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A49780 Marriage by the morall law of God vindicated against all ceremonial laws of popes and bishops destructive to filiation aliment and succession and the government of familyes and kingdoms Lawrence, William, 1613 or 14-1681 or 2. 1680 (1680) Wing L690; ESTC R7113 397,315 448

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any Delays by Jeofails Repleaders Arrests of Judgment or Writs of Error another cause was that both Parties and Advocates took the Oath of Calumny that they believed their Allegiance just and true Illud juretur quod lis sibi justa videtur which Oath keeps their Allegiances clean from falsity that I never found so much as one Fiction in all their judicial Proceedings and if the same Oath were but taken here as there I believe there would not one Bill in Chancery or Declaration at Common Law come in for Twenty which now are thrust in by heaps many other causes there are which lessen the labour of a Judg and of the Suitors which for Brevity I omit all which shew the Prudence of that Noble Kingdom where the People enjoy so great Justice with so little Cost and Contention Lastly we could have done more Business than we did had we been set to Act as the Roman Judges every one single without Associates in a Court by himself and how great an Addition to the Publick Treasury as well as advantage to Justice the lessening the number of Judges and turning Fees to Salary will cause is already mention'd A Satyr against the Cruel Preposteration of Ecclesiastical and Temporal Courts in Judicial Proceedings contrary to the Precept of Christ Matth. 18.15 AND will you never learn the skill Which first Subpoena is or Bill Or foremost know with all your wit If Declaration is or writ Or which precede should in your Tale The Capias or Original You which is best who make a pause To Sentence first or hear the Cause With Execution who begin Before a Judgment or a Sin Who grinde and eat the Poor distrest With Tongue and Teeth of Romish Beast For Grace in Anglice's who curse The Rent was bad the Patch is worse Who have no Summons but Surprize Who have no Laws but Treacheries Do you not know there is a Cry Gone up against your Cruelty The Prince himself of Righteousness So foul Oppressions to suppress Descended hath on Earthly Globe And glorious Dy'd his Scarlet Robe In his own blood to keep the Peace And from your Dungeons to release Twelve Trumpets hear 12 Apostles whose Silver sound Doth from the East to West rebound Proclaim'd the Sacred Edict have And Penalty whence none can save Which lest to you should be in vain Ye Adders deaf hear it again If Thee thy Brother or thy Friend Or Enemy hap to offend See thou to warn him do not grudg Twice at the least without a Judg And the last time see thou no less Shew him than thy two Witnesses Or three to make the Fact appear If he shall doubt to him more clear Nor shalt thou him for any thing Unto the Seat of Judgment bring Untill he Litis Contestate Or shew a Contumacious hate That if thou canst thou may'st him prove Thus first at home to win by Love Let every Plaintiff thus his Suit Begin or be for ever mute No form of Strife shall be but this Our express will and pleasure is The Nations Bow and struck with Awe Adore the Justice of the Law And to the dread Tribunal run High as the Clouds bright as the Sun With loud Appeals and further will Upon this Statute draw their Bill Both of Indictment and Complaint And of these Crimes you thus attaint That against this Divinest Act More Fees and greater to exact The furious Plaintiff false or true While hot you bind him to pursue The slow Defendant wrong or right You Bail or Goal to make him fight And Fines on Concords heavy lay To make them your unhappy prey The Debtor travailing to find The Creditor with honest mind Your Outlawries ambush the way And will not suffer him to pay But in your Tolls you take him there And bind him like a filly Dear Or what doth make him as forlorn To death you hunt him with the Horn To make his Skin and Carcass yours You cheat both him and Creditors And while his Plaint each sadly tells You take the Fish and leave the Shells Thus Innocents you lay in Chains Before they know who 't is complains Or what 't is for nor shall they see 't Till all Extortion's paid by Sheet You lay Imbargues and Prizes take Before the War proclaimed you make And Right by Battle try and Wounds Mortal before the Trumpet sounds Your Hell-hounds hunt without a noise Your Snake not rattles but destroys There 's nothing true and nothing Sworn Till Justice is to pieces torn And you who cite not but infest us With your Excessus Manifestus And us torment with great unfitness Dr. Cousins writes in defence of suppressing the names of Witnesses Accusers Excommunication ipso facto without Citation Because you will not name the Witness Your Ipso Facto's make us wonder At Thunderbolts without a Thunder And Bodies Judg in Hell to cast Before the Judgment day is past And deathless Souls make pale and wan Because you Curse before you Ban. No Plea deceives the Judg on high What will you do stand mute or flie All rather or who most repents Burn Popish Forms and Presidents Is it not better then to turn To Flames than you your selves to burn Some way with speed appease his Ire Your pain proclaimed is Hell and Fire Of Summons to answer before a Copy given of what is required to be answer'd This is in Scotland provided for by Act of Parliament and no man is troubled to appear before any Judg to answer before by their Libell'd Summons a Copy is deliver'd to the Person or affixed at the Door of his dwelling House containing all the matters at large to which his answer is required and though the People of England are not yet so happy as to enjoy so great a Privilege on which those invaluable Treasures of their Liberty and Propriety depend yet every Attorny and Clerk of a Court hath it and is free from giving appearance before a Judg or being Arrested till a Copy of the Declaration first deliver'd him and Judgment pass'd against him Attor Ac. 28. The reason why these Lay-Clerks who are Successors in Courts to the old Romish Spiritual Clerk Monopolize this from the whole People only to themselves is Filthy Lucre For first if the Plaintiff were compell'd as he ought to be to make Oblatio Libelli to the Defendant by giving or sending a Copy of his Bill in Chancery or of his Declaration at Common Law to the Defendant at his dwelling House and so likewise the Defendant bound to return his Answer Sealed up directed to be left for the Plaintiff in such Court having Jurisdiction of the Cause as the Plaintiff desired within Fifteen Days after the Service of the Copy at the dwelling House to be by the Officer of the Court deliver'd Sealed to the Attorney of the Plaintiff when he demands the same and the like done on Reply Duply Triply and Quadruply and all Exceptions of Fact or Law Postulations and Motions of
Duaren lib. 1. Disp c. 1. Hermann vult lib. 1. discep c. 1. Goed ad l. 9. n. 1.6.7 ff de verb. sign 2. By the Law si vis vocationi fuat testamini igitur em capito appears that after the Defendant had a Copy of the Declaration deliver'd no Capias before Judgment was to issue against him without a Fugam fecit or at least an hiding himself and the word Testamini shews there must be Productio testium Probation by witnesses of the flight or absconding and not a Latitat granted on a meer false Suggestion and Lie or on the Forgery of an Outlawry to destroy that inestimable Right of Liberty from wrongful Imprisonment and more valuable than Life it self 3. By the Law si vindiciam falsam tulit rei si velit is Arbitros tres dato forum Arbitriis fructus duplione damnum deciditor appears That the Plaintiffs were Fined pro falso elamore double the value on a Writ of Enquiry of Damage to a Jury of Three which like Commissioners for examination of Witnesses being equally chosen by the Parties were more able and equal than a numerous Jury of Twelve all chosen by the Sheriff 4. This being granted that by the Ancient Roman and Athenian Laws Oblatio Libelli preceded vocatio in jus and vocatio in jus preceded Contumacy and Probation by Witnesses preceded Sentence of the same and that Plaintiffs were punish'd for false Suggestions it follows there was neither taking of Pledges Distress Attachment Satisdation Exaction of Bail or Arrest in their Original Process nor before Judgment except on Contumacy proved by Witnesses which shews that neither Romans nor Athenians were Authors of beginning Law-Suits with Execution 5. It appears by the Law Aeris confessi rebusque jure judicatis c. That the Pagan Execution it self after Judgment was more Just and Merciful than the Papal and Episcopal is now with us before Judgment for first they were so far from Arresting before Demand and before Judgment that they could not Arrest the Defendant on Hearing and Trial and Judgment pass'd against him without giving him Monition of the Judgment and till Thirty Days Justi dies to provide the Money were expired but now on a bare Bond before Judgment and before so much as a Demand made they cast into the Goal the Husbandman from his Plow the Tradesman from his Shop and the Merchant from the Exchange without giving the least notice Thirty or so much as Three Days to provide the Money whereby they and their Families their Reputation and Trade are oftentimes destroyed not only to the ruin of themselves but great damage of the Publick for the greatest bulk of Trade of the Nation being driven on Money borrowed on Interest if it be intended what is borrowed should be applied to Trade it is impossible that they can pay interest for it to the Creditor if they must keep it at their Chambers for the Creditors to call it in again on an hour's warning or as they now do without any warning at all and imploy it at their Trade they cannot unless they may have at least warning for so small a pittance of Time as Thirty Days which the very Heathen allowed their Debtors to be free from Arrest though Judgment was past against them This abominable Cruelty of beginning Suits with Execution came not therefore from the Heathen but from the pretended Christian Romish Bishops and Clerks All Attachments Distresses Exactions of Pledges Bail and Arrests before Judgment are Executions before Judgment and come from Romish Bishops against whom the Heathen shall rise in Judgment Now that beginning of Suits with Executing by exacting of Pledges before Oblatio Libelli Bail before Flight Judgment before Hearing Distress Attachment and Arrest before Judgment was brought into Great Britain by the Romish Bishops appears by these Reasons 1. Because the Register of Writs that old Romish Idol to which more innocent Causes and Persons have been Sacrificed and Destroyed according to the proportion of the Territory it Commands than to the Turkish Alcoran is in Latine which is the Romish Language in which Register all the Original Process of Summons Attachment and Distringas are composed for Exacting of Pledges and Bail Distress imposing Penalties and Forfeitures Arrest and Imprisonment in Personal Actions and Grand-capes and Petty-capes in real before Oath of Calumny Oblatio Libelli Hearing Probation or Judgment and in Indictments by Inquisition 2. Because all old Formalities of Entries and Pleadings of Instruments and Contracts Publick and Private were Originally in Latine which shews they were formed by Romish Bishops or their Clerks in their own Language conform to their Romish Idol the Register beginning with Execution as particularly appears in all Instruments concerning Feudal Jurisdiction are Clauses and Conventions of Distress Reentry Penalties and Forfeitures horrible unjust before Oath of Calumny Ohlatio Libelli dies justi Hearing Probation Judgment or Judg but the Lord himself in his own Case over his Vassal 3. Because anciently the Romish Bishops have been Chancellors in that Court which is Officina Brevium the Shop of Writs where they are forged and have been likewise chief Judges in the other Courts of the King keeping all their Proceedings in Latine Court-hand and Chancery-hand secret from the understanding of King and People whereby they exercised what Tyranny and Oppression they pleased 4. Because they and other Ecclesiastical Persons as Abbots Priors and the like have Possess'd the Third part of all the Baronies Honors and Mannors in the Land and had they not been stopt by the Statutes of Mortmain might by this time have got all this way therefore of taking Distress Penalties and Forfeitures before Judgment advanced their Interest in Tyranny and made them Arbitrary and absolute Judges in their own Case 5 Because anciently the Romish Bishops have been Outlawries and Excommunicato Capiendos and Judgment of Heresies the Romish Inquisition in Disguise and to the shame of Protestants still claim to be in their Ecclesiastical Courts Judges of Heresie whereby as the Common Law Judges by their Outlawries which are Temporal Excommunicato Capiendos they by their Excommunicato Capiendos which are Spiritual Outlawries have brought in the Romish Inquisition to begin all Suits with Execution before Judgment 6. Because the Greek Bishops first destroyed the Equal Law of the Twelve Tables Si in jus vocet a●que eat which is before interpreted Statim eat and made it in jus vocati statim eant aut satisdent which Satisdation included all the Rabble of Distresses Pledges Bail Mainprize Arrests and Imprisoments before Oblatio Libelli Hearing Probation or Judgment which Greek Bishops were the Instruments of that wicked Empress Theodora who foisted into the Laws of Justinian what they pleased concerning Judicial Proceeding touching Marriage Filiation and Succession and all other matters and the Romish Bishops followed them in their wickedness in whatsoever was for their gain and brought the same with themselves and the
cùm vix esset dare causam quin ratione peccati possit deferri ad Ecclesiam Object 3 Stat. Merton gives them no Jurisdiction It 's alledged That it appears by the Statute of Merton that Henry the Third writ in his time to the Bishop to certifie Marriage and Bastardy First It is to be understood therefore that in the time of Pope Alexander the Third Anno Dom. 1160. which was Anno 6. H. 2. in whose time all Matrimonial Causes beonged to the King's Courts This Constitution was made That Children born before Solemnization of Matrimony where Matrimony followed should be as Legitimate to inherit to their Ancestors as those that were born after Matrimony It is likewise further to be known that King John the Father of Henry the Third who made this Statute of Merton following was by the then Pope Innocent Excommunicated King John Excommunicated as likewise at the same time was the Emperor Otho and the whole Kingdom of England Interdicted and so remained for the space of Six Years Three Months and Fourteen Days during all which time there was no Church open for Marriages or Burials but the poorer People were buried like Dogs in Ditches and where they married God knows Through which King John was driven to such distress by his own Bishops and Barons and the French assisting the Pope against him that he was forced before he could get to be released of this Excommunication to pay the Pope vast Sums of Money and to lay down his Crown and Scepter Mantle Sword and Ring the Ensigns of his Royalty at the feet of Pandolphus the Pope's Legat and submit himself to the Mercy and Judgment of the Church Two Days some write Six it was before the Legat restored him to his Crown which he likewise received again on no better Terms then to hold the Kingdom of England and Lordship of Ireland from the See of Rome at the Annual Tribute of a Thousand Marks Silver and the Excommunication was not to be taken off but deferred till further and full satisfaction was made to the Clergy which was not done till Two Years after The Bishops being hereby arrived at so great an height of their Tyrannical Power over this King The Bishops usurped the exercise of Ecclesistical Laws by force over their Kings As that when the King having obtained absolution had gather'd a great Army to have been revenged on the French King the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury told him 't was against his Oath at his Absolution and the King in a great passion reply'd He would not defer the Business for his pleasure seeing Lay-judgment appertained not to him the Arch-Bishop presumed to threaten his native Soveraign that unless he desisted he would Excommunicate him Note therefore That in the time of H. 3. who was the Eldest Son of King John the Bishops continued to assume the Power of Lay-judments as well in Marriages as they did of shutting up of Churches in which they were made from the Pope to whom they had inforced King John to surrender his Crown and not from the King 's Writ as that Statute of Merton shews rather a proud Renunciation and scorn to answer the King 's Writ concerning Marriage then any use permitted by them to the King of the same unless he would as his Father had done lay down again his Crown to them and have Marriage judg'd according to the Law of the Pope for otherwise they tell him plainly They neither will nor can answer his Writ as appears by the Statute it self the words whereof follow 20 H. 3. Cap. 9. To the King 's Writ of Bastardy Whether one being born before Matrimony may Inherit in like manner as he that is born after Matrimony All the Bishops answer'd That they would not nor could not answer to it because it was directly against the common Order of the Church that is meant the Romish Church And all the Bishops instanted the Lords that they would consent that all such as were born afore Matrimony should be Legitimated as well as they who were born within Matrimony as to the succession of Inheritance for so much as the Church accepteth such for Legitimate And all the Earls and Barons answer'd with one voice That they would not change the Laws of the Realm which hitherto have been used and approved Coke 2 part Inst 97. It is said Though the Bishops are Spiritual Persons yet in case of general Bastardy when the King writes to them to certifie who is lawful Heir to any Lands or other Inheritances they ought to certifie according to the Law and Custom of England and not according to the Roman Canons and Constitutions yet if they do make their Certificate according to the Canon Law No remedy against Bishops making Certificates contrary to the King's Laws General Bastardy u●urped by Bishops not given them by Law and not the Law of the Land there appears no Remedy unless such a one as is worse then the Disease Sir Galfred le Scrope Cheif Justice saith Before this Statute of Merton the Party pleaded not general Bastardy but that he was born out of Espousals and the Bishop ought to certifie whether he were born before Espousals or not and according to that Certificate to proceed to Judgment according to the Law of the Land And the Prelates answered That they could not nor would not to this Writ answer and therefore ever since special Bastardy viz. that the Defendant c. was born before Espousals hath been Try'd in the King's Courts and general Bastardy in the Bishops Court and herewith agree out old Books and the constant Opinion of the Judges ever since Coke 2 part Inst 99. It being before granted That the Law of England cannot be changed but by an Act of Parliament and Magna Charta being before made and being a Declaration of the ancient Common Law First That no Freeman was to be put out of his Free-hold or Inheritance but per legale Judicium parium and there being no cause of its own Nature more Temporal or more concerning Succession to Temporal Inheritance then Marriage It was contrary to Magna Charta and the Common Law to judg the Fact of it by any other Judges then Juries and the Law of it by any other Judges then those of Temporal Courts and though the Pope and Bishops in those Superstitious times forced the Kings many times as they did King John to yeild his Crown and the Subjects to yeild their Marriages and other Temporal Rights to their Arbitrary and Saleable Sentence for fear of Excommunication yet doth not this any way prove that the Jurisdiction of Marriage was ever granted them by any Law or Act of Parliament or could be without it were contrary to a known Common Law and Act of Parliament which expressly gave the trial of Temporal Rights and Inheritances to a Legale Judicium parium and not to any Ecclesiastical Judges or Laws Now therefore it being clear they had
the Kings Courts 2. He rests not there but says Iisdem licentiam ad alia vota convolanda concedimus So that here not only Licence may be had for Money to Marry but for the same to leave the old and make a new choice as often as they please And my Lord Coke will have the Common Law to give such Faith that they ought not to question these doings true or false right or wrong which sets all Women and Men to Sale for Money and gave the occasion to Cornelius Agrippa to call all Ecclesiasticks Panders General for their Profit 3. The Common Law Judges give the Bishop the same Supremacy of Power in Matrimonial Causes since the Protestant Religion hath made Marriage no Sacrament as they had in the time of highest Popery and made it a Sacrament though Sublata causa tollitur effectus The same ceasing to be a Sacrament and becoming a mear Temporal Contract the old superstitious Faith of a Sacrament ought not to be given those who are no Judges of Temporal matters 4. It is worth a smile in this Case were it not so wicked to see how hot the Common Lawyers were a while in the scuffle for Supremacy of Marriage But no sooner had the Bishops turn'd the muzzles of the Romish Canons against them and discharged their piece of Conjuring in a strange Language instead of a Sentence but our Worthies of the Law fell flat on their faces and yielded the Royal Fort of the Prerogative and all the Protestant Subjects Laws and Liberties eya Magna Charta it self to the Mercy of the Enemy by so abominable a Judgment that no Appeal lay to the Kings Courts against the Sentence of a Bishop touching Marriage Filiation or Succession true or false right or wrong with cause or without cause a Resolve deserving to be mark'd with a Note of perpetual Infamy and Razed out of all Records On which and other Reasons though in most parts of Christendom the Clergy generally composed one Estate of the Country yet since the Reformation they were excluded from being any part of the Estates and of Holland neither were they allowed any Vote in their Assembly and far less Reason have they in England seeing they have equal Privilege here with the Gentry and all other Lay-free-holders in Election of Knights of the Shire to assume any other Power in the Legislative Temporal or Spiritual either in Person or by any other Representative The like Practice is likewise in Venice though they are Catholicks where before the Council sits the Cryer with a loud Voice commands all Priests out of Doors lest they should discover the State secrets to the Pope and likewise assume the Supremacy of Judgment from the Temporalty to the Spiritualty to produce which effects they are a dangerous ingredient to be mixt in how small a quantity soever in any Supream Council and a little Leven of so active a Fermentation Leveneth the whole Lump A Reason is given by Aeneas Silvius why it was held by more That the Pope was above a Council than a Council above a Pope because Popes gave Bishopricks and Arch-Bishopricks but Councils gave none Which doth not only hold in meer Spiritual Councils but in such Spiritual Councils as are mixt with the Temporalty in which the Spiritualty are always Bribed and Pension'd by the gift of their Offices And this is apparent and needs no further proof And if any of the Temporalty receive the like Bribes and Pensions upon lawful proof thereof made it cannot be denied that neither of them are equal or fit Legislators and much less Judges of the Holy Laws of God of Marriage Filiation and Succession of Subjects and least of all of Kings Exceptions against Bishops being Judges in reference to the Judicial Power 1. They are prohibited by the example of Christ to Judg Marriage Filiation Aliment or Succession We Read Christ was at a Marriage-Feast but it was so poor a one they wanted Wine and 't is likely he would have helped them to none had the man been rich for he might have bought enough for his Money without Miracle But Christ shewed his Bounty to the Poor and the Rich he sent empty away We read likewise he taught the Doctrine of Marriage but it was according to the Moral Law of God and all Ceremonial Laws he Established neither did he or his Apostles ever join any hands by the Ceremonies of a Priest or Temple nor ever spake of any other joining Man and Woman together but by God only as it was from the beginning And as to the point of being a Judg of Marriage Filiation Aliment and Succession he utterly refused it though he knew the Fact and the Right far above any Bishop as appears Luke 12.14 And one of the company said unto him Master Speak to my Brother that he divide the Inheritance with me And he said unto him Man Who made me a Judg or a Divider over you To give Judgment in this Case according to Episcopal Doctrine Christ must first have enquired with what Ceremonies the Father and Mother were Married whereby the Marriage must have been first Judged Then Whether these two Brothers were begot before the Ceremonies or after and whether there were Witnesses at the begetting which concerns Filiation Then Whether the Inheritance which according to the Romish Law then Imperial in Judaea included both Lands and moveable Goods were left by a Testate or an Intestate which would have concerned the Aliment and Succession but Christ in a word refused to Judg any of these And those who alledg themselves his Successors ought to follow his Example who if he sent them sent them to teach and not to Judg. For he saith Go teach all Nations but there is not a word of Judging any Nation 2. They are totally ignorant in the Fact and were never Educated in the Laws by which they pretend to Judg Marriage That 't is impossible for them to know the Facts of Marriage or Filiation or to receive any Testimony of the same is already shewn and proved P. 104 105. and indeed the Cook with his white Sleeves who dress'd the Wedding-Dinner and the Tailor who made the Wedding-Cloaths and the Midwife and Gossips who eat the Pie and drunk the Bowl if any Certificate or Judgment were at all necessary as to the Fact of Marriage and Filiation besides that of the Parents were far more credible and fit than the Bishop's who was an Hundred Miles off at the time of getting the Child and of all these doings besides And as to the Law 't is known they were never Educated either in the Civil Canon Common or Statute Laws the knowledg of all which they themselves cannot but acknowledg are necessary to make up an Ecclesiastical Lawyer by which is manifest they are as ignorant of the Law of Marriage and Filiation as they are before proved to be of the Fact With what Face or Conscience can they undertake to be Judges of what they
because in their making there was no Consent of an House of Commons and the House of Commons being but Delegates themselves can not Delegate the Peoples Interest in the Legislative to others for Delegatus non p●test delegare it was an Office of Personal Trust reposed in the Persons El●cted to be Members of Parliament to treat with the King and assent to equal Laws in behalf of the People they could not grant over therefore this Office of Trust to Bishops or a Synod or a Council to treat with the King and assent to Laws for the People but every Member of Parliament ought either to refuse to accept of the Election or if he accept to serve in Person All Books of Canons made by Bishops without consent of Parliament void and not by Proxy assign or subdelegate in so great a Trust as to join in making Laws for the Publick Safety and Peace Hence will follow therefore That all Ecclesiastical Canons and Laws of Synods and Councils prohibiting Marriage without Publick Bans or Episcopal Licences and all Canons prohibiting Marriage in time of Advent Septuagesima and Rogation and all Canons prohibiting Marriage within degrees of Consanguinity and Affinity not prohibited by the Moral Law of God and all Canons prohibiting Marriage not made by the Ceremonies of a Priest and Temple and all Canons of the Council of Trent making null and void all Marriages not made before a Priest and two Witnesses are all in themselves utterly void for the House of Commons never assented to their making and all Laws prohibitory of Marriage being before shewn to be contrary to the Moral Law of God and to come from the Devil P. 52. and it being here shewn that they have no consent of Parliament such Books of Canons must in both respects be of necessity null and void as being neither the Laws of God nor Man in England but of the Devil according to which Books of Canons Bishops therefore Judging of Marriage contrary to the Moral Law of God and without any positive Law of Man their Judgment must likewise be void being according to the Law of the Devil and such Persons are no fit Judges who judg according to such Laws 7. They take to themselves the Fines and Penalties of their own Judgments That the Sole and Final Cause why Bishops so eagerly contest for the Jurisdiction of Marriage is Filthy Lucre is shewn before P. 52 53. c. and the same is so great a Pillar of the Kingdom of Anti-Christ that Pope ruin'd where Episcopal Jurisdiction of Marriage is taken away take but away Episcopal Jurisdiction of Ma●riage the Papal Power is immediately ruin'd in those Provinces wheresoever it is done 1. In regard of the infinite Treasure he heaps hereby which appears before P. 52 53. 2. In regard of the Power he gains hereby over Kings and Princes in assuming to himself the Judgment of Filiations and Successions to Kingdoms 3. By enticing Princes to unlawful Marriages contrary to the Moral Law of God and procuring them to take his Dispensations for thereby such Prince and his Successors will be in great danger as to his Title unless he expose his Interest and Religion to obtain assistance from the See of Rome which made Philip the Second King of Spain who Married Queen Mary so furious to support the Catholick Religion in the Low Countreys by Fire and Sword and to make a Law That none should succeed him in the Government of those Provinces unless he took an Oath to maintain the Catholick Religion there and maintain the Authority of the Church of Rome And this made Queen Mary so cruelly furious against Protestants in England the Title of her Mothers Marriage and her Succession depending on the Popes protection And wheresoever any Prince is promoted by the Popes Canon Laws contrary to the Right of Succession instituted by the Moral Law of God such Prince to defend his Title against the right Heir by the Moral Law of God and his Successors become assured Vassals to the Religion and See of Rome 4. The Pope by procuring and dispensing Marriages of Catholick Ladies with Protestant Princes gains a numerous increase of Catholicks in those Dominions and many times turns the whole Tide to carry Tribute to Tyber But to return to the lesser Rivers the Bishops 't is no small stream of gain flows in to them too by such an unjust Power of Bribing themselves to Injustice by exercising so Arbitrary a Proceeding as to Fine and Commute what they please and putting it in their own Purses which should go to the Publick Treasury 8. They License Dispense and Pardon all Offences against the Law for Money It is to no purpose to make Penal Laws if the Judg hath liberty to License Dispense and Pardon Offences against them and nothing better enables him to do it than to allow a Judg to Fine or Commute and to put the Fine or Commutation Money in his own Purse now the Power of Licensing Dispensing and Pardoning Offences against the Laws of Marriage or any other Law must of necessity so corrupt the Judg as he will protect and increase the Vice he pretends to suppress Hence the Popes Taxa Camerae and the Bishops Courts increase more Fornication and Adultery than a●l the loose Women in the Countrey They are therefore no fit Judges of Marriage 9. They cannot be known whether they are Protestants or Papists if Bishops The Laws of Marriage have a very great influence on all Religions and in all Nations but more specially God hath been pleased in England to make the same the chief means and occasion in the time of H. 8. of planting the Protestant it is therefore of very great concern for the Preservation of the same that the Judges of Marriage be Protestants and it cannot be known whether they are so or no if Bishops 1. Because the excess of Riches which the Jurisdiction of Marriage Filtation and Succession especially to Kingdoms carries with it and all other Profits of a Bishoprick joined therewith are so great as may be too much a Temptation to any unless a Saint by Miracle to be of any Religion to obtain them and Christ himself Matth. 19 24. makes this Temptation so difficult to be resisted that he saith It is easier for a Camel to go through the Eye of a Needle than for a rich man to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven yea he makes a Miracle necessary for any to obtain Riches and Heaven together for he saith Verse 26. With men this is impossible but with God all things are possible And Austin in imitation of this confesseth in effect the same difficile imò impossibile est praesentibus futucis bonis frui It is difficult yea impossible to enjoy the good things of this World and of that to come Damasus Bishop of Rome ende●vour'd to convert Praetextatus a great Heathen Ph●losopher to Christianity he answer'd him Make me Bishop of Rome and I will turn
a Publick Treasury might be more equally divided by way of Salary according to the proportion of Skill and Pains The English Judges therefore sent intō Scotland put the foremention'd Statute of Westm 1. cap. 25. to experiment there and turned all Fees into a Publick Treasury to manage which we allowed our Treasurer out of the same Two Hundred Pound per Annum and allowed Salaries to our selves as the State appointed us and to all our Clerks and Officers necessary proportionable to Skill and Pains which Treasury of Fees not only satisfied all the English and Scottish Judges and all the Officers of Justice without any charge or trouble to the State but likewise many Military Officers of the Army and we found by experiment that far more exact Justice was done by Salary than ever any was done by Fees And if the same were practiced here in England it cannot be but the like effect must follow as to Justice but vastly greater as to the increase of the Publick Treasury especially if the number of Judges were reduced to Three who as is after shewn are sufficient to dispatch all matters of Judicature Civil Ecclesiastical and Criminal of the Kingdom Exceptions against Bishops being Judges in reference to the Executive Power They begin the Suit with Execution No Writer of the Forms of Judicial Proceeding except the Bishop was ever so Absurd as to Tolerate much less to Ordain any Law-Suit to be begun with Execution and this is that which makes the Spanish and Romish Inquisitions Romish Inquisition begins with Execution on the Person and the Barbarous Inquisition by Torture of the Civil Law to be so Abhor'd and Abominable that they begin with Execution upon the Person and Arrest him before Judgment Now that not only Arrest before Judgment but Districtio Pignorum or taking of Pledges by distress is likewise Execution appears clearly both by Civil and Common Law As to the first which is Districtio Pignorum or taking Pledges by Distress it is express in the Civil Law C. de Execut. rei Jud. that on a Sentence for Debt or Damage the Judg may order Execution to be done by Distress or taking the Goods moveable of the Defendant as Pledges and if he satisfie not the Plaintiff within the space of Two Months after the Distress is made then the Officer was to sell them and satisfie the Plaintiff As to the Common Law it appears 4. H. 6.17 22. Ass pl. 72. That the Execution after Judgment is in the County Court only by Distress Distress on the Goods is Execution and keeping the same in Pound 'till Judgment be satisfied for they cannot sell the Distress which shews that the Common Law esteemed Distress an Execution after Judgment though it had not the Power to sell the Distress as the Civil Law had That it is an Execution therefore after Judgment both by Civil and Common Law is clear It will be next by some perhaps enquired from whom the Original of this most Anti-Christian Custom came of beginning Suits with Distress and Attachments which differ from Distress in that the one forfeits the Distress 9. H. 7.9 for Nonappearance the other not Capiasses Latitats exaction of Bail Mainprize Outlawries in Civil Actions and Excommunicato Capiendo's in all which the Goods of the Defendant being of greater value than the Debt or Trespass are either seized or detained or what is worse Forfeited and Confiscated or the Person Arrested Imprisoned and sometimes Starved sometimes Poison'd and sometimes Tortured before there is a Copy given him of any Complaint made against him and before the Plaintiff hath so much as taken an Oath of Calumny that he believes his Complaint True and Just and before Hearing Probation of Witnesses and Judgment That this most inhuman and more than Barbarous Proceeding came not from the old Romans though Pagans appears by what Alciat says that not so much as the word Districtus or Districtio which is to be intended before Judgment is to be found amongst any of the Ancient Lawyers and likewise that no such thing as Distress or taking Pledges or exacting Bail caution judicio Sisti Judicatum Solvi or Arrest before Judgment is to be found amongst those which are left of the Laws of the Twelve Tables Yet in them these are express'd after Judgment as appears by the Reliques of the same which follow in these words L. 25. Si in jus vocet atque eat L. 28. Si vis vocationi fuat testamini igitur em capito L. 31. Si vindiciam falsam tulit rei si velit is arbitros tres dato forum Arbitriis fructus duplione Damna Deciditor L. 33. Aeris confessi rebusque jure judicatis triginta dies justi Sunto postidea muus endoiectio esto in jus ducito nei Judicatum facit aut quips endo jure em vindicit secum ducito vincito aut nervo aut compedibus quin Decim pondo ne minore aut si volet majore vincito Si volet suo vivito in suo vivit qui em vinctum habebit libras farris endo dies dato si volet plus dato Wherein though many words are so Antiquated and obscure as no Interpreter can expound them yet so much may be understood from them 1. That their Editio and Oblatio Libelli by giving the Defendant a Coppy of the Libel Bill of Complaint or Declaration preceded their vocatio in Jus Citation and Summons for in the Law Si in jus vocet atque eat the word Atque signifieth Statim presently in which sense it is taken in Leg. filia 20. C. de inof Testam and in Virgil. Atque illum prono rapit alveus amni Now it had been to no purpose when the Defendant had been called to appear before the Judg in Person Statim presently to answer unless the Plaintiff before he had call'd him had made him Oblatio Libelli and given him a Copy of his Bill of Complaint against him and allowed him his dies justi a fit time for him to deliberate and provide for the same Vt veniat paratus ad respondendum Oblatio Libelli precedes Summons when he shall be again called to appear in Person before the Judg and without this if the Judg caused him to appear and cast him into Prison as now Judges do on lying Latitats and false Suggestions all the Poor of the Land who are not able to give Bail and on Forged Outlawries both Poor and Rich without Bail and forced him to answer to Copies of Declarations not deliver'd 'till he had been first cast into close Prison an Hundred Miles from his home where he had neither Meat nor Drink nor Money nor Friends nor Council nor Writings nor Witnesses he had made it impossible for such a Prisoner in Dures to answer otherwise than to grant whatsoever the false Suggesting Plaintiff will Demand of him And that the Obligatio Libelli preceded in jus vocatio agrees Cujac Lib. 10. Obs 10. 11.
Lives by Fictions I hope such Popish Fictions will no longer be suffer'd in Protestant Courts of Justice Coke saith From the taking away of Oaths for the truth of the cause of Essoin by the Statute of Marlebridge cap. 12. there arose after Fourcher per Essoin by several Tenants alternis vicibus and making false Essoins ultra mare all endeavour'd to be taken away by Westm 1. cap. 43. 44. but when a mischief comes by making an ill Law or Statute it is never cleanly cured by after Statutes of Explanation or Limitation without clean repealing again the Statute which causeth the mischief additions of new Patches to old Garments making the Rent but worse Fictions in Essoins The mischief of Fictions of Husband and Wife to be but one Person have been sufficiently shewn P. 66 67. Fictions de Plus petitionibus In the Common-Law Declarations the next Fictions for want of the Oath of Calumny are de Plus Petitionibus Conrad 405. saith Olim triplum condemnabantur qui majorem Summam in libello assignaverant quam reus debebat but in more ancient times I find they forfeited only the Tenth part which with an Oath of Calumny might be now sufficient to restrain the lawless laying of Debt and Damage in their Declarations an Hundred times more than it is which is very mischievous and dangerous to Defendants when Plaintiffs pack and bribe Juries and they happen to misplead make defaults or have other Casualties fallen on them whereby they cannot attend their Suits Dr. Cowell says The Civilians are in no danger de Plus Petitionibus by reason of certain Cautelous Clauses they ordinarily have at the end of every Position or Article of their Libel or Declaration to this effect Et ponit conjunctim divisim de quolibet detali tanta quantitate vel summa qualis quanta per Confessionem partis adversae vel per probationes Legitimas in fine litis apparebit and again in the conclusion of all Non astringens se ad singula probanda sed petens ut quatenus probaverit in praemissis aut eorune aliquo eatenus obtineat But Civilians and Canonists make their Laws like Juglers-knots to tie with one finger and untie with the other they make a great noise of their Oath of Calumny and de Plm Petitionibus and by these secret Clauses in their Libels make it all again to no purpose All the Common Law Writs of Questus est nobis are now grown Fictions and Declarations Licet saepius Requisitus are likewise Fictions whereby men are surprized by Arrests before any Demand made the Inde producit sectam in the end of the Plaintiffs Declaration is now turned a Fiction which was heretofore a legal proof of Witness produced to prove his Declaration for the better Caution against the false Calumnies of Plaintiffs the former Taking of Pledges of the Plaintiff is now turned to a Fiction of Plegii de prosequendo John Doe and Richard Roe the Counter-pledges exacted of the Defendant are now turned to a Fiction John Den and Richard Fen. Courts of Justice compel to Fictions and Falsities It doth not satisfie Courts of Justice to tolerate Fictions and Falsity but they compel to them as the Defendant shall be compell'd to give colour a meer insensible Fiction and Lie he shall be compell'd at Common Law to answer Negatively or Affirmatively as if he were Omniscient and shall not be permitted to say Dubito or Ignoro though Juries of greater number may all say Ignoramus he shall be compell'd to a Plus petitio to avoid a Variance between his Obligation and his Declaration as Bro. Confess 37. If a man Sue an Obligation for Ten Pounds and the Defendant confesseth all except Forty Shillings whereof he sheweth an Acquittance the Plaintiff prays Judgment and says nothing of his Acquittance for if he confess it his Writ should have abated Fictions of Acts made the first day of the Session If an Act of Parliament come before them to judg when it was made they will judg it by Fiction to be made the first day of the Session 33. H. 6.17 the Case was this In the Exchequer-Chamber Fortescue Rehearsed how the Parliament last past made a special Act against John Pilkington Esq for the Rape of a Woman out of N. c. and Rehearsed the effect of the Act and how by the same Process was granted to be made to the Sheriff of E to make certain proclamations in a Ville that the said John ought to appear before the Lords at W. at a certain day c. to answer to the Trespass contained in the said Act c. and if he would not that then he should be attaint of the Trespass and pay a certain Sum to the Party c. and that the Proclamations were accordingly made and returned into Chancery and the said John made no Appearance c. and after the said John was taken and in the Kings-Bench committed to the Marshals-Ward for certain Causes on which a Transcript of the Act and a Mittimus was sent out of the Chancery directed to us c. whereupon the Marshal was charged with him for the same Condemnation contained in the Act and the said Prisoner comes now and alledges by his Councel That the Act of Parliament is not sufficient and therefore prays to be discharged c. for the Bill being directed to the Commons pass'd them well and was endorsed in this Form Let it be delivered to the Lords but whereas the Bill was That the said John should render himself before the Feast of Pentecost next ensuing the Lords endorsed the Bill in this Form The Lords grant that in case he appear not before the Feast of Pentecost which shall be Anno Domini 1452. c. to wit at Pentecost next after the Feast contained in the Bill And therefore the Lords granted a longer day then was granted by the Commons in which Case the Commons ought to have had the Bill deliver'd back again to them and they to have assented to the Grant of the Lords which was not done and therefore such Act of Parliament is void Fortescue It seems we ought to intend no otherwise but that the Act is good for the King hath written to us by his Writ and hath certified unto us That the Bill is confirmed by Authority of Parliament Illingworth Chief Baron This cannot here be intended as you say for the Writ which is made only by a Clerk of the Chancery cannot make an Act of Parliament good if it be vicious in it self c. And afterwards he sent for Kirkby keeper of the Rolls and for Faukes Clerk of the Parliament Fortescue Rehearsed the matter to them both on which Kirkby Sir The course of the Parliament is this c. But if any Bill is particular or other Bill which is first deliver'd to the Commons and pass'd they use to endorse the Bill in this Form Let it be
better Form And Brudnell agreed with Fitzheabert Brook Ch. Justice I conceive the contrary and that the conclusion is not good And Sir as to what is said that the Law is no other but that a man shall Declare his matter in Truth and good Sentence the Law is more than so for without Formality the same is nothing worth as the Form of Law is a man shall shew his matter without Duplicity of Multiplicity yet may matters more than one be True and in good Sentence but they want Formality and therefore are nothing worth and a Form ought to be used or otherwise all things will be in confusion So in Trespass the Defendant ought to give a colour of Right to the Plaintiff yet the colour is not true nor the Sentence the better but it is the Formality which is required and Formality is the chiefest thing in our Law and though the matter in the present Plea appears in Truth and good Sentence yet here wants Formality for he ought here to have concluded not Judgment Si Actio but Sic non est facium for I conceive in regard only two Convenants of the Indenture were read to him and there were more Covenants not read that the whole Indenture is void and it is Fraud in the Obligee And Pollard agreed with Brook that it was no good Plea and that the whole Indenture was void But to this Fitzherbert and Brudnell might have repli'd that admit the whole Indenture had been all void in Law for the Fraud in part and the Defendant might Rigore Juris Plead it yet Quilibet potest Renunciare juri pro se introducio if the Defendant was more merciful than the Law and his Conscience would not suffer him to use Summum jus but doth assent to perform those Covenants were read to him is it therefore Reason or Conscience that the Plaintiff for his good Nature and Courtesie should return him Evil for Good and put the Burden of all the Covenants on him because he would perform any when he needed perform none if he would have pleaded in a Form against his Conscience and that Truth ought to be prefer'd before Fiction and Formality But I leave the Merits of the Cause to others to Censure and shall only upon the whole Dispute take th●se Observations 1. It appears by the Case that there are but Four Judges in the Court and they are divided Two against Two Fitzherbert and Brudnell for Truth against Fiction and Substance against Formality and Block and Pel●ard for Fiction against Truth and Formality against Substance whence is shown that there have been and are many good men Judges and other Professors of the Law who with all their their Power Desire and long to remove those Abuses of Fictions Forms and other Irregularities which are Reproaches on the Practicers but should they afflict themselves to death can do nothing if equipoised or overpoised by the other Party therefore they ought not to be imputed to those who are not guilty but the consideration of them ought to be left to the Legislative which hath Power to Redress them when they please with a word and shall give account to God if they neglect the same 2. It may be observed how many Contentions arise about a petty piece of Formality when there is none about the Substance which is acknowledged by Coke himself Com. Lit. 303. whose words are these When I diligently consider the Course of our Books of Years and Terms from the beginning of the Reign of Ed. the Third I observe that more Jangling and Questions arise upon the manner of Pleading and Exceptions to Form than upon the matter it self and infinite Causes lost or delayed for want of good Pleading by which he means Formality hath destroyed infinite good Causes which is a most horrible thing to be Tolerated in any Government 3. The next thing observeable is The great Ignorance of Cour●s themselves in their own Formalities for they have continued by Coke's confession Jangling and Wrangling about them ever since Edward the Thirds time and are yet never the wiser nor any perfect Form invented or settled by them they are still ever Learning and never come to the knowledg of Truth and so will be to Dooms-day if they are not by God sooner called to Account of their Stewardships and this point of Ignorance in their own Formalities is further confessed by Coke in another place where he saith It were to be wished that Littleton had writ something concerning Pleadings which shews he was but a wisher or woulder at it himself for whom if he had been able it had been far more proper to have writ a perfect Form of Judicial Proceeding than to wish the same had been done by one dead Hundreds of Years before and if he could have had him alive 't is likely he was as much to seck as himself for he could not write any directions concerning it to his own Son though it was a point above all other which he desired he might Learn and in respect of which his Tenures were but Trifles but he is fain to leave it to him as his other Quaeries de Dubiis and a Terra Incognita where he should g●t Rich Mines of Gold and Silver if he could light on it in these words And know my Son that it is one of the most Honourable Laudable and Profitable things in our Law to have the Science of well Pleading in Actions Real and Personal and therefore I counsel thee especially to employ thy Courage and Care to learn this Which yet neither he nor any since ever learnt or found out in this Climate neither is it possible for any to do unless those very Forms of Actions and Writs are made only Directive and not Coercive and Liberty given of Commenceing and Disputing Suits on more Solid Foundations of Right than can be laid on any Forms in the World especially on such in which the Courts themselves are Ignorant how to proceed and their so many divided and contrary Opinions in the Expositions of the Law have so intangled the cross Threads of their several Clues of unravell'd Opinions that now no Courts unless they clean break them all to pieces are able ever to get out of their own Labyrinth of Formalities and are most commonly in the pitiful Condition wherein Vigelius Dia. Jur. 477. finds his Judg who is Ignorant of the Forms of Judicial Proceeding At nunc saith he Cum Judex Litiscontestationis adeoque judicandi ratione sit ignarus sedet inter Advocatos Procuratores tanquam Asinus inter simias nescit quando Disputationes in Causa permittendae sunt quando contra sunt inhibendae hinc ne necessarias inhibeat non necessarias permittit Advocatis in infinitum Disputandi Licentiam concedit non Semel sed saepius dilationes Dat easque velex levissima causa But now saith he when a Judg is Ignorant how tostate the Point of the Cause and of the Form of
Courts and only takes in the Rich. 1. Because of the remoteness of sending for Writs the same being the greatest part sent for Hundreds of Miles 2. They are limited to so many short Returns only to multiply unnecessary Fees for Aliases and Pluries that they are extreamly troublesome and costly to the Poor 3. The Forms of them are so ticklish that when got they are easily abated and overthrown for the miss of a word a syllable and often a dash to an half word not made more clericorum and often for false Latine A Writ abates likewise for any default of Form varying from the Register Omission variance in order of words from the order used in Chancery the following matters are likewise good exceptions to abate Writs rasure interlining false Latine yet they never write true Omission of the words Vi Armis or of the words Contra pacem Outlawry Misnaming a Twice naming of the Person Misnaming of the Village or Hamlet Misnaming of Barockshare for Barkshire Misnaming of the Village Misnaming of the Person so variance between the Writ and the Declaration or Count in the least toy is a sufficient Exception to overthrow both Writ Declaration and Count Hastings Hasting as 9. E. 4.42 43. Det by Edward Hastings and Counts that he by the name of Edward Hasting recovered Land in Ancient Demesne and One Thousand Pounds Damages and brings his Action for the Damages by Three Justices against Five the Writ ought to abate 28. Ass 52. A Record removed and a Variance between the Record and the Mittimus and the Certiorari for one was H. Green Just Green and de Green Molineux Moliney and the Writ was Henry de Green the omission of the word De stopt the proceeding of the Justices Trespass the Writ was Molineux the Protection Moliney and therefore disallowed for the Variance 7. H. 6.22 Nuper omitted Trespass against J. N. nuper de D. in the Protection Nuper was omitted therefore Variance 19. H. 48. Audita querela upon an Indenture which was Langa White the Writ was Lang Whaite which put the Party to great Cost to get it to be amended 21. H. 6.7 7. Port. said an Outlawry was reversed for the Variance between Dockwra and Dockawre 21. H. 6.7 Dockwra Dockawre I. In the Obligation the Defendant was named J. M. de M. in the Writ M. was left out and therefore abated 38. E. 3.24 In Mayhem the Writ was Contra pacem Nuper Regis and the Count Contra pacem nunc Regis therefore it abated 8. H. 4.21 2. E. 4.25 Amendment 21. A Dispute is whether Wagam and Vagam are a material Variance Wagam Vagam Count less than the Writ A Judgment given in a Writ of Annuity was reversed because the Writ was That Twenty-six Marks Six Shillings Eight Pence was Arrear of the Yearly Rent of four Marks and in the Count Six Shillings Eight Pence omitted which is a Variance 9. E. 4.51 54. Here the Poor man was punish'd for his Conscience because he desired less in his Count than his Attorney had put into his Writ and it is said there that is not Misprision of the Clerk to be amendable because the Count is made by the Party and not by the Clerk A world of other Abatements of Writs there are too many to trouble at this time the Reader with both as to Variances between the Writ and Count and between the Writ and another Writ between the Writ and Specialty between the Writ and Testament between the Writ Count and Specialty between the Writ and Warrant of Attorney c. And the more Writs are abated and Causes thereby overthrown the more Money the Courts and Clerks get to send out new but the more miserably are the Poor by them oppress'd and it were more merciful in short to deny them Hearing than to cause them to hazard and lose all that little they have and at last not to be Heard This mischief of Writs was first invented by the College of Priests at Rome and were called Formulae Juris which is little Forms or diminutives of Forms the little Forms were those we call Writs the greater Forms whereof the lesser pretended to be as the Contents of the Chapters were what They called Libels and We Bills and Declarations These Formulae though set up by the Priests for their Gain were contrary to the Law of the Twelve Tribes in regard Oblatio Libelli being by that Law to precede Vocatio in jus as before is shewn these Writs or Formulae were useless and the Forms of Libels were sufficient to direct the People themselves Original Writs abolished by Justinian and better than the other which were so rigorous in their punctilios of Formalities Vt cadente Syllaba caderet Causa these Forms therefore of Original Writs of the Priests were totally abolished by Justinian lib. 2. tit 58. De Formulis impetrationibus Actionum Sublatis Juris Formulae aucupatione syllabarum insidiantes cunctorum Actibus radicitus amputentur Dat. X. Calend. Feb. Constantio III. Constante II. A A. COSS. Let Forms of Actions insidiating by hawking at Syllables in all mens Suits be cut up by the Roots Baldus Notes on the place Quia supervacuae Formulae sunt sublatae non oportet Actiones à Pontificibus impetrare sed sufficit eas apertè proponere and very well against this insidiation of Writs in Words and Syllables agrees the expression of Isa 29.21 They make a man an offender for a word and lay a snare for him that reproveth in the gate and turn aside the Just for a thing of nought The like to this of Justinian was done by that famous King James the Fifth the great Justitiar of Scotland where they had formerly their Writs as we have till they were sick of them and able to bear them no longer which was remedied by an Act of Parliament Jac. 5 p. 6. cap. 75. The words of which Act follow ordering a Copy of the Libel to the Person or dwelling House The Ordour of Summounding all Persons in Civil Actions Copy of a Bill or Declaration served in stead of a Writ ITem For eschewing of great Inconvenientes and Fraude done to our Soveraine Lordis Lieges by Summounding of them at theire dwelling places and oft times falslie and gettis never knawledge thereof It is Statute and Ordained That in times cumming quhair ony Officiar or Schireffe in that parte passes at Commande of the Kingis Letters or the Schireffes Stewardes Baronnes or Baillies Precept to Summound ony Partie if they cannot apprehend them Personallie they sall passe to the Ȝett or Dure of the principall dwelling place quhair the Person to be Summonde dwellis and hes their actual Residence for the time and there sall desire to have entresse quhilk gif it be granted they sall first schaw the cause of theire cumming and gif they cannot get the Party Personally they sall schaw their Letters or Precept before
in the said Chancery-Orders Printed 1669. presumes to do in the Court of Conscience what was never heard of to be done in the Courts of Turks Infidels or the most Barbarous Judicatories in the World for he is not ashamed publickly to give License to Cursitors and their Clerks to commit Crimen Falsi which we call Forgery by Antedating Writs taking them out of Returns past or of a former Term by reason of which Forgery of Writs and Forgery of Returns Antedated Capiases Proclamations Exigends and Outlawries Antedated have been likewise Forged and Thousands of Poor men unjustly cast in Goals and miserably undone without any Summons or Hearing and these are likewise the damnable effects of the Chancellours Writs by which as by others the Plaintiffs so here the Defendants are destroyed without Hearing and certainly these Crimes of Antedating and Forgery of Judicial Acts though here Licensed by Orders of Chancellors and Protected by Courts by not Licensing Averments against them are by the Civil Law and Laws of Scotland and of many other Nations both of these and Instruments Death and even by our own the imbeselling of a Record by a Clerk and Counterfeiting of Fines is Felony and if the second time so is the Forgery of Deeds Writings and Court-Rolls and deservedly the Offender better deserving death than a Robber on a High-way and why any Crimes of this Nature should be publickly Licensed to the Ruin of all Truth and Justice by any Chancellour in his Chancery Orders is very strange the mischievous effects of which said Attachments on Affidavit and Antedating Writs and Forgery of Outlawries are notoriously known and not complained of here without good Cause and Testimony and some particular experience of my own to my loss who have as well as others suffer'd in an high degree by the false Affidavit of a Fellow who Subscribed and Swore it by a false name and not his own and likewise procured a Forged Outlawry antedated against me It belongs not to a Chancellour to be a Judg of Equity in England 5. It belongs not to the Chancellours Office to be a Judg of Equity or to make Orders Edicts Laws or Writs and thereby to Imprison the Persons and dispose of the Lands and Goods of the Subjects Arbitrarily and at his Pleasure Coke 4. part 82. saith That all Statutes which give Authority to the Chancellour to determin Offences in Chancery are to be intended only in the Ordinary Court there which proceeds in Latine and is Secundum Legem c. and not in any Extraordinary Court which proceeds in English Secundum Aequum bonum and 37. H. 6.14 27. H. 8.18 it is Resolved That the Court of Chancery Proceeding by English Bill is no Court of Record and therefore it cannot bind either the State of the Subjects Lands or the Property of his Goods or Chattels and therefore they there admit he may Imprison the Person Chancellour cannot bind the Subject's Goods not Persons which is not only a Non sequitur but a contrary conclusion follows on it for if he cannot bind the Subjects Goods à Fortiori he cannot bind his Person For the Life is more than Meat and the Body is more than Raiment Luke 12.23 And though those Common Law Judge of H. 6. and H. 8. so sordidly deliver'd the Subject Prisoner to the Chancellour so as they might keep his Lands and Goods to themselves yet had they no more Law or Right to do it than they had to deliver him Prisoner to the Turks or to send him to the Barbado's for the Subject is no Slave neither ought he to be given or sold for one without his own Assent by his Representative in Parliament and having so good a Protection against the Chancellours and Common Law Judges and the Orders and Writs of both as Magna Charta and the Petition of Right both for his Lands Goods and Person they ought to shew some greater Laws than their Writs and Orders of Courts or Forgeries of Clerks before they presume to invade either 6. There being no Law in England which ever Ordained a Chancellour to be a Judg of Equity or to make Edicts or Orders concerning the same he can pretend no Title thereto unless from the Laws of France and to that effect Polydor Virgil saith The Chancery came in with the Conquest to which though my Lord Coke saith Perperam Erravit because the Mirror saith The Constitutions of the ancient Kings were that every one should have out of the Chancery of the King a Writ Remedial for his Flaint without difficulty yet he himself seems to be in the Error and not Polydore for though the name of Chancellour and Chancery was before the Conquest and divers other Countries use the name of Chancellour as well as England yet the greatest part of the Writs came from Normandy and are mention'd in their Customary as who will peruse it shall find but as to the Writ of Subpoena Centum librarum and Arbitrary Power of the Chancellour and to be a Judg of Equity came first from the Conquest and was never used before nor did it belong to the Chancellour's Office either of England or Scotland that having other employment and more than a Chancellour could do though he never troubled himself with Judgment but left the same to the Judges to whom the King Delegated the cause by Writ and this the very name of Chancellour testifieth who was Originally no other than a Master of Requests to the Prince whom he served and on Petitions deliver'd to him by the Subjects if unfit to be Granted he strook cross lines over them like Cancelli or Lettices by which he Cancell'd them and thence had his name of the Canceller or Chancellour as Turn lib. 11. advers c. 25. and not according to that Fictitious Verse of his Power Hic est qui Leges Regni Cancellat iniquas For when was ever any Chancellour in England allowed to Cancel any Roll or Act of Parliament And when these Petitions for Justice were deliver'd by the People to this Master of Requests call'd the Canceller of such of them as were Evil such as were Just he Cancelld not but on behalf of the Petitioner Granted the Princes Rescript or Warrant to the Praeses Provinciae where the cause of Action arose or the Defendant lived for Actor Sequitur Forum Rei which Rescript or Warrant we now call a Writ containing in it self 1. A Questus est nobis a short recital of the Complaint 2. Si A. fecerit te securum a taking Security or Pledges of the Plaintiff de Prosequendo 3. A Summoneas or Summons of the Defendant to appear before the Prince himself or such Judges as he Delegated though out of the Province or County where he lived which was the Reason of taking Pledges of the Plaintiff because he made the Defendant appear many times Hundreds of Miles from his Home when he might in those days implead him before the President
may be easie for the Priests to put Apples Grapes and Nuts in a Coffin and by Night to make fearful Noises Shrieks Groans and Counterfeit Apparitions about Graves and Tombs whence the horror of the very place and darkness make such impressions on timorous Fancies as they shall not dare to approach much less examine the matter and take out the new Body out of the Coffin and put in one had been Buried Seven Years and then a Vault made of purpose to make a noise under ground in the Church and Sofronio know nothing of all this 5. But whether it were Witchcraft or Cheat it is most horrible wickedness to make Use of either under pretence of Church-Discipline or the Worship of God seeing they both come from the Devil Alvarez a Portugal Priest Relates of himself That at the Town of Barva in Ethiopia there appeared a Terrible Cloud of an infinite number of Locusts which at length fell and Devoured the Countrey and that he and another Portuguez Priest took a Consecrated Stone and the Cross and sung the Letany and in this manner went in Procession through the Corn-Fields for the space of a Mile unto a little Hill and there he caused them to take a quantity of the Locusts and made of them a Conjuration which he carried with him in writing which he had made the Night before Requiring them Charging them and Excommunicating them Willing them within Three Hours space to begin to depart towards the Sea or towards the Land of Morez or towards the Desart Mountains and to let the Christians alone and if they obey'd him not he called and adjured the Fowls of the Air the Beasts of the Field and all the Tempests to scatter destroy and consume their Bodies And for this purpose he took the quantity of Locusts and made this Admonition to them that were present in the name of themselves and those which were absent and so let them go and gave them liberty The Locusts began forthwith to depart and in the mean while a mighty Tempest and Thunder arose toward the Sea which drowned all the Locusts in the River and the dead Locusts remained in heaps two Fathom high on the Banks so by the Morning there was not one Locust left alive This Excommunication if true were Conjuring and Witchcraft Flies Excomunicated Peter de Nathal in vita Bernhardi Relates That St. Bernhard denounced the Sentence of Excommunication against Flies Whether this may be call'd Witchcraft or a Silly Prank of St. Simplicius I cannot say but if he could Excommunicate Flies without a Magical Telesme or Inchantment Fishes Excommunicated he shall be the Domitian of Divinity Mere. Gallo lib. 6. p. 592. saith That Anno Domini 1593. The Bishop of Conagtion very malitiously Excommunicated the Innocent Fishes Theodosius a Bishop of Alexandria Dead Excommunicated Excommunicated Origen Two Hundred Years after his Death if he is censur'd only for a Cheat 't is less than so wicked a practice deserves Now though God may permit wicked men to Excommunicate and Daemons Witches wild Beasts and Tyrants to abuse the Bodies of the best men after they are dead they have no Power to touch the Soul And we ought not to fear but contemn their Excommunication for so saith Christ Matth. 10.28 Fear not them that can kill the Body but are not able to kill the Soul but rather fear Him which is able to destroy both Soul and Body in Hell Excommunication of the Devil Devils Excommunicated Mengus de Flagell Daemon Describes part of the Form of the Romish Exorcism to be I Command you Oh Davils who are come to the help of those that vex this Creature of God N. upon pain of Excommunication and Immersion into the Lake of Fire and Brimstone for a Thousand Years that ye yield no Aid and Assistance to these Devils It seems the Devil is of the Society of these Romish Priests otherwise he could not be Excommunicated To grant a Bishop Power of Excommunication is to grant him the Legislative Judicial and Executive Power Excommunication gives the Pope the Legislative Power over all Nations for by this he made his Canon-Law whensoever he pleased to be observed through Christendom by no other Obligation than his Command they should be observed on pain of Excommunication By granting the Power of Excommunication the Legislative Power is granted and the Clergy in Convocation used anciently without asking the Royal Assent to make Canons touching matters of Religion to bind not only themselves but all the Laity without Assent of the Lords and Commons in Parliament It was used in ancient time for Creditors besides other Security to procure Debtors to Swear they would pay them and thereupon there being then no Arrest in the Temporal Courts for Debt they Sued them in the Spiritual Courts on their Oaths and they granted an Excommunicato Capiendo to Arrest them without Bail which were so frequent that E. 1. could not keep his Servants free from Arrest in his Court till to prevent it he caused a Writ De Promulgantibus Sententiam Excommunicationis Capiendis Imprisonendis Commanding to Imprison such as Excommunicated any of them Rot. Parl. 25. E. 1. Intus Henry the Second according to Hovedon would That all such of the Clergy as were Deprehended in any Robbery Murder Felony Burning of Houses and the like should be Tried and Adjudged in the Temporal Courts as Lay-men were But Becket Arch-Bishop of Canterbury stood proudly on the Pontificial Prerogative of the Clergy That no Clergy-man ought to be Tried but in their own Spiritual Courts and by men of their own Coat And if they were Convicted before them they ought only to be deprived of their Office but if they after offended they should be Judged in the Kings Courts This Power of Judgment he drew to his own Court only by his Power of Excommunication A Copy of a Prohibition of Excommunication A true translated Copy of a Writ of Prohibition granted by the Lord Chief Justice and other the Judges of the Common-Pleas in Easter-Term 1676. against the Bishop of Chichester who had proceeded against and Excommunicated one Thomas Watersfield a Church-Warden for Refusing to take the Oath usually tendred to Persons in such Office to Present such who absent from Church by which Writ the Illegality of all such Oaths is Declared and the said Bishop Commanded to Release and take off his said Excommunication c. CHarles the Second by the Grace of God King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. To the Reverend Father in Christ Ralph by Divine Providence Lord Bishop of Chichester or any other competent Judg in his behalf whatsoever Greeting We are informed in our Court before our Justices at Westminster on the behalf of Thomas Watersfield That whereas by the Laws of this our Realm of England no Person ought to be Cited to appear in any Court Christian before any Judg Spiritual to
his direct Judge next the Pope and without Consent of his fellow-Bishops who then all arose and humbly desired the Kings Clemency in his behalf but finding him Resolute they took away their fellow-Bishop from the Bar and delivered him to the Custody of the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury till some other time the King should appoint for his answer to what he was charged withal Shortly after he was again taken and Converted as before which the Clergy understanding The Bishops rescue a Traitor-Bishop from the Bar of Justice the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury York and Dublin and Ten other Bishops all with their Crosses erected went to the place of Judgment and again took him away with them Charging all men on pain of Excommunication to forbear to lay violent hands on him with which audacious Act the King was much displeased and presently Commanded inquiry to be made Ex officio Judicis Concerning those objections against the Bishop whereto he Refused to appear and answer and he being found Guilty of the same Judgment was passed against him as Contumaciously absent and thereupon all his Goods and Possessions were seised into the Kings hands this Act Lost him the Clergy and added Power to the Discontented Party which by Reason of the misfortunes of the Prince and his having advanced unpopular officers As Gaveston and Spencer were grown in the people and Concurred to his after Deposeing from the Throne and horrible Murder when Deposed Hence may be very well observed in what a sad Condition a Prince is who must Depend on the Protection of Bishops and their Excommunications And how shamelesly notwithstanding they will boast that no Bishop no King For here are France and Scotland Confederated against the Kingdom the King is valiant but young and unexperiensed his Bishops and Barons are Corrupted against him by French Pensions and cause the Overthrow of his Army he discovers one of the Bishops guilty of the Treason and had he not been Rescued by the other Traytor-Bishops his Companions he might perhaps have discovered the whole Plot and all his Complices The King very Justly Sentences him both as Mute and Contumaciously absent and seises on his Estate as forfeit What more Just proceeding than this here is no condemning without Liberty of Answer and Hearing yet this must lose the King all the Arch-Bishops and Bishops in England and Ireland and all the Clergy of both Kingdomes who received Ordination from them And they will no longer be his subjects unless he will allow them to betray and sell him to his Enemies and not Punish or question the Treason But all concur to irritate the Temporal Barons the people and his own Trayterous Queen to depose and destroy him And the Bishop of Hereford Preaching before her took this Text My Head aketh my Head aketh and thence drawes this wicked Doctrine and Use to a wife that she must cut off her Husbands Head who was her Head and when after the King was deposed and his son chosen the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury Preached in Westminster-Hall on this Text Vox Populi Vox Dei to encourage the people in the Treason which was after perfected by his horrible murder in Prison The next Consideration will be how this might have been prevented by his Renowned Father who was of such Wisdome Vigilance and Valour as neither Gaveston nor Spencer nor Bishops Dared to abuse if he had suspected they would have practised such Treachery against the younger yeares of his son Concerning which it seemes he was able and might have easily prevented it had he not Committed two oversights the one was That he only Banish'd Gaveston and had not cut off his head if he had deserved it for assoon as he was dead Gaveston returned again and corrupting the young King was the first occasion his Enemies made Use of to cast the vices and misgovernments of his Favorites on himself It may be here objected That perhaps though Gaveston was a wicked vitious person yet he might not be Guilty of any Crime for which he might be lawfully put to death To which is answered That it possibly might be so though it be not likely And if he were not Guilty of such a Crime he ought not to have been put to Death for a Throne cannot be Established by shedding Innocent Blood But neither he nor his son needed to have been Guilty of it for his son needed not have sent for him Contrary to his Fathers Command and though he incurr'd that fault the Lords cut ●ff his Head who must answer for it and freed him from the Guilt and danger of him The second oversight was of more weight that was When he made an Act against Mortmain for the future he had not taken away as H. 8. after did all that was before Mortmained And when he took the Moiety of the Reverend Fathers Money and Goods he had not taken all and when he Lopt the Branches of Privileges and Jurisdictions of Bishops and other Ecclesiasticks he had not took both Root and Branch For it is as lawful to take present Mortmaines as 't is to prohibit Future And if lawful to take the Moiety it was lawful to take the Whole And if lawful to take the Branches it was as lawful to take the Root of Hierarchy which if he had done This clear Benefit he had Received by it he had left his son secure from any Spiritual French Pensioners who are the most Dangerous sort of all other And the Temporal Barons could not have had without them so great and specious advantages to have Betrayed him 2 He had freed him from such Audacious Traytors as would Rescue their fellowes from the Bar of Justice which Temporal Barons never dared do 3 He had f●eed all his successors who should happen to be superstitious from having Rebellions raised against them and themselves Deposed by Excommunication by abolishing Bishops and their ordination which had been an advantage none of his neighbour Emperours or Kings could hitherto ever obtain nor if Bishops had been taken away Episcopal or Ecclesiastical Government by halves though it was sufficient to abate their Power as to himself it was worse for his Son than if he had done nothing at all for he thereby left Bishops and a Clergy full of Rancour in their minds for those blowes they had been beaten with by the Father which though they dare not revenge themselves on him yet did they on his Son to his destruction and though there never had been a Gaveston or a Spencer would have found other pretences enough for their Treasons which they could not have done had he cleane abolish'd them and not left a See for a Bishop to fit in Arch-Bishop threatens to Excommunicate Edw. 3. Edward the Third being with his Army in France and disappointed of his Supply of Treasure upon his last Return into England had in great displeasure Removed his Chancellor and Imprison'd his Treasurer with other Officers most of them Clergy men
Men to the height whom he himself if an Enemy appears in his Year is to lead in Person against him 8. The greater the number of Judges the greater the delay in the Proceedings 9. The greater number of Judges the more difficult to obtain Remedy against those of them who Judg wrong for they conceal their names as the Lords of the Session of Scotland being Fifteen and sometimes Eighteen compel the President to sign their Sentence in his name A. B. I. P. C. that is in praesentia Curiae though it be contrary to his Vote whereby it is as impossible to discover who gave the wrong Sentence as 't is in a Jury who gave the wrong Verdict deliver'd by the Mouth of their Foreman So in Athens the Court of the Areopagites were in number Twelve and they gave their Sentence into a Balloting Box by Black Beans and White Beans whereby it was impossible to know who gave the unjust S●ntence on which Plutarch mentions a passage of Alcibiades who being sent for home out of Sicily to Athens to be question'd for his Life Fugam fecit and being askt by one saying Wilt thou not trust thy own Countrey who begat thee to be thy Judg No quoth he nor her who brought me forth lest she being Ignorant and not conceiving the Truth mistake a Black Bean for a White Amongst o●hers was the Custom to do it with Black and White Stones as Ovid Mos erat Antiquis niveis atrisque lapillis His damnare reos illis absolvere culpa They Sentenced with Stones of Black and White That know thou mightst not who Judged Wrong or Right 10. The Appeal must be to double the number as from a Jury of Twelve to a Jury of Four and Twenty which makes double the danger amongst so many they all concealing their Names in giving their Verdict as well as the first Jury 11. When a Jurisdiction is divided to two Judges which might have been exercised by one by the Interfereing of the divided Jurisdictions a man is pull'd to pieces to pay Tribute for the same Cause to both as between the Chancery and the Common Law Courts between the Kings-Bench and Common-Pleas one on Indictment of Trespass the other for Action of Trespass for the same offence so between the Common Law Courts and the Episcopal Courts a man is not only put to double Costs but is twice punish'd for the same offence and all Jurisdictions in the hands of several Judges will interfere except such as are divided by Territory and no other respect as the Jurisdiction of one County-Court is divided from another by Territory the County Pala●ines from the Westminster Courts by the Territory bounding them the Admiralty from the Common Law Courts by the Territory cover'd with the Sea 12. Where one Judg is sufficient to perform the Office of many with greater Expedition and Justice a multitude of Judges must be then a vast Charge to the Publick and a Prejudice as if to Justice the Romans had appointed Twelve Judges for every Province where one alone discharged the same it had been enough to have exhausted the Treasure of an Empire it is manifest that but three Judges only i● Westminster one in the Kings-Bench the other in the Common-Pleas and the third in the Exchequer let them have but the Jurisdiction of Fact Law and Equity as they ought to have may with as exact Justice and greater Expedition than now is done discharge all the Offices of the Twelve Judges of the Kings-Bench Common-Pleas and Exchequer save the labour of the Prerogative Court of Arches Court of Audience Court of Faculties Court of Peculiars Consistory Courts Court of the Arch-Deacon or his Commissary the Court of Delegates and all Episcopal Courts and Offices and likewise save the Labour and Charge of a distinct Chancery and of all original Writs and of all Commissions of Rebellion and of all Outlawries of all the intolerable Slavery of Sheriffs in making Pannels and of Free-holders serving in Juries and of Nisi Priuses and of Councels speaking to matters of Fact before Juries And that three Judges are sufficient to do this and many matters more I speak by experience for there were but four English Judges sent into Scotland and sometimes there were but three and sometimes but two there the other serving in Parliaments as they fell out and occasion required and we discharged all the Offices of Lords of the Session Lords of the Exchequer and of the Justitiar General in his Justice-Eir and in his particular Justice-Courts which did answer all the Offices and Power of the Judges in Westminster of the Chancery Kings-Bench Common-Pleas and Exchequer and of the Justices of Gaol-Delivery in their Circuit and besides these we Discharged the Commission for Plantation of Kirks through all Scotland and were Visitors of the Universities there were Judges likewise of the Seisures of all Ships except English Importing any Goods of the Production of Asia Africa America or Europe contrary to an Act made 1651. Cap. 22. for Increase of Shipping and encouragement of Navigation we likewise Discharged a Commission of Claims and a Commission for moderating the Fines laid on Persons who had been in Hostility to a Third part we likewise Discharged a Commission to Elect all Chief Officers in the Boroughs and made all the Sheriffs of Scotland yet had we not above Six Hundred Pound per Annum for all this and about Two Hundred Pounds to bear the Charge of a Circuit which was no profit to us but spent in entertainments for the Publick Honour neither did we take any Present Treat or Entertainment from the Sheriffs though of our own making and much less any Bribe or so much as Esculenta or Poculenta from them or any other now that which made it possible to us to Discharge so many Courts Offices and Commissions was that we were saved the labour of having Causes tossed and tumbled from Chancery to Common Law the Chancery and Common Law being there united and Pleas of Equity admitted in the same Court and there being no Juries in Civil Actions the same Persons were Judges of Fact Law and Equity another cause was that there were no Original Writs but the more compendious and just way of Summons used by serving the Defendant with a Copy of the Declaration another cause was that Councel could not speak to matter of Fact in Civil Actions before Juries or at Nisi Priuses there being none nor was so much as one of them suffer'd to speak or appear at the Bar when the Depositions of Witnesses are Advising or Reading as they do with us at Chancery-Hearings to the intolerable charge of Suitors and destruction of Justice and Equity another cause was that the Councel first excepted to the Law which we call a Demurrer and after that to the Fact which we call a Plea and had that liberty given both to demur and plead which kept the way so clear before them that they had never