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A96344 For the sacred lavv of the land. By Francis Whyte. White, Francis, d. 1657. 1652 (1652) Wing W1765; Thomason E1330_2; ESTC R209102 136,470 313

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to be that there was no such overturning of things as is believed The Title of the Lawes called the Lawes of King William the first published by M. Selden with his learned Notes upon Eadmer and since with the Saxon Lawes is this These are the Lawes and Customes which William the King granted to the whole people of England after the Conquest of the Land these were those which the King Edward his Cousen beld before him In these Lawes recited by Hoveden in the life of King Henry the second ' King Edwards Lawes are confirmed in these words This we command That all men have and hold the Law of Edward the King in all things together with those Lawes which we have added for the profit of the English g Pars Poster 661. This Confirmation was not freely given but in this manner King William having heard the Lawes of the Danes and Normans and approved them as the Chronicle of Lichfield having approved the Lawes of those of Norfolke Suffolke Grantbridge and Deira c. he commanded they should be observed through the Kingdome as more just then any others because himselfe and his Barons were Norwegians by extraction not a word is there of any resolution to introduce his Norman Laws this the English thought a more killing blow then that of his Victory they beseech him and by the soule of King Edward c. to permit them to injoy their owne ancient Laws and Customes under which their Fathers lived themselves were borne and bred up to wit the Lawes of holy King Edward and they tell him it could not but be very hard to receive Lawes unknowne and to judge of those things they understood not h The Paraphrast of these Laws Chron. Lich. The King long resolute at last yeelds and as these with much authority were venerate and through the whole Realme corroborate and before other Lawes of the Realm the Lawes of King Edward not because he found them but because be restored them sayes Gemeticensis of the same age with King William i l c. 9. The Chronicle of Lichfield and Hoveden are more large with which agrees the first Chapter of the Lawes of good King Edward thus it speaks Which King William confirmed all of them use neer the same expressions By Precept of King William say they are elected out of every of the Counties of all England twelve of the most wise men who were injoyned before King William that in what they might neither declining to the right hand nor the left in a direct way they should lay open the Constitutions of their Laws and Customes nothing omitting nothing adding nothing out of prevarication changing k Hoved. 601 Chron. L●ch ll Ed. c. ● Further yet in that Chronicle Aldred the Archbishop of Yorke not Thomas Archbishop of Canterbury as the Paraphrast would have it there being no Thomas of that See till lawlesse Beckets dayes who as this and Malmesbury crowned him l Malms● l. 3. 〈◊〉 vita Pontific and Hugh Bishop of London by command of the king writ with their own hands what the foresaid jurates said from the laws of holy mother the Church beginning c. Ingulphus Secretary to William in Normandy and after made Abbot of Crowland by him is witnesse enough alone and as he I brought this time with me from London where he had been about the businesse of his house to my Monastery the laws of the most just king Edward which my Lord William the renowned king of England had proclaimed authentick and perpetual all England over to be kept under most grievous penalties commended to his Iustices in the same tongue they were set forth m Ingulph p. ult This proclamation was not all to allay the stormes which perhaps the violation of these laws had raised for the good of peace says an ancient Monk He swears upon all the reliques of the Church of S. Albane touching the hol Gospel Abot Fretherick ministring the Oath the good and approved ancient laws of the realm which the holy and pious Kings of England his ancestors and especially King Edward set forth inviolably to keep n Vita Ab. S. A●b 8. s ●0 that the English laws were in use then I can prove out of that famous plea of Pinnende●e betwixt Lanfranck Archbishop of Canterbury and Odo Bishop of Baieux and Earl of Kent there it is said the King comanded al the County without delay to sit all the French of the County especially the English in the antient laws customes skilled to assemble o Not. ad E●d 198. William the 2. promises onely easie laws justice equity and mercy and laws desirable p Hunting l. 7.372 ead 13. Ma Par. 14 Heved in h. 1. which his successour Henry the first construes and there could be no other meaning to be meant of these laws he swears To take away all the injustices and oppressions of his brother promises the good and holy laws to keep and to strengthen the liberties and ancient customes which flourished in the realm in the time of S. Edward the King q Ead. 55. Malmsb. in Hen. 1.156 Ma. Pa. 55. and in his laws he says The law of King Edw. I grant you with those amendments made by my father with the counsel of his Barons r Ll. Hen 1. c. 2. Ma. Pa. 56. and in the same place those things which hence forward shall be done shall be amended secundum lagam according to the law of King Edward yet after he imposes a new law a medley out of the salick ripuarian and other forreign laws with some pieces out of King Cnuts Danish laws which were but a small time observed and could not take any thing from the lawes of King Edward king Stephen confirms the laws in these words all the liberties and good laws which Henry King of England my Vnkle granted them and I grant them all the good laws and good customes which they enjoyed in the reign of King Edward s Ex lib. autiqu Ll. The Londoners request of Maetildis the Empresse daughter of Hen. the 1. That they may be suffered to use the laws of Edward because as they they were the best and not the laws of her father Henry because they were grievous which she refused whence great commotions were made t Florent wig in an 11 42. cont which grievous laws certainly were that salic rapuarian Danish medly and likely enough a commotion in those boisterous times would follow the refusal many of the disquiets and tumults of those first reigns being raised upon the pretence of the breach of these laws a pretence so taking that the No●mans themselves either coloured their insurrections with it or else preferred these before their own laws and ran the hazard of their lives fortune in earnest for them Henry the 2. commanded the laws of his Grandfather to be observed u Hov p. pricr in H. 2. of which below
before William the first that he sided not against him and that being found true he and all those in his condition h Weentun Monum hi● example ●n C●●ington of Sir Rob. Cotten like to lose all were confirmed in their Lands and Lordships to have and hold those are the words of the confirmation as wholly and peaceably as ever they did before the conquest By the Records of Term. Trin. 21 E. 3. Comit. Ebor Com. Northumb Rot. 191. This Drench is described thus That the foresaid Vghtred held the said lands viz. In Northumberland of our Lord the king and of his progenitors kings of England by the service of a Drench which service in the parts foresaid is such that of whomsoever he holds any thing there by such service it is held and if the Tenant dye his heire being within age the Wardship of the heir and land belongeth to the Lord of which c i D. Spelm. gloss verb● Dronches with the marriage Whether wardship and marriage as the Lord Cook k 4. Inst 193. no badges of servitude be of the same antiquity with king Aelfred I will not take upon me to determine the Lord Cook as also the Mirrour in the place cited by him are for the affirmative l Inst 1. p. 76.4 Inst 292. mire sect 3. graft 911. c. By a law if any man dye intestate the Lord is to have nothing but what is due by the name of Hereo● m Ll. Cnu●● c. 68. by Mr. Lambard this is acknowledged Engish-Saxon and thought to be the same with relief one place sayes Relief or rather Herent n Not. in radwes 152 and Hereot or relief o 154. 161 id compares the Hereota to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hereor is a service and acknowledgement of the seigniory of another a tribute so Dr. Cowel given to the Lord amongst the Saxons for his better preparation toward the war In the Monastical institutions of king Edgar Hereot is called geƿunlic gae ul a customary Cens or duty said to be given to the kings by the great men of this Country after geþtenege their death It is forbidden by this king to be given for all Abbots and Abbesses p In not ad eadm before as it seemeth not so free as here the words By the great men after their death make it quite another thing though it is called so from relief which is for the heir and never paid but where there is one q Gloss verbo Hereot The Hereot was to be reasonable and here again we shall see the ranks of the Saxon noblesse The Earls eight horses four sadled four not four Helmets four coats of maile and eight spears as many shields four swords and two hundred * Saxon ● Marks of Gold The greater Thanes the kings Thanes four horses two sadled two not two swords four spears as many shields an helmet a coat of maile and fifty marks of Gold The Medmere or under Thane one horse ready his weapon or as amongst the West Saxons his neck ransome amongst the Mercians two pounds amongst the Eas●-Angels two pounds The Kings Thanes Hereot amongst the Danes who has free jurisdiction ðe his socne haeb●e foure pound and if he be further knowne to the King two Horses one sadled the other not one Sword two Speares two Shields and fifty markes of gold The conclusion has not Infimae conditionis Thani as the Latin is But he that has lesse and lesse may be he two pound r Ll Conti. c 69. other Lords had their Hereot too The Lawes of Kings William which as the title were the same which King Edward obserued calles this which in these Lawes is Hereot reliefe and the Earle Kings Thegne and Underthane who are here charged as is said there are called and named Cnute Barun and Vavasour and charged much in the same manner ſ ● 22 23 24 v. c. 20. with little difference King Edwards Latin Lawes where any man falls in warre before his Lord by Land or else where forgives his reliefe t c. 3● and gives his Heires his Lands and Money without diminution u ibid. I will observe a little out of those old grants and Charters which preceed the Normans by which the religious heretofore made their titles onely carefull to get and to be free where we shall finde other men were not so The confirmation of Pope Agatho of the new raised Monastery of Medeshamstede after Peterborough before the age of Charters w An. 680. Concil Sax. 164. recites the immunities It was to be in no ðeudom in no kinde of servitude neither to King Bishop nor Earle No man was to have any rent or tribute there in the Councel of Becanceld King Withered freed the Church from all difficulties of saecular servitude from feeding the King Princes Aldermen Earles from all works the greater and lesser grievances c. x Concil Becanceld Au. 694. Concil Sax. 190. Witlafe King of the Mercians in the yeare 833. confirmes to the Monastery of Crowland their Lands and Tenements thus I grant deliver and confirme those Lands and Tenements c. for a peaceable and perpetuall possession to have from me and my Heires whosoever Kings of the Mercians after me to succeed in puram Eleemosynam in perpetuall and pure frankalmoigne Libere quiete et solute or as we now use it quit and discharged from all saecular charges exactions and tributes whatsoever by what name soever y Ingulp hist Concil Sax. 328. as another place amongst many things done said Ceolnoth the Archbishop before the whole Councell of Kingston shewed That the aforesaid Kings Egbert and Aethelwulfe his Son gave to Christ-Church at Canterbury the Mannor called Mallings in South-saxon free from all secular seruice and tribute royal except these three expedition military fird or firdfare upon the Herebanne the proclamation or edict military and to repair Bridges Castles Brugbote and Burgbote z Concil 340. by some not to be released * Charta E●dbaldi M●lmsb de gest reg l. 1. I●ae reg Glelienb Concit 228. which was not true The most learned Mr. Selden saies in England before the Normans were military fiefes the Earles and Thanes were bound to a kind of Knight service all the Lands of the Kingdom except some priviledged c. held of the Crown mediatly or immediately but saies he the expedition mulitary c. those three were not so much by reason of tenure as general subjection to occasions of the state a Tit. Hon. 1 Edit 321. likely so yet to recite the opinions of others there are that thinke this firdfare to be the same with our escuage the Charter of Kenulph An. 821. the Mercian King to Abingdon discharges all services but the expedition of twelue men with their shields cum scutis burgbote c. as the most knowing Knight In the antient Charters
is to buy by the lump tenuta seisin venter a woman with childe or as Alciate a posthumus fusiones publique Functions Whoso shall turn over the Laws of the Frankes Lombards Boiorians and other of the Teutonick Nations he will meet Mormoes and Goblins formidable indeed such as the most knowing glossaries must be contented to recite only or wisely to passe by in sacred silence which yet will be read by those who admire not themselves and their own age too much who will allow in some proportion both wisdom and civility to their forefathers and are curious to be satisfied how they lead their lives upon what policie and order the Empire of the German Franks Lombards rose and moved for however governments may begin Justice good lawes assure them give them vigour and continuance lasting violence had been a fire which suddenly would have burnt their Trophies these German Conquerours how fierce soever they seem in their first appearance of all which might be said which is related of Mezentius Dextra mihi deus c. Or the Quadi a part in that Eductis mucronibus quos pro numine colebant the sword was their deity spent the yeers of their entrance into their Provinces to compose mindes their first peace and rest from the turmoils of war was ever dedicated to the polishing and smoothing of those foundations which else laid with too hasty and too rough an hand would have fallen alone Augustus was more happy in his moderation then in his victories it might be thought he subdued his Country to preserve it his peace was so sweetned by the equity and clemency of his laws that all the calamities of the triumvirate and its proscriptions were forgotten no tears were left but such as the whole world powred out to his memory There is its honour due to antiquity yet there may be met with in the lawes of these people though they seem what Du Bartas speakes of Marots verse torne Monuments and age worne Images that policy and excellency of constitution which if we will not imitate perhaps we can never exceed It is observed for the honour of our English that an Earle of Arundel in his travels to Italy and the Lord William Howard in his Government of Calice although they understood other languages would not speak to any stranger but in their English And that Cardinal Woolsey in his French Embassie would not suffer his attendance to speak any tongue else to the French And I know not why our English where it is more pure and lesse corrupt where it is a mother tongue and the best Dialect of a mother tongue should not have the esteem it is worthy of It was made none of the least of venerable Bede's praises that he was learned in it A great man before mentioned rather transported with choller against som of the Profession and indirectly I thinke then out of his own judgement is very angry at the Law which he says cannot passe the Seas It were wonderful if it shou'd who looks that neighbourhood alone should make Nations like the same things I have shewn already what great agreement there is betwixt the French and us enough to make it evident they and we had but one stock in Constitutions more ancient then the Civill Law there and it takes off nothing though our Law would not be known in the Courts at Paris This Author grants no man he sayes can deny it it is a sacred both Thing and Title our professors wil not envy the learning of Brissonius his Lexicon or his formulae so much praised and it is confessed we cannot shew any Terms of law like them yet are ours to as much purpose they interpret the words of art of our homebred Lawes and I cannot tell what is to be required more All men may know that as there have been additionary Laws since the Saxons so have there necessarily been additionary termes since which according to the custome of the times when the Law began to speak French were French and when they began as good perhaps and as pure French as any then spoken The leagues and agreements concerning the Sea betwixt King Edward the first and other Princes shew what the old French was by these words soffrera souccours resceipts Pees Trewes subgitz forspris nadgairts c. x D. Seld. Ma. Claeus 267 276. The Lord of Argentons History much later manifests what the language was and how it has changed These terms are so enterwoven as the Lord Coke into the Lawes they cannot possibly be changed I wil appeal to any man who understands the modern French for many of them are yet retained by it whether any words can more aply hit the sense which these signifie there is a supposition where these objections lie that if the great Lawyers abroad should come hither much amazed they would stand at our voucher cited for a big word like to tear the ear but unluckily brought in it is yet in the French advocare to vouch call in aide in a suit and certainly was understood by some of the great Lawyers Rigaude and Bignon being such as had the word bene antique indeed would not have been amazed at it They were not confined within the knowledge of their own age onely what is much to Bignon's honour Sir Hen. Spelman acknowledges himselfe owing to him for many things in his Glossary Garrantie is the same yet with our Warranty Pleviner to plevin give surety saisine is yet seifin rebutter to repell as the heir with us is repelled by the Warranty of his ancestors Larcin is theft fellony robbery fee demain or domain prescription Escbet rent as we use them nampt is our naam halfe withernam a distresse briga with which by this author in another place the professours of our Lawes are reproached and have the stile of his barbarians has been continued amongst them ever since Edw. the 3. before which it was but rarely used yet is in the modern French viz. brigue for it signifying contention or wrangling The onely man abroad who may seem an adversary is Hotomanne a Civilian very learned but I believe not at all in our laws a man of a peevish heady temper who writ against his own State and fled for it yet is he not so much an enemy to the Laws of England as to Litleton's tenures the book so called which very probably he never understood in his Comentary of the feudall word in the word feudum he writes thus Stephane Pasquier a man of an excellent wit c. gave me an English Litleton in which the Laws of the English feuds are discoursed written so rudely absurdly and without method that it appeareth easily to be true which Polydore Virgil in the English History writes That foolishnesse in that book contends with malice and the study to calumniate Here is his own judgement seconded with the censure of that uncleane beast Polydore whofreely indeed as is said railes in that book against
Hovedens words this I will note here that Henry the second made Ranulphe of Glanville chief Justice of England by whose wisdome the laws underwritten were made which we call of England make no new law nor that chief Justice a law-maker they explain what is intended by the laws of Henry the first his Grandfather for the laws there underwritten w Hoved. pars pest 6●0 are meerly King Edwards laws confirmed by William the first king Richard the first swears to keep the good laws c. x Paris in Rich 1. without saying of St. Edward which yet can be no other those as is shown had got the name those must be meant by the expression good lawes the kings before and after swore to keep them K. Iohn absolved from the Popes thunder though at his Coronation by that oath to destroy bad laws substitute the good to exercise right Justice he had sworn the same y Ma. Par. 197. is forced to swear that he will as there revoke or restore the good laws of his ancestors here the expression good lawes is interpreted and especially the lawes of king Edward z Id. 239. In the same place where king John commands that the lawes of his Grandfather Henry be kept this must be intended of the first laws of his great Grandfather Henry the seconds Grandfather so often mentioned in the controversie betwixt Henry the second and that Martyr of the Roman make without a cause disobedient unruly Becket a Hov. 492. in H. 2 called by that king as before his Grandfathers lawes I say his great Grandfather Henry the first before here recited where Henry the first grants lagam Edwardi regis the Law of king Edward A Charter of which Stephen the Archbishop of Canterbury produces in the very next page of Mat. Paris after the absolution which well might be produced several transcripts of that Charter being sent by Henry the first to be preserved in the Abbies of all the Counties and there tells the Barons of the kings promise which he forced him as he says at his absolution to make that was to take away all injust laws and the good and just laws to wit as he still the laws of king Edward to revoke for restore and cause to be observed by all in the realm And now as he goes on there is found a certain Charter of king Henry the first by which if ye will your lost liberties you may to the Antient state revoke the transcript agreed word for word with the Charter b Ma. Pa. hist 55.210 the great sticklers for the lost liberties for the good and just laws for St. Edwards laws are all of them Normans or Norman-French such as came in since Edward and being setled here for some generations now made a great part of the whole amongst which are Fitz-walter Marshal of the Hoste of God and of holy Church this was his stile in the succeeding wars Vescy Percy Ros de Bruis Stuteville as there Saerie of Quincy Earle of Winchester the Earle of Clare descended from the Norman Gislebert Bigod Vere Fitz-Warin Marshal Beauchamp Manduit Fitz Allen Mandeville * Estoteville Munhrey * Mowbrey Montfichet Munifichet Montacute de Gant Laval c c id 254. These when king John asked them what laws they would have answered not Sir We are the Norman Conquerours give us this people for a spoile a prey make them our villains but quite another thing they offer him a Scedule for the greatest part as this Monk containing the antient laws and customes of the realm the chapters of the laws and liberties says he which the great men the Barnage or Baronage as in other places he cals them sought to be confirmed were partly written above in the Charter of king Hen. partly taken out of the ancient laws of king Edward d id ibid. Alll which lawes with much adoe were confirmed by king John this Scedule is the same and everywhere agrees with our Magna Charta or grand Charter and that of the Forrest granted and confirmed by king Henry the third called then by this Author the long required liberties e id 323. or rather by the whole Clergy and Nobility who tel the king they would give him the fifteenth which he desired if he would grant them the long required liberties which says this Historian the king granted and presently Charters were writ one of the common liberties c. And strengthened with his seal and one sent into every County But says he the tenors of the Charters is had above more expresly for here he recites not a word of them So that as he still the Charters of both the kings are not not found in any thing unlike u 5. H. 3 l. 1. Mort. dancest In. 323. in an 1224 the 8 of the King as he yet th charters has an 9. In the year foregoing this King was sought to by the Archbishop of Canterbury Stephen and the other great men the Barons at Oxford where he held his Court to confirm the liberties and free customes c w id 316. Which he did not then do but sent his letters or writs to all the● Sheriffs of the realm to cause twelve knights or legal men of every County to enquire upon oath what were the libertics in England in the time of king Heary his Grandfather so he is yet called x id 317 Ma. W●st the breakers of the Charters are Excommunicated with candles burning cast away extinguished and cast away stinking y Id. 861. Thus we see the stream of the laws of king Edward the ancient liberties and free customes some times running freely sometimes weakly sometimes stopped in their course at last have brake through all the Dams have mixed and incorporated with the great Charter whose basis and foundation they are z Nobilis D. Rog. Twis● den praefat in Ll. w. 1. H. 1 there still in being and still the fountain of the Common Law The great Charter raised upon this basis in one of the Statutes of confirmation is commanded by king Edward the first to be allowed by the Justices in judgement as the Common Law a 25. E. 1 c. 1 So that well might the Lord Cook say The great Charter is but a confirmation or restitution of the Common Law b Iast 81 It hath been confirmed above 30 times and by a Statute if any Statute be made against one of these Charters it is to be void c 42 E. 3 c. 1 ● which if it were intended not of the time past but of the time to come I see no such absurdity in it as some mens over wise policies would fancie some parts of it being as moral and immutable as the Decalogue it selfe As those That no man shall distraine for more service then is due no man shall be amerced for a small fault but after the manner of his fault no man shall bee destroyed
who has not heard of the father of Venice If any such there now be as well there may nature we see by these examples of the last times is no weaker then she has been of so firm memories of so happy judgements they are exceptions to my limitation and are not to be confined if they be not too delicate to adventure they may be ranked amongst those who do not invade Such men have reputation to lose which they will not hazard slightly they will consider of things and know well what it is they censure Whensoever they appear they cannot appear but as friends there can be no danger in them Haste and ignorance are onely to be feared if haste as Livie of it be improvident and blinde what can ignorance be thought to see Every man ere he gives his censure of Laws ought to read them over from the beginning to the end to look into them throughly according to that In civile est nisi tota lege perspecta una aliqua particula proposita judicare c c Leg. in Civivile st de leg upon one particle proposed the whole is not to be judged To the understanding of laws the words alone are not enough the intent of the Legislator the reason and end why they were given are to be enquired By the words of the Law is meant their propriety and signification which will not quickly nor without pains be known The intent of the Legislator is his preceptive will seldome found by the words abstractedly and nakedly but by the adjuncts the matter or circumstances This is the intrinsecal form The reason of the law is only the end moving the Legislator to make it not composing substantially the law constitutive to which the precept and will of the Legislator is to be accommodated This if not expressed in the law but devised by the interpreters is but a probable conjecture Every disadvantagious act of a drunken man by our law touching his lands or goods binds him Nay and touching his life too if he kill a man he is hanged for it f rep 4.124 Plow Com. 19. By Pittacus his law amongst the Greeks allowed by Aristotle g Polit. l. 2. c. ult if he had struck any man he was to suffer double as much as if he had done it sober Some lawlesse good fellows would thinke all this very unreasonable in a law onely intended to punish the wrong done according to the grievousnesse of the offence Since it is evident that mischiefs deliberately done as they may say perhaps with advice and malice are naturally lesse pardonable and therefore worthy of more severe punishment But as M. Plowdens report although the drunken man kill out of ignorance it helps not This ignorance was his own act and folly he might have resisted it and shall not be priviledged by it as the Court in that place of the Lord Cooke His drunkennesse is a great offence in it self and extenuates not but aggravates that which follows whatsoere colourable reasons may be given this boldnesse is rather tolerable in an Hotoman a stranger then an English man The law is the act of the whole body politique and ought to over-rule every part of it to binde every man the actual assent of every single man is not material nor does the dissent of a single man disoblige we are tyed by our forefathers their publique submission to these lawes at their free liberty and with their consent made h 25. H. 8. c. 21. their acceptance of them long since bindes us unlesse the revocation be by the same universal agreement which I believe is not like to be had As a most reverend Lord chiefe Justice strangers by living here do tacitely submit themselves to our lawes and forms of Law-making their grant and consent is involved in the consent of Parliament i ch Iust Hubard rep 271. Much more of the naturals and if all mens judgements which may be as unlike as full of diversity as their faces must be satisfied with reasons of laws long since established or to be set up it wil be impossible any old law shoud hand or any new law take Besides all publique authority to which onely the power of lawgiving belongs would lose its reverence As the Mirrour No creance no belief is to be given to the vain voice of the people The Iudges they are to obey the laws not to dispute them We have have our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as well as the Athenians who are judges of the laws of the reasonablenesse of them and who are to see them observed King Edward the first said by a most reverend chief Justice long ago to be the wisest king that ever was k 5. E. 3. c. 14. speaks thus in a Statute where we may see what antiquity attributed to the honourable Judges of the laws The king wills that the Chancellour and the Justices of his Bench shall follow him so that be may have at all times neer him some sages of the law which be able duly to order all such matters as shall come unto the Court at all times c l 28. E. 1. c. 5. All the Justices of England and Barons of the Exchequer as the Lord Cook are assistants to the Lords in Parliament m 4 Inst 56 They were more then assistants to the Barons their Writ was for they had their Writs too Quod intersitis nobiscum cum caeteris de consilio nostro super pramissis tractaturi vestrumque consilium impensuri They were to treat with the king and his Councel and to give Counsel As Mr. Crompton they were to be demanded for the Law n Jurisd 2. Postnat 22 23. a Statute more antient then the former begins All of the Councel as well Justices as others agreed that the constitutions underwritten c o Vid. Stat. de Bgam And again It is agreed by the same Justices c p Ibid. i. 6. The Statute of Marlbridge sayes For default another day is to be assigned according to discretion of the Judges q c. 13. Mar●b and discretion of the Justices and the Common Law are joyned 1 c. 26. ibid The Statute of Westm 2. for damages in appeals has According to the discretion of the Justices ſ W. 2. c. 12 in another place Whereas the Justices in the plea of Mortdancester have used to admit the answer of the tenent t c. xx the Statute 27 of Fines is according to discretion of the Justices u 27. E. 1. All the Judges of England gave their Answer to the Articles of the Clergy 3. Jacobi which the Lord Cooke calls Resolutions of the highest authority in law w 2 last 001. as upon the xx chap. of Westm 2. by that he says it is confessed That admission and allowance of the Iustices ought to be holden for Law x 2. Inst 399. In the Parliament 19 of Edward the first Sir Thomas of Weyland
chiefe Justice of the Common Pleas having abjured c. for murder His wife and son Petition the Parliament for a Manour which the Lord of the Fee had seised as Escheated in which Sir Thomas had onely an estate for life joyntly with his wife but the inheritance was in the son by fine There were summoned says the Record as well the Iustices of either Bench as the rest of the realme c. expert in the laws and customes c. The resolution speakes Before the Councel c. there being called the Treasurer and Barons and Iustices of either Bench it is agreed c. The famous case of conveening Clerks before the secular Magistrate was debated in the time of a Parliament of Hen. the 8. the Iustices c. being present and ruled according to the opinion of chiefe Iustice Fineux a most reverend Judge y 7. H. 8. Kelle vay 183. Reasonablenesse of time for tenant at Will discharged to carry away his goods of incortain fines of Copy holds c. is to be adjudged by the discretion of the Judges z Inst 57.59 Distresses are by the Statute of Marlbridge to be reasonable a c. 4. No more is said The Judges have ever yet determined that reasonablenesse as they have ever ordinarily what is reasonable in other things just and injust right and wrong what are evil customes and what not according to the Laws they have the use and customes of judgement saies a Statute b De Bigaem c. 1. Good reason then that they be Judges of that use and those customes They may claime this authority by a long prescription it has been allowed them in all Parliaments and by all Parliaments hitherto c V. 1 H 7. 3.4.20 3 Just 3. They in all the books doe not onely expound interpret and deliver the sense of Statutes but in Parliaments too upon consideration of a Bill in the 43 and 44 of Queen Elizabeth it was resolved so we finde a book speak By the chiefe Iustices Popham and Anderson and by divers other Iustices assistants to the Lords of Parlia ment in the upper House That leases to the Queen c. against the provision of the 13 of El. are restrained by the same act d 5. Rep. p. 2.14 The Lord de la Wares case concerning disability temporary and absolute was in a Parliament sitting referred to a Committee which at the Lord Burgley's Chamber in White-hall heard what could be said by Councel in the presence of the two chief Justices and of divers other Justices by whom it was resolved e Rep. 11.1.39 El. Here is an allowance of the latter as wel as former ages whatsoever the change may be let us change till we shall not know our selves if we retaine any face of Law or Judicature so it must be I never heard nor those who have heard more of such a Law yet which could be learned practised and understood without study and which all men but those who had studied and understood it might be Judges of The professed enemies of the Laws of England as such lawes have not been many no not in very many ages much stirre there was much disquiet ere they were had or rather restored Never any tumults all the Histories ore to undoe what was setled I doe not remember any other Law named against it but the Law of Wat Tylers mouth f From this day saies Tiler in London all Law shall fall from Wat Tylers mouth which we can make nothing of we heare of Kets Oke of reformation nothing of his Lawes The Lawes never were made the title of a rising yet I believe under such leaders little of the building would have stood whole Those of the Roman heresie are and have been inveteratly spightfull have more then once attempted to blow the Lawes and the Nation into the ayre together according to that divine determination of the Jesuiticall Oracle that the innocent may be destroyed with the wicked the Wheat plucked up with the tares g Act. p. 93. They would have blown up all our Laws though all of them are not accused not slandered by them not in what I have seen of theirs though likely they shal all have their turns not one of them not yet perhaps traduced by them as they are offended by it if it keep their mischiefes from ripening and be executed against them though much more ancient then our quitting them and their heresies and approved by their own Clergy here but it shall be reproached by them as one of our Statutes Our Laws though necessary and religious against them being called by them cruel Laws h 3 Jac. c. 1. The Statutes of praemunire and provision c. are abominable Parsons the Jesuit that fury of sedition charges the Law of Cawdries case highly and with the least dangerous Ponyards and daggers of his society wounds as he thought the reverend reporter Andrew Eudaemon as others Cacodaemon Johannes in love with the Straw miracle of the Gunpowder Martyr Garnet condemnes our Laws and Courts and the triall by twelve men like Polydore Virgils Ghost in his words He was of Crete so he saies and if we believe him in that we must believe him in nothing else The Jesuits were ever undermining ever active full of plots and treasons and their hatred cannot be imputed to any other cause but this for the ills they had done they feared the barre yet this arrogance they might take from the house of pride of which they were The Prince of which has ever till we left him where he had left the purity of the first ages encroached upon our Lawes and government praetending every where a certain assistance of the holy Spirit for which he is to be obeyed a course I would advise those to take who inveigh next and have nothing to say to the purpose The Pope as the Venetians in the interdict tell the French Kings Ambassadour attributes to himselfe authority to define and determine even against the opinion of all the world what Lawes are just and unjust as Dr. Marta Besides the kisse of the blessed feet he has the free faculty of making and abregating Laws i D' jurisd c. 46. Whence this authority is derived some are not assured they referre it to the spirituall authority with which the temporall is imagined to be indirectly given Others speak plainly that he is a temporall Monarch over all the earth that he might receive appeals from Princes give Laws to them and annul those made by them That Ecclesiasticks are to examine whether the Lawes of Princes be just and whether the people be obliged to obey them if we doubt this think it with the most if we tell the flatterers and Parasites of this chaire the former ages heard nothing not a word of all this They may reply in the words of Paul the 5. That the former Popes did not wel understand themselves a great and certain mark of this