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

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Title to their rude and indigested Opinions Howsoever from some or all of these Causes not a few of the former wicked and never to be justified Principles ignorant and unwarrantable endeavours and complaints have since Monarchical Government and our Laws and Liberties were so happily restored sprung up again and no sooner was our David brought back over Jordan but many a railing cursing and rebellious Shimei that had done more then cast stones against him and his Royal Father made haste and came with the men of Juda and Loyal party to meet him and as if they had not remembred all the mischiefs which they had done unto him his Brethren Royal Father Family and good people pretended that they had been greatly instrumental in it and having gain'd a very large and extensive Act of general Pardon and Oblivion which as to treason murder felony faction and rebellion the Loyal party needed not an Act of Parliament for confirmation of what their abusive Courts of Justice had done in matters of Judicature betwixt party and party in the inter regnum and times of Usurpation and another Act of Parliament to make honest free many Parents on earth from Adultery or Fornication and legitimate and un-bastar'd many of their Children begotten in a wrong way of Marriage solemnized in despite of the Laws and our Church of England before a Justice of Peace not in a Church but an Hall Parler or Chamber where that kind of Magistrate was a Knight or Gentleman or many times in a Shop when he was a Trades-man which the Kings faithful Subjects abhorred and some of them having warmed themselves by the Farming of the Kings Revenue and those grand and ever to be detested Artifices of Advance and defalcation which have so much cankred decayed and ruined it and others that li●ed their consciences with plundrings and sequestrations and Committee ungodly Emoluments did fall again to their former Trade and Engines of subverting our Laws and turning the Justice of the Kingdom into their Abortive projects and new-found Politiques and hoped in the end to recompence the loss of their possesion of the Lands of the King Queen Prince Nobility Gentry Bishops Dean and Chapters which they having purchased at an easie rate were taken from them and enforced to be restored and their hopes of gaining the Lands and Endowments of the Universities and Colledges which by a failing of Providers and some mistakes as they wickedly thought of Divine Dispensations or some Errors of their new lights they had unexpectedly lost And therefore summoned got together their mis-apprehensions and Invectives against that antient very legal rational custom of Fines to be Pay'd upon Original Writs where the Debt or Damage exceeded Forty Pounds which from the Year 1651. unto his Majesties happy Return unto his Throne had by their Rebellions and ungrounded clamors against the payment of them to make a mis●lead people the more willing and able to continue and contribute to a War against their consciences and eternal happiness been taken away or laid to sleep In order whereunto in a Book Entituled the Wants of England Printed in the year 1667. it was among other things offered to the consideration of both Houses of Parliament that according to the law of God and other Christian States Christian clemency gentleness and mercy and the antient Laws and Customes of this Kingdom no person be for any new debt cast in prison but be left at liberty to work out his Debt by industry In the year 1669. a Petition was exhibited to the King and both Houses of Parliament that in Actions of Debt there may be no Arrest or Imprisonment of the Debtors Body but a Summons made at his House or hung at his door and for want of an Appearance his Goods and real Estate to be seized and the like in the year 1671. And in the same Year a Bill for an Act of Parliament was with great Importunity desired for the Registring of all Incumbrances of Land and of all Debts and Ingagements then which nothing could have more undone the greatest part of an Impoverished Nobility and Gentry by the late Wars and Taxes nor any thing more have Bankrupted Citizens and Trades-men whose Estates do consist in a great deal more in Credit and Opinion than in reality and substance But the promoters of those Innovations who endeavoured to pull in pieces our wellestablished Laws concerning Arrests and Outlaries did in those their Attempts speed no better then Balaak the King of Moab did by sending for Balaam to curse the children of Israel when notwithstanding his Erecting of several Altars and all his solicitations and promisses of Rewards he could not hinder him from blessing instead of cursing them for the wisdom of the King and Parliament and his Privy Councel did think it to be more for the good of the people to suspend their desires and Devises until the King might understand that there could be any reason cause or ground to alter or forsake the old Fundamental Laws so for many Ages well approved to comply with their humors ill designes but being willing to give what reasonable content he could to that small complaining part of the people without pre●judice damage to the universality greater number of his Subjects did as the fittest expedient and all that the Law could permit and his reason and Soveraignty perswade him to do for the allaying that distemper which had seised upon a sort of ignorant seditious unquiet spirited people whom no reason can satisfie but would set up their new devices which are never like to perform their Promises and Intendments And needed not as touching the taking away of the Process of Arrest Utlary to have troubled his Majesty and Parliament and themselves and others with such unwholsom and improbable Remedies for that which their Ignorance and Vain Imaginations only told them were Grievances but should rather have acquiesced in a due consideration that his Majesty did not hold it to be agreeable to Justice to abolish the Process of Arrest or Outlary or to change or take away the Fundamental Lawes which established or allowed of those Antient and legal kindes of Law proccedings as grant in the Year of our Lord 1664. by the advice of his Privy Councel his Commission for the relief of Poor and Distressed Prisoners under the Great Seal of England to the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury Bishops of London Winchester Rochester Lord Mayor of London for the time being Judges and Justices of the Courts of Kings Bench Master of the Rolls Judges of the Court of Common Pleas Barons of the Exchequer Chancellor of the Dutchy of Lancaster Masters of Requests and Chancery Attorney and Sollicitor-General and Attorney of the Dutchy of Lancaster Deans of St. Paul Westminster Lieutenant of the Tower of London Bishops Chancellors with the Advocats of the Court of the Arch Bishops of Canterbury and Bishop of London for th● time being c.