom could foresee and provide indifferently devised for all men Sed quia plus pollere multorum ingenia consiliaque in animis versarent secum unamquamque rem agitarent deinde sermonibus at que in medium quid in quaque re plus minusve esset conferrent eas leges habiturum populum Romanum quas consensus omnium invasisse nec jussisse latas magis quam tulisse videri posset But for as much as the wits and heads of many men might see further and better advise they gave them leave to consider and ponder every particular and to reason together from point to point and deliver their opinions openly what was short wanting or superfluous in every Article and what Laws an universal consent of the people should bring in those should be enacted and none other that it might appear they were not so much to approve of them give their assent after they were propounded as to propose prefer them their own selves Cumque ad rumores hominum de unoquoque legum capite edito satis correctae viderentur Centuriatis Comitiis decem Tabularum leges perlatae sunt qui nunc quoque in hoc immenso aliarum super alias acervatarum legum cumulo fons omnis publici privatique est Juris And when as they were thought to be sufficiently corrected as every one spake to the Titles and Chapters thereof in an Assembly of all the Centuries and degrees of men the Laws of the Ten Tables were enacted and established which even at this day saith Livy amongst that infinite number of Laws heaped one upon another are the very Well-spring and Fountain of all Justice both publick and private But the next year after the people finding the Decem viri growing insolent to determine matters at home before they gave Sentence openly and usurping Kingly Government begun to repent themselves of putting the power of appeal out of themselves tumult and protested against the Decem viri or Ten which they had chosen saying They had created them Magistrates only for the publishing and enacting of certain Laws but they had now no Justice in the City And Appius one of the Ten having ingrossed into his hands the power and disposing of his Partners helps on the Tumult by a business that happened upon his lusting after a young Maid the Daughter of L. Virginius a Commander of good note in the Army and setting Mr. Claudius to claim her as his Bond-woman who laying hands on her in the Market-place cited her to appear and commanded her to follow him otherwise he would force her the People flock together but the Plaintiff tells them they need not trouble themselves for he proceeded according to Law and would do nothing by force cites her again to appear before Appius and the People perswade her to follow where the cause by reason of the expostulation of Icilius to whom she was betrothed not coming to hearing that day she was bailed and suffered to go under Sureties till the next but the second day Appius without hearing the Defendant or her Friends decreed that she should be a Bond-woman to Claudius who going to seise her finds the People resisting him Appius sends a Serjeant to assist him Virginius in a rage killeth his Daughter that she might not come into the Oppressors hands and a great uproar happening by the People Kindred and Friends of the Maid Appius cites Icilius the Spouse of the Maid as an Author of the Tumult and for his contumacy in not coming caused him to be attached and carried to Prison but Valerius and M. Horatius two popular and powerful Senators thrusting back the Serjeant said If Appius had any thing to charge him with by order of Law they would Bail him but if he went about to offer violence he should meet with his match After that Appius himself is arrested who desiring to be bailed and not to be put in Prison or lye in Chains by all the Friends and pittyful speeches he could make could not obtain it For that he had saith the Father of Virginia so much against all order of Law denyed the bailing of her who therefore commanded him to be carried to Prison as a person attaint and convict The Tribun of the Commons set him a day to plead for himself and make his answer but Appius before that day killed himself his Goods were confiscated by the Tribuns the rest of the Decem viri fled and were banished and all their Goods confiscated And the Ten Tables having two more added to them by the appointment of the Tribuns are set or hung up openly to be seen engraven in Brass The Romans having long before the compiling of the Twelve Tables used to Arrest and compel Men to appear in Judgment as is manifest by their manner of giving Bail before such time as Appius denyed to take Bail in the case of the Daugh-of Virginius which was ex veteri Jure an Old Law and Custom amongst them saith Pomponius And this grand Commotion of the People having nothing at all in it the while of complaint or action against the Laws of citing and compelling men to appear in Judgment and a putting them to Bail in the interim but a confirmation or allowance rather of them Threescore and five years after that Marcus Manlius Capitolinus so named because he had saved the City of Rome and the Capitol from ruine and spoil growing ambitiously discontented not contenting himself to deal in the Laws Agraria about the Division of Lands which had alwayes ministred occasions of Seditions began to intermeddle between the Debtors and Creditors and to overthrow saith Livy all keeping of Credit And seeing a Centurion condemned in an Action of Debt and carrying to Prison upon an Execution with a rout and crew of his Followers rescues and takes him from the Officers and crying out that his merits in saving the Capitol had been to little purpose if he could abide to see his Fellow-Souldier carried away captive did in sight of the People pay down the Debt set to sale his own Land and caused it to be openly cried that as long as he had one foot of ground or any thing else rest he would not see one of the People condemned upon Execution carried to Prison and stirred up such a Sedition in the City as the People followed him as the protector of their Liberties whereupon the Dictator being sent for from the Army assembled the Senate caused the Ivory Chair of State to be set in the Common-Hall and sent a Serjeant for Manlius who with a great retinue of his party presents himself before the Tribunal and tells the Dictator that now he saw he was created Dictator not against the Common Enemies but himself and the Commons of Rome for he did see well that he professed to maintain and bear out the Usurers against the Commons Whereupon after many insolent speeches the Dictator commanded him to be
or otherwise destroyed but by lawful judgment of his Peers or by the Law of the Land And by 25 Ed. 3. ca. 4. That no Man shall be taken by Petition or suggestion but by Indictment or Presentment or by Process made by Writ original at the Common Law He is in his Comment upon Magna Carta and that Statute of 9 H. 3. of opinion that the words Per legem terrae do refer to all the procedent matters in that Chapter or Statute that that Statute was but declaratory of the old Law of England That a Commitment by Lawfull warrant either indeed or in Law is accounted in Law a due process or proceeding of Law and by the Law of the Land as well as by force of the Kings writ and that if a man be suspected and he flyeth or hideth himself it is a good cause to arrest him that in many cases a man may be by the Law of the Land taken and imprisoned by force of the Kings writ upon a suggestion made and that against those that attempt to subvert and enervate the Kings Laws there lyeth a writ to the Sheriffe in nature of a Commission ad capiendum impugnatores juris Regis ad ducendum eos ad Gaolam de Newgate to arrest the Impugners of the Kings Laws and to bring them to the Gaole of Newgate and if he had not been of that opinion the words of Magna Charta in that Statute of 9. H. 3. can if they were put upon the rack and tortured bear no other genuine sense or interpretation then that no man shall be taken or imprisoned but by lawfull judgment of his Peers or by the law of the land And those words of the Statute of 25. Ed. 3. ca. 4. that no man shall be taken by petition or suggestion but by indictment or presentment or by process made by writ original at the Common Law can receive no other construction but that a man may be taken by process made by writ original at the Common Law of which nature are the process or writs of Capias in the Court of Common Pleas at Westminster which are made upon original writs issuing out of the Chancery have been in use upon occasion and are matters of record before the Justices in this Kingdom long before the making of those Statutes And such an universal approved Ancient long and continued Praxis founded and fixt upon the Laws of God Nature and Nations in order to the preservation of Faith and Justice those grand Supporters of humane Societies should need no Advocate to plead and justifie the necessary use thereof but be sufficient to perswade the opponents to acquiesce in the reason and legality of it And that great Lawyer Sir Edward Coke might have had more lawrels to have encompassed and grown up by his urne and had not so much Eclipsed that great reputation which he had gained in his Studies and Profession of the Laws as he hath if he had not without a due and serious examination so much taken upon trust Caressed Magnified and recommended to posterity that Manuscript called the Mirror of Justice and some other Manuscripts so often by him appealed unto and vouched in his 2. part of the Institutis or Comment upon Magna Charta In which Consarcination called the Mirror of Justice that Mirror of Justice Maker or Deviser dreameth truly to have recited some exemplary Judgmeets or direful punishments inflicted by King Alured or Alfred upon 44. Judges of his times for supposed Errors and Misdemeanors by them committed And hanged them who with great probability may be believed not yet to have been hanged by that King or any other for that if any such remarkable things or Examples of Justice had ever been done by him they could not in all likelihood have escaped our old Historians Symeon Dunelmensis Ailredus Abbas Rievalensis John Brompton William Malmesbury Henry Huntington Roger Hoveden Henry Knighton Matthew of Westminster Ingulphus and all our other Ancient times Remenbrances nor would have been unrecorded by Asser Menvensis who for the fame of his Learning being sent for out of Wales to come and live with him was preferred by him and made a Bishop and residing in his Court Wrote his life and recommended to Posterity his most memorable Actions excellent Qualities and Endowments but was so far from the Registring of any such Severeties as on the contrary he doth make mention of the extraordinary clemency and lenity of that Virtuous Prince who although he was a most diligent inquisitor of any male administration of Justice by his Judges yet saith Asser Menevensis Leniter Advocatos aut per scipsum aut per alios suos fideles quoslibet Interrogabat quare Ita nequiter Judicassent utrum per ignorantiam aut propter aliam malevolentiam id est utrum pro aliquorum amore vel Timore aut aliquorum odio aut etiam pro alicujus pecuniae cupiditate Gently calling them to him he did by himself or others whom he might trust demand of them Wherefore they had given such Judgments whether ignorantly or for any ill will or for love fear hatred covetousness or love of Money Denique si illi Judices profiterentur propterea se talia Ita Judicasse eo quod nihil rectius de his rebus scire poterint tunc ille discrete moderanter illorum imperitiam insipientiam redarguens aiebat Ita inquiens nimirum admiror vestram hanc insolentiam eo quod dei dono meo sapientium gradus usurpati sapientiae autem studium operam neglexistis But if those Judges did confess that they had so Judged or done because they knew no better then he did discreetly and moderately shew them their ignorance and say unto them truly I do very much wonder at your folly for that by Gods guist and mine you have taken upon you the degree of my wise men and Judges but the study of the Laws you have neglected Qua propter aut terrenarum potestatum ministeria quae habetis illico dimittetis aut sapientiae studiis multo devotius docere studiatis impero Wherefore I command you either suddainly to leave your places or give your minds more unto study Quibus auditis verbis perterriti veluti pro maxima vindicta Correcti Comites praepositi ad aequitatis discendae studium totis viribus se vertere nitebautur ita ut mirum in modum illiterati ab infantia Comites pene omnes prepositi ministri litteratoriae arti studerent malentes insuetam disciplinam quam laboriose discere quam potestatum ministeria dimittere Whereupon they viz. His Earles and subordinate Judges being as much terrified as if they had been actually punished did wholly addict themselves to the study of the Laws so as to a wonder the Earles and Judges aforesaid many of whom from their youth were ignorant and illiterate did by study endeavour to make themselves more able choosing rather the hardship
reproaches and not always without the scorn of being asked if they had any Latin by those that did never understand it or were ever likely or in a capacity to do it And Pride the Drayman turned by an accursed Rebellion into a Colonel could say that he hoped shortly to see or it would never be well untill the Lawyers Gowns were like the Scottish Colours hung up in Westminster hall So great was his and his partisans malice and hatred to those Laws which once they seemed to be so much in love with professed and covenanted to maintain In the same year that so remarkable Thomas Elsliot calling himself a member of Jesus Christ and of the English Common-wealth a free-born person of the English Nation Esquire at Arms Conquerour of the Gentlemen of the Long Robe now or late the Satan of the Commonwealth in his Book entituled The true Mariner with his Metaphorical and Hieroglifical Ship demonstrating the way to Paradice dedicated to Oliver Cromwell saith the Prothonotaries and Registers in the Courts of Justice are immense Foxes the Attorneys and Clarks Kindle-coals the Bum-bailiffs Serjeants at Mace and Marshals-men Serpents Toads Rats and Mice James Stocall Colonel of a Regiment of fifteen hundred men in the Isle of Jersey proposed that if a man be overburdened with Debts and imprisoned and his Estate not able to pay he ought if he come into Court and affirm it upon his Oath to be freed of all his Creditors so as he do leave them what he hath whereby to satisfie every Creditor according to the priority of every mans Debt Shortly after followed Proposals by some Chancery Clarks aiming to hurt their Masters the Six Clarks in Chancery and make what benefit they could for themselves that twelve ancient practising Clarks to be chosen two out of every Office by the major votes of the Clarks and presented to the Lord Keeper Lord Chancellor or Lords Commissioners of the Great Seal and out of them to be chosen some Overseers or Superintendents and to have an Annual stipend the Subpoena Office to be nulled and those Writs to be made by the Chancery Clarks the Affidavit Office to be taken away Lawyers Fees to be ascertained and none to take any more Fee in that Term for any particular Cause and no matters to be referred to Masters of Chancery but Accompts Charles George Cock would have Vtlaries abolished and no Arrest and that there be only a Summons without a Writ or attaching the person and if twice summoned let him be proceeded against upon his Goods In the year 1652. Gerrard Winstanley published his opinion that the Kings old Laws cannot govern a free Commonwealth and it is not possible for a people to be too free and in a Book entituled The Law of Freedom or true Magistracy restored complaineth that Tolls in the Market are a burden that the Gentry do oppress the Common people live idly upon their labours and carry away all the comfort and livelihood of the Earth that the powers of Lords of Manors do remain still over their Brethren requiring Fines and Heriots beating them off the free use of their Commons the Commoners have cast out the King therefore they are in equity free from the slavery of that Lordly power and that it will blast the power of the Parliament and Army to see the Government of the Commonwealth to be built upon the Kingly Laws and Principles and that all slaveries and oppressions which have been brought upon mankind have been by Kings Lords of Manors Lawyers Landlords Divines who ought to be cast out and prayeth that there may be a Judge in every Shire Peace-makers in every Town Overseers and a band of Souldiers attending them Another proposeth that instead of an Arrest a Summons might be sufficient and if no Apparance Judgment and Execution to pass In the year 1653. in a Book entituled a supply to a draught of a Systeme proposed by a Committee for the Regulation of the Law it was desired that none be arrested attached molested or troubled by any Original or other Writ And thus whilst too many addle-headed Reformers were labouring to establish wickedness by a Law or Authority and the major part of the Members of the miscalled Parliament having as they thought rear'd their designs to that height and nearness of accomplishment that they took themselves to be Officers of Righteousness elected and chosen to do wonderfull things that Gods will might be done on earth as it was in heaven that every one might be holy and the Pots yea the Bells upon the Horses as they were pleased to phrase it might be holiness unto the Lord and that God might reign and be all in all they did in that hurry and fit of Zeal without any solid or rectified reason cause or consideration without the hearing of any defences to be made against their supposed to be infallible Judgments Vote that the High Court of Chancery and all the other Courts at Westminster-hall should be dissolved and no more made use of and a Member of that Society and a Burgess for the Town or University of Cambridge who might have done well to have disswaded his Election until he had learned more wit was so willing to have the Civil Laws here used to be destroyed or set packing with the Common Laws as he could not forbear crying out Mr. Speaker one word I beseech you for Jesus Christ let the Civil Law also be put down But that not well according with the sentiments and purposes of Cromwell their man of Sin who had designed to trepan them to deliver up their fancied Parliamentary Government and to bless God for the yoke and Instrument of his own making whereby he as a single person had with many curbing contrivances a future absolute lawless and unlimited power and Authority he did for the better preserving of the Justice of the Nation for the administration whereof he intended to make himself an allowance of Two hundred thousand Pound per annum and well understood to be as necessary in a Common-wealth as it had been in the best of Monarchies and some other his reasons of State whilst those Dreamers of Godly Reformations had upon his Summons and Command refused to dissolve or come out of their opinionated Senate or Parliament-house cause some of his Janisaries or Red-coat Souldiers to pull them out of the House and lock up the doors And their ungodly and particular interests having thus enticed the vulgar and less considerate part of the people too many of them made all the hast they could to pull in pieces the frame and the noble ever to be admired constitution of our Government where they could be sure of hopes of gain and losing nothing by it and joyning with some Lawyers of the smaller size that wanted Practice and expected imployments by a Renverse of our Old Laws and setting up New the finews and foundations of our Laws were endeavoured to be cut Monarchy Justice and