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A33531 English-law, or, A summary survey of the houshold of God on earth and that both before and under the law, and that both of Moses and the Lord Jesus : historically opening the purity and apostacy of believers in the successions of ages, to this present : together with an essay of Christian government under the regiment of our Lord and King, the one immortal, invisible, infinite, eternal, universal prince, the Prince of Peace, Emmanuel. Cock, Charles George. 1651 (1651) Wing C4789; ESTC R37185 322,702 228

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in Germany and England ibid. William so called the Bastard or the Conqueror admitted King of England his claim his reign ibid. His politique settlement p. 24 His successors tyranny p. 25 The opposers and how quelled ibid. The gate God opened for freedom p 26 Magna Charta and Charta De foresta granted ibid. The Pleas of Kings against them ibid. The Judges and Lawyers absolute interest serving Kings tending to enslave the people ibid. Some Judges hanged for it ibid. The contest briefly examined pag. 27. Why the Pope suffered these contests ibid. The Popes policy to avoid Reformation from Princes ibid. Gods witnesses against Romes signs and her dealing with them ibid. The Pope and Princes strengthen each other pag. 28. The Kings of Englands best title is from Parliamentary elections and the reason ibid. Princes liberality to the Churches ibid. Parishes erected ibid. God still raises up witnesses against Rome ibid. Incestuous Marriages from the Popes dispensations in most of the chief Families in Europe pag. 29 The Kings labour to exalt Prerogative ib. The settlement of the Court of Kings Bench Common-Pleas Chequer c. ibid. In whom the choice of Judges and how ibid. Court of Wards erected c. ibid. Court of Star-chamber erected ibid. Admiralty and others Courts c. ibid. Luther and his Quarrel with the Pope pag. 30 His Doctrine ibid. His Abettors few if any ibid. His opposers all Christian Princes ibid. Hen. the 8 th of England writes against him ibid. The reason of the Princes siding against Luther ibid. Henry after quarrels the Pope The Reason ibid. His halting twixt Popery and Protestancie He seizeth the Monasteries c and the reasons pag. 31. How he rewarded his instruments ibid. Edward the sons zealous Reformation ib. Maries cruelty pag 32. Elizabeths deliverances and succession ib. Popish plots against her upon Reformation ibid. Englands laws distinguish twixt a Papist in Opinion and in Faction ibid. Englands Law at Elizabeths coming to the Crown ibid. Recusants why so called ibid. All Protestants agree not to Elizabeths Reformation ibid. Their Reasons and uninterestedness p. 33 Some of the Parliament men questioned by the Queen ibid. How she misliked the so called zealots ibid. They flie into Holland and they print freely ibid. Against both Magistracy and Ministery pag 34 Yea against the Queen in regard of manifest error continued both in Church and State ibid. Her Potency and relief to her Neighbours ibid. James succeeds Loves not Puritans ibid. Yet distasts them not ibid. Advances the Interest of Prerogat Courts ibid. Takes away the good old lawes to increase revenew ibid. The succeslesness of His wise Councels p. 35 His policy to subvert the freedom of Parliaments ibid. His way discovered ibid. The end then aimed at the subduing Scotland absolutely ibid. The Court party ibid. The King would not agree to Arms. pa. 36 The cross dealing of the Scotch Presbytery with King James ibid. Some lawes made in King James time how diversly executed ibid. Charles Crowned with great joy ibid. Disgusts against him in his first Parliament ibid. He gets mony and dissolves it ibid. Breakes his Royall word so called in his grant to the Petition of right pag. 37 The State of the Church here at the beginning of and during his reign pag. 37. 38. and 39. in the pride and dependance of the Hierarchie seeking by unjust wayes to raise private estates out of the Church revenues ibid. Their little regard of Blasphemy drunkenness c. ibid. All they sought was unity and by uniformitie ibid. Hate against good men ibid. Their policies to bring in Popery ibid. Some of their errors repeated ibid. The civil state considered pag. 39. 40 The King lost his Militia in all kinds ibid. His Lords given altogether to vain sports c. ibid. The Gentry follow them and the Yeoman them and so all order is broken ibid. Justice wholly turned into form and practice and destructive in all the pooceedings of Law pag. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. So the first step to introduce generall poverty pag. 45. 46. And that demonstrated by consideration of the parties suing ibid. The process what whence and by whom ib. The Courts of Tryall above and below ib. The Attorny and their practice p. 43. 44. Declaration and Plea ibid. Issue single and double ibid. Jury ibid. Verdict ibid. Stay of Judgement ibid. Judgement ibid. Stay of Execution ibid. Remedy in Chancery the worst evil p. 45. 46 Sollicitors what c. 44. The reasons of all this Error pa. 45. 46. Priviledge of Persons and Places discussed pag. 46 Witnesses and the abuse in them ibid. Most ordinary matters in practice undetermined in Law pag. 46. and 47 Cheatings in Bargains sales and all conveiances pag. 48 Englands Law practicall only so that Government was subverted pag. 48. Coppy-hold or base or villein tenure discussed pag. 48. 49. Want of Forcing Plantations another causes of Englands povertie ibid. Inns Alehouses and Taverns another cause ibid. Marrying of the poor too young another cause and debilitates nature and makes unfit to labour ibid. Englands good lawes for maintaining honest laborious and punishing idle ones enervated and neglected pag. 50 Considerations of binding out poor children apprentices by the Justices of the peace p. 50. Difficulty and varieties of Lawes the Lawyers Gins evidenced ibid. The Criminall part of law neglected and how pag. 51 The policy in ruining the old frame of Englands Government ibid. The policy to evade the discovery of this ibid. London the great Monopol of Trading pag. 52 Monopolies one of the Royall trades ibid. The Kings policy in ship-mony and the end ibid. Kings Charles intends War pag. 53 Intends an alteration of Government ibid. That the alteration was made of necessitie ibid. For a ground he imposes the Eng. Liturgie upon the Scots ibid. His carriage to engage a deeper War ibid. He is necessitated to call a Parliament p. 53 Breaks it and necessitated cals it again ibid. The King seekes mony pag. 54 The King disables himself to dissolve the Parliament ibid. The Parliament questions Strafford ibid. His pleas the Parliaments answers ibid. The King attempts upon some Members ibid. The Parliament sets a guard ibid. The King practizes the Army ibid. 400000. l. Raised and the Army disbanded ibid. Ireland almost lost ibid. The dislike of the people to the Kings encrease ibid. The Bishops questioned and discarded ibid. The King flies pag. 55 The Parliament arm ibid. The King fled the Convocation follow ibid. Many Lords and Commons go also ibid. These he cals his Parliament at Oxford ibid. The Lord Keeper flies to the King ibid. The controversie twixt King and Parliament as it stood controverted between them ibid. The Nationall Covenant agreed on ibid. And the Nature of it ibid. The Kings aime in setling Government pag. 56 Exemplified in a demonstrative particular ibid. The disadvantage to the Parliament by being only defensive ibid. The divers interests that followed the divers
the King must have their priviledge and as the King must not be sued but by Petition a Royal cheat so the Lords must not be arrested but by prayer a Noble flattery but a most grand abuse arose from this for much cost did many bestow to get the King Queen and Lords into their debt who never gained more then undoing the recompence of foolery by their knaveries and multitudes of debtors and trespassors bearded Law and Justice both Now for Judges Counsellors Attorneys Lawyers of all sorts or pretenders thereto the other persons priviledged they stuck together like brethren so that hard it was to pinch them especially two the Judge for his power and the Attorney for his priviledges but of this before sufficient for the present intention Thus were all matters in distast as to the great and principal ruling part of the Commonwealth and head and heart thus sick the body sure was in a distemper for all the Courts indeed from the County Court to the Court of Pypowder which I think is one at least of the lowest followed the track in proportion of all the tricks quiddities niceties of unjust dilatory and expensive lawing used in the high so called and supream Courts of judicature I shall but hint the abuse in Witnesses there being now grown visibly many more just exceptions against men then the old Laws allowed But the great evil in all Courts was and is that the indeed common and most ordinary questions were not determined and setled Matters of Accompt matters of Covenant which hold partly an equitable partly a legal right determinations of litigious questions in Wills as in case of a name mistaken in case of a gift given to a child payable under age who shall acquit the party that payes it nay indeed the ancient law concerning acquittances real and personal to me seems lost To ravel all and shew the utmost of absurdity error and perversness grown upon our Courts Lawes and Lawyers is not by one pen to be declared all is out of order I will cease to tell what all know and complain of there is nothing sought but riches and honour by what means soever I wish the Seats of Judgement had been clear of receiving moneys so called Dammage clear which shortly is thus A man sues and recovers now by the Law there is a supposall and but a supposall if that be to be supposed which is well known to the contrary that the Recoverer hath his debt or his damage and costs of suit now the first Law holding forth and looking at a kind of equity if the suit were for so small a matter that it exceed not 3. li. 6. s. 8. d. recovered then it took nothing but if it were more then it took two shillings upon every pound Now although I suppose at the original this was or ought to have been a sufficiency to have tryed the Cause and to be added to the Judgement and paid by the Defendant yet now it comes only to the Master of the Office who assigns Costs upon the Judgement and this is paid before Execution which the party happily never lives to see performed this was as to a moity allowed in the Upper Bench. But in the Term called Easter Term 1649. it was as an oppression taken off by the Judges a small beginning to a great work but fit to operate the clean contrary way but is still continued in the so called Common Pleas. In probate of Wills and suing out Administrations to whom it belongs whether accomptable if divers children or the wife to have all or the eldest child all and the rest nothing with a thousand other things are so difficult in Law though easie in Reason as cannot but be the wonder of any one that sets himselfe to consider it Now to speak a little of the Titles by way of Feofment or bargain and sale what a world of difficulty in them I dare say never a Lawyer in England can especially in the most excellent tenure of the land assure to any man a good Title neither Knight nor Lord and all arose First from the want of care in Judges authorized to enact Laws who heard of cheatings and yet gave no stop for this is sure he that is able and sells not for need but for conveniency to better himself otherwhere will not deceive grosly because he knows it brings scandal as much as charge and trouble though his conscience be but loose but the poor needy Prodigal that drinks away thrift and hardly knows and little cares what he does he it is that falls upon this trick and he first entayles then mortgages then sells The entayle is setled by the wives friends to secure the estate to her and her children they keep this secret but to keep their credit they will not borrow the money nor commonly witness the Mortgage Thus hath he all his deeds and the discent appears fair or the bequest 't is sold to redeem the Mortgage the deeds and state all parts from the Mortgage and the buyer thinks himself secure but is cheated and the Statute of fraudulent conveyances shall not help c. and all the recompence he hath is the Creditors body if he can catch it Lands so setled pay no debts Another way of cheat is the Statute of Uses setling of estates in trust to deceive making long Leases and such like This filled the world with infinite jangles and although an easie and speedy remedy were proposed both to King James and the late King yet the interest of the Lawyers being now made subservient to Prerogative all was quashed so that the Land was filled with multitudes of oppressions cruelties cheatings and extortions and no remedy and the Lawyers only enriched thereby with the Officers of Courts upon long tedious and intricated controversies they were also vexed with old sleeping judgements which no time being set unto it was the fashion to keep money in hand upon a purchase to clear incumbrances and that kept was seldome paid for to say there was no encomber amid so many wayes was difficult to swear it to no end but to prove it impossible thus if an honest seller met with a knave a rich and contentious or contentious buyer only he gat it not or so that he had as good have lost it So for Annuities Rents c. Again for conveying there was livery and seisin the supposed absolute strength a fine and the late passage by enrolment yet none of these absolutely certain for the fine though strongest and the five years limited passed yet if the seller had no right at the time as many had not being neither heir purchaser nor possessor the fine wrought not yet this not to be discovered by all the writings produced which shewed good title the livery voided per some prior lease and the enrolment not done in due time Indeed almost all good Statutes are by the loosness of Judges invalidated for so soon as honest men provide
4 If the ordinary Judges be not meet give sufficient assistance 5 Manslaughter Bailable by a certain imposition 6 All idle persons not able to give account how they live to put in good bail or go to the Work-house or c. 7 Councel to be admitted all men but one and no more and he only to speak as to matter of Law if dissallowed and the Counsel will appeal let him put it under his Hand and then the Itenerant visiting Judges to allow or disallow and punish as they see cause Chap. 40. p 162 163. shewing 1 That debts are to be recovered 162 2 First out of the personal estate if that suffice not then out of lands 3 The abuse of this discussed 4 The way to enter a Plaint opened 5 If satisfaction be not what to be done Chap. 41. p. 164. shewing 1 Wherein the great Charter of the Subjects priviledge principally rests 2 A speedy and safe way for trial of doubts for lands propounded 3 Affidavit under Hand Seal of a Justice with another witness to make two witnesses in Law 4 Obedience must be rendred to mistaken judgements 5 The unjust complainer or detainer to be fyned Chap. 42. p. 164. shewing 1 Courts of Equity may be allllowed but 2 Not till the Equity appears to the ordinary Judge of Law and be by him transmitted to the Chancery upon his Oath 3 Let then the Decree pass within a time prefixed under a severe penalty 4 Let all Orders be read and ingrossed as made in Court and signed 5 Objections against Courts of Equity Chap. 43. p. 165. shewing 1 That experienced evils must by lawful wayes be remedied 2 The work of Equity is fit generally for a diverse Court Chap. 44. p. 165. shewing 1 Students of the Municipal Laws of any Nation worthy honor 2 It s necessary to have sufficient incitements thereto 3 These were heretofore too great and were grown destructive 4 The duty and end of Pleaders laid down 5 The fit way of their due ingagement to the Commonwealth 6 The respects due in that course to them 7 The Objections vain or of little weight to the benefit Chap. 45. p. 166. shewing 1 The use and conveniency of Practizers as Attornies 2 That many must not be admitted 3 Their Fee to be set by the Magistrate 4 They and Lawyers to be fined in case of misdemeanor Chap. 46. p. 166. 1 That its fit to administer Oath to the Debtor of the true value of his estate 2 If this will not satisfie it s more beneficial to the State and to the Creditors benefit unless to satisfie the appetite of Rereage to make the debtor a servant then a Prisoner if servitude be lawful Chap 47. p. 67. shewing 1 That the all-wise God instituted servitude therefore not simply unlawful 2 The real wisdom to a rational man of that institution 3 Boundaries must be with Christians to the Masters power if allowed 4 Reasons why debtors should either be prisoners or servants 5 Whether the wife and children are to be servants with the husband and father 6 Good government will make that few servants thus will be ingaged Chap. 48. p. 168. shewing 1 What Vsury is 2 The reason why it came to a settlement and was made a Law 3 That farming of Lands came in upon the like reason 4 The loser and ill husband only complaines of both 5 That its looseness of Government pride laziness and gluttony more then moderate use that undoes any man ordinarily So over-purchasing 6 That Vsury is not forbidden Christians 7 No difference twixt that and letting lands if any 8 Mony more advantageous 9 Both fit yet to be moderated by the Magistrate Chap. 49. p 169. shewing 1 That tortures are against the light of Nature 2 Against Christianity 3 That though evils have been d●…ected by it yet not being a certain rule it s not to be practised as a Law by Christians Chap. 50. p. 169. shewing 1 That all publick Offices are to be born by the publick purse 2 That the Offices and stipends ought to be made certain 3 What is the publick Revenue Chap 51. p. 170. shewing 1 That ideots and mad men must be adjudged and provided for by the Magistrate 2 Their estates ordered for the benefit of their wife and children and self 3 For this Judges in certain must be appointed and their power Chap. 52. p. 170. shewing 1 That Bond or Copyhold tenure was but a dependent upon Knights Service and the rest and they gone that should go 2 The Nature of the thing wholly ceases so should the Law 3 That the continuance is not only illegal but visibly destructive to the Common-wealth by unjust dependences 4 How to settle it legally if not oust it Chap. 53. p. 171. shewing 1 How frauds grew notorious 2 The difficulty to get Laws against them or punish them nourished and encouraged thereto 3 The best way to prevent them 4 The Legal cheat of custome contrary to Law 5 Fit to settle Disputes of Inheritance justly 6 The punishment of frauds Chap 54. p. 172. 173. shewing 1 Errors in Magistrates or Laws breed dislike of both 2 How England stands so affected to Juries 3 Justice is above Magna Charta and works no dispriviledge 4 What to be done with Christians before suit commenced 5 No suit till a Magistrate legally deputed allow the same 6 How to be entred for a Tryal 7 Within how long time after cause of complaint 8 How the Defendant is so brought to Answer 9 Tryal to be speedy 10 Jury to appeal how many to a Jury 11 How to be qualified and the reason 12 How Judges of Law and how to be punished in case of Error 13 bound to give the Court reason for going against their evidence 14 Other Qualifications requisite 173 Chap. 55. p. 173. shewing 1 That judgement ought immediatly to follow the Verdict unless just cause in Law appear 2 Execution ought to follow judgement and for both let the value be secured or deposited 3 If the person be present to sign the judgement and give caution to perform it or be imprisoned if able 4 If no Execution within twelve months after judgement Judgement to be void Chap. 56. p. 173. shewing 1 Offenders in putting in unfit Jurors to be fined 2 They also that draw Jurors Chap. 57. p. 173. shewing 1 That no man should be distreined in that whereby his Family immediatly lives 2 That due apportionment of distress for publick Service ought to be Chap. 58. p. 174. shewing What punishment is fit to be in cases of waste Chap. 59. p. 174. shewing That Commons are one of the great sores of England 2 The several sorts of Commons and why and how granted 3 The rule of Commoning is now lost 4 The evils arising thereby 5 The Remedy 6 Free Warrens and Fole courses considered 7 Now an opportune time to settle all advantageously and how Chap. 60. p. 175. shewing 1 That certain Magistrates must be
inferior places But assuredly the foundation of this mischief was principally in the abused practise of the Courts of Justice of this kingdom which holding also a Jewish dependency as before was hinted there was no stint of strife for the Law admitted appeals and what was so called the Subjects due ought not be denied them so that if you had either a knavish or a powerfull adversary to deal withal which power is manifold as either a great rich man or greatly friended by the officers or els powerful in a joynt stock as a corporation whose united purses have ruled over all justice and righteousness whatsoever in many places you could not get right but with repentance that is loosing by the bargain the particulars I shall demonstrate after this ruined many discouraged more discontented all except the gainers which were and are such a rabble and bed-roul of names in both Laws as would amaze a wise man much more a Christian for whereas a Christian saith let all things among you be done in love and let the brethren judge your differences that is without litigious pleadings after the manner of the world but with that quietness gentleness meekness and botherlike affection as the Gospel of Christ holds forth and the prudent man saith let it be before wise men duly appointed in a time convenient and with certainty and what one Judge cannot determine either for difficulty or doubting let aid be joyned and right done and that whither according to the exact letter or the rule of conscience The Laws of England held forth all things in practice I say in practice for the general rules or foundations of Englands Laws are good wholsome and sanative absolutely contrary for it held forth in the letter you should have right for every wrong this general rule was good but discend to the particular The Quaere now is what remedy for the wrong an Action you must prosecute But first it is considerable by whom this Action shall be brought for long suites and expensive have bin had and then the party ought either to have one or more joyned with them or where the Action was ioynt it ought to have bin sole sometimes in the respect of the nature of the Action sometimes in respect of the way of assessing or recovery of damages next it is considerable in what Court for ofttimes 100. li. hath been spent in the Court and then the Court had no cognizance of the business yet the ablest Lawyers in England advised within the case or so accounted as most favored c. But grant you hit the Court then the Quaere is what Action for one hundred Actions have been prosecuted in the right Court and before right and due Judges and by the right person and then the Action mistaken it was deceit and should have been a Trespass or a Tespass where it should have bin deceit so almost in all matters of higher or lower nature next agreeing what Action where shall you begin your suite out of what Court have your process and for your process whither from above that is the Kings bench which now holds cognizance of all pleas or the Common pleas the proper Court of all Subjects differences betwixt themselves at least in the Common Pleas by original in the Common bench by Latitat or els in the Chequer by a Surmise that you are a Debtor to the King or below in the County or City if the sum be not above their Trial and for the Chancery and such other Courts a Subpaena and then the several Writs must be issued in due course or all is nought Next for the execution of the Writ there is for the Chancery c. either the party plaintife or some other shows the writ to the Defendant or leaves a part or the body of it so called as the case requires at his house and if he appears not process issues against his person but upon the other he must be arrested by a Serjeant of the Mace so called the officers of a City or a bayliffe whether common special or of a liberty there is not much difference they are much alike Now these mens livelyhood is under the Sheriffe to execute writs of all sorts to judgements and Executions they have a fee proper from the party but that was set so long since that it is not a sufficient maintenance now and rather then take paines to raise that well foreseeing the trouble it would bring to alter all Fees in the Nation they let them gripe the poor and abuse the rich and wrong all Yea assuredly they many of them take hire of the Debitor or Trespasser not to see him and of the Plaintiffe or Creditor to see him as the searchers or under-writers for customes formerly or now for excise may do either for prohibited or custome stoln goods So that ofttime the charge of arresting is as much as the Debt and it is generally known that these men are the worst sort of men the old Law was none to be arrested but to find sureties that his cause was just and that he would prosecute with effect but that just Law being too hard to many poor men to surmise the best was not remedied but by practise that is the unwarantable proceedings of Judges Totally abolished and now a bill of Middlesex may abuse any man unknown and the law is made a stale to the both foolery and knavery of Sycophants or worse there is much pleaded for this arresting by Bayliffs as first he is a known and sworn officer I say only if he be so let his Summons without a Writ or attaching the person be enough and if twice summoned let him be proceeded against as to his goods who will not appear provided he be at or in Town but this is beyond my taske intended here There is another way of making the offender appear which is by Utlagary used very unjustly and so confessed but as good as the rest The next thing is where I must lay my action that is in what County And many times the action is laid in London for a matter of so small moment that a journey to London of himself and witnesses eats out all the gain justice gives especially when small matters are removed outof the County justly as I will say in this case they being indeed above the now proper rate of County or City Trialls or else unjustly as when a man is arrested in a liberty for five pound or forty shillings only which is there triable he gets himself arrested also for a greater summ and so removes both to London now for these proceedings in abuse of the common subject of the Nation in Law-proceedings believe not I can or hope to open all the sleights tricks quillets fetches deceits knaveries and abuses with the irrelegious abominable prophane juggles thereof it being in the whole practise I say practise of it nothing else but vanity and wickedness I am loth to say robbery extortion
and such like epithites which some mens zeal bestow upon it cauterised under the scourge and lash of a long pilling polling suit hurried from Town to City from City to Country from Court to Court Hearing upon Hearing Order upon Order Judgements and Verdicts both so called and yet in a labyrinth not onely Term after Term but year after year and still almost as far off as ever if not further no I aim but to give a clear light that our Laws practised are not the Laws of the Nation that is a set rule of Justice but usurped upon us by evil men they are as practised neither according to natural reason the foundation of the Laws of Nations nor Religion the Law of the Almighty Wisdom pardon my zealous digression I now return to what I had omitted which is that by Law that is the custome allowed A Sheriff or under-Sheriff shall make Returns of Course onely for the benefit of Officers as for example that the party was not found within his Baylewick or that he hath no goods c. when both are contrary yet he is sworn to excute all Writs truly but this is no perjury by or within the judgements of any the English Judges because not being within the niceties of their wise sayings or resolutions no more then thousands of other perjuries which though they may excuse themselves for because the Laws of the Land so called look not at them as the Judges of such perjuries yet that they get no other Law established seeing the great want for redress of such matters they finde before them will be their or the Lands afflictions at last but to go on in a course of Triall These difficulties over I must now put in my Declaration that is the narration of my complaint into the Court in writing and that not in English but Latine though I understand never a word and that in the form the Law requires though I can tell no more then the meer matter of my wrong And in the same manner must my adversary so called also though little wiser then my self But to help out this we have Attorneyes so called allowed Deputies to answer for us skilled in the way of practise and these men they do even do what they list for the Client so called is seldom knowing of practise and he hath so much first for his Fee then drawing the Declaration or Plea which is either general or special and though done with much difficulty and charge is oft mistaken the one for the other again double pleas are exploded and though great advice taken which matter to plead the best is left and so left remediless at Law unless a new bout in another Court help him or else the Chancery either of which remedies is generally worse then the disease Now the reason of Attorneys was this as riches multiplied pride and outward pomp encreased long suits came into fashion and to maintain Officers it was laboured for to avoid further suit by these means to bring all Trials to the upper Bench or common Pleas c. And pleadings ordered wholly in form and in Latine which what for ease and what for the so pretended being so made necessity namely keeping of Records as presidents they were admitted and to get an Attorney was difficult in such chargeable prosecutions which to remedy they were allowed privil●dges as Officers in some Courts yet being the Clients Deputies they were the Pl●…ders or Serjeants I say no more servants and carried their baggs as divers of them did throw in their teeth upon discontent though they have now almost shaked the yoak off their shoulders Give me now leave a little to speak of Attorneys and their practise which almost over-ruled the whole Law First the Judges though the Licenser or allower of Attorneys yet receiving great part of his extraordinary revenue from him as upon Fines c. Next the Serjeants upon all special pleas and the Serjeants and C●…ellor upon all legall proceedings the ●lient being generally if not wholly led by the Atturney they were the principal men and Lawyers grown numerous many would covenant to have half Fees with the Councel I profess and averr that a late Judge did being a Serjeant declare it to me as an audacious part of I. B. whom I then found going from him with these words Paultry saucy Knave cast after him by the Serjeant But assuredly they were grown very knowing in the practical part of the Law and some of them have among multitudes of more had these abusive practises laid to their charge against the Laws as taking of Capias's from the Common-Pleas yet never filing an Original This redounding meerly to his profit abusing the Officers of the Court to inrich himself and not advantage his Client for the Cursitor so called looseth one shilling the Philizer one shilling two pence c. So that the Writ which is six shillings two pence cometh onely to him except for the Seal seven pence and if this be discovered before Iudgement though after Verdict I believe it would overthrow the whole proceeding So in suing forth the Capias utlag For whereas upon true practise a Capias being awarded to the Sheriff who by wicked custome not looking after him returns a Non est inventus that is upon a Writ to take his body the Sheriff though he might take him returns him not found whereupon another Capias or Writ to take his body wherein of Custome as aforesaid the Sheriff again makes such a perjured in Christian acceptation return again then goes forth another Writ mentioning what ado they have made to get him and oft times he is out of the County indeed it being done of purpose in another County that he might not know it and then for his contumacy he is exactioned proclaimed and out-lawed and this oft in two Terms which ought to be done in five by the Law but little justice in any part of it though spetious in pretence yet if the Capias were delivered to the Sheriff there were some rule observed but the knowing Atturneys can do it themselves using the Sheriffs name who never sees the Writ and did he not one of a hundred can tell what to do but by his under-Sheriff a late constituted Officer upon the high made difficulties of Law who being one of the same Tribe calleth discovering of error defiling the neast and so lets all pass as Custome leads Thus is a man put out by the Law of the priviledge of a Subject and this only to maintain Officers for let all the course be examined and the issue will be nought else I have known this sued against a man for that the Law gave no action the party yet never demanded the thing and of a man not worth twenty shillings in the whole world and the matter it self not worth five shillings the Charges came to nigh four pound and if he hath notice no way but to sue a Supersedeas which is I take it
where they may have no neighbours and there they have Cottagers servants but no other and some by this means pay not one penny in a year to the poor but their offall well they make a Rate the payment is refused what course now to come by it some Rates are to demand and within six days a distress others within four days some by the Constable some by Warrant from the Justice of Peace that signed the Rate some of any Justice some the distress is taken to be sold presently some within four some six some eight some ten dayes some the overplus is to be returned some deducting charges some certain charges some incertainly and so for Forfeitures and so Warrants some things to be done by one some by two Justices whereof one to be of the Quorum upon penal Statute Laws c. These variety of Laws were the Lawyers gins for seldom but the poor Officer smarted for that the Justice to avoid quarrel with him left his Warrant with this general clause at last according to Law which the poor Constable taking simply according to the literal Tenor of the Warrant he seldom went according to Law Thus was all due proceeding and the substance of Government lost to preserve a fair husk of so called priviledge of the Subject but the husks vertue had this attractive that all the idle money and good money of the Nation was dreyned into the Lawyers purses and the difficulty of the Law was invented by them assuredly on s●… purpose onely to keep up the Trade and not discovered by the Judges nor discountenanced upon the principle that every one had their times so letting of servants at Petty-Sessions and their not departure without a testimony and such like all grown to disorder and the rather because now even the honors of the Kingdom were as aforesaid made mercenary to the ends of Covetize and Tyranny and the debauchery of the Gentry spoiled the whole Nation so that the ancient Gentry whether of Brittish or Norman Race was lost wholly in the puddle of foolery and fashion so that put a childe into either a rich man or Gentlemans house and they learned nothing but the foundation of beggary they there growing onely nice neate lustfull and lazy But to return Thus were the Justices and all Officers made tender in execution of the Law and thus the Law extinguished And hence it grew that even Felons Murderers and all criminous persons had at last as much favor as baseness negligence and security could afford for no Hues and Cries were at all prosecuted with effect for no punishment where they ceased and the burthens of Constables in their services were such and the office now put on the meanest persons for vexation that little knowledge he had of his work he ignorant and the Law thorny both for understanding and execution so that he onely put off the work but to act vigorously or with care he durst not lest his own fire should burn his own fingers for if he were diligent and apprehended a Rogue he was bound over sometimes to prosecute the Rogue or Felon for want of an Attorney for the King or his not executing his place duly yet all Processes were by indictment at the Kings suit but however as a witness and Indictings and Recognizance Fees made them soon weary besides three or four dayes attendance and not one penny for all their charges Thus were Rogues incouraged and obstructors and disobedient to the Law Government and Reason whether for Covetize or worse ends sake is evident But the justly feared end of all this by wise men was that by the iniquity of this frame now wholly and visibly naught and lost the Subject might be enforced to submit to such Rules of Arbitrary Government as the King by his Edicts whether personal or from his private Councel should send forth to which all they of his Councel were fitted and all his Lords and Gentry to them by the means aforesaid Now that this evil is faln upon us is evident is it not known to all there was no due return of Warrants by the Constables for execution of Justice twixt man and man but that the party must enforce or secure the Officer or nothing done yea the Sheriffs of Counties from the nicities of Laws would not execute a judgement without securitie to bear harmless rather venturing breach of oath then the rigidity of a suit Now one Reason will manifest this was not unnecessary on their part for their at least practise of the Law did bear that if execution were upon another mans goods though in the shop of the party and of the same condition with his Trade yet upon a Trover and Conversion a figmentious Action the Sheriff must be overthrown these were the ways to prepare the Free people of England to slavery and absolute vassallage they doting upon their so called Laws The Bishops corrupted the Prince the Princes corrupted the Judges and they being the speaking Law the dead letter did little good so that it was time for English-men to look to themselves here were Symptoms enough of ruine threatned both to soul and body and estate but the wayes were dark for the contrivances were fitted to every capacity say Popery was intended nothing less the Laws sharp and execution visible as to the first part calling in question indicting and conviction all this brought gain The next step was gain also that is discharge upon composition Say Tyranny was intended to be introduced no you have your Judges both sedentary in the ordinary Courts at Westminster and Itinerary in the Counties and they gave the Law where was the King to be blamed this suggested and the evil continuing the King walks higher and by Pattents of grace so called that is the meer Will of the King he inhibits subjects their Trades and under a colour of mischief brings in an inconvenience that is to prevent an incertain charge or loss he imposes a certain charge and this contrary to Statute-Law these were called Monopolies London gained as much by this destructive chaffer as any place truly engrossing all Trade to her self under pretence of regulation which is necessary for the outward formal pretences of Companies of Merchants for well-making ordering selling c. of commodity is good but to leave them that are Masters of the company to the sole making of the Laws and execution also is destructive they are like Benchers of Inns of Court no Sir le ts not make Laws to bind our selves as if the place had given all power to them they make Laws only subservient to their own ends I shall exemplifie but in one petitioned against in Parliament these Merchants having places of Mart or sale the Masters agree in private send away their commodities and some dayes after declare where the Mart shall be theirs are either arrived or half way or prepared to the voyage when time 's so scanted to others if at all possible that the
pleading to the Jurisdiction Next by denying himself to be the party with multitudes more how evident soever Which Laws in the letter being taken advantage of as one for example one first called said nothing then shewed his name was not John but John-as Jenkins therefore not the party indicted That amended the Clerk goes on John-as Jenkins of c. he answers not after much debate there is two Towns one Hoph Pet. the other Jo. and the Indictment is general he knows not which that agreed on then his addition is mistaken as he is Baronet indicted Knight or Knight and Baronet but all agreed on he is then to plead and to this he pleads First strange dilatory pleas as that the fact was done in another County c. These breeding great trouble and great delay were both in Civil and Criminal cases in great part rectified but so jealous was the Parliament ever of the thing called Priviledge that all was never done though it may be the greater evils were removed so that there are causes enough still to dally in Law to general disadvantage of honest and publike good and no liberty but of general capital offenders Now the reason of this was evident because the Subjects Liberty was by Princes sought to be totally enslaved the best and wisest were most active in opposition and to save these good men we ensnarled the Law and till now had never opportunity of rectification if yet we have this seen by the Crown side they engage three wayes by Judges absolutely depending A Jury of Conformists and the general Plea not guilty And thus Prerogative and Priviledge fought And surely the Law holds forth matter so clear in the Year-Books on the one side by Presidents Rights of Supremacy dispatch of business c. On the other side by Presidents reason of Priviledge for safety of Life that the controversie seems endless and yet Justice is plain let him plead not guilty but withall give what other matter he can in evidence which the Court ought to accept and upon the whole matter to give judgement hearing himself and Councel which surely if in any other Cause Matter or Plaint a Subject ought to have then much more in case of life especially if the Law favors it and more especially where the Judges are the meer Dependants of the Prince or State which jealousie cannot be satisfied without if withall other things can be supposed any way requirable and therefore it hath been accounted for Law that the Jury were not barely Judges of the fact but were surely intended as a barr to Prerogative in some sort or dependance thereon for they may be without all doubt so far Judges as to finde the matter specially will the Judge or nill he and if themselves will venture an attaint may be Judges of the Law indeed against the plainest evidences So that it is evident these questions are easie to be controverted and hard to be determined yet not in themselves but only because of the divers interests in this as in most matters in our Law wherein the Crown had any hook according to the prevailing of their party having laid foundations for their own benefits and advancing their particular designs which is the first rise of the controversie about the Militia which never was in England in the Kings hand otherwayes then that of Tenures the posse Comitatus being alwayes the proper defence of the County and not subjugated to the Kings will or Royal Commission Now the reason was War and Peace was nominally in the King really in the Subject because of Moneys which could not be charged without consent in Parliament some upon this ground a Quaere of main concernment Namely what are the Laws of England or where to be found Some as I have said answer the Law of God others say excellent reason some the Law of Nations peculiarized by use others say with the Lawyers That the Law of England is founded upon the Law of God the Law of Reason principles called Maximes Customes not contrary to reason received time out of mind and proper quarto modo to the people of the Nation Statutes and the resolutions of the Judges To this it is objected that these generals teach or edifie not what the Law of England is For the Quaere is If the word of God whether all or part if so the infallible or at least certain Rule pleadable to know which part they require the like certainty in reason and the Exposition of Principles and Customes for they say all these must solely depend upon the Iudges and then the Law in their opinion is wholly Arbitrary for if their only word makes it reason and their only word determines the end and meaning of the principle and so whether custome be good or not then it is meerly at the will of them and this they say experience manifested in the great Cause of Ship-Money wherein had not the Sword been the better Arbiter of their priviledge the sentence had been irrevocable to enslave them all to the King Therefore they say there must be common reason or some head-Rule which must judge most excellent reason not that they intend vulgar decision but a judgement must be tryed by its conducing to publike good The Rule is Good the more general and common so much the more precious and from this they conclude all these heads of the Law of Nature or Reason Principles or Maxims and Customes to be all the same with the dicta sap or resolutions of the Judges and then whose creatures they are and from whom they have their honour pay c. to them they will be bound which they cast not by way of odium upon them but common to them with all men to enforce and improve all their abilities by the first principle of nature to the preserving self and this they do and better self in advancing the Title and Interest of them upon whom they depend But they say this is as fatal a hawk to liberty to have such an absolute dependance upon a State as upon a Prince tending to the same end of enslaving the people Yea reducing a State from a Democracie to a Tyranny as well as from Royalty to Tyranny for they say they have heard from Lawyers and it is a general complaint That the Laws of England are they know not what at least a wise or so called Politick Judge may make them so and that this is easiliest done in matters of highest concernment Take them to be the Law of God no such matter where is ought according to that rule They exemplifie in Henry the Eights Law for marriages made meerly for private interests and now for the same neglected for Gods Name is scandalized prophaned blasphemed and not regarded horrible adulteries and some say incests unpunished Yea all the rabble of Popish Episcopal and now so called Presbyterial Professors that is the baptized Christian are guilty of walking clean contrary to their profession
yet no way punished Gods Sabboth contemned god-Mammon that mental Adultery of Idolatry is most of their sin common to them with their other brethren in the flesh by what names soever called or known And for the duty towards Neighbour there is nothing but envying and malice furfetting gluttony or drunkenness the Nurses to Adultery and Lasciviousness with pride in apparel and abundance of idleness which increasing poor increases and by them necessity and that brings Theft or Covetize or both and sure among such to swear in truth will not at all be regarded it will be thought cruelty not to tell an Officious so called lye to save thy brothers life which now makes it nothing to have lyes sworn this brings scandals upon seats of Iustice for these things known and not remedied if possible will asperse But some say some Judges make no conscience of such acts they exemplifie not only in Ship-Money but in ordinary Tryals while they deny justice by delaying and admitting the continuance of delayes in justice and sometimes go against their own knowledge in the Law as in the case of admitting such to read as they know cannot and more evidently such as are not capable by Law as those branded before not once but seven times whereby the Rogue is as preserved so encouraged and this because due notice is not taken of persons branded in the Calender nor Records penally presented in Court to which though ignorant persons answer they will not come there again but act their Villainies in another County wise men will not who know the Law admits no going out for it will prove wandring in such of necessity but with Certificate but the true reason though it cannot wholly excuse is the best namely they think the Law too hard and would rather have constant work-houses but there is two evils in this so just so righteous a proposal to change this Law for if either work-houses or due course of certificates were setled the Commonweale would be quickly rid of such vermin But then the first evil appears namely Clerks Fees would cease The next evil is the matter of charge in building repairing and maintaining the houses and Officers c. for a work-house in this age where building back and belly cat up all will hardly be maintained much less raised but to be well provided with stock and Overseers rather venture all There is complaint against our now Iudges taking Fees if so they do having yet 1000. l. per annum that Fees might be discharged But these Complainers have one word more to the Law that is they say the great Charter of Normandy they own rather to be the old Norman Laws before William the Bastard then the Law of England though he might well labour to introduce the whole plot Truth it will serve to discover the Reasons of our bondage and that 's all which while Copyholds are not discarded together with Crown Tenure we are not freed of For Fleta and Bracton they say they are the meer heads of Justinians Institutes a little corrected according to the guise of Englands Principles of liberty above the Ancient Roman or State of Greece in the height of the Empire Yet for that exploded by the Kings Iudges For Horn Britton Glanvil they are reputed more English but may be as well Scottish Sweadish or Danish especially Glanvil who if compared with R. Mai. Scot the old Tenures Customes Services Writs c. are the same word for word the other were they who drew the Traditions of our fathers into form by insensible degrees raising debased Engl. to a glimmering of Native liberty in the use of a body of law for it is plain Englands Law unwritten could not be well known by the vulgar Fortescue taking the advantage of the contest betwixt York and Lancaster declares more freedome happily then consists with reason in the letter Now all these books were altogether exploded Fleta and Horn not permitted to be printed but hung up by the licence liberty and all that was the common reading of the Lawyer was the resolutions of the Iudges in the so called Year-Books which have no date beyond Edward the Third there being then a stipend given to certain men constantly sitting in Court to report the reasons of the Iudges so that let them answer at their perill for now their reasons were permanent and brought to strict judgement Yet they still had their evasions in cases of great interest either for one Kings Title or other for Prerogative or Priviledge as particular respects engaged and providence favoured as was evident in the case of R. 2. and his Iudges which lay asleep from him till our late Charls revived it and suffered publickly for it as Richard did privately far the more manly and exemplary way of the two and rational it is for if it be lawful for man to give Law he may and ought to enforce and no way can be more consentaneous to order then that of the body Representative which is not in this case denyed either by the Regular Presbyterian or violent so called Interdependent only they deny this a Parliament as before is said These Reporters wrot till Henry the Seventh there are some fragments of Henry the eight Edward the Sixth and Q. Mary and Elizabeth taken by Students then and since which are called by the names of the Authors as Kelway Petty Brook Dyer Plowden c. with some particular assertions of others but none durst write freely Lord Cook put out several Books of Reports all which being principally matters of Title or betwixt party and party swam down stream Now in most of these were matters altered at pleasure for out of these books it is easie to argue black white and white black Reason was cut into such fine shreads of wit and form which is as vain that judgement was puzled to find something where there was so much of nothing and if any thing were it was so disjoynted a piece in 1o. Ed. 3. debated further 18o. further Process in 23o. and finished 31o. Jan. 24o. ultimo Regis Caroli Rex ultimus Brittannorum A subtile Oracle true and not true let matters pass as they will so that in such a confused study who could learn ought though helped with Fitz-Herberts yea and Brooks Abridgement for the old Books and the late Indexes the least too big for any book of Law for a Nation where each is to be supposed knowing of it and no man excused by his ignorance Now for the Crown Law of which we had no compleat Tract but Stamford the Lord Cook treating of that particular and tacitly in his both Jurisdictions of Courts and Expositions of Statutes holding forth not only the bare letter but a rational disquisition of the Texts they also were estopped and well is it say some if they have not met with a concealed Dominicane Expurgator or Jesuitical Emendator there being such hard hold on all sides for them and against them since published
be composed if this will not do let a Magistrate allow a legal controversie Then let his Case be set down specially as it is after the nature of an Action upon the Case and let Oath be of the truth of it and that he is able to make it good by Law let the Case barely be stated no Conceits no Opinions but the naked truth which the Complainant is to make good Let this alwayes be within twelve moneths after cause of Action Then let a Summons go to the Defendant by a sworn Officer from the Court or the party or some other making Oath of the Summons if he appears not let a Note be fixed to his door under a severe penalty to any one to take off requiring appearance or to shew Cause if neither be done let the Trial immediatly be awarded if he appear let the day of hearing be ordered and entered in the Court-book and that truly by the Clerk under a severe Fine immediatly to be deducted by abatement in his Salary after which time let a Jury of twelve or six men for it is not the number that doth the work I think six best but that contest is not worth the while the alteration of an old received way is the greatest objection be warned not under the penalty of twenty or one hundred pounds and nothing ever paid but of ten or five shillings to be assuredly levied to the States use immediatly of Course unless sick in bed or otherwise imployed in the Service of the Commonwealth in the County above twenty miles or hindred by Providence which Causes sworn and allowed may excuse or essoyn him for not summoned the Officer is sworn and must admit no present contest Now the men must be knowing understanding men and of estate to answer dammages if that be continued if they give a false Verdict which is just being they are properly Judges of the dammage now if they and the Judge differ upon the Law let them do it at their peril for the Case let it be stated the Judges and their hands with the Counsel present set to it and let the yearly Judges decide it and if the Judge be faulty let him otherwise the Jury be fined to the State and if they give a false Verdict that is go not truly according to what is truly alledged and proved unless they or some of them of their own knowledge know the thing of which they are bound to give the Court publike Cognizance for Juries as other Judges are under a Rule of Reason and Common Justice then Jurors must be of the next inhabitants to the place where the fact was Committed of the vicinage neer dwellers so that they know the parties their lives and conversations and thereby judge But there ought to be no relations of Consanguinity or Affinity within three degrees for although spiritual or publick relations ought to be preferred above natural yet this is now little known less regarded Lastly he must not be who is a Jury-man a common Swearer Drinker Company-keeper nor ejected any congregation as an evil person an offender against the peace and quiet of the Nation or one that hath declared his opinion before sworn It is agreed it is best object against the Juror before sworn but what the court is mistaken in ought not to be proceeded in therefore till they be as we say gone from the bar just objections may be offered but the Judge must not allow objections as to favor or surmises after sworn if it be let it be proved for let no Juror after sworn be dismissed but the reason recorded and this proof is easie and then let him be fined When Judgement ought to be and Execution And when void IUdgement ought immediately to follow Execution unless some just cause and that only in Law be offered and for execution notwithstanding the cause which may be for delay alledged let the goods be secured or the money deposited or no cause allowed And if the party be present let him enter caution immediately to perform the judgement or otherwise to imprison his person is not dispriviledge if he be able till he performs it let the caution be setting his hand to the judgement which ought to amount in Law to above all Statutes or Customary Judgements alwayes provided if the execution be not within twelve moneths upon any Judgement whatever the Judgement to be void for the long hanging of judgements and other securities is also legall injustice I say no more Offendors in impannelling Juries Imbracers and the like FOr offendors in putting in knowingly unfit Jurors in any kind let them be fined and the Fines high and deducted out of their salary if any in hand otherwise by distress besides loss of that place and disabled of any other for at least some years for it must be perjury for he is a sworn Officer For drawers of Iurors or informers of them aforehand to draw them to one party let all be upon presentment and tryed and fined What Distresses are lawful THe Law is just that no man be destrained in that whereby he principally earns his living if ought else be But to distrain one man for a Fine due from a Hundred Town c. this is hard without speedy remedy is unjust let this be generally committed to a Court and right done as the fact appears that is let an equal rate be and the Constable and Overseers gather it and pay it immediately with respect to his dammage adjudged and set and if they will not let the Court enforce the rate and all charges upon it and so in all other Cases What to be done in cases of waste c. IN case of waste let the forfeiture be certain for Tenants for year by Lease let it be their Term except an incom be and for that let a Jury mitigate For Guardians of Infants Tenants for life and the like let it be treble dammages those to be assessed by a Jury What to do in Commons THis is a matter of large extent and is one of the great sores of England which wants healing Our Commons are either appendant appurtenant or by reason of vicinage and were originally the relief of the beasts of the Plow and for the breed of young Cattel for the Freeholders and do primarily belong to them and as their Farm was so might they put upon the Common greater or lesser quantity of Cattel according to proportion But long since the rule of Commoning was lost and Commons are become the ruine of the generalty of the poor to whom Commonage belongs not For first they get a Cow in Summer and live idlely of that and not providing against winter they buy dear in the Spring and sell cheap at winter and the rich so long as the purse payes not few regard how things go by this at last miserable and remediless beggery ensues besides the general neglect of Commons as of all matte●… of publick interest whereby many poor are undone