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A31599 The second part of the present state of England together with divers reflections upon the antient state thereof / by Edward Chamberlayne ...; Angliae notitia. Part 2 Chamberlayne, Edward, 1616-1703. 1671 (1671) Wing C1848; ESTC R5609 117,915 324

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Bench so called because anciently the King sometimes there sate in person on a high Bench and his Judges on a low Bench at his Feet to whom the Judicature belongs in the absence of the King In this Court are handled the Pleas of the Crown all things that concern loss of life or member of any Subject for then the King is concerned because the Life and Limbs of the Subject belong only to the King so that the Pleas here are between the King and the Subject Here are also handled all Treasons Felonies Breach of Peace Oppression Misgovernment c. This Court moreover hath power to examine and correct all Errors in facto in jure of all the Judges and Justices of England in their Judgements and Proceedings and this not only in Pleas of the Crown but in all Pleas Real Personal and mixt except only in the Exchequer In this High Court sit commonly Four Grave Reverend Judges whereof the First is stiled the Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench and is created not by Patent but by a short Writ thus Johanni Keeling Militi salutem Sciatis quod constituimus vos Justiciarium nostrum Capitalem ad placita coram nobis tenenda durante beneplacito nostro Teste me ipso apud Westm The rest of the Judges of the Kings Bench hold their places by Letters Patents in these words Rex omnibus ad quos praesentes literae pervenirint salutem Sciatis quod constituimus dilectum fidelem Richardum Rainsford Militem unum Justiciariorum ad placita coram nobis tenenda durante beneplacito nostro Teste c. These Judges and all the Officers belonging to this Court have all Salaries from the King and the chief of them have Robes and Liveries out of the great Wardrobe In this Court all young Lawyers that have been called to the Bar are allowed to plead and practice This Court may grant Prohibitions to keep other Courts both Ecclesiastical and Temporal within their Bounds and due Jurisdiction The Jurisdiction of this Court is general and extendeth to all England is more uncontroulable than any other Court for the Law presumes that the King is alwayes there in person None may be Judge in this Court unless he be a Serjeant of the Degree of the Coif that is a Serjeant at Law who upon taking this high Degree is obliged to wear a Lawn Coif under his Cap for ever after A List of the several Officers belonging to His Majesties Court of Kings-Bench LOrd Chief Justice Sir John Keeling Knight Justices are Sir Thomas Twisden Knight and Baronet Sir Richard Rainsford Knight Sir William Morton Knight Clerk of the Crown Sir Thomas Fanshaw Knight his Secondary Jasper Waterhouse Esquire Protonotary Sir Robert Henley Knight his Secondary William Livesay Esquire Marshal or Keeper of the Kings Bench Prison Stephen Mosedell Esquire Custos Brevium Justinian Paget Esquire Andrew Vivean and Francis Woodward Clerks of the Paper Office Sealer of the Writs Edward Coleman Gilbert Barrel Clark of the Rules Clerk of the Errors Henry Field George Bradford Clerk for Filing Declarations a Cryer Porter and some other inferiour Officers Then there are Filacers for the several Counties of England whose Office is in this Court to make out all Process upon original Writs as well real as personal and mixt They were lately these that follow Humphrey Ironmonger Edward Parnel James Buck Samuel Astrey Francis Greg John Hynde Thomas Stone Thomas Leach Gilbert Eveleigh Henry Ewin Joshua Langrige William Oglethorp John Philips William Osborn Rob. Hyde and Anthony Rouse The manner of Tryals in this and all other Common Law Courts in England being different from that of all other Countries and peculiar to England shall be at large described apart in a Chapter with other peculiars Of the Court of Common Pleas. THe next Court for execution of Laws is the Court of Common-Pleas so called because there are debated the usual Pleas between Subject and Subject Some say this Court as well as other Courts were at first held in the Kings House wheresoever he resided but by the Statute of Magna Charta it was ordained that this Court should not be ambulatory but be held at a certain place and that hath ever since been in Westminster-Hall None but Serjeants at Law may plead in this Court and so many of them as the King shall appoint are bound by oath to assist all that have any Cause depending in that Court This Court may grant prohibitions as the Court of the Kings Bench doth The chief Judge in this Court is called the Lord Chief Justice of the common-Common-Pleas or of the Common-Bench holdeth his place by Letters Patent durante bene placite and so do the other inferiour Judges of this Court whereof there are commonly three In this Court all Civil Causes Real and Personal are usually tryed according to the strict Rule of the Law Real Actions are pleadable in no other Court nor Fines levyed or Recoveries suffered but only in this Court at Westminster The King allows to the Lord Chief Justice of this Court a Fee Reward Robes and two Tun of Wine ●s is done to the Lord Chief Justice of the other Bench also to the other Judges of this Court and to four Serjeants is allowed Fees Reward and Robes to each one In the 11th and 12th of Edward 3. there were eight Judges belonging to the Common Pleas at other times seven six and five and so in the time of Henry 6. and Edward 4. but since usually but four as at this day Before the Reign of Queen Mary these and the rest or the twelve Judges rode upon Mules and not upon Horses as they now do in great State a● the beginning of the Term. A List of the several Officers belonging to His Majesties Court of common-Common-pleas LOrd Chief Justice Sir John Vaughan Kt. Sir Thomas Tyrrel Kt. Sir John Archer Kt. Sir William Wylde Kt. and Bar. these are the present Judges of that Tribunal Then there is an Officer called Custos Brevium the first Clerk of the Court whose Office it is to receive and keep all Writs returnable in that Court to receive of the Protonotaries all the Records of Nisi Prius called Postea's He holdeth his Place by Patent from the King and hath the Gift of the second Protonotary's Place and of the Clerk of the Juries· Sir Joseph Ash hath this Office and doth execute it by his Deputy Thursby Esquire There are three Protonotaries a word compounded of Greek and Latin which with the Antients was usual and signifies the first Notaries they are chief Clerks of this Court and by their Office are to enter and inroll all Declarations Pleadings which the Filazers did formerly promiscuously do Assises Judgments and Actions to make out Judicial Writs c. These considerable Offices are in the hands of Thomas Robinson Alan Lockhart and Humphrey Wirley Esquires The Chirographer also from two Greek words signifying to acknowledge a Debt by setting ones
Borough of Cricklade Sir George Hungerford Kt. Sir John Earnely Kt. Borough of Great Bedwin Sir John Trevor Kt. Henry Clerk Esq Borough of Lugdersal William Ashburnham Esq Thomas Gray Esq Borough of Old Sarum Edward Nicholas Esq Sir Eliab Harvey Kt. Borough of Wooten Basset Sir Walter St. John Bar. John Pleydal Esq Borough of Marleborough John Lord Seymour Jeoffery Daniel Esq Worcester Sir John Packington Bar. Samuel Sandys Sen. Esq City of Worcester Sir Rowland Berkly Kt. Thomas Street Esq Borough of Droitwich Henry Coventry Esq Samuel Sandys Jun. Esq Borough of Evesham Sir John Hanmer Kt. Sir James Rushout Kt. Borough of Bewdly Sir Henry Herbert Kt. York Conyers Darcy Esq Sir Thomas Slingsby Kt. City of York Sir Metcalf Robinson Kt. Sir Thomas Osborn Bar. Town of Kingston upon Hull Anthony Gilby Esq Andrew Marvel Gent. Borough of Knaersborough Sir John Talbot Kt. William Stockdale Esq Borough of Scarborough Sir Phillip Munckton Esq William Thompson Esq Borough of Rippon Sir Jo. Nicholas Kt. of the Bath Thomas Burwell Dr. of Laws Borough of Richmond Sir William Killegrew Kt. Marmaduke Darcy Esq Borough of Heydon Henry Guy Esq Sir Hugh Bethel Kt. Borough of Burrowbridge Sir Rich. Malevere Kt. and Bar. Robert Long Esq Borough of Malton William Palmes Esquire Sir Thomas Gowre Kt. Borough of Thirske Sir Thomas Ingram Kt. Will. Franklin Esquire Borough of Aldborough Sir Soloman Swale Bar. Sir Francis Goodrick Kt. Borough of Beverley Michael Wharton Esquire Sir John Hotham Bar. Borough of North-Allerton Sir Gilbert Gerard Kt. and Bar. Roger Talbot Esquire Borough of Ponfract Sir John Dawney Kt. Sir William Lowther Kt. Barons of the Cinque Ports Port of Hastings Edward Waller Esquire Sir Denny Ashburnham Bar. Town of Winchelsea Francis Finch Esquire Robert Austin Gent. Town of Rye Sir John Robinson Kt. and Bar. Sir Jo. Austin Bar. Port of New Rumney Sir Charles Sidley Bar. Sir Norton Knatchbull Bar. Port of Hyth John Harvey Esquire Sir Henry wood Kt. and Bar. Port of Dover George Montague Esquire Edward Lord Hinchenbroke Port of Sandwich Jo. Strode Esquire James Thurbarne Esquire Port of Seaford Sir William Thomas Kt. and Bar. Nicholas Pelham Esquire WALES Anglesey Nicholas Bagnall Esquire Town of Bewmorris John Robinson Esquire Brecon Edward Progers Esquire Town of Brecon Sir Herbert Price Bar. Cardigan Edward Vaughan Esquire Town of Cardigan Sir Charles Cotterel Kt. Carmarthen Sir Henry Vaughan Kt. Town of Carmarthen John Lord Vaughan Knight of the Bath Carnarvon Sir Richard Wynne Bar. Town of Carnarvon William Griffith Esquire Denbigh John Wynne Esquire Town of Denbigh Sir John Salisbury Bar. Flint Sir Thomas Hanmer Bar. Town of Flint Roger Whitely Esquire Glamorgan Sir Edward Mansel Bar. Town of Cardiffe Robert Thomas Esquire Merioneth Henry Wynne Esquire Pembroke Arthur Owen Esquire Town of Haverdford-West Sir Frederick Hyde Kt. Town of Pembroke Rowland Lagherne Esquire Montgomery Andrew Newport Esquire Town of Montgomery Henry Herbert Esquire Radnor Sir Richard Lloyd Kt. Town of Radnor Sir Edward Harley Kt. of the Bath Note that some Knights and Burgesses being lately deceased others are not yet elected in their Room Of the Executive Power in Temporal Matters A Brief account of the Legislative power in Temporall affairs having been given next may be considered the Executive power in those affairs and that is generally in the King he is the Fountain of Justice he is the Fountain of Justice he is the Lord Chief Justice of England and therefore as all the Laws of England are called the Kings Laws because he is Caput Principium Finis Parliamenti by which the Laws are made and that nothing can have the Force of a Law but what he wills so all the Courts of Judicature are called the Kings Courts and all the Judges of those Courts are called the Kings Judges The highest Court of Judicature in England is the House of Lords in Parliament so that the Parliament is not only Concilium but Curia a Court of Judicature consisting as aforementioned of all the Lords Spiritual and Temporal as Judges and these assisted with the most grave and eminent Lawyers of England both in Common and Civil Law To the Judicature of this Supreme and most Honourable Court all other Courts and Persons that are Subjects of England are Subject and accountable for all Crimes not properly tryable remediable or punishable in other inferiour Courts of Justice and to this Court all last Appeals are to be made and from whose Sentence there lies no appeal but to a succeeding Parliament and this supreme Judicatory or Judicial Power lyes only in the King and House of Lords and at the Bar of this High Court may the House of Commons as the Grand Inquest of the Nation impeach the highest Subject of England whether of the Clergy or of the Laity and prosecute them till it come to a Sentence after which there can be no farther proceeding till the King informed of the whole matter gives His Royal Assent for the Execution of the said Sentence or grant His gracious Pardon In the late Long Parliament the House of Commons pretended to be also a Court of Judicature and at length usurped a most exorbitant power to the total ruine of Monarchical Government and it is worth observing by what Gradations they arrived thereto In the time of Queen Elizabeth and not before the Commons began to take upon them as saith Mr. Pryn a learned Member of that House to seclude one another for undue Elections whereas formerly the King and Lords were accounted the sole Judges of all Members of the Commons House and to have the sole power to judge of their undue Elections Returns Misdemeanors Breaches of Privileges and of all other matters concerning their Membership also for freeing any Member from Arrest or Imprisonments did wholely and solely belong to the Lords and not to the Commons unless it were by special order referred by the Lords to the House of Commons as heretofore sometimes hath been done In the time of King Charles the Martyr the Commons went farther took upon them utterly to expel out of their House some of their fellow Members as Projectors and Monopolizers although they had been duly elected After this in the same Kings time they expelled all such as adhered in Loyalty to the King next they secluded and imprisoned all such as the Officers of the late rebellious Army impeached or disliked then by the help of that Army 50 or 60 of the Members of that House expelled all the rest of their fellows and soon after voted down the King and whole House of Lords and voted themselves to be the Parliament to be the sole Legislators and the Supreme Authority of England into such a prodigious height of folly and impiety do men run when they once allow themselves to pass their due limits Of the Court of Justice called the Kings-Bench FOr the Execution of Laws after the House of Lords in Parliament the highest Court in England is the Kings
hand is an Officer who ingrosseth Fines acknowledged c. He holdeth his Place also by Patent and is at present Mr. Sparks in trust for Sir William Drake who doth execute it by a Deputy Mr. Wayt. All these Officers aforementioned sit in the Court covered with black round knit Caps according to the mode immediately before the invention of Hats which was since the beginning of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth Moreover they are all sworn and have their Offices for life as a Freehold There are in this Court 3 Officers unsworn and hold their Places durante bene placito One Clerk of the Treasury Mr. George Ingram who hath the charge of keeping the Records of this Court and makes out all Records of Nisi Prius and divers other things This Office is in the Gift of the Lord Chief Justice 2. Clerk of the Inrolements of Fines and Recoveries who is by Statute under the three puisne Judges of this Court and removeable at their pleasure Note that the Inrolement of Fines and Recoveries or any part thereof by Stat 23 Eliz. cap. 3. is of as good force and validity in Law to all intents and purposes for so much of any of them so inrolled as the same being extant and remaining were or ought by Law to be The general neglect whereof in this Kingdom hath occasioned many Law Suits and hath proved in process of time exceeding dangerous to many mens Estates 3. The Clerk of the Outlawries Mr. Annuel who makes out the Writs of Capias Utlagatum after the Outlawry in the name of the Kings Atturney whose Deputy he is pro tempore There are five Clerks more 1. Clerk of the Kings Silver Henry Nurse Esquire unto whom every Fine or Final Agreement in sale of Lands is brought after it hath been with the Custos Brevium and to whom Money is paid for the Kings use 2. Clerk of the Warrants Mr· Thomas Brown executed by a Deputy Mr. James Mayo who entreth all Warrants of Atturney for Plaintiff and Defendant 3. Clerk of the Juries Mr. John Green who makes out the Writs called Habeas Corpora and Distringas for appearance of the Jury either in this Court or at the Assises in the Country 4. Clerk of the Essoins or Excuses for lawful cause of absence Mr. Townley 5. Clerk of the Super sedeas Mr. Abbot which is held by Patent but before King James time made by the Exchequer In this Court are also Filazers for the several Counties of England so called from the French Fil a Thred because they file their Writs These make out all Process upon Original Writs and do many other things too long to be here set down of these there are 14. viz. Fabian Philips Esquire who hath London Middlesex Huntington and Cambridge Shires The rest of the Counties are divided amongst these that follow Sir Roger Hill Henry Dutton Spicer Grey Fr. Hill Robert Child Charles Clare Sir Thomas Stringer Thomas Child Bennet Mark Hildesley Herbert Matthews and Hughes who is Protonatory Filazer and Exigenter of Monmouth by Patent the rest in the Gift of the Lord Chief Justice and hold for life There are also four Exigenters whose Office it is to make all Exigents and Proclamations in all Actions where process of Outlawry doth lye This Writ is called an Exigent because it exacteth the Party that is requireth his appearance to answer the Law and lies against a Transgressor of the Law that cannot be found nor any of his Goods within the County so that after summons by the Sheriff at five several County Courts if he appear not he is outlawed The four Exigenters at present are William Petty John Dawling Charles Clare and Silvester Petty all in the Gift of the Lord Chief Justice and are for life There are also belonging to this Court four Cryers and a Porter Of the Court called the Exchequer THe next Court for Execution of Laws is that called the Exchequer so called as some think from a Chequer-wrought Carpet covering the great Table in that Court as the Court of Green Cloth in the Kings house is so called from the Green Carpet or else from the French word Eschequier a Chess board because the Accomptants in that Office were wont to use such Boards in their Calculation Here are tryed all causes which belong to the Kings Treasury or Revenue as touching Accounts Disbursements Customs and all Fines imposed upon any man In this Court may sit the Lord Treasurer the Chancellor of the Exchequer the Lord Chief Baron and four other Learned Judges called Barons of the Exchequer and one other Cursitor Baron but the two first seldom sit and the five last Seldom fail The first of these five is the Principal Judge of this Court and answers the Bar or the Baristers who direct their Speech to him takes Recognizances for the Kings Debts c. It is an Office of High Honour and Profit he is styled Lord Chief Baron is Created by Letters Patents to hold this Dignity Quam dieu bene se gesserit wherein he hath a more fixed estate then the Chief Justices of either Bench for the Law intends this an Estate for Life in the absence of the Lord Chief Baron the other three Barons supply his place according to their Seniority but the fifth is said to be a Cursitor of the Court and administers the Oaths to the Sheriffs Under-Sheriffs Baylifs Searchers Surveyors c. of the Custom-house In the Exchequer are held two Courts one of Law another of Equity All Judicial Proceedings according to Law are coram Baronibus but the Court of Equity held in the Exchequer Chamber is coram Thesaurario Cancellario Baronibus This Court had its beginning primo Ph. Mar. The Authority of this Court is of original jurisdiction without any Commission Note also that all the other forementioned Courts were not Instituted by any Statute or written Law but have their Original from the antient Custom of the Kingdom For a long time after the Conquest there sat in the Exchequer both Spiritual and Temporal Barons of the Realm and in later times there sate in their places others that were not Peers of the Realm yet stiled Barons quia ibi sedere solebant Barones All the Twelve Judges belonging to these High Tribunals sit in Robes and Square Caps like those Doctors of Divinity because as some say they were antiently most commonly Clergy-men and Doctors Bishops or Prelates A List of the several Officers belonging to His Majesties Court of Exchequer In the Vpper Exchequer THe Kings Remembrancer Thomas Lord Vicount Fanshaw in whose Office are 8 sworn Clerks whereof John Payn and Thomas Hall Esquires at present are the two Secondaries the rest are Ansel Beaumont Hugh Frankland Butler Buggin George Wats Nicholas Sanders c. In this Office pass all the Accounts concerning the Kings Revenue for Customs Excise Hearth-money Subsidies and all Ayds granted to the King in Parliament and all other Accounts of what nature soever
coming in not too late This office is now kept in Bishopsgate-street Of the Kings great Wardrobe THis Office was usually kept within the City near Puddle Wharfe in an antient House built by Sir John Beauchamp Son to Guy de Beauchamp Earl of Warwick and afterward sold to King Edward the Third The Master or Keeper of the Great Wardrobe is an office of great Antiquity and Dignity High Privileges and Immunities were conferred by Henry the Sixth and confirmed by his successors King James enlarged the same and ordained that this Great Officer should be an incorporation or Body Politique for ever His Office is to make Provisions for Coronations Marriages and Funerals to furnish the Court with Beds Hangings Carpets and other necessaries to furnish Houses for Ambassadors at their first arrival here Presents for Foreign Princes and Ambassadors Cloaths of Estate and other furniture for the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland Lord President of Wales and all His Majesties Ambassadors abroad to provide all Robes for Foreign Knights of the Garter for the Officers of the Garter Coats for Heralds and Pursuivants at Arms Robes for the Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer c. Rich Liveries for the two Lords Chief Justice all the Barons of the Exchequor divers Officers in those Courts all Liveries for His Majesties domestick servants all Linnen for the Kings person c. To defray all the forementioned charges ordinarily there is expended yearly about twenty five thousand pounds besides all Extraordinaries as Coronations Funerals c. This Office is at present enjoyed by Edward Montague Earl of Sandwich one of His Majesties most Honourable Privy Council and Knight of the most Noble Order of the Garter The present Salary to his Lordship in compensation of all other antient Fees and Allowances is yearly 2000 l. The said House near Puddle Wharfe was long ago annext for ever to the Master of this Office but since the great Fire this Office is kept in the Savoy The chief Officers under the Master are a Deputy Thomas Townsend Senior Esq his Salary 200 l. and a Clerk Thomas Townsend Junior Esq whose Salary in compensation of all Fees and Allowances is yearly 300 l. Both these Officers had likewise fair dwelling houses which were also consumed by the fire Belonging to this Office are divers Tradesmen Artificers and others to the number of about 40 all sworn Servants to the King To this Office have lately been added by Patent during pleasure two cousiderable Officers viz. a Controuler Andrew Newport Esquire Brother to the Lord Newport and a Surveyour Colonel Bullen Reymes whose Salaries are 300 l. yearly to each one Of the Colledges in London THe Famous City of LONDON may not unfitly be stiled an University for therein are taught all Liberal Arts and Sciences not onely Divinity Civil Law Physick which in other Universities are usual are read here but also the Municipal or Common Law of the Nation is here taught and Degrees taken therein which can be said in no other Nation Moreover all sorts of Languages Geography Hydography the Art of Navigation the Art of Fortification Anatomy Chirurgery Chymistry Calligraphy Brachygraphy or Short-Hand the Arts of Riding Fencing Dancing Art Military Fire-works Limming Painting Enamelling Sculpture Architecture Heraldry all sorts of Musick Arithmetick Geometry Astronomy Grammar Rhetorick Poetry and any other thing that may any way contribute to the accomplishment of an ingenious Nobleman or Gentleman The Colledges of Municipal or Common-Law Professors and Students are 14 called still Innes the old English word for Houses of Noblemen or Bishops or of extraordinary note and which is of the same signification with the French word Hostel at Paris There are Two Inns of Sergeants Four Inns of Court and Eight Inns of Chancery The Inns of Chancery were probably so named because there dwelt such Clerks as did chiefly study the forming of Writs which regularly appertain to the Cursitors that are Officers of Chancery The first of these is called Thavies Inn begun in the Reign of Edward the Third and since purchased by Lincolns Inn as was also Furnivals Inn then there is Bernards Inn New Inn Clements Inn Cliffords Inn antiently the House of the Lord Clifford Staple Inn belonging to the Merchants of the Staple and Lyons Inn antiently a common Inn with the Sign of the Lyon These were heretofore preparatory Colledges for younger Students and many were entred here before admitted into the Inns of Court Now they are for the most part taken up by Atturneys Sollicitors and Clerks who have here their Chambers apart and their Dyet at a very easy rate in a Hall together where they are obliged to appear in grave long Robes and black round knit Caps These Colledges belong all to some Inns of Court who send yearly some of their Barresters to read to to these In these Inns of Chancery one with another may be about Sixty persons The Innes of Court were so named as some think because the Students therein are to serve the Courts of Judicature or else because antiently these Colledges received onely the Sons of Noble men and better sort of Gentlemen as Fortescue affirmeth Of these there are Four First The Two Temples heretofore the dwelling of the Knights Templers and purchased by some Professors of the Common Law above Three hundred years ago They are called The Inner and Middle Temple in relation to Essex House which was a part of the Knights Templers and called The Utter Temple because it is seated without Temple Bar. The two other Inns of Court are Lincolns Inn belonging anciently to the Earls of Lincoln and Greys Inn belonging to the Noble Family of the Greys In the Reign of Henry the Sixth they so flourished that there were in each of these about Two hundred Students and a Student then expended yearly about 20 l. Which was as much as Two hundred pounds now for they had usually as the French Nobles have now in their Academies every one an old discreet Servant and divers Masters for to instruct them in all laudable qualities and therefore saith the same Fortescue Ultra Studium legum sunt quasi Gymnasia omnium morum And the Students were onely saith he Nobilium Filii that is Gentlemen at least for so the word Nobilis was then taken here and is still in France And therefore by command of King James none were to be admitted into these Colledges but Gentlemen by descent Our Ancestors thought those of inferior rank would rather debase the honor of the Law and would be prone to chicane or play tricks and not like to be so fit for Trusts and Honors whereas the consideration of Birth and Fortune makes Men more careful of their Honor and Reputation These Societies are no Corporations nor have any Judicial Power over their Members but have certain Orders among themselves which have by consent the Force of Laws For lighter offences they are onely excommoned or put out of Commons not to eat with the rest and
are as the Dies Nef●sti wherein the Courts sit not so that in one fourth part of the year and that in one City all considerable causes of the greatest part of England are fully decided and determined whereas in forreign parts the Courts of Justice are open all the year except high Holydayes and Harvest and that in all great Cities This may seem therefore strange to all Forreigners till they know that the English have alwayes been given more to peaceableness and industry then other people and that rather then go so far as London and be at so great Charges with Attourneyes and Lawyers they will either refer their differences to the Arbitration of their Parish Priests who do or ought to think it a Principal part of their Duty to reconcile differences within their Parishes or to the Arbitration of honest Neighbours or else are content to submit their differences to tryal before the Judges of Assises or the Itinerant Judges who twice a year viz. after the end of Hilary Term and after the end of Trinity Term two by two of these principal Judges ride several Circuits and at the Principal Town of every County sit to hear and determine all Causes of lesser moment both civil and criminal a most excellent wise Constitution begun by King Hen. 2. Anno 1176. who at first divided England into six Circuits not the same that are now and to each Circuit allotted three judges Wales also is divided into two Circuits North and South Wales for which are designed in like manner two Sergeants at Law for each Circuit These Judges give Judgment of the Pleas of the Crown and all Common Pleas within those Counties dispatching ordinarily in two or three days all Controversies in a County that are grown to issue in the fore-mentioned Courts at London between Plaintiffs and Defendants and that by their Peers a Jury of 12 men ex viceneto out of the neighbourhood where about the business lyes So that twice a year in England and Wales Justice may be said to be rightly and speedily administred even at our own doors Besides the forementioned Courts at Westminster Henry 8. erected for the more ease of the Subject a Court in the North of England another for the County of Wales and Counties adjoyning and intended another for Cornwall and Devonshire and these in manner of those Courts called in France Parlements where all cases might be decided both according to the Laws of England and according to equity in Chancery Of these Courts that for Cornwal was never fully erected those people desiring rather to come to London for Justice that of the North was by the late long Parliament taken away and so was that of Wales but this last since the Restauration of the King again erected Of this Court or Council of the Marshes of Wales is a Lord President at present the Lord Vaughan Earl of Carbury divers Councellors Secretary Attourney Sollicitor Surveyor who have Salaries from His Majesty HAving given a brief Account of the Civil Government of all England in General next shall be described the particular Government of Counties Hundreds Cities Burroughs and Villages For the Civil Government of all Counties the King makes choice of some of the Nobility Clergy Gentry and Lawyers men of worth and parts who have their usual residence in the County so many as His Majesty pleaseth to keep the Peace of the County and these by Commission under the great Seal are called Justices of Peace and such of them in whom the King doth more particularly confide or respect are called Justices of the Quorum from those words in the Commission Quorum A. B. unum esse volumus that is some business of more importance may not be transacted without the presence or concurrence of one of them One of the principal Justices of Peace and Quorum is by the Lord Keeper made Custos Rotulorum so called because he hath the Custody of the Rolls or Records of the Sessions and is to bring them to each Quarter Sessions The Original of Justices of Peace is from the first year of Edward 3. Their Office is to call before them examine and commit to Prison all Theeves Murderers wandring Rogues those that hold Conspiracies Conventicles Riots and almost all other Delinquences that may occasion the breach of Peace and quiet to the Kings Subjects to commit all such to prison as either cannot or by Law are not to be bailed that is cannot be set at liberty by Sureties taken for their appearance at a place and time certain land to see them brought forth in due time to Tryal Every Quarter or three months the Justices meet at the chief or Shire Town where the Grand Enquest or Jury of the County is summoned to appear who upon Oath are to inquire of all Traitors Hereticks Theeves Murderers Money-coiners Riots c Those that appear to be guilty are by the said Justices committed to prison to be tryed at the next Assises when the Judges of Westminster come their Circuits aforementioned For execution of Laws in every County except Westmorland and Durham the King every Michaelmas Term nominates for each County a Sheriff that is a Reeve of the Shire Praepositus or Praefectus Comitatus a Governor or Guardian of the County for the words of the Patent are Commisimus tibi Custodiam Commitatus nostri de N. The Sheriffs Office is to execute the Kings Mandates and all Writs directed to him out of the Kings Courts to empannel Juries to bring Causes and Criminals to Tryal to see the sentences both in Civil and Criminal affairs executed to wait on and guard the Itenerant Judges twice a year so long as they continue within the County which at the Assises is performed with great Pomp Splendor Feasting c In order to the better execution of his Office the Sheriff hath attendant his Under-Sheriff divers clerks Stewards of Courts Bayliffs of Hundreds Constables Gaolers Sergeants or Beedles besides a gallant train of servants in rich Liveries all on Horseback at the Reception of the Judges He was antiently chosen as Knights of the Shire but to avoid Tumults it is now thus Every year about the beginning of November the Judges Itinerant nominate six fit men of each County that is Kts. or Esquires of good Estates out of these the Lords Keeper Treasurer Privy Councellors and 12 Judges assembled in the Exchequer Chamber and sworn make choice of three of which the King himself after chooseth one to be Sheriff for that year only though heretofore it was for many years and sometimes heriditary as at this day to the Cliffords who by dissent from Robert de Vipont are Sheriffs heriditary of the County of Westmoreland by Charter from King John Furthermore the Sheriffs Office is to collect all publick profits Customes Taxes of the County all Fines Distresses and Amerceaments and to bring them into the Kings Exchequer or Treasury at London or else where as the King shall appoint The
Sheriff of each County hath a double function first Ministerial to execute all Processes and Precepts of the Courts of Law and to make returns of the same Secondly Judicial whereby he hath authority to hold two several Courts of distinct nature the one called the Sheriffs Turn which he holdeth in several places of the County enquiring of all Criminal Offences against the Common-Law not prohibited by any Statute The other called the County Court wherein he hears and determines civil Causes of the County under 40 s. which antiently was a considerable summe so that by the great fall of the moneys now the Sheriffs authority in that part is much diminished He is said to be the life of Justice of the Law and of the County for no suit begins and no process is served but by him then no Execution of the Law but by him lastly he is the chief Conservator of the Peace in the whole County Every County being subdivided into Hundreds so called at first either for containing an hundred houses or 100 men bound to find Armes or Wapentakes so called from touching a weapon when they swore Allegiance as the manner at this day is in Sweden at their solemn weddings for the chief witnesses to lay all their hands upon a Lance or Pike every such Wapentake o● Hundred hath commonly a Bayliff a very antient Officer but now of small Authority also Officers called High Constables first ordained by the Statute of Winchester 13 Edw. 1. for conservation of Peace and view of Armour they disperse Warrants and Orders of the Justices of Peace to each Pety Constable There are also in every County two Officers called Coroners whose Office is to enquire by a Jury of Neighbours how and by whom any person came by a violent death and to enter the same upon Record which is matter Criminal and a plea of the Crown and thence they are called Crowners or Coroners These are chosen by the Free holders of the County by vertue of a Writ out of the Chancery They were antiently men of estates Birth and Honour and therefore in the Reign of Edward III. a Merchant being chosen a Coroner was removed quia communis Mercator fuit whereas he ought to have been a Gentleman which have no Trades man is reckoned to be by our Laws Every County also hath an Officer called Clerk of the Mercat whose Office is to keep a Standard of all Weights and Measures exactly according with the Kings Standard kept in the Exchequer and to see that none others be used in the same County to Seal all Weights and Measures made exactly by the Standard in his custody and to burn such as are otherwise He hath a Court and may keep and hold Plea therein Of the Civil Government of Cities EVery City of England by their Charters or Priviledges granted by several Kings is a little Common-wealth apart governed not as the Cities of France by a Nobleman or Gentleman placed there by the King but wholly by themselves they choose amongst themselves their own Governor in Cities a Mayor is chosen commonly out of 12 Aldermen In some other Co●porations a Bailiff is chosen out of a certain number of Burgesses They are not taxed but by their own Officers of their own Corporation every trade having some of their own alwayes of the Council to see that nothing be enacted contrary to their profit Every City by Charter from the King hath haute moyenne basse Justice a jurisdiction amongst themselves to judge in all matters criminal and civil onely with this restraint that all civil causes may be removed from their Courts to the Higher Courts at Westminster The Mayor of the City is the Kings Lieftenant and with the Alderm●n and Common Council as it were King Lords and Commons in Parliament can make Laws called By-Laws for the Government of the City He is for his time which is but for one year as it were a Judge to determine matters and to mitigate the Rigour of the Law The next in Government of Cities are two principal Officers called though improperly the Sheriffs who are Judges in civil causes within this City and to see all execution done whether penal or capital and should rather be called Stat-reeves or Port-reeves i. e. Urbis vel Portus Praefecti In Cities the people are generally made more industrious by Manufactures and less idleness suffered then in other places so that in some Cities children of six or seven years old are made to gain their own expences In the City of Norwich it hath of late yeares been computed and found that yearly children from 6 to 10 years of age have gained 12 thousand pounds more then what they spend and that chiefly by knitting fine Jersey Stockings The Government of Burroughs and other Towns corporate is much after the same manner In some there is a Mayor in others one or two Bailiffs who have equal power with a Mayor and Sheriffs and during their Offices they are Justices of the Peace within their Liberties and have there the same power that other Justices of the Peace have in the County For the better Government of Villages the Lord of the place hath ordinarily power to hold a Court-Baron so called because antiently such Lords were called Barons as they are still in many parts of France or else Court Baron i. e. Court of Freeholders as the Barons of Germany are called Frey herren so the Barons of the Cinque Ports in England are but the Freeholders of the Cinque Ports And this Court may be held every 3 weeks Also for the Government of Villages there is a Pety Constable chosen every year by every one that is Lord of the place this Officer is to keep the Peace in case of quarrels to search any house for Robbers Murdrers or others that have any way broken the peace to raise the Hue and Cry after Robbers fled away to seize upon them and keep them in the Stocks or other Prison till they can bring them before some Justice of Peace to whom the Constables are subservient upon all occasiions either to bring crrminals before them or to carry them by their command to the common Prison Every little Village almost hath an Epitome of Monarchical Government of Civil and Ecclesiastical policy within it self which if duly maintained would render the whole Kingdome happy First for the civil Government there is the Lord of the Soyl who from the Crown immediately or mediately holds Dominium soli and is said to have in him the Royalty as if he were a little King and hath a kind of Jurisdiction over the Inhabitants of the Village hath his Court-Leet● or Court-Baron to which they owe suit and service and where may be tryed smaller matters happening within the Mannour Escheats upon Felonies or other accidents Custody of Infants and Lunaticks power of passing Estates and admitting of Tenants Reliefs Hariots Hunting Hawking Fishing c. under the Lord is the Constable or
to behave themselves in that Port Gravity and Authority as if they were so in the Kings House that so hereafter they may know the better to behave themselves in case they should be promoted to that Honour for these Gentlemen are usually of such quality as come not hither with intent to profess the Law but to learn so much Law as may be necessary to preserve their Estates and to make themselves accomplisht in other qualities necessary for Gentlemen At such time they have here divers divertisements as Feasting every day singing dancing Musick which last is allowed there to all Comers and is so excessive that what the Dicers allow out of each winning to the Butlers box usually amounts to above 50 l. a day and night wherewith and a small contribution from each Student are the great charges of the whole Christmas defrayed Sometimes when their publick Treasury is great they create a Prince among themselves with such Title as they please to give him and he hath all his Officers and a Court sutable to a great Prince and many of the prime Nobility and great Officers of State are feasted and entertained by him with Enterludes c. From All Saints day to Candlemas each House usually hath Revels on Holy-dayes that is Musick and Dancing and for this is chosen some young Student to be Master of the Revels Note that the manner of their Parlament is briefly thus Every Quarter commonly the Benchers cause one of the standing Officers of the House to summon a Parlament which is onely an Assembly and Conference of Benchers and Utter-Baristers which are called the Sage Company and meet in a place called the Parlament Chamber and there Treat of such matters as shall seem expedient for the good ordering of the House and the Reformation of such things as they shall judge meet to be Reformed Here are the Readers for Lent and Summer vacation elected also the Treasurer is here chosen and the Auditors appointed to take the Accounts of the old Treasurer c. Here offences committed by any of the Society are punished c. These Innes of Court are most wisely situated by our Ancestors between the Kings Courts of Judicature and the most opulent City of London In the Four Innes of Court are reckoned about 800 Students Lastly there are two more Colledges called Sergeants Inne where the Common-Law Student when he is arrived to the highest degree hath his Lodging and Dyet These are called Servientes ad Legem Sergeants at Law and are as Doctors in the Civil Law only these have heretofore been reputed more Noble and Honourable Doctoris enim appellatio est Magisterii Servientis vero Ministerii and therefore Doctors of Law are allowed to sit within the Bar in Chairs and covered whilst Sergeants stand without the Bar bareheaded only with Coiffs or Caps on To arrive to this high Degree take this brief account The young Student in the Common Law being born of a Gentile Stock and bred two or three years in the University and there chiefly versed in Logick and Rhetorick both expedient for a Lawyer and gotten some insight into the Civil Law and some skill in the French Tongue as well as Latin he is admitted to be one of the Four Innes of Court where he is first called a Moot man and after about Seven years study is chosen an Utter Barister and having then spent Twelve years more and performed the Exercises before mentioned he is chosen a Bencher and some time after a Reader during the Reading which heretofore was Three weeks and Three days the Reader keeps a constant and sumptuous Feasting inviting the chief Nobles Judges Bishops great Officers of the Kingdom and sometimes the King himself as that most accomplished Lawyer the present Atturney General did that it costs them sometimes 800 or 1000 l. Afterward he wears a long Robe different from other Baristers and is then in a capacity to be made a Sergeant at Law when His Majesty shall please to call him which is in this manner When the number of Sergeants is small the Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas by the advice and consent of the other Judges make choice of Six or Eight more or less of the most Grave and Learned of the Innes of Court and presents their Names to the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper who sends by the Kings Writ to each of them to appear on such a day before the King to receive the State and Degree of Sergeant at Law at the appointed time they being habited in Robes of two colours viz. Brown and Blew come accompanyed with the Students of the Innes of Court and attended by a train of Servants and Retainers in certain peculiar cloth Liveries to Westminster-Hall there in publick take a solemn Oath and are clothed with certain Robes and Coyfs without which they may no more be seen in publick after this they feast the great persons of the Nation in a very magnificent and Princely manner give Gold Rings to the Princes of the Blood Archbishops Chancellor and Treasurer to the value of Forty shillings each Ring to Earles Bishops Rings of Twenty shillings to other great Officers to Barons great Prelates c. Rings of less value Out of these are chosen all the Judges of the Kings Bench and Common Pleas wherefore all those Judges do alwayes wear the white Linnen Coyfe which is the Principal Badge of a Sergeant and which he had ever the Priviledge to wear at all times even in the Kings presence and whilst he spake to the King though antiently it was not permitted to any Subject to be so much as capped in the Presence of the King of England as at present it is not allowed in the presence of the Pope or of the Emperour When any of the aforementioned Judges are wanting the King by advice of His Council makes choice of one of these Sergeants at Law to supply his place and constitutes him by Letters Patents Sealed by the Chancellor who sitting in the middle of the rest of the Judges in open Court by a set Speech declares to the Sergeant that upon this occasion is brought in the Kings pleasure and to the people the Kings goodness in providing the Bench with such able honest men as that Justice may be done expeditely and impartially to all His Subjects and then causes the said Letters Patents to be read and being departed the Chief Justice places the said Sergeant on the Bench junior of all the rest and having taken his Oath well and truly to serve the King and His people in the Office of Justice to take no reward to do equal and speedy Justice to all c. he sits himself to the Execution of his Charge The Sergeant being thus advanced to be a Judge hath thereby great Honour and a very considerable Salary besides certain perquisits for each one hath at least One thousand pound a year from the King and now in some things his former habit