Selected quad for the lemma: land_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
land_n aforesaid_a call_v seize_v 1,448 5 11.0067 5 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
A80048 Judges judged out of their own mouthes or the question resolved by Magna charta, &c. Who have been Englands enemies, kings seducers, and peoples destroyers, from Hen. 3. to Hen. 8. and before and since. Stated by Sr. Edvvard Coke, Knt. late L. Chief Justice of England. Expostulated, and put to the vote of the people, by J. Jones, Gent. Whereunto is added eight observable points of law, executable by justices of peace. Jones, J., Gent.; Coke, Edward, Sir, 1552-1634.; England. Magna Charta. 1650 (1650) Wing C4938; Thomason E1414_1; ESTC R13507 46,191 120

There are 4 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

learn the Laws at their perils therefore If Ignorance were a plea shall knowledge be excused Professors of knowledg nay such as ingross that Profession from all others nay more such as are the onely causers and punishers of all other mens Ignorance It appeareth that this Sentence was Denounced in the time of King Hen. 3d. Now followeth another Denounced upon the said Confirmation made in the 25th year of King 8d 1o. viz. In the Name of the Father Excom 2. the Son and the Holy Ghost Amen Whereas our Sovereign Lord the King to the Honour of God and Holy Church and for the common profit of the Realm hath granted for him and his Heirs for ever these Articles above written Robert Arch-Bishop of Cauterbury Primate of all England Admonished all his Province Once Twice and Thrice Because that shortness will not suffer so much delay as to give knowledge to all the People of England of these Presents in Writing We therefore injoyn all persons of what Estates soever they be that they and every of them as much as in them is shall uphold and maintain these Articles granted by our Sovereign Lord the King in all points And all those that in any point do resist or break or in any manner hereafter procure counsel or any wise assent to resist or break those Ordinances or go about it by word or deed openly or privily by any manner of pretence or colour We the foresaid Arch-Bishop by our Authority in this Writing expressed do Excommunicate and accurse and from the Lord Jesu Christ and from all the company of Heaven and from all all the Sacraments of Holy Church do sequester and exclude Doth not the word Hereafter Expost Q. 1 extend to all successions and implie a Duration as long as there be a Mag. Charta and a breaker of it Do not Parliamentarie Oaths as well as their Laws include absents and futures as well as present If neither Oaths nor Excommunications be obligatorie to Atheists shall not their hands and seals bind them and their Heirs and Executors after them as common Bonds signed and sealed between private parties commonly do And more specially such as take upon them the sole Execution and Administration of the Laws Liberties and Freehold of England Shall not Charters of Parliament made signed sealed and confirmed by Authoritie of Parliaments bind all Subjects their Heirs Executors and Administrators as well and as far as private Charters of Feofments shall bind their Contractors and their Heirs c. Nay as far as Acts of Parliament can bind till repealed Is not every Court called Curia of the Care it ought to have to execute that charge it undertaketh and not to exact and raise Fees c. for discharging themselves of all their said Obligations to do even Justice to all men and to force men to pay those exactions even for doing injustice If all before written be not sufficient to discover that to be true and that therefore the Lives Lands Goods possessed by Judges Lawyers all or most of them are in the States power to seize into their hands to the use of the Common-wealth as aforesaid let us look a little further and we shall find more that may And first the Statute called Articuli super Chartas viz. Stat. of Artic. on the great Chart. A. 28. Ed. 1. Articles upon the great Charters made 28. of Ed. 1. viz. the same year as the Confirmation at large which consisteth of 38. chapters of Magna Charta was made proveth further as followeth For as much as the Articles of the great Chart●r of the Liberties of England Preamble and of the Charter of the Forrest the which King Henry Father to our Sovereing Lord the King granted to his People for the Weal of his Realm have not been heretofore observed ne kept and all because there was no punishment executed upon them which offended against the points of the Charters before mentioned Our Sovereign Lord the King hath again granted revived confirmed them at the requests of his Prelates Earls Barons assembled in His Parliament holden at Westminster in the ●8 year of his reign And hath ordained enacted and established certain Articles against all them that offend contrary to the points of the said Charters or any part of them or that in any wist transgress them in the form that ensueth viz. First of all That from henceforth the great Charter of the Liberties of England granted to all the Commonaltie of the Realm and the Charter of Forrest in like manner granted shall be observed kept maintained in every point in as ample wise as the King hath granted renued and confirmed them by this Chart. And that the Charter be delivered to every Sheriff of England under the Kings Seal to be read four times in the year before the people in the full County that is to wit the next County day after the Feast of S. Michael and the next County day after the Feast of the Circumcision and after Easter and after the Feast of S. John Baptist And for these two Charters to be firmly observed in every point and Article where before no remedy was at the Common Law there shall be chosen in every Shire Court by the Commonaltie of the same shire three substantial men Knights Justices of Oyer Term. or other lawfull wise and well disposed Persons to be Iustices which shall be assigned by the Kings Letters Patents under the great Seal to hear and determine without any other Writ but onely their Commission such plaints as shall be made upon all those that commit or offend against any point contained in the aforesaid Charters in the Shires where they be assigned as well in Franchises as without and as well for the Kings servants out of their places as for other And to hear the plaints from day to day without any delay and to determine them without allowing the delays which be at the Common Law And the same Knights shall have power to punish all such as shal be attainted of any Trespass done contrary to any point of the two said Charters where no remedy was before at the Common Law as before is said by Imprisonment or by Fine or by Amerciament according to the Trespass Nevertheless the King nor none of his Councel that made this Ordinance intend that by virtue hereof any of the foresaid Knights shall hold any manner of Plea by power for to admit any suit in such cases wherein there hath been remedy provided in times passed after the course of the Common Law by writ Nor also that the Common Law should be prejudiced nor the Ch. aforesaid in any point And the K. Willeth that if all three be not present or cannot at all times attend to do their Office in form aforesaid the King commandeth that two of them shall do it And it is Ordained that the Kings Sheriffs and Bailiffs shall be attendant to do the commandments of
Judge of any Court of Record observe any such Law being so made or practice or suffer to be practised where he hath authoritie any suits or proceedings contrarie to Mag. Chart. and was and is he not perjured Doth not the practice of the Kings-Bench still shew that thence doth issue no other Writ for debt than a Bill of Middlesex or Latitar which express themselves to be for Trespass Are not those Writs still returnable ubicunquè suerimus and the Kings-Bench therefore still removeable at the Kings will whereupon as saith the L. Coke many discontinuances ensue and great trouble of Jurours charges of Parties and delay of Justice for which causes he saith this Statute was made How doth this Statute if therefore made prevent such discontinuances trouble charges and delay of Justice but by declaring that Common-Pleas shall not follow the Kings-Bench How contradictorie to himself is the L. Coke then when he laboureth to make Common-Pleas lawfull to be holden in the Kings-Bench And if as he saith the Pleas of the Crown were divided into high Treason Misprision of Treason Petty Treason Fellonie c. limited to the Kings-Bench because cont Coron dign Regis so that of these saith he the Common-Pleas cannot hold Plea By what Justice can he desire to hold Common-Pl●as in the Kings-Bench unless because more gainfull as when he was supplanted by his successour under colour of preferment from the Common-Pleas to the Kings-Beach he passionately expressed the difference saying That he was called from the warm kitchen to the cold hall and that therefore he desired to reduce Justice to his desire rather than his desire to Justice But let us examine his Arguments for that purpose First saith he The King is out of this Stature How out of this Statute which above all other the King was sworn to observe and obey and to violate was perjurie and punishable in all men without regard of persons and no less in the Lo. C. to say and write otherwise But saith he the King might sue in his Bench. And so might he in any Court of Record which he pleased for all such Courts are called his and have power under him to administer Justice to all men according to their Commissions and Charters as well as the Kings Bench and therefore he had his Atturneys and Sollicitours attending many such Courts Secondly saith he if a man be in custodia any other may lay upon him any action of debt c. because saith he that he that is in custodia ought to have the priviledge of that Court. Now if a man be in custodia for Fellonie c. and an Action for Debt c. be laid upon him shall his priviledge in being in custodia keep him from hanging if he deserve it till he pay the debt or if he be hanged and have any goods shall the Creditour be paid his debt out of the same or if he have any lands out of the Escheat I believe not If a man be not in custodia but a Justice of Peace or a Grand-Juror attending Sessions in Cumberland or Cornwall what priviledge of this Court doth he need If he be arrested there upon a Writ of trespass when he is guiltie of none is he not more disgraced than priviledged by this Court when he is forced to appear in this Court for trespass and nothing declared against him for any such matter ought he not to be dismissed for that matter with costs and dammages answerable to his disgrace and expences though arrested at the Kings suit Shall the King do any man wrong how then doth the Maxim hold that he cannot Shall this Court abuse his name to wrong his Subject Is not Injustice Perjurie in a Judge sworn to do Justice Is not all against Mag. Chart. and truth which is God himself If not so dismissed shall a declaration be admitted against him upon an Original for debt where neither such Writ nor cause belong And shall the Defendant be inforced to wait upon his Bail for trespass to answer that Declaration is not that more Injustice And moreover if that Writ or the Return thereof be forged as all or most Originals directed to the Sheriffs of London or Middlesex are aswel by Clerks of this Court and so filed upon Record here as by Attorneys in the Common-Pleas there shall that Declaration be admitted to say that the Defendant is in custodia which is false and be made a Record which would be accounted the next truth to Gospel And shall not the Defendant be admitted to plead Mag. Ch. against the jurisdiction of the Court and such lying Records If not is not all this more Injustice and Perjurie Shall Judges give Judgements upon fal●e Records except to burn them and punish the makers and causers and shall not they be counted and called false Judges and Perjurers and their judgements false judgements and perjuries Shall they that commit Debtors into their Marshals custodie upon such judgements by their priviledge as they call it say that this Statute doth nor take away such priviledges when the Lo. C. himself saith that all Statutes ought to be expounded so that there should be no failer of justice and this Statute being M. Ch. chief of all Statutes and all its Confirmations say that equal justice ought to be done to all men without regard of persons What Statute or custom did or can give any priviledge to any Court to the contrarie What benefit of priviledge hath the Debtor that is so committed by this Court and its priviledge but his undoing and his families and often his untimely death by famin and miserie Is not that so occasioned by the rigour and illegalitie of this Court an offence of the highest nature of Munther and Perjurie Who gaineth any thing by this priviledge but the Court and their Marshal in extorted Fees to the dammage of both Creditor and Debtor and often the ruin of both or either Why therefore doth the L. C. call it a priviledge to the party in Custodie when it appeareth to be no benefir but prejudice unto him and that more aggravated to have more Actions laid upon him for more debts occasioned perhaps by his imprisonment What law or reason requireth any priviledge to any man for debt since this Statute in the 29 chapter freeth all mens bodies from imprisonment untill they be lawfully tried by their Peers and no law but an abortive Statute made 25. Ed. 3. cap. 17. and repealed in the 42 of the same King as aforesaid gave an Arrest against Debtors but Merchants and Accomptants and a Statute made in the said 25 year of the said King gave the Creditors two parts of all their Debtors lands all thei goods except the beasts of their plough for satisfaction of their debts which Statute is still in force and daily executed accordingly As for Accomptants Debtors and Tennants to the King that are so indeed if the Court of Exchequer be thought proper for them why
judgement of the Coroners of the Countie wherein they are Outlawed Are the Coroners of any Countie now adays present at every or any Countie when and where men are Outlawed Are not their names nevertheless returned as Judges of every Outlary unknown to them for the most part or all Are not those Returns false and forged and are such proceedings the due course and Proces of Law How many thousands of the Free-men of England are Outlawed yearly by such means and how many of them undone before they can reverse them How many are imprisoned thereupon and have all their estates seised for the King by Sheriffs chosen without the consent of the People and often such as purchase their Offices to gain by such means How many Outlawries yearly are so clandestinely carried that the parties so Outlawed can hear nothing thereof before they be imprisoned and their estates destroyed as aforesaid How many are further damnified by such Outlawries procured of purpose to debar them of their just suits in all Courts until they reverse them How chargeable are reversals thereof What lawfulness is it or what honour for the Courts at Westminster to make unlawfull prosit of such unlawfull practises Cannot the Judges at Westminster be contented to have counterfeit Returns of their Originals in London and Middlesex but they must also have the like Returns of their Exigents throughout the Kingdom Are not such Returns false and perjurious in the Sheriffs that make them Is it not sufficient for Judges to perjure themselves but that they must animate others to do so too by not punishing them when they know that practise Are not the Sheriffs of London and Middlesex and all the Coroners of the Kingdom made liable by this practise to Actions of the Case and to pay costs and dammages to the parties grieved Are such Judges Lawyers c. for the Peace or Profit of the Common-wealth that beget foment or suffer the causes of such Actions causelesly but for their own ends and gains Are such Courts to be called or counted Courts of Justice that maintain any Actions or Arrests upon unjust grounds or colour of any mis-begotten Laws contrarie to Mag. Charta Are not Assaults Batteries Rescues Riots and Homicides frequent upon such Arrests Are not many mens lives lost and more hazzarded and their estates ruined thereby And if a Catch-poll be killed for making or attempting such unlawfull Arrest do not the Judges use to adjudge it wilful Murther though the wronged party doth but endeavour his justifiable defence And have they not begotten a Statute for officers to plead the General issue by colour of which they justifie themselves and their creatures and condemn the guiltless Are not the causers of Murther as worthy to be hanged as the doers Are not they that maintain such Arrests to the same ends as their Predecessors Imps of the same generation Why therefore their advice desired or received in such matters Are not the Releases of Errors which Prisoners are forced to seal before they can be inlarged rather proofs of their guiltiness than acquittances of such practitioners Are not their Errors manifest to be wilfull and gainfull onely to themselves and hurtfull to the Common-wealth are such Errors or Proceedings to be called Due courses or Proces of Law Then to speak once for all is not the Due course and Proces of Law obstructed and perverted and a wrong course practised full of Errors Lies Forgeries Perjuries c. as alreadie appeareth and better shall hereafter and cannot Law be executed without such practises Doth not Mag. Char. and all its confirmations shew how it may Are not they sufficient lights and guids for the Due course Proces and Proceedings which ought to be observed in the right execution of Law And doth not the Lord Coke confess them to be such and that they never misguided any man that certainly knew them and truly followed them Fol. 526. Fourthly If no man shall be exiled c. Are not Debtors exiled from their Native Soils in Cumberland or Cornwal and from all their wordly comforts of Wifes Children Families Friends and Estates both Real and Personal when called and forced by Habeas corpus c. to attend Duke Humsrey in Pauls or Judge Owen in Westminster as good dead as any Judges living to hear or dispatch Suits by the Law of the Land in any way of Justice while the Suitors money lasts or to relieve them with any Alms when their Purses are spent And if at last sent to the Fleet or Marshalsey where they be pent up as aforesaid are they not worse Exiled than into Turkie where they may have more Liberty of Land and Sea and live in less Slavery than under Goalers in England and have more hopes to return home again like Sir Thomas Shirley and many others than from these Hells whence few find Redemption Had Henry of Bullingbrook been Imprisoned for Debt here as such now are when he was banished to France could he have hoped to be King of England except he had made all his Judges and Goalers the best sharers of all his Usurpations as all the cheating Prisoners in these places do theirs as they and their Creditors can best tell by dear and daily experience Fifthly If no man shall be destroyed c. unless by Verdict c. Are not all Prisoners for Debt who are first forced themselves to destroy their small Estates to buy bread to eat in Idleness and to pay Fees to Goalers c. and at last to Famish in the Fleet or Marshalsey c. destroyed both in Lives and Estates and their Families to boot without any Verdict given or intended for their Lives Nay are not all the Free-men of England that are or may be subject to Debts consequently subject to the like destruction And worthy so long as they suffer the Laws of England contained in the glorious Fabrick of the Great Charter of the Liberties of England built by their Ancestors for a perpetual Monument of their care of their Posterity and their Liberties for ever to be thus destroyed by an Hypocritical Generation of Pharisaical Pretenders to the onely knowledge of these Laws which by that pretence they thus pervert to destroy all honest men whom it should save and to save all whom it should destroy or punish and that for unlawful respects and considerations tending onely to their own profits and ends Sixthly If no man shall be condemned c. but by the judgement of his equals according to the Laws of the Land Are not all Debtors that are Famished as aforesaid Condemned for their Lives in effect though but for their Debts in appearance without any Verdict of their equals so intended contrary to the Law of the Land Seventhly do not all the Judges at Westminster sell Justice when they sell Prisoners for Debt their Writs of Habeas Corpus c. for money when the King would have all his Writs of Grace to be given to his Subjects
to the Party Perjurious in the Judges who admit such a Return and proceed upon it and as Illegal in the Sheriff that makes such a Return and as different from due Proces of Law as the other And do not those false Returns filed upon their Records make all their proceedings thereupon false and faint Actions as aforesaid And if all before written be not sufficient to make it appear to the world that they are not onely Forgers Perjurers and Anathema's themselves but also the onely causers of all others to be or be accompted the like And that their Lives Lands and Goods are in the immediate dispose of the present State by the judgements and confessions of their own mouths Behold their Oath which they voluntarily take when they assume their places whereby they binde themselves further before God and man as followeth viz. Ye shall Swear The Oath of the Kings Judges that well and lawfully ye shall serve our Sovereign Lord the King and his people in the office of Iustice and that lawfully ye shall Counsel the King in his business and that ye shall not councel nor assent to any thing which may turn him to dammage or disherison by any manner way or colour And that Ye shall not know the dammage or disherison of him whereof Ye shall not do him to be warned by Your self or by other And that Ye shall do even Law and Execution of right to all his Subjects rich and poor without having regard to any person And that You take not by Your self or by other privily nor apertly gift nor reward of gold not silver nor of any other thing which may turn to Your profit unless it be meat or drink and of small valure of any man that shall have any Plea or Proces hanging before You as long as the Proces shall be so hanging nor after the same cause And that Ye take no Fee as long as Ye shall be Iustice nor Robes of any may great or small but of the King himself And that Ye give none advise nor Counsel to no man great nor small in no case where the King is party And in case that any of what Estatt or Condition they be come before You in Your Sessions with Force and Arms or other ways against the Peace or against the form of the Statute thereof made to disturb Execution of the Common Law or to manace the people that they may not pursue the Law that Ye do their Bodies to be Arrested and put in prison and in case they be such that Ye may not Arrest them that Ye certifie the King of their names and of their Misprision hastily so that he may thereof ordain a covenable remedie And that You by Your selfe nor by other privily nor apertly maintain any Plea or quarrel hanging in the Kings Court or else where in the Countrie And that Ye denie to no man common right by the Kings Letters nor none other mans nor for none other cause and in case any Letters come to You contrarie to the Law that You do nothing by such lett but certifie the King thereof and go forth to do the Law notwithstanding the same Letters And that Ye shall do and procure the profit of the King and of his Crown with all things where Ye may reasonably do the same And in case Ye be from henceforth found in default in any of the points aforesaid Ye shall be at the Kings Will of Body Lands Goods thereof to be done as shall please him As God You help and all Saints Anno 18. Edward 3. Stat. 3. Expost and Quer. If Atheists can perswade Christians that this Oath was no binding for them that had taken it even the Wise Learned Reverend Judges Sages Scientissimous Interpreters of the Laws of England sufficient to keep them within the compass of their Oath Law and Knowledges Shall not Christians perswade themselves that it is a sufficient Confession Declaration and judgement of their own mouths that made it that their forfeitures viz. their Lives Lands and Goods in case of their breach of any point of this Oath are now immediately in the power of the State to dispose of to the publique use at their pleasures without any further Proces or proceedings in Law but onely to give Order and Warrant to Arrest the persons of such Offendors to stand to their censures and to Sequester their Estates and to divide them to the said use accordingly Did Lords ever use any more Law than their own Wills when they Sequestred and punished their villains Had Lords any more Law Right or Reason to Sequester and punish their villains at their own Wills but for that their villains did take their Lands upon conditions to do those services which they and their Lords agreed upon and gave their Lords their Oaths as their greatest bonds to perform those conditions or in case of breach to suffer their Lords to repossess their Lands with the forfeitures of their Goods which they gained and their Lives which they sustained upon the same Was the Oath of a Villain though made by Parliament to the end that Lords should be well served by their Slaves in their private and meanest Offices of as considerable consequence to be observed or in default thereof their forfeitures to be executed as the Oath of Judges made and Confirmed by several Parliaments to the end that the common-wealth should be well served by their Justices in their publike and most honourable if rightly served Offices of Judicature and administration of Justice Are not such Villains as dare incroach not onely upon their Lords Lands and Estates but also upon their Lives and Liberties dangerous transcendent Hyper-Prelatical Usurpers Are not such Usurpers intollerable mischiefs in a Common-wealth Who being sworn servants to the Common-wealth as by this Oath it appeareth the Kings Justices were make all the Common-wealth their servants to attend their Trains at Westminster at their pleasures And all Prisoners for Debt not onely their own Villains but also Villains to their Villainous Goalors and Slaves to their Slaves Are not the meanest of the Free-People of England interessed in the due execution of Justice to which these Judges were sworn as well to them as to Kings and consequently ought they not to be such Lords as dare and will take the forfeitures of such Villains as do them daily Injustice Is not this Oath a sufficient Evidence in it self that the takers of it have do dayly break it cause all others that have or do break it to do so likewise Since Kings and People have wholly referred themselves and their Estates not onely to the Justice of their Judges but also to their fatherly advertisements and admonitions whereby they ought not to suffer any that depend upon them to err through ignorance and they contrariwise admonish none not to offend but suffer and cause more to offend than willingly and wittingly would and so do for want of such admonitions much