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A54632 Lex parliamentaria, or, A treatise of the law and custom of parliaments shewing their antiquity, names, kinds, and qualities ... : with an appendix of a case in Parliament between Sir Francis Goodwyn and Sir John Fortescue, for the knights place for the county of Bucks, I Jac. I.; Lex parliamentaria. English Petyt, George. 1690 (1690) Wing P1944; ESTC R8206 195,455 448

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subscribing them England to be entred and filed in Parchment Rolls provided by the Clerk of the House and each Member to pay only 12 d. for every such Entry That the said Act 30 Car. 2. Stat. 1 W. M. c. 1. Members of the House of Commons qualified to sit and vote by taking the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy appionted by this Act instead of the old ones now repealed and by subscribing the Test according to the Limitations c. of the preceding Statute 30 Car. 2 and all other Acts of Parliament as to so much of the said Act or Acts only as concerns the taking the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance or either of them in the said Acts respectively mentioned by any Member or Members of the House with relation to their sitting and voting in Parliament are hereby repealed to all Intents and Purposes any Thing in the said recited Act or Acts to the contrary And In all future Parliaments the Oaths in this Act mentioned and the Declaration in the Act 30 Car. 2. mentioned shall be taken made subscribed and repeated by every Member of the House within the Time and in the same Manner and Form and under the Penalties and Disabilities as the said Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and the said Declaration by the said Act of Car. 2. are limited ordained and appointed and not at any other Time England or in any other Manner to enable them to sit and vote in Parliament any Thing in the said Act or Acts to the contrary That Elections of Members of Parliament ought to be Free Stat. 1 W. M. c. 2. The claim of Right That the Freedom of Speech and Debates on Proceedings in Parliament ought not to be impeached or questioned in any Court or Place out of Parliament Enacted accordingly That no Member of the House of Commons shall at any Time be concerned directly or indirectly Sta. 5 6 W. M. ch 7. Members of the House of Commons to be no ways concerned in Duties or Aids to be granted by Parliament except Commissioners of the Treasury Customs Excise and Land Tax or any other in Trust for him in the farming collecting or managing any of the Duties or other Aids that hereafter shall be granted by Act of Parliament except the Commissioners of the Treasury and the Officers and Commissioners for managing the Customs and Excise not exceeding the present Number in each Office and Commissioners of the Land Tax Quere the Novelty of this Exception That any Member or Members of the House of Commons Stat. 5 6 W. and M. c. 20. Members of the House of Commons may be Members of the Bank may be a Member or Members of the Corporation of the Governor and Company of the Bank of England England That o Collector Supervisor Gauger or other Officer or Person whatsoever concerned or imployed in the charging levying or managing the Duties of Excise or any Branch or Part thereof shall by Word Officers of the Excise not to intermedle c. Message or Writing or in any other Manner endeavour to persuade any Elector to give or dissuade any Elector from giving his Vote for the Choice of any Person to be a Knight of the Shire Citizen Burgess or Baron of any County City Borough or Cinque-Port and every Officer or other Person offending therein shall forfeit the Sum of 100 l. one Moiety thereof to the Informer the other Moiety to the Poor of the Parish where such Offence shall be committed to be recovered by any Person that shall sue for the same by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any of their Majesties Courts of Record at Westminster in which no Essoign Protection Privilege or more than one Imparlance shall be allowed and every Person convict on Suit of the said Offence shall be for ever incapacitated to bear any Office or Place of Trust under the Crown That no Persons hereafter to be elected to serve in Parliament for any County City Town England Borough St. 7. W. 3. c. 4. No Persons to be elected after the Teste of the Writ shall by themselves or any other at their charge before the Election give promise or oblige themselves to give any thing to any Person having a Vote in particular or to any County or Place in general in order to be elected Port or Place within the Kingdom of England Dominion of Wales or Town of Berwick upon Tweed after the Teste of the Writ of Summons or after the Teste or issuing out or ordering of the Writ or Writs of Election upon the calling or summoning of any Parliament or after any such Place becomes vacant shall or do hereafter by himself or themselves or by any other Ways or Means on his or their Behalf or at his or their Charge before his or their Election in England Wales or Berwick directly or indirectly give present or allow to any Person having Voice or Vote in such Election any Money Meat Drink Entertainment or Provision or make any Present Gift Reward or Entertainment or shall make any Promise Agreement Obligation or Engagement to give or allow any Money Meat Drink Provision Present Reward or Entertainment to or for any such Person in Particular or to any such County City Town Borough Port or Place in general or to or for the Use Advantage Benefit Imployment Profit or Preferment of any such Person or Place in Order to be elected England or for being elected to serve in Parliament for such County City Town Borough Port or Place And that every Person so giving presenting or allowing Such Persons so giving promising c. disabled to serve as never elected or returned making promising or engaging doing acting or proceeding shall be and are hereby disabled and incapacitated upon such Election to serve in Parliament for such County City Town Borough Port or Place and shall be deemed and taken no Member in Parliament and shall not act sit or have any Vote or Place in Parliament but shall be and are to all Intents Constructions and Purposes as if they had been never returned or elected c. That all false Returns willfully made of any Knight of the Shire Stat. 7 and S. W. 3. c. 7. continued by St. 12. 13. W. 3. c. 5. False Returns of Knights Citizens c. illegal and prohibited Citizen Burgess Baron of the Cinque-Ports or other Member to serve in Parliament are against Law and are hereby prohibited The Party grieved by any false return An Action given to any duly elected against the Officer and Procurer of a false Return or Return contrary to the last determination of the Kight of Election in any Court at Westminster with double Damages and full Costs and contrary to the last Determination of the Right of Election of the House of Commons which is also adjudg'd a false Return to wit every Person that shall be duly Elected to Parliament for any County City Borough Cinque-Port or Place England by such false Return may Sue
pro arduis Negotijs Regni 2. That tho' the Magnates Regni are only mentioned to be Summoned yet the Commons of England were therein included and indeed it is very Evident that the Words Magnates Regni or Nobiles Regni Selen Tie Hon. 603. 604. in the Language of those Times included both Lords and Commons when applyed to a National Assembly For as Mr. Selden observes the Word Nobilis in the Saxon Times denoted every Gentleman i. e. under Thanes or Knights c. So after the Conquest the Word Baronagium Camb. fo 137. Edit Lond. 1600. included the Commons as well as Peers and Mr. Cambden with others do consess Quod Sub Nomine Baronagij omnes Regni ordines continebantur Thus Rex Magnates Proceres are said to make the Stat. of Mortmain which was apparently made by the K. Lords and Commons 17 Johanis and the Magna Charta of K. John of which that of K. H. 1. is clearly prov'd to be the Foundation appears to have been made per Regem Barones Liberos homines totius Regni Mat. Par. Edit per Watts p. 38.45.51.166 alibi all which are by the Historians of those Times called Magnates Angliae See farther of the Import of the Word Magnates in Mat. Paris 3. M. Paris 10.6 40. That the Norman Nobility tho' Summoned resus'd to appear at this Parliament they being almost entirely devoted to Robert the King's Elder Brother and hence it is that we find the King's Speech is here Directed to English Men only and that too in opposition to the Normans in general on whom the King in the Conclusion very warmly Reflects in order to ingratiate himself the more with the English Commons of whom this Parliament seems to have been almost wholly composed The cause of the Normans defection seems to have been Vide ibid 42. for that King Henry having in the 2d year of his Reign Married Maude the Daughter of Margaret Q. of Scotland who was Edgar Aetheling's Sister and the direct lineal Heir of the English Blood Royal Mat. Par. 40. was so enamoured with her tanto ardentius exarsit in ipsius amorem that he very much favoured the English for her Sake whereupon the Normans raised a general Rebellion against him in favour of Robert and tho by the Intervention of Friends the difference between the two Brothers was Skinn'd over for the present yet we find the K. could never afterwards be heartily reconciled to the Norman Nobility tho' of his own Blood diverse of whom as Robert de Beleasmo Ib. 40 41. William Earl of Moreton and others he soon after Banished the Kingdom And it is very remarkable That in the Event of the several Contests about Robert's Right the English Commons became the Victors over the Norman Nobility first on behalf of W. Rufus in the Beginning of his Reign and now on the Behalf of K. H. 1. Vide ib. sub Anno 1089. And the Example of their former Valour might induce this King to gratify and caress them with those high Encomiums and Promises in his Speech Which Promises tho as the Historian asserts he afterwards impudenter violavit yet as to the granting a Charter for restoring the Confessor's Laws Ib. p. 42. doubtless the Parliament took him at his Word and this Charter I take to have been that very Charter which the same Historian observes to have been produced to King John Ib. p. 167. at the Rencounter of Runny-Mead and not that which is mentioned to have been granted by this King at his Coronation in which we find this ensnaring Stricture Mat. Par. 38.167 viz. Lagam Regis Edvardi vobis reddo cum illis emendationibus quibus Pater meus eam emendavit His Father having under Pretext of those Emendations utterly deprived the English of the Free Election of their Magistrates whereas tis evident from History That for some Years after this new Charter granted in this English Parliament the People were generally restored to the Right of electing their own Magistrates and Officers Civil Military and Ecclesiastical and this I take to be the grand Foundation of the Magna Charta of English Liberties i. e. as it gave Relaxation from Norman Tyranny and Slavery And this may teach us Dier 60 See Mirror c. 1. Sect 3. Bra. Flet. Lambards Archaion 5● 239.245 Sir R. Atkyns p. 20.15 c. Vide Post c. 6. 7. That the Rights and Liberties of the Commons of England are neither so illegally begotten as by Rebellion nor of such tender Years as some imagine But if any Man is not convinced from what I have before produced touching the Origin of English Parliaments and the Antiquity of the House of Commons let him peruse the Authors cited in the Margin especially the Treatise writ by that learned Judge Sir Robert Atkyns on this very Subject Nor was this the first English Parliament held under this King Mat. Par. 37.39 2 Inst 15. Mat. Paris has given us a brief Account which other Authors confirm and enlarge That one Ranulph Saxon Chron. sub Anno 1099. p. 208.210 Flor. Wig. c. Mat. Par. 39. Bishop of Durham whom Mat. c. adorn with the sublime Titles of Vir pessimus corruptissimus Homo perversus ad omne scelus paratus Vir subacto ingenio prosunda nequitia c. was imprisoned c. by a Common-Council or Parliament of Englishmen The whole Passage runs thus Eo tempore Rex tenuit in Custodia Ranulphum Dunelmensem Episcopum hominem perversum ad omne scelus paratum Quem Frater Regis i. e. Rex Willielmus Episcopum fecerat Dunelm Regni Anglorum subversorem N. B. The Office of a Court Bishop Qui cum Regi jam dicto nimium esset familiaris constituerat eum Rex Procuratorem suum in Regno ut evelleret destrueret raperet et disperderet et omnia omnium Bona ad Fisci commodum comportaret Sed mortuo eodim Rege iniquo Henrico coronato de Communi Consilio Gentis Anglorum posuit Rex eum in vinculis c. Nor was the Concurrence of the Commons in Parliament requisite only to the Imprisonment or Exauctoration of Bishops Rights of the Kingdom p. 118.133.140 c. the same Assent seems as necessary and that too in a superior Degree as to their Election or Confirmation divers Instances of this appear in the Historians of those Times I shall select some to prove it then the Custom of England Scotland Wales Ireland France c. Anno 1113 Sax. Chr. p. 306. Ralph Bishop of Rochester was elected Archbishop of Canterbury by the King Annuente Plebe Clero Eadmer Hoveden this was done in Communi Consilio apud Windsore And I find about the same Time That another Ralph who had been ordained a Bishop in Scotland was rejected by all because not elected with the Consent of the People c. And notwithstanding his Consecration was forced to wander about and officiate as a Coadjutor to other Bishops About the Year 1120 Malmsb. one