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A81194 A compendium of the laws and government ecclesiastical, civil and military, of England, Scotland & Ireland and dominions, plantations and territories thereunto belonging, with the maritime power thereof, and jurisdiction of courts therein. Methodically digested under their proper heads. By H.C. sometime of the Inner Temple. Curson, H. (Henry) 1699 (1699) Wing C7686A; ESTC R231895 237,927 672

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the Second in Propriety unto the Right Honourable Edward Earl of Clarendon George Duke of Albemarle William Earl of Craven John Lord Berkley Anthony Lord Ashley after Earl of Shaftsbury Sir George Carteret after Lord Carteret Sir John Coleton Knight and Baronet and Sir William Berkley Knight By which Letters Patent the Laws of England are to be in force in Carolina But the Lords Proprietors have power with the Consent of the Inhabitants to make By Laws for the better Government of the said Province so that no Money can be Raised or Law made without the Consent of the Inhabitants or their Representatives They have also power to appoint and impower Governours and other Magistrates to grant Liberty of Conscience make Constitutions c. with many other great Priviledges as by the said Letters Patent will more largely appear And the said Lords Proprietors have there settled a Constitution of Government whereby is Granted Liberty of Conscience and wherein all possible Care is taken for the equal Administration of Justice and for the lasting Security of the Inhabitants both in their Persons and Estates by the Care and Endeavours of the said Lords Proprietors and at their very great Charge Two Colonies have been settled in this Province the one at Albemarle in the most Northerly part the other at Ashley River which is in the Latitude 32 Degrees odd Minutes Care is taken by the Lords Proprietors That no Injustice be done the Natives who are here in perfect Friendship with the English in order to which is established a particular Court of Judicature to Determine all Differences The Lords Proprietors do at present Grant to all Persons that come to Inhabit there several reasonable Advantages to all Conditions of Men and sell their Land to any after the Rate of 50 Pounds for 1000 Acres The manner of Purchasing is The Party seeks out a place to his mind not possessed by any other then applies to the Governovr and Proprietors Deputies who thereupon Issue out their Warrant to the Surveyor General to measure him out a Plantation who making Certificate That he hath Measured out so much Land appointed a Deed is prepar'd of course which is Signed by the Governour and the Lords Proprietors Deputies and the Proprietors Seal affixed to it and Registred which is a good Conveyance in Law of the Land therein mentioned to the Party and his Heirs for ever Thus having Travelled the Main Land of America we must Cross the Seas and take a View of the Islands belonging to the Crown of England in the West Indies The first being Bermudas OR Summers Islands which are a Multitude of Broken Isles some write no less than 400 scituate directly East from Virginia from which they are distant 500 English Miles and 3300 Miles from the City of London so named from John Bermudaz a Spaniard after Summers Islands from the Shipwreck of Sir George Summers there The Island of more Fame and Greatness than all the rest and to which the Name of Bermudaz is most properly ascribed is scituated in the Latitude of 32 Degrees and 30 Min. North. The Air is sound and healthy very agreeable to the English Bodies the Soil as fertile as any well Watered plentiful in Maize of which they have Two Harvests yearly that which is sowed in March being cut in July and what is sowed in August is mowed in December No Venemous Creature is to be found in this Isle nor will Live if brought thither and besides these Advantages it it so fenced about with Rocks and Islets that without knowledge of the Passages a Boat of Ten Tun cannot be brought into the Haven yet with such knowledge there is Entrance for the Greatest Ships The English have since added to these Natural Strengths such Artificial Helps by Block Houses Forts and Bulwarks in convenient places as may give it the Title of Impregnable It was first Discovered rather Accidentally than upon Design by John Bermudas a Spaniard about 1522 and thereupon a Proposition made in the Council of Spain for settling a Plantation therein as a place very convenient for the Spanish Fleet in their Return from the Bay of Mexico by the Streights of Bahama yet was it neglected and without any Inhabitants till the like Accidental coming of Sir George Summers sent to Virginia with some Companies of the English by the Lord De la Ware in 1609 who being Shipwreck'd on this Coast had the Opportunity to survey the Island which he so well liked that he Endeavoured to settle a Plantation in it at his Return in 1612. The first Colony was sent over under Richard More who in Three years Erected 8 or 9 Forts in convenient places which he planted with Ordnance In 1616 a New Supply was sent over under Captain Tucker who apply'd themselves to sowing of Corn setting of Trees brought thither from other parts of America and Planting that gainful Weed Tobacco In 1619. the Business was taken more to Heart and made a Publick Matter many Great Lords and Persons of Honour being interested in● it Captain Butler was sent thither with 500 Men. The Isle was divided into Tribes or Counties a Burrough belonging to each Tribe and the whole reduced to a settled Government both in Church and State according to the Laws of England After this all succeeded so well that in 1623 there were said to be 3000 English and Ten Forts whereon were planted Fifty Pieces of Ordnance their Numbers since increasing daily both by Children born within the Island and Supplies from England All the Isles together represent an Half-Moon and Inclose very good Ports as the Great Sound Harrington Inlet Southampton and Paget's Bay with Dover and Warwick Forts having their Names from the Noble Men who were Undertakers therein The greatest Isle is called St. George five or six Leagues long and almost throughout not above a quarter or half a League broad The Air is almost constantly Clear Except when it Thunders and Lightens is extream Temperate and Healthful few dying of any Disease but Age so that many remove from England hither only to enjoy a long and healthful Life and after having continued there are fearful of Removing out of so pure an Air. The very Spiders here are not Venemous but of divers curious Colours and make their Web so strong that oftentimes small Birds are entangled and caught therein Their Cedar Trees are different from all others and the Wood very sweet In 1685. the Governour hereof was Sir Henry Heydon The Caribee Islands NExt present themselves so called in General because Inhabited by Canibals or Man-eating People at the first Discovery as the word Caribee imports They ly extended from the Coast of Paria to the Isle Porto Rico many in number 27 of them known by proper Names In Nine whereof the English are concerned viz. Barbuda Anguilla Montserrat Dominica St. Vincent Antegoa Mevis or Nevis St. Christophers and Barbadoes And first in Barbuda SCituate in 17 Degrees of North Latitude
was before the Conquest For in an ancient and Authentical Manuscript Intituled Authoritas Seneschalli Angliae where putting an Example of his Authority saith Sicut accidit Godwino Comiti Kanciae tempore Regis Edw ' antecessoris Willielmi Ducis Normandiae pro hujusmodi male gestis consilijs suis per Seneschallum Angliae adjudicatus forisfecit Commitivam suam In the time of the Conqueror William Fitz Eustace was Steward of England and in the Reign of William Rufus and Hen. 1. Hugh Grantsemenel Baron of Hinkley held that Barony by the said Office Of ancient time this Office was of Inheritance and appertained to the Earldom of Leicester as it also appeareth by the said Record Seneschalcis Angliae pertinet ad Comitivam de Leicester pertinuit ab antiquo That is that the Earldom of Leicester was holden by doing of the Office of Steward of England Other Records testified tha● it should belong to the Barony of Hinkley The truth is That Hinkley was parcel of the Possessions of the Ear● of Leicester for Robert Bellomont Ear● of Leicester in the Reign of Hen. 2 Married with Petronilla Daughter and Heir of the said Hugh Grantsemenel Baron of Hinkley and Lord Steward o● England and in her right was Steward of England And so it continued until by the Forfeiture of Simon Montford it came to King Hen. 3. who i● the 50th year of his Reign created Edmond his Second Son Earl of Leicester Baron of Hinkley and High Steward of England which continued is his Line until Henry of Bullinbrook So● and Heir of John of Gaunt Duke o● Lancaster and Earl of Leicester who was the last that had any Estate of Inheritance in the Office of the Steward of England since which time it wa● never granted to any Subject bu● but only hac vice and the reason was for that the Power of the Steward of England was so transcendent that it was not holden fit to be in any Subjects hands For the said Record saith Es Sciendum est quod ejus Officium est supervidere regulare sub Rege immediatè post Regem totum regnum Angliae omnes Ministros legum infra idem Regnum temporibus pacis guerrarum c. and proceedeth particularly with divers exceeding High Powers and Authorities which may well be omitted because they serve for no present use And albeit their Power and Authority have been since the Reign of Henry the Fourth but hac vice yet is that hac vice limited and appointed As when a Lord of Parliament is Indicted of Treason or Felony then the Grant of this Office under the Great Seal is to a Lord of Parliament reciting the Indictment Nos considerantes quod Justitia est virtus excellens Altissimo complacens aeque prae omnibus uti volentes ac pro eo quod Officium Seneschalli Angliae cujus praesentia pro administratione justitiae executione ejusdem in hac parte facien requiritur ut accepimus jam vacat De fidelitate strenuitate provida circumspectione indu●tria vestris plurimum c●nfidente● ord●n●vimus constituimus vos ex hac causa causis Seneschallum nostrum Angliae ad Officium illus cum monibus eidem Officio in hac parte debitis pertinentibus hac vice gerend ' accipiend ' exercend ' dantes concedentes vobis tenore praesentium plenam sufficientem potestatem authoritatem ac mandatum speciale indictamentum praedict ' c. So that it appeareth that this great Officer is wholly restrained to proceed only upon the recited Indictment And he to whom this Offic is granted must be a Lord of Parliament and his proceeding is to be Secundum Leges Consuetudines Angliae for so is his Commission And hereof you may read more at large in Coke's 3 Inst Chap. High Treason Also at every Coronation he hath a Commission under the Great Seal hac vice to hear and determine the Claims for Grand Serjeanties and other Honourable Services to be done at the Coronation for the solemnization thereof For which purpose the High Steward doth hold his Court some convenient time before the Coronation See a President hereof before the Coronation of King Richard the Second John Duke of Lancaster then Steward of England who in Claims before him was styled Tres Honourable Seignior Roy de Castile Leon Seneschalle d' Engleterre and held his Court in Alba Aula apud Westm die Jovis proximè ante Coronationem Quae quidem coronatio habita solemnizata fuit die Jovis sequente viz. 16 Julij Anno 1 Ric. 2. The first that was Created Hac vice for the Solemnization of the Coronation of Henry the Fourth was Thomas his second Son and upon the Arraignment of John Holland Earl of Huntingdon the first that was Created Steward of England Hac vice was Edward Earl of Devon When he sitteth by force of his Office he sitteth under a Cloth of State and such as direct their Speech unto him say May it please your Grace my Lord High Steward of England The style of John of Gaunt was Johannes filius Regis Angliae Rex Legionis Castellae Dux Aquitaniae Lancastriae Comes Derbiae Linconliae Leicestriae Seneschallus Angliae And in respect his Power before it was limited was so Transcendent no mention is made of this Great Officer in any of our ancient Authors the Mirror Bracton Britton or Fleta It seemeth they liked not to treat of his Authority neither is he found in any Act of Parliament nor in any Book Case before the 1st of Henry the Fourth and very few since which hath caused me to be the longer saith the Lord Coke in another place to set forth his Authority and due proceeding upon the Arraignment of a Peer of the Parliament by Judicial Record and Resolution of the Judges agreeable with constant Experience As the Peers of the Realm that be Tryors or Peers are not sworn so the Lord Steward being Judge c. is not sworn yet ought he according to his Letters Patents to proceed Secundum legem consuetudinem Angliae Co. 4. Inst. cap. 4. In Enditemene de Treason ou Felony ver● un des Pieres del Realm le Tryal est per s●s Pieres quel maner de tryal in Appel nes● grauntable per que depuis que cel Trial per ses Pieres est le proper Trial que appertient al piere del Realm quant sur Enditement de Treason ou Felony il ad plead d●rien culpable Veions l'order proces d●cest Tryal Appiert An. 1. H. 4. fol. 1. An 13 H. 8. fol. 11. que quant un Seigniour del Parlement serra arraigne de Treason 〈◊〉 Felony dount il est endite Le Roy pers●● Letters patents ferra un graunde sag● Seigniour d'estre de grand Senescha●● d' Engleterre pour le jour de l'arraignment qui devant le dit jour ferra precept a son Serjaunt d'Arms qui
The Grant of Earl Marshal of England by Letters Patents of Rich. the 2d and other Grants thereof you may see more at large Coke's 4 Institutes cap. 17. The Maritime Power of England ALL the King 's Maritime Forces are under the Command of the Lord High Admiral of England so called from Amir in Arabick and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Greek that is Praefectus Marinis A compound word from the Eastern Empire introduced into England after the Wars in the Holy Land by King Richard or King Edward the first His Patent was antiently Angliae Hiberniae Acquitaniae Magnus Admirallus But now it is Angliae Hiberniae Dominiorum Insularum eorundem Villae Calesiae Marchiarum ejusdem Normandiae Gasconiae Acquitaniae Magnus Admirallus Praefectus Generalis Classis Marium dictorum Regnorum And this Office for the Great Trust and Honour is usally given to the King 's younger Son near Kinsman Or one of the Principal Nobility He hath power to Commissionate a Vice-Admiral a Rear-Admiral All Sea Captains And also Deputies for particular Coasts Coroners Commissioners and Judges for the Court of Admiralty to Imprison Release c. and sometimes to confer Knighthood on such as deserve it at Sea To him by Law and Custom belong Penalties and Amerciaments of Transgressors at Sea on the shore in Ports and from the first Bridge on Rivers towards the Sea Also the Goods of Pirates Felons or Capital Faulters condemned Outlawed or Horned All Waifs Strays Goods Wrecks of Sea Deodands a share of lawful Prizes Lagon Jetsam and Flotsam that is Goods lying in the Sea on the Ground Goods Floating on the Sea and Goods cast by the Sea on Shore not granted to Lords of Mannors adjoyning to the Sea All great Fishes as Sea-Hogs and others of Extraordinary bigness called Royal Fishes Except Whales and Sturgeons To the Crown of England belongs the Sovereignty of the Narrow-Sea round the Island of Great Britain whereof by Ancient Right it hath had Possession in all times and King Edgar stiled himself Sovereign of the Narrow-Seas In Testimony whereof the Swedes Danes Hollanders c. were wont to aske leave to pass the British-Seas and to take Licenses to Fish therein And to this day Strike Sail to all the Ships of War belonging to the King of England as oft as they pass by any of them thereby acknowledging his Sovereignty according to an Ordinance made at Hastings in Sussex by King John about 450 years ago To maintain this Right Protect Trade and Defend their Kingdoms The Kings of England have Ships of War for Strength Beauty and Sailing Surpassing all other in the World of these such as Ships then were King Edgar is said to have 3600 And the late King Charles had 7 of the First Rate 9 of the Second Rate 22 of the Fifth and 18 of the Sixth Rate besides 30 Fireships and several Small Vessels for Tenders and Victuallers The Royal Sovereign Built by King Charles the first 1637 being of the First Rate was in Length by the Keel 127 Foot in Breadth by the Beam 47 Foot in Depth 49 Foot her Draught of Water 21 Foot Burthen in all 2072 Tunns and 1492 Tunns besides Guns and Tackle hath 6 Anchors the biggest 6000 l. weight and the least 4300 l. weight 14 Cables the greatest 21 Inches compass and weighs 9000 l. weight the least 8 Inches compass weighing near 1300 l. weight 18 Masts and Yards the Main Mast 113 Foot long and 38 Inches Diameter the Main Yard 105 Foot long and 23 Inches Diameter and her Main Top 15 Foot Diameter Had 10 several sorts of Sails Her greatest called the Main Course contained with her Bonnet 1640 yards of Canvas Ipswich double The least called the Foretop Gallant Sail 130 yards of Canvas The compleat suit cost 404 l. The weight of Sea store in point of Ground Tackle and other Cordage 60 Tuns 800 and odd Pounds Shee carried a Long boat of 50 Foot a Pinnace of 30 Foot and a Skiff of 27 Foot long The weight of her Rigging 33 Tun She hath 3 Tires of Guns 44 in the Upper 34 in the Second and 22 in the Lower Tire in all 100 Guns She carried Officers Soldiers and Mariners in all 850 Men. The charge for Victuals Ammunition Wages Wear and Tear every Month at Sea costs 3500 l. The Charge of Building a First Rate Ship with Guns Tackle and Rigging doth usually amount to 62432 the lesser Rates Charge is proportionable A Second Rate carries from 56 to 80 Guns A Third Rate from 58 to 70 Guns A Fourth Rate from 40 to 60 Guns A Fifth Rate from 24 to 32 Guns A Sixth Rate from 6 to 18 Guns The Lord High Admiral may fitly be reputed Vice-Roy of the Maritime Kingdom of England Nam in Mari sunt Regna distincta idque Jure Gentium sicut in arida Terra The Vice-Admiral is an Officer to whom next under the High Admiral it belongs to see the Royal Navy kept in good Repair The Wages of Mariners and Shipwrights duly paid and the Ships provided of all things necessary The Lord High Admiral doth appoint in divers parts of the Kingdom Vice Admirals with their Judges and Marshals by Patent under the Great Seal of the Admiralty These do Exercise Jurisdiction in Maritime Affairs within their Limits and if any be aggrieved by their Sentence or Decree he may Appeal to the High Court of Admiralty and of these round the Coasts are about 22 in England and Wales The Lord High Admiral hath Courts for the Maritime Affairs whereof the Principal is at London and called The Court of Admiralty IN this Court Erected as some hold by Edward the Third The Lord Admiral hath a Lieutenant called Judge of the Admiralty who is commonly some Learned Doctor of the Civil Law Because The Proceeding is in all Civil Matters according to the Civil Law The Sea being without the Limits of the Common Law and by Libel they Proceed to the Action the Plaintiff giving caution to prosecute the Suit and to pay what shall be adjudged against him if he fail therein The Defendant also giving Security or Caution as the Judge shall think meet that he will appear in Judgment and pay that which shall be adjudged against him and that he will ratify whatever his Proctors shall do in his name Besides the Civil Law The Laws of Rhodes and Oleron are here used The former for their Excellency being Incorporated into the Volumes of the Civil Laws And Oleron being an Island in the Bay of Aquitain belonging to the Crown of England King Richard the first there Compiled such Excellent Laws for Sea Matters that in the Ocean Sea Westward they had almost as much Repute as the Rhodian Laws in the Mediterranean and these Laws were called La Rool de Oleron Many Statutes and Ordinances were made by King Edward the Third and other Princes and People as at Rome Pisa Genoa Marseilles Barcelona and
old English name for Houses of Noblemen Bishops or Men of Extraordinary Note The lowest of which as being heretofore Preparatory to the other and therefore may properly be placed first are The Inns of Chancery WHich are Eight and may probably be so called because there dwelt such Clerks as did chiefly Study the forming of Writs which regularly appertain to the Cursitors which are Officers of Chancery The first of these called Thavies Inn was begun in the Reign of King Edward the Third and since Purchased by Lincolns Inn as was also Furnivals Inn Then in Holbourn is Bernards Inn Then New Inn St. Clements Inn Cliffords Inn anciently the House of the Lord Clifford Staple Inn belonging to the Merchants of the Staple and Lyons Inn anciently a Common Inn with the Sign of the Lyon Heretofore many were entred here before they were admitted of the Inns of Court But they are now taken up with Attorneys Sollicitors and Clerks who have their Chambers apart and their Diet at a very easie Rate in a Hall together where they are obliged to Appear in Grave Long Robes and Black knit round Caps These belong all to some Inns of Court who send yearly their Barristers to Read to them The Inns of Court SO named as some think for that the Students therein are to serve The Courts of Judicature are Four The Two Temples Purchased by some Professors of the Common Law above 300 years ago and called the Inner and Middle-Temple in relation to Essex House which was also a part of the House of the Knight's Templers and called the Utter Temple because Seated without Temple Bar. Lincolns Inn belonging anciently to the Earls of Lincoln And Greys Inn belonging to the Noble Family of the Greys These Societies are no Corporations nor have any Judicial Power over their Members but have certain Orders among themselves which have by consent the force of Laws For Lighter Offences they are only Excommuned or put out of Commons and for Greater they lose their Chambers and be expelled the House after which they are not to be Received into any of the other three Societies And these also at Chappel Hall or Courts of Judicature Wear a Grave Black Robe and Cap and at other times walk with Cloak and Sword They have no Revenues being not enabled to Purchase But defray the Charges of the House with what is paid at Admittances and Quitrents for Chambers Pensions and other small Duties The whole Company of Gentlemen in each Society may be divided into Four parts Benchers Utter Barristers Inner Barristers and Students Benchers are the Seniors to whom is Committed the Government of the House And out of those is yearly chosen a Treasurer who Receiveth Disburseth and Accompteth for all Moneys belonging to the House Utter Barristers are such who for Learning and Standing are called by the Benchers to Argue in the Society Doubtful Cases which are called Moots from the Saxon Mote or French Mot a Word and whilst they Argue Sit Uttermost on the Form's or Benches which they call the Bar. Out of these are chosen Readers for the Inns of Chancery belonging to the respective Inns of Court where in Term time and Grand Vacations they argue Cases in the Presence of Attorneys and Clerks Inner Barristers are all the Rest who for want of Learning or Time are not to Argue and yet in a Moote before the Benchers Two of these Inner Barristers do for their Exercise Recite by heart the Pleading of the same Moot case in Law French which Pleading is the Declaration at large of the same Moote Case the one taking the part of the Plaintiff the other of the Defendant They divide the year into three Parts That is the Two Learning Vacations which begin the first Monday in Lent and the first Monday after Lommas-day and continue Three weeks and Three days each the Term Times and the Dead or Mean Vacations The Exercises of Study in these Learning Vacations are the greatest which are in manner following The Benchers appoint the eldest Utter Barrister to Read amongst them openly in the Hall whereof he hath notice half a year before He then the first day about 8 of the Clock chuseth some Statute whereupon he grounds his whole Reading for that Vacation and Declares such Mischiefs and Inconveniencies as were unprovided for before the same Act And then reciteth certain Doubts he hath devised that may grow upon the Statute and declareth his Judgment therein After which One of the younger Utter Barristers repeateth One question propounded by the Reader and by way of Argument endeavoureth to prove the Readers Opinion to be against Law and after him the Senior Utter Barristers and Readers one after another according to Seniority do declare their Opinions in the same and then the Reader who did put the Case endeavoureth to confute Objections laid against him and to confirm his own Opinion After which the Serjeants and Judges if any be present declare their Opinions Then the youngest Utter Barrister again rehearseth another Case which is prosecuted as the former was And this Exercise continueth daily about three or four Hours Out of those who have Read once in the Summer Vacation and are Benchers is chosen always one to Read in Lent who observes the like manner of Reading as before is Expressed In the mean Vacation after Dinner Cases are Argued and after Supper Mootes brought and Pleaded by the Inner Barristers in the Presence of the Utter Barristers Mooting in the Inns of Court IN these Learning Vacations after Supper or Drinking on Fasting Nights in the Hall the Reader with one or two of the Benchers comes in To whom one of the Utter Barristers propounds some doubtful Case which being argued by the Benchers and afterwards by him that moved the Case The Benchers sit down on the Bench at the upper end of the Hall whence they are called Benchers And upon a Form in the Middle of the Hall sit Two Utter Barristers and on each side of them sits one Inner Barrister who in Law French declareth to the Benchers as Serjeants do at the Bar in the King's Courts to the Judges some kind of Action The one being as it were Retained for the Plaintiff The other for the Defendant Then the two Utter Barristers Argue such Questions as are disputable within the Case after which the Benchers do likewise declare their Opinions how they take the Law to be in those Questions In these Mootings the Junior argueth first as do the Judges in the Exchequer Chamber and Serjeants in open Courts of Judicature The Inner and Utter Barristers Plead here in Law French and the Benchers in English and at the Readings The Readers Cases are put in English Mootings in Inns of Chancery IN the Learning Vacation each Utter Barrister who is a Reader in the Inns of Chancery go with Two Students of the Inn of Court to the Inn of Chancery where he is appointed to Read and there meet him commonly Two
And sometimes the Kings of England have called the Nobles of Ireland to come to the Parliaments of England Coke's 4 Inst 350. And by Special Words the Parliaments of England may bind the Subjects of Ireland Co. 4 Inst ibid. And seeing good Acts of Parliament made in England since the Reign of King John extended not to Ireland unless it were especially named or by General Words included a Right profitable Act was made at a Parliament holden in Ireland Anno 10 Hen. 7. before Sir Edward Poynings then Deputy or Pro-Rex in Ireland and thereupon called Poyning's Law That all Statutes late made in England concerning the publick Weal should be accepted used and executed in Ireland Co. 4 Inst. 351. In what manner a Parliament is to be holden in Ireland and how Bills offered to the Parliament there shall be first Transmitted hither under the Great Seal of that Kingdom and having received Approbation here shall be returned hither to be preferr'd to the Parliament and several Questions and Doubts Resolved concerning this matter Vide Co. 4 Inst 353. By the Statute of 3 Hen. 2. all Persons having Lands Tenements or Offices Ecclesiastical or Temporal shall Reside upon the same and those that have Castles must there reside and repair and fortifie them And if they Depart they must appoint some able to supply their room or the Governour may dispose half their Living to such Defence Co. 4 Inst 356. At a Synod holden by St. Patrick in Ireland it was unanimously agreed That Irish Priests should have Wives Co. 4 Inst 356. There is an Ancient Record concerning Ireland necessary to be Explained In these Words REX Thesaurario Hiberniae Solutem Cum Edwardus primogenitus noster terram Hiberniae habeat teneat de dono nostro cum omnibus pertinentiis suis adeo libere quiete sicut eam in manu nostra teneremus per quod charissima filia nostra Alianora Consors dicti filij nostri Aurum suum tam de finibus quam sponte Oblatis in terra Hiberniae habere Debet sicut charissima Consors nostra Alianora Regina Angliae Aurum suum habet de eisdem in Regno nostro Angliae Vobis mandamus c. quatenus praefat ' Consorti filij nostri praedicti Aurum praedictum de finibus sponte oblatis etiam de quibuscunque aliis finibus praedictis habere facias in forma praedicta Et hoc c. In cujus c. Teste Rege 29 die Februarij Anno 52 Hen. 3. By this Record first it appeareth that as the Law was taken at that Day by Gift of King Henry the Third his Eldest Son Prince Edward was Lord of the Dominion and Lordship of Ireland Secondly That albeit the Wife of Prince Edward was not Queen in Name but had the Effect of it therefore she should have a Duty called Aurum Reginae as well as the Queen of England being but Lady in Ireland For albeit the Kings of Ireland were until the Statute of 33 Hen. 8. styled by the Name of Lords of Ireland yet was he Supremus and absolutè Dominus and had Royal Dominion and Authority and that his Consort was in rei veritate Regina or else she could not have had Aurum Reginae Albeit this Royal Dominion and Land of Ireland was of ancient time permitted to be granted De facto to the King's Sons before-mentioned yet by the Law the King by his Letters Patent could not grant so Royal a Member of his Imperial style to any no more than he could do of the Kingdom of England Co. 4 Inst 357. What was the Duty of Aurum Reginae and when due Vide 4. Coke's Inst 358. At a Parliament holden in Ireland by Howel Duke of Clarence Lieutenant there Anno 40 Edw. 3. called The Statute of Kilkenny The Brehon Law which was the Irish Judges Law is no Law but a Lewd Custom crept in of later times and never was the Law of the Ancient Britains from whom they are descended Co. 4 Inst 358. The Pro-Rex there hath been sometime called Custos Warden Lieutenant Chief Justice Deputy of Ireland Coke's 4 Inst ibid. If an Archbishoprick or Bishoprick in Ireland be void then the Chapter shall Sue to the King in England to go to Election and after Election made they ought upon Certificate thereof made to the King to obtain his Royal Assent to this Election and thereupon a Writ shall be directed out of the Chancery here to the Chief Justice of Ireland or his Lieutenant rehearsing all this matter and commanding him to take Fealty of the Bishop and to restore him to his Temporalties But now the Course is in Ireland to make such Writs there in the Name of the King But the King Names the Archbishops and Bishops there as he doth in England and then the Chapter chuse him whom the King Names and thereupon Writs are made of Course Coke's 4. Institutes 359. And whereas some have Divided this Kingdom into the English Pale and Wild Irish let Oblivion bury it for now all are reduced to Obedience and civil Behaviour● So as a Man may justly say of the Old Britains Sunt in Bello fortes in Pace fideles And whereas some have said the Crown of England had the Country of Ireland by Donation from the Pope the following Record will manifest the Truth therein Altitonantis Dei largiflua Clementia qui est Rex Regum Dominus Dominantium ego Edgarus Anglorum Basileus omniumque rerum Insularum Oceani qui Britanniam circumjacent cunctarumque Nationum quae infra eam includuntur Imperator Dominus gratias ago ipsi Deo Omnipotenti Regi meo qui meum imperium sic ampliavit exaltavit super regnum patrum meorum Qui licet Monarchiam Totius Angliae adepti sunt à tempore Athelstani qui primus Regum Anglorum omnes Nationes quae Britanniam incolunt sibi armis subegit nullus tamen eorum ultra fines Imperium suum Dilatare aggressus est Mihi tamen concessit propitia Divinitas cum Anglorum imperio omnia regna Insularum Oceani cum suis ferotissimis Regibus usque Norvegiam maximamque partem Hiberniae cum sua Nobilissima Civitate de Dublina Anglorum regno Subjugare quos etiam omnes meis imperiis colla subdere Dei favente gratia Coegi Quapropter ego Christi gloriam laudem in regno meo exaltar● ejus servicium amplificare devotus deposui Et per meos fideles fautores Dunstanum viz. Archiepiscopum Ayelyolanum ac Oswaldum Archiepiscopos quos mihi patres spirituales consiliatores eligi magna ex parte disposui c. Facta sunt haec Anno Domini 964 Indictione 8. Regni vero Edgari Anglorum Regis 6 in Regia urbe quae ab incolis Ocleayeceastrie nominatur in natale Domini festivitate Sanctorum Innocentium feria 4 c. ✚ Ego Edgar Basileus Anglorum Imperator Regum gentium cum consensu principrim
expresly forbid the same as heretofore hath sometimes been done It is free for any Man of the Parliament or not of the Parliament to get a Bill drawn by some Lawyer and give the same to the Speaker or Clerk of the Parliament to be presented at a time convenient and this Bill may be put first either in the Lords House or the Commons House Whatever is proposed for a Law is fir●t put in Writing and called a Bill which being read commonly after Nine of the Clock in a full Assembly it is either unanimously Rejected at first or else allowed to be Debated and then it is committed to a certain Number of the House presently nominated and called a Committee After it hath been amended and twice read two several Days in the House then it is Ingrossed that is written fair in Parchment and read the third time another Day and then if it be in the Lords House the Lord Chancellor in the Commons House the Speaker demandeth if they will have it put to the Question Whether a Law or no Law If the Major Part be for it there is written on the Bill by the Clerk Soit Baille aux Communes or Soit Baille aux Seigneurs retaining still in this and some other things about making Laws the Custom of our Ancestors who were generally skilled in the French Tongue Note That when the Speaker finds divers Bills prepared to be put to the Question he gives notice the Day before That on the Morrow he intends to put such Bills to the Passing or third Reading and desires the special Attendance of all the Members Note also That if a Bill be Rejected it cannot be any more proposed during that Session A Bill sent by the Commons up to the Lords is usual to shew their Respect attended with Thirty or Forty of the Members of the House As they come up to the Lords Bar the Member that hath the Bill making three profound Reverences delivereth it to the Lord Chancellor who for that purpose comes down to the Bar. A Bill sent by the Lords to the Commons is usually sent by some of the Masters of the Chancery or other Person whose Place is on the Wooll-sacks and by none of the Members of that House and they coming up to the Speaker and bowing thrice deliver to him the Bill after one of them hath read the Title and desired it may be there taken into Consideration if aftewards it pass that House then is written on the Bill Les Communes o●t assentez When any one in the Commons House will speak to a Bill he stands up uncovered and directs his Speech only to the Speaker then if what he delivers be confuted by another yet it is not allowed to answer again the same Day lest the whole time should be spent in Debate Also if a Bill be debating in the House no Man may speak to it in one day above once If any one speak words of Offence to the King's Majesty or to the House he is called to the Bar and sometimes sent to the Tower The Speaker is not allowed to perswade or disswade in passing of a Bill but only to make a short and plain Narrative nor to Vote except the House be equally divided After Dinner the Parliament ordinarily assemble not though many times they continue sitting long in the Afternoon Committees sit after Dinner where it is allowed to speak and reply as oft as they please Note By Death or Demise of the King the Parliament is ipso facto dissolved Anciently after every Session of Parliament the King commanded every Sheriff to proclaim the several Acts and to cause them to be duly observed yet without that Proclamation the Law intending that every one hath Notice by his Representative of what is transacted in Parliament of later times since Printing became common that Custom hath been laid aside See before in High Court of Parliament Page 51. To the Court of the High Steward of England BUT now by Stat 7 W. 3. Upon the Trial of any Peer or Peeress either for Treason or Misprision all the Peers who have Right to sit and Vote in Parliament shall be duly summoned Twenty days at least before every such Trial to appear at every such Trial and every Peer so summoned and appearing at such Trial shall Vote in the Trial of such Peer or Peeress so to be tried every such Peer first taking the Oaths mentioned in the Act of Parliament made 1 W. M. Intituled An Act for Abrogating the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and Appointing other Oaths And subscribing and audibly repeating the Declaration mentioned in the Act made Anno 30 Car. 2. Regis For disabling Papists to sit in either House of Parliament Provided that neither the Act nor any thing therein contained be construed to extend to any Impeachment or other Proceedings in Parliament in any kind whatsoever Provided also That the Act nor any thing therein contained shall any ways extend to any Indictment of High Treason nor to any Proceedings thereupon for Counterfeiting the King's Coyn his Great Seal or Privy Seal his Sign Manual or Privy Signet See before in The Court of the High Steward of England Page 81. Of the Power and Authority of the Protector and Defender of the Realm and Church of England during the King's tender Age. And Guardian c. of England in the King's Absence FOR his Authority Place and Precedency See Rot. Parl. Anno 1 Hen. 6. Nu. 26 27. 2 Hen. 6. Nu. 16. 6 Hen. 6. Nu. 22 23 24. 8 Hen. 6. Nu. 13. 11 Hen. 6. Nu. 19. 32 Hen. 6. Nu. 71. The Lord Coke in his 4th Inst. Cap. 3. saith The surest way is to have him made by Authority of the Great Council in Parliament Richard Duke of Gloucester Uncle to King Edward the 5th and afterwards King by the Name of Richard the 3d. was by the Council then Assembled made Protector of King Edward the 5th and his Realm during his Minority Holinshead's Chron. fol. 1363. And for the Government of the Realm and Surety of the Person of King Edward the 6th his Uncle Edward Earl of Hertford was by Order of the Council and the Assent of his Majesty appointed Governour of his Royal Person and Protector of his Realms Dominions and Subjects and so proclaimed the 1 st of February Anno 1547. by an Herauld at Arms and Sound of Trumpet through the City of London in the usual places thereof And on the 6th of Feb. Anno 1547. the said Earl of Hertford Lord Protector Adorned King Edward with the Order of Knighthood remaining then in the Tower and therewith the King standing up called for Henry Hubblethorn Lord Mayor of the City of London who coming before his Presence the King took the Sword of the Lord Protector and Dubbed the said Hubblethorn Knight Holinshead Chron. fo 1614. The King when he intends to go or is in remotis out of the Realm appoints a Guardian c.
of the King 's Writ it doth not change the Nature and Jurisdiction of the Court. For as these without Writs are not Courts of Record so when the Plea is holden by Writ the Courts are of the same Nature For upon a Judgment given in both Cases a VVrit of false Judgment lieth and not a Writ of Error But it is true the King may create a new Court and appoint new Judges in it but after the Court is established and created the Judges of the Court ought to determine Matters in the Court. And therefore neither the Lords of Ancient Demesne nor the Court Baron nor the Sheriff in the County Court when the Plea is holden by Writ of Right Justicies Admeasurement c. are Judges but the Suitors who by the Common Law are the Judges of the Court But in some Cases the Sheriff is made Judge by Parliament as in the Redisseisin by the Stat. of Merton cap. 3. And all his proceeding by force of that Act is of Record and a Writ of Error doth lie of a Judgment given against him Coke's 6 Rep. 11 12. Jentleman's Case In some Actions the Defendant shall be fined in one Court and but amerced in another and yet the Offence shall be all one as in a Writ of Recaption if it be brought in the Common Pleas and Judgment be there given the Defendant shall be fined and imprisoned But if the Writ be brought in the County Court and the Defendant be convict before the Sheriff in the County the Judgment shall not be Quod capiatur quia nulla Curia quae Recordum non habet potest imponere finem neque aliquem mandare carceri quia ista spectant tantummodo ad Curias de Recordo and therefore in such cases he shall be only amerced Coke's 8 Rep. 60. Beecher's Case By Stat. W. 1.33 3 E. 1. No Sheriff shall suffer Barretors or Maintainers of Quarrels or Stewards of great Lords or other unless Attorney for his Lord to make Suit or to give Judgment in the Counties or to pronounce them if he be not required so to do by all the Suitors and Attorneys of the Suitors there present in Pain that both the Sheriff and they shall be grievously punished by the King By Stat. 19 H. 7.24 the Shire Court for Sussex shall be holden one time at Chichester and the next at Lewis alternis vicibus in pain that the Court otherwise kept and the things therein transacted shall be void By Stat. 2 3 E. 6.25 County Courts shall be adjourned from Month to Month and no longer The Sheriff of Northumberland shall keep his County Court at Alnwicke and not elsewhere Stat. 2 3 E. 6.25 This Court is incident to the Office of Sheriff and cannot be divided from it by Letters Patent or otherwise but by Act of Parliament Coke's 4 Rep. 33. Mitton's Case See the Court of the Tourn and the Court Leet and after in the Court of the Hundred and Court Baron See before in The County Court Page 228. To the Court of the Hundred AFter King Alfred had divided the Realm into Shires called so from the Saxon Scyran signifying to cut he divided the Shires into smaller Parts called Lathes of the Word Gelathian which is to Assemble together Others Tythings because there were in each of them Ten Persons whereof each one was Surety or Pledge for the others good a bearing Others Hundreds because they contained Jurisdiction over one Hundred Men or Pledges dwelling in Two Three or more Parishes Boroughs or Towns in which he appointed Administration of Justice severally among them of the same Hundred In Stat. of Marlebridge cap. 11. hundredum is taken pro Visu Franci Plegii so as the Sense is That he who hath Tenements in the Town and in some other View of Frankpledge of some other Lord or in divers Views of Frankpledge he shall not need to come to any other but where he is conversant and Hundreds there are named because Sheriffs keep their Tourns in every Hundred If a Man hath a House and Family in two Leets he shall be taken to be conversant where his Bed is If a man hath a House and Family in Two Hundreds yet he shall do his Suit to the Tourn or Leet where his Person is commorant Coke's 2. Inst. 122. A Man may have a Writ to the Sheriff for discharging him from coming to the Sheriff's Tourn or Hundred or Leet or other Place than in the Leet or Precinct of the Hundred where he dwelleth and if the Sheriff distrain him to come contrary to the Statute of Marlebridge cap. 10. and a Writ be delivered to him he shall have an Attachment against the Sheriff All the Tenants in Ancient Demesne may have this Writ And if a Man be distrained to do Suit twice in the Year appertaining to the Leet he shall have a Writ upon Magna Charta but it is otherwise of the Hundred because Suit is there from There Weeks to Three Weeks Vide F. N. B. 356 to 360. Articuli super Chartas 28 E. 1. Bailywicks and Hundreds shall not be let to Farm at over-great Sums whereby the People may be over-charged to make Contributions to such Farms See the Statute and in Court of the Leet and County Court See before in The Court of the Hundred Pag. 233. To Court Baron THE Court Baron is so called because amongst the Laws of King Edward the Confessor it is said Barones vero qui suam habent Curiam de suis hominibus c. taking his Name of the baron who was Lord of the Manor or for that properly in the Eye of the Law it hath relation to the Freeholders who are Judges of the Court. And in Ancient Charters and Records the Barons of London and the Barons of the Cinque-Ports signifie the Freemen of London and of the Cinque-Ports Coke's 1 Inst 58. a. The Lord of a Manor that hath a Court Baron of common Right and by Course of Law all Pleas therein are determinable by Wager of Law and yet by Prescription the Lord may prescribe to determine them by Jury In a Writ of Right Patent directed to the Lord of the Manor Plea shall be holden of Freehold and the Court in that Case may give an Oath for there is the King 's Writ of Praecipe quod reddat Coke's 2 Inst. 143. Before the Statute of Marlebridge cap. 22. Lords would distrain their Free Tenants to come and shew their Deeds especially the Original Deed whereby they might know by what Rent and Services the Tenancy was held of them and obliquely many times perusing the Deeds which are the Secrets and Sinews of a Man's Land brought in question the Title of the Freehold it self Another Mischief was That the Lords of Court Barons Hundreds c. where the Suitors were Judges would constrain them to swear between Party and Party both which Mischiefs are taken away by the said Statute Coke's 2 Inst 142. Fines for Beaupleader are yet paid in some