Selected quad for the lemma: justice_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
justice_n baron_n chief_a common_a 3,528 5 7.0134 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A87520 The vvorks of that grave and learned lavvyer Iudge Ienkins, prisoner in Newgate. Upon divers statutes, concerning the liberty, and freedome of the subject. With a perfect table thereto annexed. Jenkins, David, 1582-1663. 1648 (1648) Wing J574; Thomason E1154_2; ESTC R20801 80,714 206

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

will not come to them and yet the King desires to come but they wil not suffer him but keepe him prisoner at Holmby so well doe their Actions and Oathes agree 5. They sweare now King Charies is their only and supreame Governor but with a resolution at the time of the Oath taking and before and after that he shall not be only or supreame Governour or only and supreame but not any Governour at all For there is no point of Government but for some yeares past they have taken to themselves and used his name only to abuse and deceive the people 6. That this virtuall power is a meere fiction their Propositions sent to Oxford to Neweastle to be signed by the King doe prove it so What needs this adoe if they have the virtuall Power with them at Wistminster 7. To affirme that the Kings power which is the vertue they talke of is separable from his person is High Treason by the Law of the Land which is so declared by that learned man of the Law Sir Edward Cocke so much magnified by this present Parliament who in the 7 part of his Reports in Calving case fol. 11 saith thus In the reigne of Edward the second the Supencers the Father and Sonne to cover the Treason hat hed in their hearts invented this damnable and damned opinion that homage and Oath of Legeance was more by reason of the I Kings Crowne that is of his potitick capacity theu by reason of ohe person of the King upon which ●●inion they inferred three execra●le and detestable consequences h. If the King to not demeaue himselfe by reason in the right of his Crowne his Lieges are bound ●y Oath to remove the King 2 seeing that the King ●ould not be retormed by ●nte of Law that ought so be dene per aspertes that is by orce 3. That his Lieges be beund to governe in ●yde of him and in default of him all which w●re condemned by two Parliaments one in the raigue of Edw. 2. called exilium Hugonis le Spencer and the other in anno 1. Edw 3 cap. 2. And that the naturall body and politick maks one indivisible body that these two bodies incorporate in one person make one body and not divers is resolved as the Law of Eng. 4 Ed 3 Ploydon Com. fol. 213 by Sir Co bet Catlin L. Chiefe Justice of Eng. Sir I●mes D●er L. Chief Justice of the Common pleas the L. Sanders L. Chief Baron of the Exche●ner by the rest of the Judges viz. Justice Restall Justice Browne Justice Corbet Justice weston Baron Frevyl● Carus and Pow●rel Sergeant to the Queene Gerrard Auturny Generall Carell Atturney of the Dutchy P●owdon the learnedest man of that age in the knowledge of the Law and Customes of the Realme 8. The Law in all ages without any controversie is and hath been that no Act of Parliament bindes the Subjects of the Land without the assent of the King ● H●● 3 Mogn Charta So in every Age till this d●y and in every Kings time as appeares by the Acts in Print 1 part of the Iustit Sect. 234. 〈◊〉 fine where many of the Law-Bookes are ●iied 7 Hen. 7.14.12 of Hen. 7.20 either for Person Lauds Goods or Fame No man can shew any sillable letter or line to the contrary in the bookes of the Law or printed Acts of Parliament in any age in this Land If the virtuall power be in the Houses there needs no assent of the Kings The stiles of the Acts printed from 9 Hen. 3. to 1 Hen. 7. were either The King ordaines at his Parliament c. or the King ordaineth by the adv●ee of his Prelates and Bar●●rs and at the humble Petition of the Commons c. In Hen. 7. his time the Stile altered and hath fithence continued thus It is o●dained by the Kings Majesty and the Lords spirituall and temporall and Commons in this present Parliament assembled So that alwayes the Assent of the King giveth the life to all as the soule to the body and therefore our Law bookes call the King the Fountaine of Justice and the life of the Law 9. 2 Han. 4 Cap 22 4 pars instit 42. Mr. ●●in in his Treatise of the great Seal fol. 17.27 Hen. 8 Chap. 24. Mercy as well as Justice belongs by the Law of the Land onely to the King This is confessed by Mr. Pryn and it is so without any question The King can onely pardon and never more cause to have sufficient pardons then in such troublesome times as these and God send us pardons and peace None can give any pardon but the King by the Law of the Land The whole and sole power of pardoning Treasons and Felonies belongs to the King are the words of the Law and it is a delusion to take it from any other and utterly invalid 27. Hen. 8. c. 24. 10. Queene Elizabeth summoned her first Parliament to bee held the 23. of Jan. in the first yeare of her Majesties Raigne The Lords and commons assembled by force of the same Writ the 21 day the Queen fell sick and could not appeare in her person in Parliament that day and therefore prorogued it untill the 25 of the same Month of January Resolved by all the Judges of England that the Parliament began not the day of the returne of the Writ 3 of Eliz. Dier 2●3 viz. the 23. of January when the Lords and Commons appeared but the 25 of the said Moneth when the Queene came in person which sheweth evidently that this virtuall presence is a meere deluding fiction that hath no ground in Law reason or sence They have the King now a prisoner at Holmby with guards upon him and yet they governe by the virtuall power of their prisoner These are some few of the causes and reasons which moved me to deliver that paper to Mr. Corbet which I am ready to justifie with my life and should hold it a great honour to dye for the honourable and holy Lawes of the Land that which will save this Land from destruction is an Act of Oblivion and his Majesties gracious generall pardon the Souldiers their Arrears and euery man his own and truth and Peace established in the Land and a favourable regard had to the satisfaction of tender Consciences April 29. 1547. David Ienkins THE ARMIES INDEMNITY WITH ADDITION Together with a DECLARATION SHEWING How every Subject of ENGLAND ought to be tried for Treasons Felonies and all other Capital Crimes as is set down in the Lawes of the LAND By DAVID IENKINS now Prisoner in the Tower of London Printed in the Yeare 1648. The Armies Imdemnity c. UPon the publishing of the Ordinance of the 22 of May last for the Indemnity of the Army certaine Gentlemen well affected to the peace of the Kingdome and safety of the Army desired mee to set down in writing whether by the Law of the Land the said Ordinance did secure them from danger as to
116. The Writ of summoning the Commons is to doe and to cons●nt to such things which shall happen to bee ordained by Common Counsell there viz. in the Parliament p. 25.26.115 The Parliament is a Corporation composed of the King the head and the Lords and Commons the Subject body p. 5. l. 22. p. 19.20.49.50.80.122.142.145.146 And it hath power over our Lives Libertyes Lawes and Goods p. 118. The Court of Parliament is onely in the House of Lords where the King sits in person p. 116.122.144 The Office of the Lords is to Counsell the King in time of Peace and to defend him in time of War p. 116.142 It belongs to the House of Lords to reforme erroneous Iudgements given in the Kings Bench to redresse the delayes of Courts of Iustice to receive all Petitions to advise his Majesty with their Counsell to have their Votes in Voting or abrogating of Laws and to propose for the Common good what they conceive meet p. 33. How Errours in Iudgement are reversed by the House of Lords p. 55. At a Conferrence the Commons are alwaies uncovered and stand when the Lords sit with their hats on which shewes that they are not Colleagues in Iudgement with the Lords p. 147. Every Member of the House of Commons takes the Oath of Allegiance and Supremacy before his admission into the House p. 67.133 Briberies Extortions Monopolyes ought to bee enquired after by the House of Commons and complained of to the King and Lords p. 114. It belongs to the House of Commons to represent the Grievances of the Countrey to grant Aydes for the King upon all fit occasions extraordinary to assent to the making or abrogating Lawes p. 33.115 116 117 118. Because making of new and abrogating of old Lawes both induce Novelties and because Bils in both Houses may passe but by one or two voices or very few and perhaps of no Iudicious men who oftentimes carry it by making the Major part which involves the consent of all therefore the Law makes the King assisted therein by a great number of Grave Learned and Prudent men the Judge of those Bils whether they be necessary for the Publique Good or no. p. 32 3● 53.57.123 And the King upon all Bills hath liberty of assenting or dissenting p. 18.28.39.111 And in case of the Kings Minority the Protector hath his liberty and negative voice in respect of the King p. 52. The styles of the Acts printed from 9. Hen. 3. to 1. Hen. 7. were either the King Ordaines at his Parliament c. Or the King Ordaineth by the advice of his Prelates and Barons and at the humble petition of the Commons c. In Hen. 7. time the style was altered and hath so continued to this day p. 24.71 No Act of Parliament bindes the Subject without the assent of the King p. 71.72 When an Act of Parliament is against common Right or Reason or repugnant or impossible to bee performed the Common Law shall controle it and adjudge it to be void And such is an Act for a perpetual Parliament p. 139. An Act of Parliament that a man shall bee Iudge in his own cause is a voyd Act. p. 139. An Adjournment of the parliament makes no S●ssion p. 137. There is no S●ssion till a prorogation or dissolution of the Parliament p. 137. All the Acts of one S●ssion relate to the first day of the Parliament p 138. The two Houses ought to take care of the preservation of the Kings Person p. 18. The Lords and Commons cannot assent to any thing that tends to the disinherison of the King and his Crown to which they are sworn p. 11. The two Houses ought not to meddle with the Kings Revenue p. 11. Armes are not to be borne in London or Westminster in time of Parliament p. 8.39 The Priviledge of Parliament protects no man in case of Treason or ●elony p. 15.16 78. Parliaments are as the times are if a turbulent Faction prevailes the Parliament are wicked if the times be sober modest prudent and not biassed the Parliament are right good honourable and good Medicines and Salves p. 41.42 The present Parliament THis Parliament beganne 3. Novemb. 1640 and in the beginning thereof the King acquitted the Ship-Money Knighthood-Money seven Courts of Justice consented to a Tri●niall parliament setled the Forrest bounds tooke away the Clarke of the Market of the Houshold trusted the Houses with the Navy passed an Act not to dissolve this Parliament without the Houses assent No people in the world so free if they could have been content with Lawes Oathes and Reason and nothing more could nor can bee devised to serve us neither hath been in any time before p. 3● Notwithstanding all this Jan. 10. 1641. the King was driven away from London by frequent Tumults and 2. thirds and more of the Lords had deserted that House for the same cause and the greater put of the House of Commons left that House also for the same reason New men chosen in their places against Law by the pretended Warrant of a counterfeit Seale and in the Kings name against his consent leavying War against Him and seizing his Forts Ports Magazins and Revenue and converting them to his destruction the subversion of the Law and Land laying Taxes on the people never head of before in this Land devising new Oathes to oppose the Forces raised by the King c. p. 35. From the 3 Novem. 1640. u●●o Ian. 10 164● they had time to persecute all evil Counsellors and Iudges p 17 4● From that time the King was driven away the two Houses stood in opposition to the king and his power p. 66. This became no Parliament when the King with whom they should parley was driven away and it continues so whilst his Majestic is restrained as a prisoner p. 35.81 And the houses now severed from the King have no power at all no more than the body hath being severed from the head p. 80.112 The 2. Houses do not now act by the Kings Writ but contrary to it p. 121. And so their Acts are Null p. 122 141. The Act for continuing this parliament so long as both Houses please is voyd because it is 1. Against Common right for thereby the parliament men will not pay their debts And they may doe wrong to other men Impune besides the utter destruction of all mens actions who have to doe with Parliament men by the Statute of Limitation 21. Jacob. 2. Against common reason for parliaments were made to redresse publique Grievances not to make them 3. Impossible the Death of his Majesty whom God long preserve dissolving it necessarily 4. Repugnant to the Act for a Trienniall parliament and to the Act for holding a parliament once a yeare p. 139.140 The end of continuing this parliament was to raise Credit for mony for three purposes And the three ends of the Act being determined it agreeth with Law and Reason the Act should end p. 141. A perpetuall parliament
Roys ' avisera or n● veul● it was against Magna Charta Articuli Cleri and many other Acts of Parliament And might have farther given these reasons if it had so pleased him for the same First that this Bill destroyes the Writ whereby they are made two Houses of Parliament 14 Hen. 7. fol. 22. Evesque est signior de grand honne●r the King in the Writ being ●um praelaris colloquium habtre Secondly they have been in all Parliaments since we had any and voted but in such wherein they themselves were concerned And there have been Bishops here sithence we were Christians and the Fundamentall Law of the Kingdome approves of them If any of them were conceived offensive they were left to Justice and his Majesty would put in inoffensive men in their places but sithence his Majesty hath passed the Bill for taking away their Vores in Parliament it is a Law that bindes us so farre Upon the whole matter the Law hath notably determined that Billa agreed by both Houses pretended to be for the publick good are to be judged by the King for in all Kings Reignes Bils have been preferred by both Houses which alwaies are pretended to be for the publique good and many times are not and were rejected with Roy's auisera or Roy ne veult This Parliament began the 3 of Novemb. 1640. before that time in all the kings reign no armed power did force any of the people to doe any thing against the Law what was done was by his Judges Officers Refers and Ministers from that time untill the 10. os Ia. 1641. when the King went from London to avoyd the danger of frequent tumults being a year and 3 months Privie Counsellors and all his Justices Ministers were lest to the Justice of the Law there wanted not time to punish punishable men The Sphere of the House of Commons is to represent the grievances of the Countrey to grant aydes for the King upon all fit occasions extraordinary to assent to the making or abrogating of Lawes The Orb of the House of Lords to reforme erroneous judgements given in the Kings Bench to redresse the delayes of Courts of Justice to receive all Petitions to advise his Majesty with their Councell to have their Votes in making or abrogating of Lawes and to propose for the common good what they conceive meet Lex non cogit ad impossibilia Subjects are not to expect from Kings impossible things so many Judges Councellours Sheriffes Justices of the Peace Commissioners Ministers of State that the King should over-looke them all cannot be it is impossible The King is vertually in his ordinary Courts of Justice so long as they continue his Courts their charge is to administer the Lawes in being and not to delay deferre o● sell Justice for any Commandment of the King We have Lawes enough Instrumenta boni saeculi sunt bon● viri good Ministers as Judges and Officers are many times wanting the houses propose new Lawes or abrogation of the old both induce novelty the Law for the reasons aforesaid makes the King the onely Judge who is assisted therein by a great number of grave learned and prudent men as aforesaid For the considerations aforesaid the Kings Party adheared to him the ●aw of the Lnnd is their Birth-●ight their Guide no offence is committed where that is not violated they found the Commission of A●●ray warrauted by the Law they found the King in this Parliament to have quitted the Sh●-money Knighthood-money seven Courts of Justice consented to a Triennall Parliament setled the Forrest hounds tooke away the Cearke of the Market of the houshold trusted the House with the Navy passed an Act not to d●●olve this Parliament without the Houses assent no people in the world so free if they could have been content with Lawes Oathes and rea●●● and nothing more could or can be devised to secure us neither hath been in any time Notwithstanding all this we found the King driven from London by frequent tumults that two thirds an dt more of the Lords had disserted tha House for the same cause and the greater part of the House of Commons left that House also for the same reason new men chosen in their places against Law by the pretended Warrant of a connterfet Seale and in the Kings name against his consent leavying Warre against him and seizing his Ports Forts Magazines and Revenue and converting them to his destruction and the subversion of the Law and Land laying Taxes on the people never heard of before in this Land devised new Oathes to oppose Forces raised by the King nor to adhere to him but to them in this Warre which they call the 〈◊〉 the Oath and the V. W. and Covenant By severall wayes never used in this kingdome they have raised Monies to foment this Warre and especially to inrich some among them namely first Ex●is secondly Contributions thirdly Sequestrations fourthly Fift-parts fiftly Twentieth-parts sixtly 〈◊〉 money seventhly Sale of Plundered gpods eightly Loanes ninthly Benedolentes tenthly 〈◊〉 upon their fast-dayes eleventhly new Impo●tions upon Merchand●res twelfely G●ards maintained upon the charge of private men thirteenthly Fifty Sub●●dies at ●●e time fourteenthly Composs●●ons with such as they call Delinquents fifteentlaly Sale of Bishpp● Lands c. From the Kings Party meanes of subsistance are taken 〈◊〉 R 3. cap. 3 Bract. li. 3. c. 8. Stanford 192. Sir Ger. Fl●●twoods Case S. pars Cook 7. H. 〈◊〉 ●ast leafe before any Indictment their Lands seized their goods taken the Law allowes a Traytor or Fellon attained Necessaria sibi familiae suae invictu vestitu where i● the Covenant Where is the Petition of Right Where is the liberty of the Subject First we have ayded the King in this Warre contrary to the Negative Oath and other Votes Our Warrant is the twenty fifth of Edward the third the second Chapter and the said resolutions of all the Judges Secondly 〈◊〉 Ins●it a 25. a Instit 696 The Law so at the Edition of that booke Hutton and Crook we have maintained the Commission of Array by the Kings Command contrary to their Votes We are warranted by the Statute of the fifth of Henry the fourth and the judgement of Sir Edward Cooke the ●●cle of the Law as they call him Thirdly we maintained Arch● Bisho●● and Bishops whom they would suppresse Our warrant is Magna-Charta and many Statutes more Fourthly we have maintained the Booke of Common may●r they suppresse it Our warrant is five acts of Parliament in Edward the fixt and Queene Elizabeths time 5 Pelchae 35 Elizabeth inter placita Coronae in Ban●● Regis New booke of Entries fol. 252. Penry for publishing two scandalous Libels against the Church Government was indicted arraigned attainted and executed at Tyburne Fiftly we maintained the Militi●● of the Kingdome to belong to the King they the contrary Our warrant is the Statute of the seventh of Edward the first and many Statutes ●●thence
60. 4. p. inst p. 1. It is true the King cannot controule or prevent his other Courts for that they are his ordinary Courts of common Justice to administer common right unto all men according to the fixed Lawes The Houses make no Court without the King they are no Bodie corporate without the King nor Parliament without the King they all make one corporate Bodie one Court called the Parliament whereof the King is the Head and the Court is in the Lords House where the King is present and as a man is no man without a head so the Houses severed from the King as now they are have no power at all and they themselves by levying War against the King and imprisoning of him have made the Statute for not dissolving adjourning or proroguing this Parliament of no effect by the said Acts of their own they sit to no purpose without his assent to their Bills they will not suffer him to consult with them and treat and reason with them whereby He may discerne what Bils are fit to passe and what not which in all Ages the Kings of this Land have enjoyed as their undoubted Rights and therefore they sit to no purpose by their own disobedience and fault For the ordinary Courts at Westminster 27. H. 8. c. ●4 28. H. 8.11 Dier the Judges in all those Courts are Judges by the Kings patent or Writ otherwise they are no Judges the Houses can make no Judges 2. ● 3.11 they are no Judges at all who are made by them the whole and sole power of making Judges belongs to the King the King cannot controul or prevent his own Judges from ●itting and acting but the Houses He may for they are not the Kings Judges but the judges of the ●● Houses In his other Courts the King commits his power to his Judges by his patent and they are sworne to do common right to all men and the King is sworn not to let them from so doing the King cannot judge in those Courts nor controul but the King is both Judge and Controuler in the Court of Parliament Quoad Acts for his assent or dissent doth give life or death to all Bills Many Lawyers have much to answer to God this Kingdom and to posteritie for puzling the people of this Land with such Fancies as the Gentleman who wrote the Answer to my Paper and others have published in these Troubles which have been none of the least causes of the raising and continuing of them And so I have done with the first part of this Answer AD. 2. For the Non sequitur in the second Section of the Gentl. Answer the Antecedent and the Consequent are his own Quem recitas meus est O Fidentine libellus Sed malè dum recitas incipit esse tuus My words are that the King is not virtually in the two Houses at Westminster to enable them to grant pardons for that whole and sole power by the Law belongs to the King My paper hath no such thing 27. H. 8. c. 24. as that the Kings power cannot be derived to others or the virtue of his power For his power and the virtue of his power ● in all patents to his Judges in har●ers to Corporations in Commission of all sorts and in the Parliament assembled by force of his Writ of Summons so long as they obey him but when they renounce that power and claim it not from the King and declare to the Kingdom that he is not in condition to govern and imprison him and usurp to themselves all Royal Authoritie as the two Houses now do no reasonable man can affirme that they Act by the power of their Prisoner who hath no power to give them that by force of Armes take all power unto themselves The Gent saith The King grants Commissions dayly of Oyre and Terminer which he cannot frustrate nor elude The King may revoke and discharge the Commission by his Writ as he may remove all Judges and place other men in their room and any Kings death determines all the Judges Patents at Westminster Hal Commission of Oyre and Terminer c And so he might dissolve both Houses in all times 4. ● 4.39 5. ● 4.4 1. Eli● Dier 165. 1. Mar. Brooks case 〈◊〉 by his Writ under the Great Seal untill that in this Parliament by his own concession the King of his goodnesse had secluded himselfe which goodnesse hath been full ill requited The Gentl. affirmes That the power the Parliament hath is concurrent from the King and Kingdom which he conceives is proved by the grant of Subsidies to the King by the Parliament 4. pars 〈◊〉 pag. The mistaking of this word Parliament hath been mischievous in these times to this Land and it is affectedly mistaken which makes the sin the greater for the two Houses are not the Parliament as before is declared and at this time so to inculcate it when all men know that of the 120. Peers of this Kingdom who were temporal Peers before the Troubles there are now not above 30. in the Lords House and in the House of Commons about 200. of the principal Gentlemen of the Kingdom left the House and adhered to his Majesty who is imprisoned by them shewes no such candor as is to be desired It is true that no Tallage can be laid upon the people of this Land but by their consent in Parliament as appeareth by the Lawes mentioned in the Margent but you shall finde in M. Seldens learned Book called Mare clausum a number of presidents in Henry the Thirds time for Ship-mony justly condemned this Parliament to the which his Majesty assented and in truth that Ship-money was condemned before by the said two Statutes of 25. E. 1 34. E. 1. de Tallagio non concedendo 25. E. 1. confirmatio chartarum c. 6. 34. H. 1. c. 1. de Tallagio non concedendo Dangelet Englishely and many grievous Burthens were laid upon the people and born untill that memorable Princes time But I am of opinion that the common Law of the Land did alwayes restrain Kings from all Subsidies and Tallages but by consent in Parliament which doth appear by Magna Charta the last chapter where the Prelates Lords and Communalty gave the King the fifteenth part of their moveables In truth it is no manner of consequence because the King cannot take what he pleaseth of the Subjects goods that therefore they have a concurrent power in Parliament there have been many Parliaments and no Subsidies granted parliaments may be without Subsidies but Subsidies cannot be without parliaments of ancien● times parliaments rarely granted any unlesse it were in the time of forr●igne Warres and in my time Queen Elizab. refused a Subsidie granted in parliament and in the parliament of 1. Iac. none were granted The Gentl. should make a conscience of blinding the people with such untrue colours to to the ruine of the King and people AD. 3. The Gentl.
the Parliament time by all the Members of the House of Commons and is required by the Law to be taken in all Parliaments otherwise they have no power nor colour to meddle with the publick Affaires This Oath being taken in Parliament that the King is the only and Supream Governour in al causes then it followes in Parliament causes over all persons then over the two Houses Let them keep this Oath and we shall bee sure of Peace in the Land and good Lawyers ought to desire peace both for the publicke good and their private and not dishonour that Noble profession as many doe in this miserable time The Gent. sayes Wee do not swear that the King is above all Law nor above the safety of his people neither do we so swear but his Majesty and we will sweare to the contrary and have sworne and have made good and will by Gods grace make good our Oath to the world that the KING is not above the Lawe nor above the safety of his people the Law and the safety of his people are his safety his Honour and his Strength AD 8. The Gent. concludes That Acts of Parliament are not formaly binding nor compleat without the Kings assent yet the Houses have a virtual power with out the Kings particular assent to doe things in order to publique justice and Safety viz. In setting up the Excise in raising and maintaining of Armes in Taxing the people at pleasure with Fifth and Twentieth part Fifty Subsidies Sequestrations Loans Compositions imprisoning the King abolishing the Common prayer Book felling the Churchs Lands c. all these are in order to the publick Justice and Safety Mr. H. P. you are of my profession I beseech you for the good of your Country for the Honour of our Science perswade your selfe and others as much as in you lies to beleeve and follow the monition and councell of that memorable reverend and profoundly Learned in the Lawes and Customes of the Land the Lord COOKI 3 par Inst pag 36. who writes as becomes a great and a learned Iudge of the Law a person much magnified by the two Houses in these words Peruse over all Books Records and Histories and you shall finde a Principle in Law a Rule in Reason and a Triall in Experience that Treason doth ever produce farall and finall destruction to the offender and never attains to the desired end two incidents inseparably thereun●o therefore let al men abandon it as the poysonou● bait of the divil follow the Precept in Holy Scripture SERVE GOD HONOUR THE KING AND HAVE NO COMPANY WITH THE SEDITIOVS Conclusion I say againe that without an Act of Oblivion a gratious Generall pardon from his Majesty the arrears of the Souldiers paid a favourable regard had to tender Consciences the●e will he neither Truth nor Peace in this Land nor any mans●cure of any thing he hath By me David Jenkins Prisoner in the Tower A DISCOURSE TOVCHING The Inconveniencies of a Long-continued PARLIAMENT A Perpetuall Parliament is repugnant to the Act made this Parliament for a Triennial Parliament for how can every three yeares a Parliament beginne if this bee perpetuall which may bee so if the two Houses please 2. An adjournment of the Parli●ment makes no Session 4 pars institut fol. 27. Howbeit before the adjournment the KING gives His Royall assent to some Bills Cookeibid 3. There is no Session till a Prorogation or dissolution of the Parliament 4. This Parliament as appe●res by the Act for not dissolving thereof set downe in the printed Statutes of this Parliament Plowd com 33.8 Bro. relation 35. Bro Parl. 86. D●● 1. Mariae 8 fol. 138. cannot be prorog●ed or dissolved but by Act of par liamènt There hath been as yet no Act of Parliament in that behalfe And therefore all the Acts of this Parliament are Acts of one Session 5. All Acts of one Session relate to the first day of the Parliament and all the Acts of such a Parliament are acts of one day so the Act for the Trienniall and the Act for this Perpetuall are two Acts of one day by the Law 6. 4 Ed. 3. cap. 36. Ed. 3. cap. 10. A Parliament is to be hol●en once every yeare and more often if need shall bee those Acts are confirmed by the Act for the Trienniall Parliament How doth a perpetuall Parliament agree with a Parliament once every yeare or with the intention of those Lawes How doth a Parliament every three-years agree with a Parliament for ever which may be if the two Houses please 7. The result is this at●ent day in Law this Parliament two acts have passed for howbeit the one was in 16 Carol. and the other in 17 Carol. yet both in Law are Acts of one day the one saith there shall be a Trienniall Parliament after the end of the sitting of this Parliament The other this Parliament shall sit for ever if they please The one will have a Parliament with an end the other a Parliament without an end When an Act of Parliament is against common Right or Reason 1 Pars. Doct. Bon. hams case ●o 11 8. 8. E. 3 3.30.33 E. cassa●it 32. 27. H. G. Anuity 41. 1. Eliz. D●er 113. or repugnant or impossible to be performed the Common Law shall controle it and adjudg this Act to be void they are the words of the Law An Act of Parliament that a Man shall be judg in his own Cause is a void Act. Hobbart Fol. 120. Begin with Common Right It is against Common Right that indebted men should not pay their debts That if any Member of the House of Commons doe any Subject wrong by disseising him of his land or dispossessing him of his goods or blasting of his fame or doing violence to his person that such persons during their lives should not be questioned by a Priviledg of Parliament and that extended also to many other beside themselves common right doth abhor these Enormities which a perpetuall Parliament doth beget besides the utter destruction of al mens actions real personall or mixt 21. Iac c. 16. who have to doe with Parliament-men by the statute of Limitation which confines Suites to certaine yeares For Common Reason Parliaments were ordained for remedies to redresse publique greivances it is against reason they should make publique and insufferable Grievances The Law of the Land allowes no protection for any men imployed in the service of the Kingdome but for a yeare to be free from Suites and in many Suites none at all howbeit he be in such service 39. H. 6.39 but a Parliament perpetuall may prove a protection not for a yeare but for ever which is against all manner of reason For impossibility The death of his Majesty whose life God prolong dissolves 〈◊〉 necessarily for the Writ of Summons i● Carolus Rex in hoc individuo and Carolus Rex is in this particular habiturus colloquium tractatum cum prelat is
and in laying Burdens upon the people and in breaking all the Oathes Vowes and promises they ever made As the Army hath power 2 3 E 6. c. 2. 11 H 7 c. 1. Calvins case 7. pars Cook fol. 11 so now adhering to the King all the Lawes of God Nature and Man are for them their Armies are just and blessed and the King is bound in justice to reward his Deliverers with honour profit and meere Liberty of conscience To the VI. Quaere All the sixth Quaere containes calumnies cast upon the Army the new Elections are against all the Lawes mentioned in the Margin and are against the Ejection of the old Members and by this it may be judged 11 M 4 c. 1 1-h 5 0 1.8 h 6 c. 7 23 h. 6 c. 15. what a House of Commons we have By the said Lawes it appeares that if any undue returne be made the person returned is to continue a Member the Sheriffes punishment is two hundred pounds one to the King and the other to the party that is duly elected Imprisonment for a yeare without Bail or mainprize and that person who is unduly returned shall serve at his own charge and have no benefit at the end of the Parliament by the Writ De solutione Militum Civium Burgensium Parliament And the trial of the falsity of the returne is to be before the Justices of Assizes in the proper county or by action of Debt in any Court of Record This condemnes the Committee for undue Elections 3. Ed. 4.20.5 Ed. 4.42 which hath been practised but of late times for besides these Lawes it is a-Maxime of the Common Law art Averment is not receivable against the returne of the Sheriffe for his Returne is upon Oath which Oath is to be credited in that Suit wherein the Returne is made The said Statutes condemne Elections of such men who were not res●ant and dwelt in the County or Boroughs for which they were returned and any abusive practise of late times to the contrary is against the Law and ought not to be allowed To the VII Quaere The Quaerist saith that the Votes of the Independents in the Houses were arbitrary exorbitant and irregular and that they disposed and singred more of the common Treasure than others That whole Quare I believe is false and slande●ous and the Author ought to make it good or else to undergo the Law of Talnio 37. Ed. 5. c. 17. which is to suffer such punishment failing of his poof as the accused should in case of proofe made To the VIII Quaere This Quaere is all minatory and threatning and the contrary of every part is true by the deliverance of the King and Kingdom from the bondage of that party in the 2 Houses by the Army their renown will be eversasting they secure themselves they content and please the Kingdome City and Countrey as appeares by their confluence to see his Majesty and the Army and their acclamations for his Majesties safety and restitution all which doth evidence to every one of the army how acceptable the intentions of the Army are to the people of this Land who have been so long inthralled Sir Thomas Fairfa● let your Worthinesse remember your extraction and your Ladies by the grace and favour of the Prince to be in the ranke of Nobility Remember what honour and glory the present Age and all posterity will justly give to the Restorer of the King to his Throne of the Lawes to their strength and of the afflicted people of this Land to peace Let the Colonels and Commanders under You and likewise your Souldiery rest assured that they shall not only share in the renowne of this Action but also shall have such remuneration as their haughty Courage and so high a virtue doth deserve This his Majesty can and will do the Houses neither will nor can and God blesse you all and prosper you I Conclude all as I have alwayes done without an Act of Oblivion a generall pardon the arrears of the Souldiery paid and a regard to Liberty of conscience this Kingdom will certainly be ruined Iudge Ienkins PLEA delivered into the Earl of Manchester and the Speaker of the House of COMMONS Sitting in the CHANCERY at WESTMINSTER Which was read by their Command in open Court the 14th of Febr. 1647. And there avowed By DAVID IENKINS Prisoner in NEVVGATE LONDON Printed In the Yeare 1648. Judge Jenkin's PLEA Delivered in to the Earle of Manchester and the Speaker of the House of COMMONS sitting in the CHANCERY at WESTMINSTER I Have been required to appear in the Chancery the Twelfth of this instant February before Commissioners appointed by the two Houses for the keeping of their Great Seal and managing the Affaires of the Chancery I cannot nor ought nor will submit to this power I am a Judge sworne to the Lawes The Law is First that this Court is C●ram R●g● in Cancellaria 4 pars instfol 79 ● E 4 fol 5 ● E 4 f 15 Secondly the Chancellor or Keeper of the great Seale is by delivery of the Great Seale to him by the KING and by taking of an Oath The Oath followeth in these words 1. 42 pars in●● 10 R 2 rot Parlanum ● Well and truly to serve our Sovcraigne Lord the King and his people in that Office 2. To do right to all manner of people poor and rich after the Laws and usages of this Realm 3. Truly to Counsell the King and his Coun cell to conceate and keep 4. Not to suffer the hurt or disheriting of the King or that the rights of the Crown be decreased by any means ●●farre as he may let it 5. If he may not let it be shall ma● it clearly and expresly to be knowne t● the King with his advice and coun● sell 6. And that be shall do and purchase the Kings profit in all that he reasonably may as God him help and the contents of Gods book The said Commissioners among others have Imprisoned their King Declar. 17 Ian. 1647 have declared to the Kingdome that they will make no Addresses or Applications to him nor receive any from him Have counterfeited a new great Seal Articulisup chartrs c. 5 and after destroyed the true old great Seale which belonged by the Law to the Kings custody These Commissioners have had no Seale delivered to them by his Majesty have taken no such Oath or full ill kept it and for these evident reasons grounded upon the sundamental Lawes of this Land these Commissioner have neither Court Scale or Commission and therefore I ought not against ●he Lawes against my knowledg and against my conscience submit to their power To affir●e that they maintaine the Kings power and authority in relation to His Lawes as they often do and restraine only his person is strange They must be remembred that the House of commons this Parliament gave in charge to Mr. Solicitor upon the prosecution of the