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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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a Proxy upon his Writ of Summons he forfeited 100 l. if an Earl 100 Marks if a Baron 100 s. c. It seldom happeneth Towns Col. 4.39 40 42. That any Bishop doth nominate fewer than three or two Proctors nor any Temporal Lord more than one John Archbishop of Canterbury Id. 34. had this Parliament five Proxies 1 Eliz. a Lord of Parliament by License obtained of the Queen to be absent 4 Inst 12 13 made a Proxy to three Lords of Parliament one of which gave Consent to a Bill the other two said Not Content And it was by Order of the Lords debated among the Judges and Civilians Attendants and conceiv'd by them That this was no Voice and the Opinion was affirmed by all the Lords That it was no Voice 2 Car. 1. 1626. the House of Peers made an Order Rush Col. 269. That after this Session no Lord of this House shall be capable of receiving above two Proxies or more to be numbred in any Cause voted In the Lords House Arc Parl. 12. Smith's Common-wealth 87. the Lords give their Voices from the puisne Lord seriatim by the Word Content or Not Content 4 Inst 34. First for himself and then severally for so many as he hath Letters and Proxies A Bill had three Readings in one Forenoon Towns Col. 11. in the House of Lords Towns Col. 9. Where a Committee of Lords is selected out to meet with another Committee of the House of Commons neither the Judges being but Assistants nor the Queen's Council being but Attendants of and upon the House were ever nominated a Joynt-Committees with the Lords But when the Lords among themselves do appoint a Committee to consider of some ordinary Bill especially if it concern Matter of Law it hath been antiently used and may still without Prejudice to the Honour of the House that the King's learned Council but especially the Judges may be nominated as Committees alone or as Joynt-Committees with the Lords January 19. 1597. 39 Eliz. it was resolved Towns Col. 94. Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour That the Order and Usage of this House was and is that when any Bills or Messages are brought from the lower House to be preferr'd to the upper House the Lord Keeper and the rest of the Lords are to rise from their Places and to go down to the Bar there to meet such as come from the lower House and from them to receive in that Place their Messages or Bills Contrariwise when any Answer is to be delivered by the Lord Keeper c. In passing of Bills Arc. Parl. 5. if the Not Contents be most then the Bill is dash't i. e. the Law is annihilated and goeth no further If the Contents be the most then the Clerk writeth underneath Soit baile aux Commons i. e. Let it be delivered or sent to the Commons 3 Car. 1. 1626. resolved upon the Question Rush Col. 365. That the Priviledge of this House is that no Lord of Parliament the Parliament sitting or within the usual Time of Priviledges of Parliament is to be imprison'd or restrain'd without Sentence or Decree of the House unless it be for Treason or Felony or refusing to give Surety of the Peace Giving the Lye to a Peer Nalson 380. Hakewel 84. Vide Kel wey 184. Vid. Lord Hollis's Letter Vid. Lord Hollis's Remains Vid. contra Hunt's Argument for the Bishops Right c. Vid. Grand Question concerning Bishops Right per totum is a Breach of Priviledge Ever since the Conquest the Archbishops and Bishops have no Title to have Voice and Place in Parliament but only in respect of their Temporal Baronies where they are present quousque perveniatur ad Diminutionem Vitae c. When a Question is had of the Attainder of any Peer Hakewel 84. Vid. contra Hart ut supra per tot Vid. Grand Question concerning Bishops Right c per tetum or other in Parliament the Archbishops and Bishops depart the higher House and do make their Proxies for by the Decrees of the Church they may not be Judges of Life and Death 11 Rich. 2. Divers Lords and others being appealed of Treason and other Misdemeanors the Prelates absented themselves during the Trial Selden of Judicature p. 150. Vid. there the Protestation of the Bishops Ibid. 151. having first made Protestation saving their Right to be present in Parliament The Protestation I think intends That they could not be present by Reason of the Common Law and by Reason of an Ordinance made at the Council at Westminster in 21 Hen. 2. by which all Clergymen were forbidden agitare Judicium Sanguinis upon Pain to be deprived both of Dignities and Orders For surely as I think they might otherwise have been present both by the Common Law and by the Law of God Sed Quere All the Lords Spiritual and Temporal Selden's Judicature c. 39. 11 Rich. 2. claimed as their Liberty and Franchise that the great Matters moved in this Parliament and to be moved in other Parliaments in Time to come touching the Peers of the Land ought to be admeasured adjudged and discussed by the Course of the Parliament and not by the Civil Law nor by the Law of the Land used in the more base Courts of the Realm which the King granted in full Parliament The Proceeding against a Peer in Parliament is not necessary Id. 53. Q. It appears that the Lords cannot of themselves judge a Common Person for an Offence Id. 61. for he is no Peer according to that of 4 E. 3. Numb 26. 1 Rich. 2. Id. 123. The Lord Beauchamp was sworn and examined and the Duke of Lancaster being one of the Committee was diligently examin'd before the rest of the said Committee but not sworn ad testificandum Vid. rost Earls and Dukes are not sworn on Trials c. in Parliament In Judgments on Delinquents in Parliament Id. 132. the Commons might accusare petere Judicium and the King assentire but the Lords only did judicare The King's Assent ought to be to capital Judgments Id. 141. Vid. Id. 144 14● 148 154 158. and the Lords Temporal to be only Judges therein and not the Lords Spiritual but in Misdemeanors the Lords Spiritual and Temporal are equal Judges and the King's Assent is not necessary Id. 136. yet it seemeth that the King's Assent is necessarily required in capital Causes and Judgments If a Peer be committed to Prison the Gentleman Usher hath the Charge of him thither and the Serjeant attending on the Great Seal How Lords of Parliament shall be placed in the Parliament Vide Stat. 31 Hen. 8. c. 10. Vid. 4 Inst 362. Rot. Parl. 3 H. 6.10 Arcana Parl. 70. and other Assemblies and Conferences of Council A Peer of the Realm shall be tried in an Appeal by Knights c. and not by his Peers because it is at the Suit of the Party Brook 142 153. Otherwise it is in an Indictment of Treason or Felony for that it is at the Suit of the King The
divided into two or more Questions as Dec. 2. 1640 the Debate about the Election of two Knights was divided into two Questions No Member in his Discourse in the House may mention the Name of any other Member then present Id. 30. Vide Smyth's Common-wealth 85. but to describe him by his Title or Addition as that Noble Lord that worthy Knight or by his Office as Judge Serjeant Gentleman of the long or short Robe or by his Place as the Gentleman near the Chair near the Bar or on the other side or that Gentleman that spake last or last save one or the like During any Debate any Member Memorials ut supr 30. tho' he have spoken to the Matter may rise up and speak to the Orders of the House if they be transgressed in Case the Speaker do not but if the Speaker stand up he is first to be heard and when he stands up the other must sit down 'till the Speaker sit down But if any Person rise up to speak to the Orders of the House in the midst of a Debate Ibid. 31. he must keep within that Line and not fall into the Matter itself if he do he may be taken down by the Speaker or any other Member calling to the Orders of the House While a Member is speaking to a Debate or Question he is to be heard out Id. 31. Vid. Town Coll. 205. and not taken down unless by Mr. Speaker as in some Cases he may or that he speak of such Matter as the House doth not think fit to admit A Matter upon Debate having been once finally determined by a Question Memorials in Hakeavel 33. ought not to be again brought into Dispute 27 Martij 1604. Ibid. Sir Edward Coke Attorney-General and Dr. Hone bring a Message from the Lords desiring a Conference about the Case of Sir Francis Godwyn Vide this Argument at large in the Appendix Upon this Message it was argued That now the Judgment having pass'd the House it could not nor ought to be reversed by them and upon the Question it was resolv'd There shou'd be no Conference 2 Apr. 1604. Ibid A Vote having passed some Days past That no Conference shou'd be admitted with the Lords the same Question was again moved but was carried in the Negative And it was then urged for a Rule That a Question having been once made and carried in the Affirmative or Negative cannot be questioned again but must stand as the Judgment of the House 4 Junij 1604. Id. 45 Agreed for a Rule If two stand up to speak to a Bill He who first stood up if it be known by Demand or otherwise is to be first heard 11 Nov. 1640. Id. 69. It is declared as a constant Order of the House That if a Witness be brought to the House the House sitting the Bar is to be down otherwise if the House be in a Committee In a Debate about an Election Id. 70. it was Resolved That the Party concern'd shall be heard to inform the House and then he is to go forth When any Complaint is made against a Member Id. 71. or Exceptions taken to any Thing spoken by him after he hath been heard to explain himself if he desire or the House command it which is usually done by him standing in his Place if the House be not satisfied but sall into Debate thereof such Member is to withdraw The Members of the lower House came to the Lords upon a Conference Town Coll. 311. as they were sitting at the Table and going to the upper End thereof spake When any Bills or Messages are brought from the lower House to be presented to the upper House the Lord Keeper Towns 95. Vide Sir S. d'Ewes Jour 585. and the rest of the Lords are to rise from their Places and to go down to the Bar and there meet such as come from the lower House and from them to receive in that Place their Messages or Bills But when any answer is to be deliver'd by the Lord Keeper in the Name and behalf of the upper House Ibid. to such Knights and Burgesses as come from the lower House the said Knights and Burgesses are to receive the same standing toward the lower End of the House and the Lord Keeper is to deliver the same with his Head covered and all the Lords are to keep their Places In the Answer of the Commons House of Parliament to King James his Objection in Sir Francis Goodwyn's Case 3 Apr. 1604. Memorials ut supra 33 34. the Objection being That they refuse Conference with the Lords The Answer is in these Words Concerning our refusing Conference with the Lords there was none desired 'till after our Sentence passed and then we thought that in a Matter private to our own House which by Rules of Order might be by us revoked we might without any Imputation refuse to confer Orders and Resolves of the House taken out of the third Volume of Mr. Rush worth's Collections Part 1. 2 Apr. 1604. Id. 71. A Rule that a Question being once made and carried in the Affirmative or Negative cannot be questioned again but must stand as a Judgment of the House the Case of Sir Francis Goodwyn and Sir John Fortescue See at the End of the House of Commons Proceedings about the Aylesbur-men 9 Nov. 1640. Id. 38. Ordered that the general Order for those that are double returned shall not bind Mr. now extra Regnum 10 Nov. 1640. Id. 41. Declared in the House that at the naming a Committee if any Man rise to speak about the same the Clerk ought not to write down any more Names whilst the Member standing up is speaking Ibid. Id. 42. Declared that when a Business was begun and in Debate if any Man rise to speak to a new Business any Member may but Mr. Speaker ought to interrupt him 11 Nov. 1640. Id. 44. That whosoever shall go forth of the House to a Conference in a confused manner before Mr. Speaker shall forfeit 10 s. and that the Reporters ought to go first to take their Places at Conferences 25 Nov. 1640. Id. 60. Ordered that when any Message is to go up to the Lords none shall go out of the House before the Messenger 26 Nov. 1640. Id. 61. That neither Book nor Glove may give any Man Title or Interest to any Place if they themselves be not here at Prayers 28 Nov. 1640. Id. 66. Ordered that if any one be chosen a Member of this House and his Writ not yet returned he may notwithstanding be admitted to the Sacrament to Morrow delivering a Ticket of his Name and the place for which he serves 4 Dec. 1640. Id. 83. Ordered that whosoever does not take his Place when he comes into the House or removes out of his Place to the Disturbance of the House shall pay 12 d. to be divided between the Serjeant and the Poor and whosoever speaks so loud in the House when any Bill or other Matter is reading as to
Bill is engrossed the Clerk ought to endorse the Title thereof upon the back of the Bill and not within the Bill in any Case Ibid. So ought likewise such Bills as come from the Lords to have Titles endorsed upon the back of the Bill and not within After a Bill hath been committed Id. 151. and is reported it ought not in an ordinary Course to be committed but either to be dash'd or ingrossed and yet when the Matter is of Importance it is sometimes for special Reasons suffer'd but then usually the Re-commitment is to the same Committee About two or three Days after the Bill is thus order'd to be engrossed Id. 152. and is accordingly engrossed it is offer'd by the Speaker to be read a third Time for the Passage thereof For the most part the Speaker putteth not any one Bill to the Passage by itself alone Id. 153. but stayeth till there be divers Bills ready engross'd for the third Reading and when he hath a convenient Number which may be five or six rather less than more then he giveth Notice to the House That he purposeth next Day to offer up some Bills for the Passage and desireth the House to give special Attendance for that purpose and then the Day following he doth accordingly put them to the third Reading First private Bills until the House be grown to some fulness and then he offereth to be read the publick Bills which are engrossed It hath at some times been order'd Ibid. That for the preventing of carrying of Bills with a few Voices that no Bills shou'd be put to the Passage until Nine of the Clock at which time the House is commonly full or shortly after When the Bill is read the third Time Id. 153 the Clerk delivereth it to the Speaker who reads the Title thereof and openeth the Effect of the Bill and telleth them That the Bill hath now been thrice read and that with their Favours he will put it to the Question for the passing but pawseth a while that Men may have Liberty to speak thereto for upon the third Reading the Matter is debated afresh and for the most part it is more spoken unto this Time than upon any of the former Readings When the Argument is ended Id. 154. the Speaker still holding the Bill in his Hand maketh a Question for the Passage in this sort As many as are of Opinion that this Bill shou'd pass say Yea c. If the Voice be for the Passage of the Bill Ibid. the Clerk ought to make a Remembrance thereof in his Journal if otherwise then his Remembrance must be accordingly made Breck Abr. f. Edit 119 n. 4. Upon the Bill thus passed if it be originally exhibited in the House of Commons the Clerk ought to write within the Bill on the top toward the right Hand Soit baille aux Seigneurs Let it be deliver'd to the Lords If the Bill passed be originally begun in the Lords House Brook 119.4 then ought the Clerk to write underneath the Subscription of the Lords which always is at the foot of the Bill A cest Bill les Commons sont assentus i. e. To this Bill the Commons have assented 19 Dec. 1584. Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour 344. Col. 2. 27 Eliz. The House of Commons taking Exceptions about endorsing of Bills in the upper part of them whereas it ought to be done at the neither and lower part the Lords did very respectfully take away their said Grievance by the alteration of the Indorsinents aforesaid according to the usual and ancient Form No Bill upon the third Reading Hak. 156. for the Matter or Body thereof may be recommitted but for some particular Clause or Proviso it hath been sometimes suffered but it is to be observ'd as a Thing unusual after the third Reading It hath been much doubted Hakewel 157. whether when a Bill is in Debate for the Passage it ought not to receive the Resolution of the House the same Day wherein it is first offer'd to the Passage but Precedents are where the Case being of some Importance and the Debate growing long the Argument hath been put over to the next Day In which Case he that hath already spoken to the Bill the first Day may not again speak the Second no more than he may speak twice in one Day where the Argument is not deferred to another Day If a Bill be rejected Id. 158. the same Bill may not be offer'd to the House again the same Session but if it be alter'd in any Point material both in the Body and in the Title it may be receiv'd the second Time In the Time of the Reading of a Bill Ibid. the House should not be interrupted with any other Business and yet in 1. Eliz. the House adjourn'd itself till the next Day after the Bill for Sealing Clothes was half read only to be present at the Conference about Religion in Westminster-Abby Sometimes the House conceiving much Offence against some Bills Ibid. doth not only order them to be rejected but to be torn c. in the House When a Bill is thrice read Id. 159. and pass'd in the House there ought to be no further Alteration thereof in any Point When the Speaker hath in his Hands a convenient Number of Bills ready passed Id. 175. as five or six or therabouts he then putteth the House in Mind of sending them up to the Lords and desireth the House to appoint Messengers who accordingly do appoint some one principal Member of the House for that Purpose to whom the Bills are delivered in such Order as he ought to present them to the Lords which is done by Direction of the Speaker except the House be pleased to give special Direction therein The Order which hath usually been observed in ranking them is First Id. 176. To place those that came originally from the Lords Secondly Those that being sent up to the Lords from the Commons House were sent back to be amended Thirdly Publick Bills originally coming from the Commons House and these to be marshalled according to their Degrees in Consequence Lastly Are to be placed private Bills in such Order as the Speaker pleaseth Many Times the House with a Purpose especially to grace some one Bill sendeth it alone Ibid. with a special Recommendation thereof The Messenger for this Purpose is usually attended by thirty or forty of the House as they please and are affected to the Business The principal Messenger Id. 177. who delivers the Bills to the Lords coming in the first Rank of his Company to the Bar of the Lords House with three Congies telleth the Lords That the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the Commons House have sent unto their Lordships certain Bills and then reading the Title of every Bill as it lieth in Order he so delivereth the same in an humble Manner to the Lord Chancellor who of Purpose cometh to receive them Bills sent from the Lords to the Commons House Ibid. if they be ordinary
Bills are sent down by Serjants at Law or by two Doctors of the Civil Law being Masters of the Chancery and Attendants in the Vpper House accompanied sometimes with the Clerk of the Crown an Attendant there Bills of greater Moment are usually sent down by some of the Judges Assistants there Id. 178. accompanied with some of the Masters of the Chancery who being admitted Entrance do come up close to the Table where the Clerk sits making three Congies and there acquainting the Speaker That the Lords have sent unto the House certain Bills doth read the Titles and deliver the Bills to the Speaker and so departeth with three Congies When they are out of the House the Speaker holds the Bills in his Hands and acquaints the House That the Lords by their Messengers have sent to the House certain Bills and then reading the Title of every Bill delivereth them to the Clerk to be safely kept and to be read when they shall be called for When Bills are thus passed by both Houses Id. 179. upon three several Readings in either House they ought for their last Approbation to have the Royal Assent which is usually deferred till the last Day of the Session The Royal Assent is given in this sort Id. 181. Vid. Towns Coll. 12 49. Vide Sir S. d'Ewe's Jour 467. After some Solemnities ended the Clerk of the Crown readeth the Title of the Bills in such Order as they are in Consequence After the Title of every Bill is read the Clerk of the Parliament pronounceth the Royal Assent according to certain Instructions given him from his Majesty in that Behalf To the Subsidy Bill Towns Coll. 49. because it is the meer Gift of the Subject the Queen's Consent is not required for the passing of it but as it is implied in her thankful Acceptance Nor to the Bill of Pardon because it is originally her free Gift no other Circumstance is required than that the thankful Acceptance thereof by the Lords and Commons be likewise expressed it being but once read in either House before it comes at last to be thus expedited To all other Bills either Private or Publick the Queen's express Consent though in different Words is always requisite February 9. Id. 127. 1597. 39. Eliz. Her Majesty gave her Royal Assent to twenty four publick Acts and nineteen private and refused forty eight which had passed both Houses If it be a publick Bill Towns 13. to which the King assenteth the Answer is Le Roy le veult in English The King wills it If a private Bill allowed by the King the Answer is Soit fait come il est desire i. e. Be it done as is desired If a publick Bill which the King forbears to allow Le Roy se avisera i. e. The King will consider To the Subsidy Bill Id. 12. Le Roy remercie ses loyaux Subjets accept lour Benevolence ainsi le veult i. e. The King thanks his loyal Subjects accepts their Benevolence and so wills it To the General Pardon Towns Col. 13.49 Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 467. Gol. 2. The Assent is thus Les Prelates Seigneurs Commons encest Parliament assembles an nom de toutes vous autres Subjets remercient tres humblement vostre Majestie prient à Dieu que il vous donne en sante bon vie longue The Prelates Lords and Commons in this Parliament assembled in the Name of all other your Subjects do most humbly thank your Majesty and do pray God to give you Health and a good and long Life A private or particular Act is always field Sir R. Atkin's Argument 57. Arc. Parl. 45. but never enrolled Every Bill that passeth the Parliament shall have Relation to the first Day of the Parliament though it come in at the End of the Parliament unless a Time be specially appointed by the Statute when it shall commence If a Bill be admitted to be read Scobel 41. it is to be presented fairly written without any Razure or Interlineation together with a Breviat of the Heads of the Bill and unless it be so tendered the Speaker may refuse it Until the Bill be open'd Id. 42. no Man may speak to it An Act was read Towns c. 187. to which no Man offered to speak Whereupon Mr. Speaker stood up and said That if no Man speak it must be ingrossed i. e. Silence gives Consent It is the usual Rule of the Law Towns Col. 134. That where the Numbers of the Affirmative and Negative are equal Semper presumetur pro negante The Negatives by Custom are to carry it i. e. That the former Law is not to be changed When Votes are digested into a Bill Scobel 45. and that comes to be read or passed it is lawful to debate or argue against all or any Part thereof to alter or reject it Because Votes in order to a Bill are no further binding but that the Bill is to be presented containing those Votes and because the Bill gives Occasion of a more large Debate before it can pass into a Law every Member hath Liberty to offer his Reasons against it as well as give his Vote as often as it comes to a Question Ibid. When a Bill has been read the second Time and opened any Member may move to have it amended but must speak but once to it and therefore must take all his Exceptions to it and every Part of it at one Time for in the Debate of a Bill no Man may speak but once the same Day except the Bill be read any more than once that Day and then he may speak as often as it is read Id. 58. 23 Junii 1604. It was agreed for a Rule If a Bill be continue in Speech from Day to Day one may not speak twice to the Matter of the same Bill Note His. Refor Vol. I. p. 144. A Bill was read in the House of Lords four Times Quere if in one Day CHAP. XVIII Concerning Committees A Committee of either House ought not by Law to publish their own Refults Rush Part. 3. Vol. 2. p. 74. neither are their Conclusions of any Force without the Confirmation of the House which hath the same Power of controuling them as if the Matter had never been debated Committees are such as either the Lords in the Higher House Sir Tho. Smyth 's Common-Wealth 75. or Commons in the Lower House do choose to frame the Laws upon such Bills as are agreed upon and afterward to be ratified by the same Houses The Proceeding in a Committee is more honourable and advantageous to the King and the House Rush Col. 557. for that Way leads most to the Truth And it is a more free and open Way where every Man may add his Reason and make Answer upon the hearing of other Mens Reasons and Arguments For Referring a Bill to Committees Sir Simon d'Ewe 's Jour 186. it is chiefly for Amendment or Alteration thereof after it hath been penned and put into the House by some one or
Being of this Kingdom can have no other Bottom to stand upon but the Parliament it being the Foundation upon which the whole Frame of the Commonwealth is built The Parliament is the Cabinet Ib. 201. wherein the chiefest Jewels both of the Crown and Kingdom are deposited The great Prerogative of the King and the Liberty of the People are most effectually exercised and maintained by Parliaments c. Parliaments are the Ground and Pillar of the Subject's Liberty Ib. 587. and that which only maketh England a free Monarchy Parliaments are says the Earl of Warwick Ib. 752. Admiral of the Sea to John Pym Esq July 6 1742 That Great Council by whose Authority the King's of England have ever spoken to their People Both Houses of Parliament are the Eyes in the Body Politick Ib. 702. whereby His Majesty is ought by the Constitution of this Kingdom to discern the Differences of those Things which concern the Publick Peace and Safety thereof The Parliament is the Mouth of the King and Kingdom Vox Dei c. Parliaments says K. C. 1. in his Declaration to all his Loving Subjects Rushw Coll. 3d Part Vol. 2 p 40. after his Victory at Edgehill on the 23d of October 1642 are the only Sovereign Remedies for the growing Mischiefs which Time and Accidents have and will always beget in this Kingdom That without Parliaments the Happiness cannot be lasting to King or People The Parliament is to be considered in three several Respects first Ib. p. 45. As it is a Council to advise 2dly As it is a Court to judge 3dly As it is the Body Representative of the whole Kingdom to make repeal or alter Laws L'Assemblie de Troys Estates Cestascavoir Finch's Nemotecnia lib. 2. c. 1. fo 21. Roy Nobility Commons qui font le Corps del Realm est appel un Parliament lour Decree un Act de Parliament Car sans touts troys come si soit fait per Roy Seigneurs mes rien parle del Commons nest Ascun Act de Parliament i. e. The Assembly of the three Estates to wit the King the Nobility and the Commons which make the Body of the Realm is called a Parliament and their Decree an Act of Parliament for without all three as if it be done by the King and Lords but speaks nothing of the Commons there is not any Act of Parliament On the Restoration of King Charles the 2d the Commons resolved May 1. 1660. Journal Dom. Co. That this House doth agree with the Lords and do own and declare that according to the antient and fundamental Laws of this Kingdom the Government thereof is and ought to be By King Lords and Commons The Word Parliament is used in a double Sense 1. English Liberties p. 78. Strictly as it includes the Legislative Power of England as when we say an Act of Parliament add in this Acceptation it necessarily includes the King the Lords and the Commons each of which have a Negative Voice in making Laws and without their Joint Consent no new Laws can pass that be obligatory to the Subject 2. Vulgarly the Word is used for the Two Houses the Lords and Commons as when we say The King will call a Parliament His Majesty has dissolved his Parliament c. This Court is the highest Court in England Crompton's Juris p. 1. in which the Prince himself sits in Person and usually comes there at the Beginning of the Parliament and at the End and at any other Time when he pleaseth 4 Inst 3. during the Parliament The King is the Caput Principium and Finis of Parliaments It appears by Precedents That whenever a Parliament was sitting in the King's Absence Rushw Coll. Vol. 3. Part 1. p. 772. there was always a Custos Regni or a Locum Tenens Regis appointed This Court consists of the King's Majesty 4 Inst 1. sitting there as in his Royal Politic Capacity and of the three Estates of the Realm viz. the Lords Spiritual Arch-Bishops and Bishops who sit there by Succession in respect of their Counties Vide Dyfol 60. or Baronies parcel of their Bishopricks The Lords Temporal Dukes Marquesses Earls Viscounts and Barons who sit there by reason of their Dignities which they hold by Descent or Creation every one of which both Spiritual and Temporal ought to have a Writ of Summons ex debito Justitiae And the Commons of the Realm whereof there be Knights of Shires or Counties Citizens of Cities and Burgesses of Boroughs all which are respectively elected by the Shires or Counties Cities and Boroughs by Force of the King's Writ ex Debito Justitiae and none of them ought to be omitted And these represent all the Commons of the whole Realm and are trusted for them The King and these three Estates Ib. 2. are the great Corporation or Body Politic of the Kingdom and do sit in two Houses King and Lords in one House called The Lords House the Knights Citizens and Burgesses in another House called The House of Commons That which is done by this Consent Arc. Parl. 2. is called firm stable and sanctum and is taken for Law All the Judges of the Realm Towns Coll. 5.6 Vid. Cromp ton 1. Barons of the Exchequer of the Coif the King's Learned Council and the Civilians Masters of the Chancery are called to give their Assistance and Attendance in the Upper House of Parliament but they have no Voices in Parliament 4 Inst 4. but are made sometimes joynt Committees with the Lords Every Englishman is intended to be there present either in Person Arc. Parl. 3. Smyth's Common-wealth 74 or by Procuration and Attorney of what Preeminence State Dignity or Quality soever he be from the Prince be it King or Queen to the lowest Person in England And the Consent of the Parliament is taken to be every Man's Consent In antient Time the Lords and Commons of Parliament did sit together 2 Bulstro 173. See Cotton's Records 12.13.348 Post 60. in one and the same Room but afterwards they were divided to sit in several Rooms and this was at the Request of the Commons but yet still they remain but one Court And of all this I have seen the Records one in the Time of H. 1. where all of them did sit together and mention is there made of the Degrees of their Seats so in the Time of E. 3.39 No Man ought to sit in the High Court of Parliament 4 Inst 45. but he that hath Right to sit there For it is not only a personal Offence in him that sitteth there without Authority but a publick Offence to the Court of Parliament and consequently to the whole Realm It is to be observed 4 Inst 2. That when there is best Appearance there is the best Success in Parliament At a Parliament 7 Hen. 5. of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal there appeared but Thirty and there was but one Act pass'd of no great Weight In 50 Ed. 3. all the Lords appeared in Person and not one by
Duke of Somerset in the Time of Ed. 6. was tried for Felony and Treason by his Peers upon an Indictment Id. 71. for it is the Suit of the King When a Lord of Parliament is tried by his Peers 1 Hen. 4.1 Id. 72. they shall not be Sworn to say their Verdict but they shall give their Verdict upon their Honour and are not charged but upon their Honours And 6 Maij 1628. Sir Wm. Jones's Rep. 154 155. It was ordered on the Question Nem. Dissen That the Nobility of this Kingdom and Lords of the upper House of Parliament are of antient Right to Answer in all Courts as Defendants upon Protestation of Honour only and not upon the common Oath An order of the House of Lords was in 1640. Cursus Cancel 112. That the Nobility of this Kingdom and Lords of the upper House of Parliament and the Widows and Dowagers of the Temporal Lords shall Answer in Chancery c. upon Protestation of Honour only but altho their Honour may bind their Conscience in Equity yet Evidence upon their Honour ought not to be admitted in any Court of Law And we must here Note That even Lords of Parliament or Peers of the Realm in giving Evidence to a Jury or in their Depositions in Chancery c. are to be Examined on Oath A Lord of Parliament shall have Knights upon his Trial in every Action 27 Hen. 8. f. 27. A Lord of Parliament may be Outlawed for Murder 27 Hen. 8. f. 17. If a Lord of Parliament makes a Rescous 27 H. 8.27 a Capias shall be taken out against him if the Sheriff return the Rescous otherwise it is in Case of Debt A Capias ad Satisfaciendum does not lyc against a Lord of Parliament 11 H. 4.15 27 Hen. 8.27 for the Law presumes that he has Assets An Attachment is not grantable by the Common Law Dyer 316. Statue Law Custom or Precedent against a Lord of Parliament and the Lord Cromwel by Order in the Parliament-Chamber was discharged of such Process In a Praemunire against a Lord of Parliament Arc. Parl. he ought to appear in his proper Person and not by Attorney unless he has a special Writ of Chancery De attornato faciendo CHAP. V. The Power of the House of Lords A Peer of the Realm being Indicted of Treason or Felony 4 Inst 23. or Misprision of Treason may be Arraigned thereof in Parliament a Lord Steward being appointed and then the Lords Spiritual shall make a Procurator for them and the Lords as Peers of the Realm during the Parliament are Judges whether the Offence be Treason c. that is supposed to be committed by any Peer of the Realm and not the Justices Vide a Letter sent by nine Lords Rush Col. 3. Stat. vol. 1. f. 737. Ant. 42. to the Parliament June 4 1642 who had gone from their House and repaired to the King at York wherein they say We do conceive that it is the apparent usual and inherent Right belonging to the Peerage of England that in the highest Misdemeanour whatsoever no Peer is to Answer to the first Charge but in his Place in his own Person and not upon the first Charge to come to the Barr. In 1553. primo Mariae Burn. His Ref. vol. 2. p. 253. The Bill of Tonnage and Poundage was sent up to the Lords who sent it down to the Commons to be reformed in two Provisoes that were not according to former Precedents How far this was contrary to the Rights of the Commons who now say that the Lords cannot alter a Bill of Money I am not able to determine Die Mercurij 25 Novembris 1692. It is Resolved upon the Question by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal that for the future when there shall be a Devision in the House upon any Question the Contents shall goe below the Barr and the Not Contents stay within the Barr And it is Ordered that this Resolution be added to the Roll of standing Orders of this House Die Lune 7. Decembris 1691. It is Ordered by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament Assembled that for the future upon giving Judgment in any Cases of Appeals or Writs of Error in this House the Question shall be put for Reversing and not for Affirming And that this be added to the Roll of standing Orders 30. Jan. 1640. Rush Col. 3. part vol. 1 p. 165. Upon a Debate in the Lord's House touching the Power of conveying away of Honour it was Nemine contradicente Resolved upon the Question that no Person that hath any Honour in him as a Peer of this Realm may alien and transfer the same to any other Person See Sir B. Shower's Cases in Parliament 1.2 c. See many notable Judgments by the Lords at the Prosecution of the Commons Rush Col. passim Nalson and in later Times Error serra sue in Parliament Vid. Crom. 18. Error Vid. infra Parliament poet prendre Recognizance Brook 137. Error Error shall be sued in Parliament and the Parliament may take a Recognizance If a Judgment be given in the King's Bench 4. Inst 21. either upon a Writ of Error or otherwise the Party grieved may upon a Petition of Right made to the King in English or in French and his Answer thereto Fiat Jusstitia let Justice be done have a Writ of Error directed to the Chief Justice of the King's Bench for removing of the Record in praesens Parliamentum c. And hence it may be presum'd that Writs of Error in Parliament were originally Returnable before the Commons as well as the Lords See Yelverton's Rights of the Commons and Hales of Parliaments p. 18. to 23. When one sueth in Parliament to Reverse a Judgment in the King's Bench he sheweth in his Bill which he exhibiteth to the Parliament some Error or Errors whereupon he prayeth a Scire Facias Id. 22. The Proceeding upon the Writ of Error is only before the Lords in the Upper House Secundum Legem Consuetudinem Parliamenti The Case between Smith and Busby in a Writ or Error Resolved 2 Nalson 716. 'twas decidable in no other Court but in Parliament If any Question be moved in Parliament for Priviledge 4 Inst 363 or Precedency of any Lord of Parliament it is to be decided by the Lords of Parliament in the House of Lords as all Priviledges and other Matters concerning the Lords House of Parliament are November 1641. 2 Nalson 625. Resolved by the House Nemine contradicente that it belongs to the House of Peers by the antient Laws and Constitutions of this Kingdom to interpret Acts of Parliament in Time of Parliament in any Cause that shall be brought before them Julij 12. 1641. 2. Nalson 381. An order of the Lords for Relief of a Feme-Covert and her Children against a Husband refusing to Cohabit The Sentence pronounced by the Lords upon Sir Giles Mompesson Rushw Col. 27.28 and Sir Fracis Michel for Projectors Upon Complaints and Accusations of the Commons Selden's Judicature
no Person who shall hereafter come to the Possession of this Crown shall go out of the Dominions of England Scotland or Ireland without Consent of Parl. 8. That no Person who has any Office under the King Note or receives a Pension from the Crown shall be capable of serving as a Member of the House of Commons With divers other Resolves for better securing the Rights and Liberties of the People on which the Stat. 12. and 13. W. 3. c. 2. was made CHAP. XVII Passing of Bills See for this a MS. Discourse penes W. Bohun Journal Dom. Com. ON the 27th of July 1660 it was represented to King Charles the Second That by the constant Course of Parliament they have used to receive Acts of Grace and such Bills as concern the Redress of Grievances and Confirmation of the Subjects Liberties before they present Bills of Aid or Supply but now in Confidence of His Majesty c they tender a Money-Bill c. i. e. before a Redress of Grievances All Bills take effect and work from the Beginning of the Parliament or Session Hob. 111.33 H. 6.18 Bro. tit Parl. 86. tit Relation 35. Plow 79. Town Col. 209. except it be otherwise ordained by the Act itself 43 Eliz. 1601. while there were divers Disputes about a Bill Mr. Fleming the Queen's Solicitor took the Bill to look a Word in it after he had done and laid it on the Board one stood up and said Mr. Speaker after a Bill is ingrossed you ought to hold it in your Hand and let no Man look into it which was confessed by all And so the Speaker took it When a Bill is read Cook 22.115 the Speaker doth open the Parts of the Bill so that each Member of the House may understand the Intention of each Part of the Bill Such Bills Hakewel 134. as being first passed in one House are sent unto the other are always sent in Parchment fairly ingrossed Publick Bills are in due Course to be preferred in Reading and Passing before Private And of Publick Ibid. Col. 12.116 such as concern the Service of God and Good of the Church Secondly such as concern the Commonwealth in which are included such as touch the Person Revenue or Houshold of the King Queen c. and they ought especially to be preferred in Passing Lastly Private Bills are to be offer'd to be read and passed in such Order as they were preferred Town Col. 270. And they that carry them to give some brief Commendation of them Any Member of the House may offer a Bill for Publick Good Scobel 40. except it be for imposing a Tax which is not to be done but by Order of the House first had If any Member desire Ibid. that an Act made and in Force may be repealed or altered he is first to move the House in it and have their Resolution before any Bill to that Purpose may be offer'd and if upon the Reasons shew'd for repealing or altering such Law the House shall think it fit they do usually appoint one or more of the Members to bring in a Bill for that Purpose But the Speaker is not precisely bound to any of these Rules Hakewel 136. for the preferring of Bills to be read or passed but is left to his own good Discretion except he be specially directed by the House to the contrary and tho he be earnestly pressed by the House for the reading of some one Bill yet if he have not had convenient Time to read the same over and to make a Breviat thereof for his own Memory the Speaker doth claim a Priviledge to defer the Reading thereof to some other Time The Clerk being usually directed by the Speaker but sometime by the House what Bill to read Hakewel 137. with a loud and distinct Voice first reads the Title of the Bill and then after a little Pause the Bill it self which done kissing his Hand he delivereth the same to the Speaker who standeth up uncover'd whereas otherwise he sitteth with his Hat on and holding the Bill in his Hand saith The Bill is thus intituled and then readeth the Title which done he openeth to the House the Substance of the Bill which he doth either trusting to his Memory or using the Help or altogether the Reading of his Breviat which is filed to the Bill Sometimes reading the Bill it self Hakewel 137. Vido Scobel 42. especially upon the Passage of a Bill when it hath been much alter'd by the Commitees so that thereby it differeth very much from the Breviat When he hath open'd the Effect of the Bill he declareth to the House Id. 138. That it is the first Reading of the Bill and delivereth the same again to the Clerk The Bill containing the King's General Pardon hath but one Reading in the Lords House and one below Id. 138. Vid. To● Col. 29 44 126. Vide Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour 91. Col. 2. The Reason is because the Subject must take it as the King will give it without any Alteration and yet many times Exceptions are taken at the Reading thereof for that it is not so favourable as in former Times The like of a Bill of Subsidies granted by the Clergy Hakewel Ibid. The usual Course is to spend the Morning before the House grow full Id. 139. in the first Readings and to defer the second or third Reading till the House grow full All Men of Law know that a Bill Town Cal. 238. which is only expository to expound the Common Law doth enact nothing neither is any Proviso good therein No Knight Col. 12.116 Citizen or Burgess ought to speak above once to one Bill in one Day unless sometime by Way of Explication At the first Reading of the Bill Hakewel 139. it is not the Course for any Man to speak to it but rather to consider of it and to take Time till the second Reading unless it carry Matter of apparent Hurt to the Commonwealth and so to be rejected Nor for any Addition Ibid. for thereby it is imply'd That the Body of the Bill is good which till the second Reading doth not regularly come to the Trial. If any Bill originally begun in the Commons House Id. 140. Scobel 42. upon the first Reading happen to be debated too and fro and that upon the Debate the House do call for the Question it ought to be not Whether the Bill shall be read the second Time for so it ought to be in ordinary Course but whether it shall be rejected If a Bill coming from the Lords be spoken against Hak. Ibid. and pressed to be put to the Question upon the first Reading the Speaker in Favour and Respect thereto shou'd not make the Question for Rejection as in the former Case but shou'd first make the Question for the second Reading and if that be deny'd then for Rejection But usually when any such Debate is the Speaker doth forbear to make any Question at all thereupon except he be much pressed thereto it
being better to consider of it before it be put to such a Hazard If the Question for Rejection be made Id. 141. Scobel 42. and the greater Voice be to have it rejected the Clerk ought to note it rejected in his Journal and so to indorse it on the Back of the Bill and it shall be no more read If the Voice be to have the Bill retained it shall have his second Reading in Course It is against the ordinary Course that the same Bill shou'd be read more than once in one Day Ibid. but for special Reasons it hath been suffer'd that private Bills have been in one Day read twice It is likewise done sometimes Hakewell 142 when the House lacketh other Businesses wherein to employ themselves especially if the Bill be of no great Importance howsoever it is never but upon Motion and special Order When special Committees appointed for the drawing of some one special Bill Ibid. present the same ready drawn to the House it hath been often seen that the same Bill hath not only been twice read but order'd also to be engrossed the same Day It is not without Precedent that a Bill hath been thrice Read Ibid. and passed in the same Day But this is a President that standeth alone Q. the D. of Monmouth's Attainder A Bill was read the fourth Time Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour 90. Co. 1. before it pass'd the House and tho there want not other Presidents yet it is rare and worth the Observation A Bill was put to the Question Id. 335. Col. 1. upon the first Reading and rejected but it is not usual for a Bill to be put to the Question upon the first Reading 27 Eliz. 1584. Id. 337. Col. 2.415 Col. 2. A Bill was committed upon the third Reading having been formerly committed upon the second which is not usual A Bill may be preferr'd to be secondly read the next Day after the first Reading Hakewel 143. but the usual Course is to forbear for two or three Days that Men may have more Time to consider upon it except the Nature of the Business be such that it requireth haste After the Bill is secondly read Ibid. the Clerk as before in humble Manner delivereth the same to the Speaker who again readeth the Title and his Breviat as he did upon the first Reading which done he declareth That it was a second Reading of the Bill And then he ought to pause a while expecting whether any of the House will speak to it for before the Speaker hath so declared the State of the Bill no Man shou'd offer to speak to it and then and not before is the Time when to speak If after a pretty distance of Time Ibid. no Man speak against the Bill for matter or Form he may make the Question for ingrossing thereof if it be a Bill originally exhibited into the Commons House So likewise if divers speak for the Bill Id. 144. without taking Exception to the Matter or Form thereof he may make the same Question for the ingrossing The like Question for the ingrossing ought to be made Ibid. if the greater Voice be That the Bill should not be committed for it were to End further delay in the proceeding of the Bill if there be no Exception taken to the matter or Form thereof but upon the second Reading and after the Speaker hath deliver'd the State thereof the House doth usually call for committing of the Bill and then if any Man will speak against it either for Matter or Form he ought to be heard After the first Man hath spoken Id. 144. the Speaker ought to rest a while expecting whether any other Man will speak thereto so ought he likewise to do after every Speech ended when he perceiveth that the Debate is at an End he ought then to make the Question for the committing thereof in this sort As many as are of Opinion that this Bill shall be committed Id. 145. say Yea. And after the Affirmative Voice given As many as are of the contrary Opinion say No. And he ought by his Ear to judge which of the Voices is the greatest if that be doubtful the House ought to be divided If upon Division of the House it appear that the Numbers are equal Ibid the Speaker hath the casting Voice upon all Questions If it appear that the Affirmative Voice be the greater Ibid. then ought he to put the House in Mind touching the naming of Committees which is done thus Every one of the House that list may call upon the Name of any one of the House to be a Committee and the Clerk ought in his Journal to write under the Title of the Bill the Name of every one so called on at least of such whose Names in that Confusion he can distinctly hear and this he ought to do without Partiality either to those that name or to the Party named He that speaketh directly against the Body of the Bill Id 146. Town Coll. 208. may not be named a Committee for he that would totally destroy will not amend it When a convenient Number of Committees are named Hak. Ibid. then ought the Speaker to put the House in Mind to name Time and Place when and where the Committees may meet which the Clerk ought likewise to enter into his Journal-Book and when the House is in silence he ought with a loud Voice to read out of his Book the Committees Names and the Time and Place of the Commitment that the Committees may take Notice thereof After a Bill Ibid. which is sent from the Lords is twice read the Question ought to be for the Commitment if it be deny'd to be committed it ought to be read the third time and the next Question ought to be for the Passage and not for the Ingrossing as it is where the Bill originally begins in the lower House for Bills which come from the Lords come always engrossed The Question for the Passage shou'd in ordinary Course be then made Hakewel 147. when the Bill is deny'd to be committed but not till the Bill be read the third Time In the debating of Bills in the House Co. 12.116 no Man may speak twice in one Day unless sometime by way of Explication except the Bill be oftner read than once and then a Man may speak as often as the Bill is read Hak. 148. Otherwise it is at Committees or when in the House the Debate ariseth upon some Motion concerning the Order of the House After the Debate is ended Id. 250. the Speaker ought to put the Question for Ingrossing If the greater Number of Voices be Ibid. that the Bill ought not to be ingrossed the Clerk ought to make an Entry in his Journal that the same was dash'd and so he ought likewise to note upon the back of the Bill and the Day when If the Voice be to have it ingrossed it is the Office of the Clerk to do it It is always to be observed Ibid. that when the
The House may be adjourned two Ways to wit by the King i. e. by Writ or by the House itself the last is their own voluntary Act which the King cannot compel for Voluntas non cogitur Note Rush 3 Part Vol. I. pag. 385. Vnder the Number of forty Members the House of Commons is not reputed a House so as to make an Adjournment CHAP. XXII The proper Laws and Customs of Parliament THE Laws 4 Inst 50. Customs Liberties and Privileges of Parliament are better to be learned out of the Rolls of Parliament and other Records and by Precedents and continual Experience then can be expressed by any one Man's Pen. If an Ordinance only be entered in the Parliament Roll Sir William Jones pag. 104. and it hath the Reputation and Use of an Act of Parliament that makes it an Act of Parliament If any doubt be conceived upon the Words or Meaning of an Act of Parliament Rush Vol. 3. pag. 77 78. it is good to construe it according to the Reason of the Common Law When Laws shall be altered by any other Authority Ibid. pag. 653. than that by which they were made says King Charles the First in his Speech at Newark to the Inhabitants of Nottingham 1642. your Foundations are destroyed As every Court of Justice hath Laws and Customs for its Directions 4 Inst 15. some by the Common Law some by the Civil and Canon Law some by peculiar Laws and Customs c. so the High Court of Parliament suis propriis Legibus Consuetudinibus subsistit It is Lex Consuetudo Parliamenti Ibid. that all weighty Matters in any Parliament moved concerning the Peers of the Realm or Commons in Parliament assembled ought to be determined adjudged and discussed by the Course of Parliament and not by the Civil Law nor yet by the Commons Laws of this Realm used in more inferior Courts which was so declared to be secundùm Legem C●nsuetudinem Parliamenti concerning Peers of the Realm by the King and all the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the like pari Ratione is for the Commons for any Thing moved or done in the House of Commons and the rather for that by another Law and Customof Parliament the King cannot take Notice of any Thing said or done in the House of Commons but by the Report of the House of Commons and every Member of Parliament hath a judicial Place and can be no Witness And this is the Reason that Judges ought not to give any Opinion of a Matter of Parliament because it is not to be decided by the Common Laws but secundùm Legem Consuetudinem Parliamenti and so the Judges in divers Parliaments have confessed And some hold That every Offence committed in any Court punishable by that Court must be punished proceeding criminally in the same Court or in some higher and not in any inferior Court and the Court of Parliament hath no higher By the ancient Law and Custom of Parliament Id. 14. a Proclamation ought to be made against being armed against Games Plays and strange Shews c. during the Parliament that the Parliament may not be disturbed or the Members thereof who are to attend arduous and urgent Business be not withdrawn Dec. 15. 1597. Resolved Towns Col. 116. Vide. Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 505. Col. 1. according to the ancient Custom of the House That all the Members of the same which did speak against passing of the Bill should go forth of the House to bring the Bill into the House again together with the Residue of the Members which went out before with the passing of the said Bill All the Members of the House being gone forth except Mr. Speaker and the Clerk Mr. Controller brought in the Bill in his Hand accomanied with all the Members of the House and delivered the said Bill to Mr. Speaker 17 Dec. 1597. The same Ceremony on the like Occasion omitted Id. 117. Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 574. Col. 2. upon a Motion of the Speaker and ordered accordingly upon the Question 18 Dec. 1601. Towns 332. As the Speaker was coming to the House in the Morning the Pardon was delivered unto him which he took and deliver'd it to the House which they sent baek again because it was not brought according to Course The Subsidy of the Clergy was sent in a Roll according to the usual Acts Id. 333. To which Sir Edward Hobby took Exceptions because it was not sent in a long Skin of Parchment under the Queen's Hand and Seal so it was sent back and then the other was sent Si les Commons grant Poundage pur quatre Ans Brook 119.4 Crompt 8. les Seigneurs grant nisi pur deux Ans le Bill ne serra re-bayl al Commons mes si les Commons grant nisi pur deux Ans les Seigneurs pur 4 Ans la ceo serra redeliver al Commons Et in cest case les Seigneurs doient fair un Scedule de lour Entent ou d'endorcer le Bill en cest Form Les Seigneurs ceo assentont pur durer pur quatuor Ans Et quant les Commons ount le Bill arere ne volent assenter a ceo ceo ne poet estre un Act mes si les Commons volent assenter donques ils endorce lour Respons sur le Margent de bass deins le Bill en tiel Form les Commons sont assentuz al Scedule les Seigneurs a mesme cestuy Bill annex donques serra bayl al Clerk del Parliament If the Commons grant Poundage for four Years and the Lords grant it but for two Years the Bill shall not be sent back to the Commons but if the Commons grant but for two Years and the Lords for four Years there it shall be redelivered to the Commons And in that Case the Lords may make a Schedule of their Intent or Endorse the Bill in this Form The Lords do assent to the continuing for four Years And when the Commons have the Bill again and will not assent to it that cannot be an Act But if the Commons will assent then they endorse their Answer on the Margin below within the Bill in this Form The Commons do assent to the Schedule of the Lords annexed to this Bill and then it shall be sent to the Clerk of the Parliament The Custom and Privilege of this House hath always been first Vide Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 483. Col. 2. to make Offer of the Subsidies from hence then to the Upper House except it were that they present a Bill unto this House with Desire of their Assent thereto and then to send it up again And Reason it is that we should stand upon our Privilege seeing the Burden resteth upon us as the greatest Number per Francis Bacon 35 Eliz. 1592. The Lord Chancellor in Parliament offered the Commons a Writ to deliver their Burgess but they refused it Petyt 's Miscel Parl. 4. in Margin as being clear of Opinion That all their Commandments and Acts were to be done and executed by
offered to the House till the Leave of the House be desired and the Substance of such Bill made known either by Motion or Petition It hath at some Times been ordered Hakewel 135. That every one that preferreth a private Bill should pay five Pounds to the Poor as in 43 Eliz. towards the End of the Parliament when they were troubled with much Business but it holdeth not in other Parliaments Scobel 41. Nevertheless the Speaker had Liberty to call for a private Bill to be read every Morning and usually the Morning is spent in the first Reading of Bills untill the House grow full If any publick Bill be tendered Ibid. the Person who tenders the Bill must first open the Matter of the Bill to the House and offer the Reasons for admitting thereof and thereupon the House will either admit or deny it 7 Martii 1606. Mr. Id. 46. Hadley being assigned of a Committee to confer with the Lords desired to be spared he being in Opinion against the Matter itself And it was conceived for a Rule That no Man was to be imployed in any Matter that had declared himself against it and the Question being put it was resolved Mr. Hadley was not to be employed Presidents reported by Mr. Pryn 28 Jan. 1666. about the Method of Proceeding upon the Impeachment of the Lord Mordant 28 May 1624. In the Lords Journal Council to be allowed Impeachment which is entered in haec verba and allows Council in all Cases 1 2 Car. 1. A great Dispute if the Earl of Bristol impeached for High Treason should be allowed Council The Lords then stood on the Order above recited The King objected to that Order that the Judges and his Council had not assented thereto yet the King consented to avoid being thought rigorous that the Earl of Bristol should be allowed Council so it were not drawn into Precedent Council was allowed to Sir George Bynion Council allowed to Garney Lord Mayor of London impeached for High Crimes and Misdemeanors 5 11 July 1642. and 1 2 August Sept. 30. 1645. An Impeachment of of the Earl of Strafford H. Poulton c. for striking Sir Arthur Haselrig Upon all which the House did acquiesce in the Lord Mordant's having Council As to his sitting within the Bar The Lords insisted on it on the Precedents of 18 Jac. the Bishop of Landass and 1645. the Lord Stamford Seignor Coke Litt. Rep. 330. Elect. 1 Car. 1. Viscount de Bucks Chivaler de Norsolk Comment que ill abstein de la maison uncore il avoit privilege versus la Dame Cleer The Privileges of Parliament consist in Three Things May 's Hist Parl. l. 3. p. 27 Sir Robert Atkin's Power of Parliaments 36. Rush Col. Vol. 1.663 First as they are a Council to advise Secondly a Court to judge Thirdly a Representative Body of the Realm to make repeal or alter Laws Upon some Questions propounded to the Judges Anno 1629. 5 Car. 1. all the Judges agreed That regularly a Parliament-Man cannot be compelled out of Parliament to answer Things done in Parliament in a parliamentary Course Their Rights and Privileges are the Birth-right and Inheritance not only of themselves Rush Col. Vol. 3. p. 1. 458. but of the whole Kingdom wherein every Subject is interested The Violating of the Privileges of Parliament Rush Col. Vol. 3. p. 1. 475. Rush Col. Vol. 1. p. 537. is the Overthrow of Parliament The Privileges of the House says Sir Edward Cook are the Heart-Strings of the Commonwealth and therefore if the King desires a Nonrecess I desire that this may be enter'd That it is done ex rogatu Regis The King viz. Charles II. Journ of House of Commons in his Letter to the King of Spain declares That the Murder of his Father was not the Act of the Parliament or Kingdom of England but of a little Company in the Kingdom 23 Aug. 1660. Expulsion from the House for Words Thursday in the Morning 27 May Diurnal Occurrences of Parliament from Nov. 3. 1640. to Nov. 3. 1641. p. 11● 1641. Mr. Tayler a Barrister and Burgess for Old Windsor was brought upon his Knees in the House of Commons for speaking some Words in Disparagement of the whole House about the Earl of Strafford's Death saying They had committed Murder with the Sword of Justice and that he would not for a World have so much Blood lie on his Couscience as did on theirs for that Sentence Which Words being proved against him by the Mayor of Windsor to whom he spoke them and some others he was thereupon expelled the House and voted uncapable of ever being a Parliament Man committed to the Tower during Pleasure to be carried down to Windsor there to make Recantation for those Words and to return back to the House of Commons to receive further Sentence And it was ordered That a Writ should presently issue out for a new Election is his room The 2d of June he petitioned to be restored upon his Submission Id. p. 116. Id. the where Rush Col. part 3. vol. 1. fo 278 280. But his Petition would not be hearkened unto A Member sent to the Tower for discovering what was said in the House in a former Parliament Mr. Francis Nevill Rush Col. part 3. vol. 1. fo 169. of Yorkshire a Member of the House was February 4. 1640. 16 Car. 1. questioned for Breach of Privileges in the precedent Parliament which met 13 Apr. 1640. by discovering to the King and Council what Words some Members did let fall in their Debate in that House Whereupon Mr. Bellasis Knight for Yorkshire and Sir John Hotham were committed by the Council-Board And Mr. Nevill being brought to the Bar was by the House committed to the Tower of London and Sir William Savill touching the same Matter was ordered to be sent for in Custody CHAP. XXIII Privilege of Parliament THE Privilege of Tenants in Ancient Demense Sir R. Atkin's Argument 18. Vide Coke 9 Rep. in Pref. must be as ancient as their Tenure and Service for their Privilege comes by Reason of their Service and their Service is known by all to be before the Conquest in the Time of Edward the Confessor and in the Time of the Conqueror Every Man must take Notice of all the Members of the House returned of Record 4 Inst 23.24 at his Peril Otherwise it is of the Servant of any of the Members of the House Id. 24. A Member of Parliament shall have Privilege of Parliament Id. 42. Hakewel 62. not only for his Servants but for his Horses c. or other Goods distrainable The Privilege is due eundo Scobel 88. morando redeundo for the Persons of Members and their necessary Servants and in some Cases for their Goods and Estates also during the Time For their own Persons they have been privileged from Suits Ibid. Arrests Imprisonments Attendance on Trials Serving on Juries and the like yea from being summoned or called to attend upon any Suit in other Courts by Subpoena
agreed That regularly he cannot be compelled out of Parliament to answer Things done in Parliament in a Parliamentary Course but it is otherwise where Things are done exorbitantly for those are not the Acts of the Court. No Privilege is allowable in Case of the Peace betwixt private Men 2 Nalson 450. much more in Case of the Peace of the Kingdom Privilege cannot be pleaded against an Indictment for any Thing done out of Parliament Ibid. because all Indictments are contra Pacem Domini Regis Privilege of Parliament is granted in regard of the Service of the Commonwealth Ibid. and is not to be used to the Danger of the Commonwealth All Privilege of Parliament is in the Power of Parliament Ibid. and is a Restraint to the Proceedings of other inferior Courts but is no Restraint to the Proceedings of Parliament 16 Car. 1 Resolved Rush 2 vol. 2d Part. 1147. That the Lords voting the propounding and declaring Matter of Supply before it was moved in the House of Commons was a Breach of Privilege of the House Dec. 1641. Resolved 2 Nalson 729. That the setting of any Guards about this House without the Consent of the House is a Breach of the Privilege of this House and that therefore such Guards ought to be dismissed Resolved upon the Question Id. 743. Nemine Contradicente That the Privileges of Parliament were broken by his Majesty's taking Notice of the Bill for suppressing of Soldiers being in agitation in both Houses and not agreed on Resolved upon the Question Ibid. Nemine Contradicente That his Majesty in propounding a Limitation and provisional Clause to be added to the Bill before it was presented to him by the Consent of both Houses was a Breach of the Privilege of Parliament Resolved upon the Question Ibid. Nem. Con. That his Majesty expressing his Displeasure against some Persons for Matters moved in the Parliament during the Debate and Preparation of that Bill was a Breach of the Privilege of Parliament Whereas his Majesty 2 Nalson 823. in his Royal Person the 4th of Jan. 1641. did come to the House of Commons with a great Multitude of Men armed in a warlike Manner with Halberts Swords and Pistols who came up to the very Door of the House and placed themselves there and in other Places and Passages near to the House to the great Terror and Disturbance of the Members then there sitting and according to their Duty in a peaceable and orderly Manner treating of the great Affairs of both Kingdoms of England and Ireland and his Majesty having placed himself in the Speaker's Chair did demand the Persons of divers Members of the House to be delivered unto him It was thereupon declared by the House of Commons Ibid. That the same is a high Breach of the Rights and Privileges of Parliament and inconsistent with the Liberty and Freedom thereof and therefore the House doth conceive they could not with Safety of their own Presons or the Indemnities of the Rights and Privileges of Parliament sit there any longer without a full Vindication of so high a Breach of Privilege and a sufficient Guard wherein they might confide The Lords cannot proceed against a Commoner Sleden's Jud. p. 84. but upon a Complaint of the Commons But Note as to Freedom from Suits and Arrests Stat. 12 13. Wil. 111. that in the Parliament of 12 13 William the Third an Act passed entitled An Act for preventing any Inconveniencies that may happen by Privilege of Parliament Which enacts Sect. I. That any Person may prosecute any Peer of this Realm or Lord of Parliament or any of the Knights Citizens and Burgess of the House of Commons for the Time being or their or any of their menial or other Servants or any other Person entitled to the Privilege of Parliament in any of the Courts of Record at Westminster or high Court of Chancery or Court of Exchequer or the Dutchy Court of Lancaster and in the Court of Admiralty and in all Causes Matrimonal and Testamentary in the Court of Arches the Prerogative Courts of Canterbury and York and the Delegates and in all Courts of Appeal from and after the Dissolution or Prorogation of any Parliament until a new Parliament shall meet or the same be reassembled And from and after any Adjournment of both Houses for above fourteen Days until both Houses shall meet or reassemble And that the said Courts respectively shall and may after such Dissolution Prorogation or Adjournment proceed to give Judgment and make final Orders Decrees and Sentences and award Execution thereon any Privilege of Parliament to the contrary notwithstanding Sect. II. Provides against subjecting the Person of any Knight Citizen or Burgess or any other intitled to the Privilege of Parliament to be arrested during the Time of Privilege Nevertheless allowing the Liberty that any Person having Cause Action or Complaint against any Peer of the Realm or Lord of Parliament so that after any Dissolution Prorogation or Adjournment as aforesaid or and before any Session of Parliament or Meeting of both Houses as aforesaid shall and may have such Process out of the Courts of King's Bench Common Pleas and Exchequer against such Peer or Lord of Parliament as he might have had against him out of the Time of Privilege And if any Person having Cause of Action against any of the said Knights Citizens or Burgesses or any other intitled to Privilege after any such Dissolution Prorogation or Adjournment or before any such Sessions or Meeting of both Houses ut supra he shall and may prosecute such Knight Citizen or Burgess or other such privileged Person in the said Courts of King's Bench Common Pleas or Exchequer by original Bill and Summons Attachment and Distress infinite out of the same Courts who are respectively impower'd to issue the same against him or them until the Defendant shall enter a Common Appearance or file Common Bail to the Action according to the Course of each Court. And that any Person having Cause of Suit or Complaint may in the Time aforesaid exhibit any Bill of Complaint against any Peer of the Realm or Lord of Parliament or against any Knight Citizen or Burgess or other Person so intitled to Privilege in the Chancery Exchequer or Dutchy Court and proceed thereon by Letter or Subpoena as usual And upon leaving a Copy of the Bill with the Defendant or at his House or Lodging or last Place of Abode may proceed thereon and for Want of an Appearance or Answer or for Non-Performance of any Order or Decree or for Breach thereof may sequester the real or personal Estate of the Party as is used and practised where the Defendant is a Peer of the Realm but shall not arrest or imprison the Body of any of the said Knights Citizens or Burgesses or other privileged Person during the Continuance of Privilege of Parliament Sect. III. That where any Person by reason of Privilege of Parliament is stayed or prevented from prosecuting any Suit
of 7 H. 4. which prescribes the Manner of the Election of Knights and Burgesses it is Enacted That the Election shall be by Indenture between the Sheriff and the Freeholders and that the Indenture shall be the Return of the Sheriff It was also said That the Precedents do warrant this Judgment viz. 1. One Precedent of 39 H. 6. where a Person outlawed was adjudged a sufficient Member of Parliament Another 1 Eliz. and at that Time one Gargrave who was a Man learned in the Law was Speaker and of the Queen's Council 2. Another was the Case of one Fludd in the 23d of the Queen who being outlawed was adjudged That he should be privileged by Parliament and at that Time the Lord Chief Justice Popham was Speaker And 3. In the 35th of Elizabeth there were three Precedents scil one of Fitz-Herbert another of one Killegrew being outlawed in fifty two Outlawries and the third of Sir Walter Harecourt being outlawed in eighteen Outlawries But after this Sentence and Judgment of the Parliament the King's Highness was displeased with it because the second Writ emanavit by his Assent and by the Advice of his Council And therefore it was moved to the Judges in the Upper-House Note Whether a Person outlawed could be a Member of Parliament who gave their Opinions that he could not And they all except Williams agreed That the Pardon without a Scire facias did not help him but that he was outlawed to that Purpose as if no Pardon had been granted And upon this the Lords sent to the Lower-House desiring a Conference with them concerning this Matter which Conference the lower-Lower-House after some Deliberation denied for these Reasons 1. Because they had given their Judgment before and therefore they could not have Conference de re Judicata as in like Manner they did 27 Queen Eliz. upon a Bill that came from the Lords and was rejected by Sentence upon the first Reading Sir Walter Mildmay being then of the Privy Council and of the House 2. Because they ought not to give any Accompt of their Actions to any other Person but to the King himself This Answer the Lords did ill resent and therefore refused Conference in other Matters concerning Wards and Respite of Homages and Purveyors and also they sent to the King to inform him of it But before their Messengers came to the King two of the Privy Council scilicet Sir John Stanhope and Sir John Herbert were sent to the King by the Lower-House to inform him that they had heard that his Grace was displeased with the House for their Sentence given for Sir Francis Goodwyn as well as in the Matter of the Sentence which was as they heard said to be against Law as also for the Manner of their Proceedings being done hastily without Calling to it either Sir John Fortescue or his Council or without making his Grace acquainted with it And therefore they desired his Grace to understand the Truth of this Matter and also told him That they were ready with his good Leave with their Speaker to attend his Majesty to give him Satisfaction about their Proceedings But the King told them they came too late and that it ought to have been done sooner calling the House Rash and Inconsiderate But yet notwithstanding he was content to hear their Speaker in the Morning at Eight of the Clock Upon this Message Committees were chosen to consider of the Things and Matters aforesaid which should be delivered to the King in Satisfaction of the Sentence given by the House which afterwards were considered of and digested by the Speaker and Committees in three Points viz. 1. In the Reasons and Motives of their Resolutions 2. In the Precedents which were those I before have reported 3. And in Matters of Law Which were those Matters of Law also before reported by me with another Addition That in the Time of Henry the Sixth the Speaker of the Parliament was arrested in Execution at the Suit of the Duke of York and the Question being put to the Judges at that Time See Bohun's Col. p. 277. Whether the Speaker ought to have his Privilege it was said by them That they were Judges of the Law and not Judges of Parliament The Reasons and Motives were the free Election of the County the Request of one of the House the double Return of the Sheriff with a Commemoration of the Length of the Time since the Outlawries and with that the Payment of the Debts To this Report the King answered That he now ought to change his Tune which he used in his first Oration scilicet Thanksgiving to Grief and Reproof But he said That it was as necessary they should be reproved as congratulated and therefore he cited a parcel of Scriptures wherein God had so done with his People Israel nay with King David the People whom he tendered as the Apple of his Eye and David who was a Man after his own Heart He said It seems antiently to be a Privy Counsellor was incompatible with being a Member of Parliament or Publick Counsellor That since Sir Francis Goodwyn was received by the House upon Reasons and Motives inducing the House thereunto so the King upon Reason too took Consideration of Sir John Fortescue being one of the Council an ancient Counsellor a Counsellor not chosen by the King but by his Predecessors and so he found him and therefore he endeavoured to grace him being the only Man of them that had been disgraced the King protesting that he would not for any Thing in the World offer unjustly any Disgrace to any Man in the Nation Besides he did not proceed rashly as they had proceeded but upon Deliberation with double Advice as well with that of his Council as with that of his Judges And in his answering the Precedents Quere If the King himself was not here too over weening he said That those were his own proper Records and to use them against himself was over-great Weenings But in Precedents he said that they ought to respect Times and Persons and therefore said That Henry the Sixth's Time was troublesome he himself Weak and Impotent And as for the other Precedents they were in the Time of a Woman which Sex was not capable of Mature Deliberation and so he said where Infants are Kings whom he called Minors For the Law Part he referred to the Answer of his Judges who by the Lord Chief Justice gave these Resolutions They all unanimously agreeing in them 1. That the King alone and not the Parliament House had to do with the Returns of the Members of Parliament for from him the Writs issued and to him the Sheriff is commanded to make his Returns but when a Man is returned and sworn the Parliament-House hath to do with him and the Sheriff ought to Return the Outlawry if he knew it before his Return 2. They resolved clearly Thatan outlawed Person cannot by the Law be a Member of the Parliament-House but for that Cause
Proxy and so many excellent Things were done that it was called Bonum Parliamentum At the Return of the Writs Ib. 6. the Parliament cannot begin but by the Royal Presence of the King either in Person or Representation The King's Person may be represented by Commission under the Great Seal to certain Lords in Parliament authorizing them to begin the Parliament or to prorogue it c. When a Parliament is call'd Ib. 28. and doth sit and is dissolved without any Act of Parliament passed or Judgment given it is no Session of Parliament but a Convention It is an Observation proved by a great Number of Precedents Ib. 32. that never any good Bill was preferred or good Motion made in Parliament whereof any Memorial was made in the Journal-Book or otherwise Tho sometimes it succeeded not at the first yet it hath never dy'd but at one Time or other hath taken effect Matters of Parliament are not to be ruled by the Common-Law Ib. 17. If Offences done in Parliament might have been punish'd elsewhere Ibid. Vide 1 Inst Sect. 108. it shall be intended that at some Time it would have been put in Ure It doth not belong to the Judges Ib 50. to judge of any Law Custom or Priviledge of Parliament The Judges in Parliament are the King or Queen Sir Tho. Smith's Common-wealth 74 the Lords Temporal and Spiritual the Commons represented by the Knights and Burgesses of every Shire Borough-Town These all or the greater Part of them and that with the Consent of the Prince for the Time being must agree to the making of Laws It is the just and constant Course of Parliament Seld. Judic 95. to bring the Party accused to his Answer Yea tho he fly Justice yet to send out Proclamation into the Countries that he appear at a Day or else such and such Judgments shall be given against him What is done by either House Sir R. Atkyns Argument c. 14. according to the Law and Usage of Parliament is properly and in the Judgment of the Law the Act of the whole Parliament And what concerns the one must of Necessity concern the whole not meerly by Consequence but by an immediate Concernment as being one and entire The three Estates of Parliament are one entire Body and Corporation Ib. 34 41 51 55. Vide Rast St. 2. 3. E. 6. c. 36. Pref. All their Powers and Priviledges in the Right of them and in the Title to them are entire per my per tout and belonging to the whole Body of the Parliament tho in the Exercise of those Powers and sometime in the Claim of them they are distinguish'd and in the Practise of their Powers they are in many Things distributed into Parts All the Estates in Parliament are call'd by one common Name Ibid. as Commune Concilium Regni Magna Curia they are one Body Politic. It is said by Fineux Chief Justice That the Parliament at the Common-Law consists of the King Lords and Commons and they are but one Body corporate The Liberties and Franchises of the Parliament in the Right of them Ib. 55. are entire and due to both Houses for both make up the Parliament Knighton one of our best Historians doth notably disclose the antient Ends of calling Parliaments Knyghton de Eventibus Augliae l. 5. f. 2681. col 1.2 Pettyt's Rights c. in Pref. p. 43. 44. Hollings f. 1055. col 1. in saying Quod ex Antiquo Statuto Consuetudine landabili approbata c. That by an antient Statute and Custom laudable and approved which no Man could deny the King was once in the Year to convene his Lords and Commons to his Court of Parliament as to the highest Court in the whole Realm In qua omnis Aequitas relucere deberet absque qualibet Scrupulositate vel nota tanquam Sol in Ascensu Meridiei ubi Pauperes Divites pro Refrigerio Tranquilitatis Pacis Repulsione Injuriarum Refugium Infallibile quaerere possent ac etiam Errata Regni reformare de Statu Gubernatione Regis Regni cum Sapientiori Concilio tractare ut Inimici Regis Regni Intrinseci Hostes Extrinseci destruantur repellantur qualiterquoque Onera incumbentia Regi Regno levius ad Ediam Communitatis Supportari potuerunt i. e. In which Court all Equity ought to shine forth without the least Cloud or Shadow like the Sun in its Meridian Glory where Poor and Rich refreshed with Peace and Ease of their Oppressions may always find infallible and sure Refuge and Succour the Grievances of the Kingdom redressed and the State of the King and Government of the Realm debated with wiser Councels the Domestick and Foreign Enemies of the King and Kingdom destroy'd and repelled and to consider how the Charges and Burthens of both may be sustained with more Ease to the People Minshieu But these six Degrees were never allowed to be six Estates of Parliament in his Etymological Dictionary tit Parliament says In a Monument of Antiquity meaning the antient Modus Tenendi Parliament shewing the Manner of holding the Parliament in the Time of K. Edward the Son of K. Etheldred which as the Note saith was delivered by the discreeter Sort of the Realm to William the Conqueror and allowed by him tis said That the Parliament consisted of six Ranks or Degrees it begins thus Rex est Caput Principium et Finis Parliamenti ita non habet Parem in suo Gradu Et sic a Rege solo primus Gradus est Secundus Gradus est ex Archiepiscopis Episcopis Abbatibus Prioribus per Baroniam Tertius Gradus est de Procuratoribus Cleri Quartus Gradus est de Comitibus Baronibus et aliis Magnatibus Quintus Gradus est de Militibus Comitatuum Sextus Gradus est de Civibus et Burgensibus Et ita est Parliamentum ex sex Gradibus En Antient temps tout le Parliament sea Insimul Rolls 1. Report fol. 18. ante 54. et le Separation fuit perle desire del Commons Mes nient obstant ils font forsque un Mese jen aie view un Record 30 H. 1. de lour degrees et seats 39 E. 3. per Choke ch Inst It is generally believed Reform'd vol. 2. p. 49. That the whole Parliament sate together in one House before E. 3. Time and then the inferior Clergy were a Part of that Body without Question But when the Lords and Commons were divided the Clergy likewise sate in two Houses and granted Subsidies as well as the Temporalities My Lord Chief Justice Coke says 1 Inst Sect. 164. fol. 109. The Parliament is the highest and most honourable and absolute Court of Justice of England consisting of the King the Lords of Parliament and the Commons And again the Lords are here divided into two Sorts viz. Spiritual and Temporal And the Commons are divided into three Parts viz. Into Knights of Shires or Counties Citizens out of Cities and Burgesses out of Boroughs In the High Court of Parliament all the whole Body
their Serjeant without Writ It is the Law and Custom of Parliament 4 Inst 14 34. Rot. Parl. ●3 E. 3. n. Cot. Records f. 17. n. 6 9. That when any new Device is moved on the King's behalf in Parliament for his Aid or the like the Commons may answer That they tender the King's Estate and are ready to aid the same only in this Device they dare not agree without Conference with their Countries Whereby it appeareth That such Conference is warrantable by the Law and Custom of Parliament Mar. 19. Journal Dom. Com. 1677. It was conceived by the Commons that according to the antient Course and Method of Transactions between the two Houses when a Bill with Amendments is sent from either House to the other by Messengers of their own the House that sends them gives no Reasons of their Amendments but the House to whom it is sent if they find Cause to disagree do use to give Reasons for their Dissent to every particular Amendment every one of them is supposed to carry the Weight of its own Reason with it until it be objected against May 28. Ibid. 1678. A Paper of Reasons against a Bill viz. for wearing Woollen being printed and delivered at the Door was committed it being irregular for Reasons to be printed and published against a publick Bill before a Petition be exhibited to the House against the Bill It is to be observed 4 Inst 14. though one be chosen for one particular County or Borough yet when he is return'd and sits in Parliamment he serveth for the whole Realm for the End of his coming thither as in the Writ of his Election appeareth is general ad faciendum consentiendum c. If Offences done in Parliament might have been punished elsewhere 4 Inst 17. it shall be intended that at some Time it would have been put in Ure As Usage is a good Interpreter of Laws Coke Lit. 81. b. so Non-usage where there is no Example is a great Intendment that the Law will not bear it Not that an Act of Parliament by Non-user can be antiquated or lose his Force Coke Lit. 81. b. but that it may be expounded or declared how the Act is to be understood There is no Act of Parliament but must have the Consent of the Lords 4 Inst 25. the Commons and the Royal Assent of the King and whatsoever passeth in Parliament by this threefold Consent hath the Force of of an Act of Parliament The Difference between an Act of Parliament Ibid. and an Ordinance in Parliament is for that the Ordinance wanteth the threefold Consent and is ordained by one or two of them Some Acts of Parliament are introductory of a new Law Ibid. and some be declaratory of the ancient Law and some be of both kinds by addition of greater Penalties or the like Ibid. Some Acts are general and some private or particular All Acts of Parliament relate to the first Day of Parliament 33 H. 6. f. 18. a. 33 H. 8. Brook Parl 86 Relation 35. 4. Inst 28. Vide Sir Simon d'Ewe 's Jour 550. Col. 1 2. if it be not otherwise provided by the Act. The House of Commons is to many Purposes a distinct Court and therefore is not prorogued or adjourned by the Prorogation or Adjournment of the Lords House but the Speaker upon the Signification of the King's Pleasure by the Assent of the House of Commons doth say This Court doth Prorogue or Adjourn itself And then it is prorogued or adjourn and not before 39 Eliz. 1597. Towns Col. 101.102 Vide Sir Simon d'Ewe 's Jour 550. Col. 1 2. Nov. 5. Through a meer Mistake and Error of the Speaker and themselves the House conceived themselves to have been Adjourned by the Lord Keeper the first Day of this Parliament to this present Day When it is dissolved Ibid. the House of Commons are sent for up to the Higher House and there the Lord Keeper by the King's Commandment dissolveth the Parliament and not before A Parliament cannot be discontinued or dissolved but by Matter of Record Hutton 62. and that by the King alone The King at the Time of the Dissolution ought to be there in Person 4 Inst 28. or by Representation for as it cannot begin without the Presence of the King either in Person or by Representation so it cannot end or be dissolved without his Presence either in Person or by Representation Nihil enim tam Conveniens est naturali aequitati Bracton unumquodque dissolvi eo ligamine quo ligatum est By the Statute of 33 H. 8. c. 21. Ibid. it is declared by Act of Parliament That the King's Letters Patents under his Great Seal and signed with his Hand and declared and notified in his Absence to the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons assembled in the House of Parliament is and ever was as good Strength and Force as if the King's Person had been there personally present and had assented openly and publickly to the same In the Lords House the Lords give their Voices from the puisne Lord seriatim 4 Inst 34.35 by the Word of Content or Not Content The Commons give their Voices upon the Question by Yea or No. Every Lord Spiritual and Temporal 4 Inst 43. Crompton 4. b. and every Knight Citizen and Burgess shall upon Summons come to the Parliament except he can reasonably and honestly excuse himself or else he shall be amerced c. that is respectively a Lord by the Lords and one of the Commons by the Commons By the Statute of 6 Hen. 8. c. 16. no Knight Ibid. Crompton 4. b. Citizen or Burgess of the House of Commons shall depart from the Parliament without Licence of the Speaker and Commons the same to be entered of Record in the Book of the Parliament upon Pain to lose their Wages Sickness is no Cause to remove any Knight 4 Inst 8. Citizen or Burgess of the House of Commons 18 Eliz. 1575. Sir Simon d'Ewe 's Jour 244. Col. 2. Resolved by the House That any Person being a Member of the same and being either in Service of Ambassage or else in Execution or visited with Sickness shall not in any Ways be amoved from their Place in this House nor any other to be during such Time of Service Execution or Sickness elected 31 Eliz. 1588. Id. 439. It was assented to by the whole House That none after the House is set do depart before the rising of the same House unless he do first ask Leave of Mr. Speaker on pain of paying Six Pence to the Vse of the Poor If a Lord depart from Parliament without Licence 4 Inst 44. it is an Offence done out of the Parliament and is finable by the Lords And so it is of a Member of the House of Commons he may be fined by the House of Commons It doth not belong to the Judges to judge of any Law Custom 4 Inst 50. Rot. Parl. 31 H. 6. n. 27. or Priviledge of Parliament Cardinal Wolsey