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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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be made of a Knight of a Shire within England St. 10. An. ch 23. Sheriff c. to swear each Freeholder if by any Candidate or Voter required Sheriff c. shall enter the Place of the Elector's Freehold of his Abode and Jurat against the Name of every Voter sworn and with in twenty Days after the Elections deliver the Poll-Books upon Oath to he Clerk of the Peace c. every Free-holder before he is admitted to Poll shall if required by the Candidates or any of them or any other Person having a Right to Vote first take the Oath in this Act contained which Oath the Sheriff c. is to administer And in taking the Poll the Sheriff c. shall enter not only the Place of the Elector's Freehold but also the Place of his Abode and Jurat against the Name of every Voter who shall be tender'd and take the Oaths hereby required and the Sheriff or returning Officer shall within twenty Days after such Election deliver over upon Oath to be administred by the two next Justices of the Peace one of the Quorum unto the Clerk of the Peace of the same County all the Poll-Books of such Elections and in Counties where there are more than one Clerk of the Peace the Original to one and attested Copies to the rest to be kept among the Records of the Sessions of the Peace for the County And of an Act 7 Guil. III. Intituled G. Britain An if any Quaker Sheriff c. to admit any Quaker to vote during the Act 7 W. 3. and accept his Affirmation to the Effect of the Oath according to the said Act instead thereof and enter Affirmat against the Name of such Quaker during the Continuance of an Act 7 Guil. III. Intituled An Act that the solemn Affirmation and Declaration of the People called Quakers shall be accepted instead of an Oath in the usual Form shall upon such Election if required by the Candidates or any of them declare the Effect of the said Oath upon his solemn Affirmation in such Manner and Form as is directed by the said Act every such Quaker shall be capable and admitted to give his Vote for the Election of any such Member within England and every Sheriff c. is hereby authorized and required to accept such Affirmation instead of the said Oath and shall enter Affirmat against the Name of every such Quaker That any of the Electors present 2 St. 12 Annae Praeses of the Meeting upon Request of any Elector of a Shire or Stewartry in Scotland to swear either Elector or Candidate to their Estates suspecting any Person or Persons either Electors or Candidates for Shires or Stewartries in Scotland to have his or their Estates in Trust and for the Behoof of another may require the Praeses to the Meeting to tender the Oath in this Act contained and the said Praeses is required to administer the same Returning Officers are ordained to make their Returns of the Persons elected by the Majority of the Freeholders inrolled G. Britain and those admitted by them Returning Officers to return Persons elected by a Majority of Freeholders in rolled and those admitted by them with Liberty of objecting c. reserving always the Liberty of objecting against the Persons admitted to or excluded from the Poll as formerly All Sheriffs of Shires and Stewarts of Stewartries shall Sheriffs and Stewarts under 50 l. Penalty half to the Queen half to him that sues before the Court of Session c. to make publick Intimation at the Parish Churches within their Jurisdictions three Days before the Diet of Elections under the Pain of 50 l. Sterling one Moiety whereof shall be to the Queen Her Heirs and Successors and the other to the Person or Persons who shall sue for the same to be recovered before the Court of Session by any Action summarily without abiding the Course of the Roll make the publick Intimations required by the Laws of Scotland at the several Parish Churches within their respective Jurisdictions at least three Days before the Diet of Elections That the Oath or Affirmation which see ib. the Officer or Officers presiding St. 2 G. 2. ch 4. Presiding Officer to administer the Oath or Affirmation on Forfeiture of 50 l. or taking the Poll at such Election is and are hereby impowered and required to administer gratis if demanded upon Pain to forfeit the Sum of Fifty Pounds of lawful Money of Great Britain G. Britain to any Person that shall sue for the same to be recovered with full Costs by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any Court of Record at Westminster wherein no Essoign Protection Wager of Law or more than one Imparlance and if the said Offence shall be committed in that Part of Great Britain called Scotland then to be recovered together with full Costs by summary Action or Complaint before the Court of Session or by Prosecution before the Court of Justiciary there for every Neglect or Refusal so to do and no Person shall be admitted to poll till he has taken and repeated the said Oath in a publick Manner in Case the same shall be demanded as aforesaid before the returning Officer or such others as shall be legally deputed by him If any Sheriff Mayor Sheriff or other returning Officer admitting any to be polled before sworn to forfeit 100 l. Bailiff or other returning Officer shall admit any Person to be polled without taking such Oath or Affirmation if demanded as aforesaid such returning Officer shall forfeit One hundred Pounds to be recovered as aforesaid together with full Costs and if any Person shall vote or poll at such Election without having first taken the Oath or if a Quaker having made his Affirmation as aforesaid G. Britain if demanded such Person shall incur the same Penalty Voters to incur the like Penalty Returning Officer after reading the Writ to take the following Oath which the Officer is subject to for the Offence above mentioned That every Sheriff Mayor Bailiff Headborough or other Person being the returning Officer of any Member to serve in Parliament shall immediately after the Reading the Writ or Precept for the Election of such Member take and subscribe the following Oath which see ante Which Oath any Justice or Justices of the Peace of the said County City Corporation or Borough where such Election shall be made or in his or their Absence any Three of the Electors are hereby required to administer and such Oath so taken shall be entred among the Records of the Sessions of such County City Corporation and Borough as aforesaid If any returning Officer Penalty of wilful Perjury Elector or Person taking the Oath or Affirmation herein before mentioned shall be guilty of wilful corrupt Perjury or of false affirming and be thereof convicted by due Course of Law he shall incur and suffer the Pains and Penalties which by Law are enacted or inflicted in Cases of wilful and corrupt Perjury That all
Great Britain or of Commissioners for choosing Burgesses in Scotland to administer the Abjuration upon Oath or Affirmation to Quakers and Electors refusing it incapable to vote or being a Quaker shall refuse to declare the Effect thereof upon his solemn Affirmation as directed by an Act of Parliament made 7 W. 3. to be administred by the Sheriff President of the Meeting or chief Officer taking the Poll at any Election of Members to serve in the House of Commons for any Place in Creat Britain or Commissioners for choosing Burgesses for any Place in Scotland at the Request of any Candidate or other Person present shall not be capable of giving any Vote for any Election of any such Member to serve in the House of Commons for any Place in Great Britain or Commissioner to choose a Burgess for any Place in Scotland That no Register for the Registring Memorials of Deeds St. 6 Ann. c. 35. The Register for the East-Riding of Tor●shire c. or his Deputy incapacitated Conveyances Wills c. within the East-Riding of the County of York or the Town and County of Kingston upon Hull or his Deputy for the Time being be capable of being chosen a Member to serve in Parliament Vide ante 212. That no Person shall be capable to sit or vote as a Member of the House of Commons St. 9 Ann. Persons incapacitated to sit or vote in the House of Commons who have not an Estate Freehold or Copyhold for Life or greater in England of 600 l. for a Knight of the Shire manfully and 300 l. for a Citizen Burgess c. and if any such elected c. the Election c. void for any County City c. within that Part of Great Britain called England c. who shall not have an Estate Freehold or Copyhold for his own Life or for some greater Estate either in Law or Equity to his own Use in Lands Tenements or Hereditaments above what will satisfy and clear all Incumbrances within that Part of Great Britain called England c. of the annual Value of six hundred Pounds above Reprizes for every Knight of a Shire and of three hundred Pounds above Reprizes for every Citizen Burgess c. And if any Persons elected or returned to serve in any Parliament as a Knight of a Shire or as a Citizen Burgess c. shall not at the Time of such Election and Return be seized of or intituled to such an Estate before required such Election and Return shall be void Nothing in this Act contained shall extend to make the eldest Son or Heir Apparent of any Peer or Lord of Parliament Eldest Son or Heir Apparent of a Peer or Person qualified to serve as a Knight of a Shire excepted Universities in England also excepted or of any Person qualified by this Act to serve as Knight of a Shire uncapable of being elected and returned and sitting and voting as a Member of the House of Commons Nor extend to either of the Universities in that Part of Great Britain called England but that they may elect and return Members to represent them in Parliament as heretofore they have done No Person shall be qualified to sit in the House of Commons No Person qualified by Virtue of a Mortgage unless in Possession of the mortgaged Premisses for seven Years before his Election by virtue of any Mortgage whereof the Equity of Redemption is in any other Person unless the Mortgagee shall have been in Possession of the mortgaged Premisses for seven Years before the Time of his Election Every Person except as aforesaid who shall appear as a Candidate Candidates to be sworn to their Estates if required by any other Candidate or two Electors or shall by himself or any others be proposed to be elected shall upon Request at the Time of such Election or before the Day to be prefixed in the Writ of Summons for the Meeting of the Parliament by any other Person who shall stand Candidate at such Election or by any two or more Persons having Right to vote at such Election take a Corporal Oath in the Form in this Act contained which see ante The respective Oaths aforesaid shall be administred by the Sheriff or Under-Sheriff Before the Sheriff or other Officer by whom the Poll is to be taken or Return made or 2 or more Justices of the Peace The Election and Return of Candidates refusing to take the Oath void for any County or by the Mayor Bailiff or other Officer or Officers for any City Burrough c. to whom it shall appertain to take the Poll or make the Return at such Election or by any two or more Justices of the Peace within England c. And if any of the said Candidates c. shall wilfully refuse to take the Oath the Election and Return of such Candidate or Person shall be void That from and after the Determination of this present Parliament 2 St. 12 Ann. No Conveyance or Right whereon Infeoffment is not taken and Seisin registred a Year before the Teste of the Writs shall intitle the Person to be elected in any Shire or Stewartry in Scotland The like as to Inoffments not taken a Year before the Date of the Warrant for a new Writ during 〈◊〉 Continuance of a Parliament Any Elector present su●pecting Persons to have Estates in Trust may require the Praeses of the Meeting to swear such to their Estates no Conveyance or Right whereupon Infeoffment is not taken and Seisin registrated one Year before the Teste of the Writs for calling a new Parliament shall upon Objection made in this Behalf intitle the Person so infeost to be elected at that Election in any Shire or or Stewartry in Scotland and in case any Election happen during the Continuance of a Parliament no Conveyance or Right whatsoever whereupon Infeoffment is not taken One Year before the Date of the Warrant for making out a new Writ for such Election shall upon Objection made in that Behalf intitle the Person so Infeoft to be elected at that Election and that it shall be lawful for any of the Electors present suspecting any Person or Persons to have his or their Estates in Trust and for Behoof of another to require the Praeses of the Meeting to tender the Oath in this Act contained intituled The Form of the Freeholders c. Oath to be taken upon Objection made by Stat. 12. Annae and is the same mutatis mutandis to any Elector and the said Praeses is required to administer the same In case such Elector Electee Q. refuse to Swear On Refusal to swear and subscribe the Oath incapable to be elected Stat. 1 G. 1. c. 13. and also to subscribe the said Oath such Person or Persons shall not be capable of being Elected at such Election That after the 29th of September 1715 no Person that now is or hereafter shall be a Member of the House of Commons shall Vote in the House of Commons or
Name of the elected to the Sheriff who is to annex and return it with the Writ the Sheriff of the Shire of Edinburgh shall on Receipt of the Writ directed to him forthwith direct his Precept to the Lord Provost of Edinburgh to cause a Burgess to be elected for that City and their Common Clerk shall certify the Name of the Member elected to the Sheriff of Edinburgh who shall annex it to his Writ and return it with the same into the Court from which the Writ issued And as to the other Royal Burghs divided into fourteen Classes or Districts Sheriffs c. in like Manner to direct their Precepts to the Royal Burghs for the electing a Commissioner for each and the Commissioners of each District to meet at the presiding Borough by name for each District on the thirtieth Day after the Teste of the Writ unless Sunday and then Menday to their Burgess Common Clerk of such presiding Borough forthwith to return the Name of the elected to the Sheriff c. in whose Shire such Borough is who is to annex and return it with his Writ Like Method to be taken by Sheriffs c. in Case of Vacancy in Parliament Time by Decease or Incapacity of a Member and if for a Burgh the presiding Burgh at the first to preside at the new Election the Sheriffs or Stewarts of the several Shires and Stewarties shall G. Britain on the Receipt of their several Writs forthwith direct their several Precepts to every Royal Burgh within their respective Shires or Stewartries reciting therein the Contents of the Writ and the Date thereof and commanding them forthwith to elect each of them a Commissioner as they used formerly to elect Commissioners to the Parliament of Scotland and to order the said respective Commissioners to meet at the presiding Borough of their respective District naming the said presiding Borough upon the thirtieth Day after the Day of the Teste of the Writ unless it be upon the Lord's Day and then the next Day after and then to choose their Burgess for the Parliament And the Common-Clerk of the then presiding Borough shall immediately after the Election return the Name of the Person so elected to the Sheriff or Stewart of the Shire or Stewartry wherein such presiding Borough is who shall annex it to his Writ and return it with the same into the Court from whence the Writ issued And in case a Vacancy shall happen in Time of Parliament by the Decease or legal Incapacity of any Member a new Member shall be elected in his Room G. Britain conformable to the Method herein before appointed and in Case such a Vacancy be of a Representative for any one of the said fourteen Classes or Districts of the said Royal Boroughs that Borough which presided at the Election of the deceased or disabled Member shall be the presiding Borough at such new Election Provided always that upon the issuing of the Writs of Summons for the electing of a Parliament if any Shire or Stewartry where a Royal Borough is In Writs to Sheriffs the Election of a Knight to be omitted if the Shires where a Royal Burgh is have not then a Turn to elect hath not then a Turn or Right to elect a Commissioner or Knight of the Shire or Stewartry for that Parliament that then it shall be omitted out of the Writ c. That every Person who shall refuse to take the Oath of Abjuration or being a Quaker St. 6 An. ch 23. Sheriffs Presidents of Meetings c. on the Poll at any Election of Members of Parliament for Great Britain or of Commissioners for choosing Burgesses for Scotland at the Request of any Candidate or others to administer the Abjuration Oath or Affirmation to Quakers and Electors refusing it disabled to vote shall refuse to declare the Effect thereof upon his solemn Affirmation as directed by an Act made 7. W. 3. which Oath or Declaration the Sheriff President of the Meeting or chief Officer taking the Poll at any Election of Members for any Place in Great Britain G. Britain or Commissioners for choosing Burgesses for any Place in Scotland at the Request of any Candidate or other Person present at such Election which they are to administer shall not be capable of giving any Vote for the Election of any such Member for any Place in Great Britain or Commissioner to choose a Burgess for any Place in Scotland Enacted St. 9 An. ch 5. Candidate to be sworn to his Estate if required by any other Candidate or two Electors That every Person except the eldest Son or Heir Apparent of a Peer or of a Person qualified by this Act to serve as Knight of a Shire or such as shall be elected for each of the Universities of England shall upon Request at the time of the Election or before the Day to be prefixed in the Writ of Summons for the Meeting of any Subsequent Parliament by any other Person who shall stand Candidate at such Election or by any two or more Persons having a Right to Vote at such Election take a Corporal Oath in the Form in this Act contained Vide aute The respective Oaths aforesaid shall be administred by the Sheriff or Under-Sheriff for any County G. Britain or by the Mayor Bailiff The Oaths to be administred by the Sheriff or other Officer by whom the Poll is to be taken and Return made or two or more Justices of the Peace Who are to certify the same into the Chancery or Queen's Bench within 3 Months under 100 l. Forfeiture to be recovered by Action of Debt c. half to the Queen and half to him that sues with full Costs or other Officer or Officers for any City Borough c. to whom it shall appertain to take the Poll or make the Return at such Election or by any two or more Justices of the Peace within England c. and the said Sheriff Mayor Bailiff or other Officers and the said Justices of the Peace respectively are hereby required to certify the taking thereof into Chancery or the Queen's Bench within three Months after the taking the same under the Penalty of forfeiting one hundred Pounds one Moiety to the Queen and the other to such Person or Persons as will sue for the same to be recovered with full Costs by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any Court of Record at Westminster No Fee or Reward shall be taken for administring any Oath or making 1 s. only to be paid for the Oath 2 s. for making and 2 s. for filing the Certificate under 20 l. Forfeiture to be recovered and divided as above receiving or filing the Certificate thereof except one Shilling for administring the Oath and two Shillings for making the Certificate and two Shillings for receiving and filing the same under the Penalty of twenty Pounds to be forfeited by the Offender G. Britain and to be recovered and divided as aforesaid That upon every Election to
David was consecrated Bishop of Bangor by the then Archbishop of Canterbury but tis expresly said That he had been thereto elected A Principe Clero Populo Walliae i. e. by a Welch Parliament And in the same Reign one Gregory an Irish Abbot was elected to the Bishoprick of Dublin a Rege Hiberniae Clero Populo an Irish Parliament So that the Commons at this Time were a a constituent Part of the Scottish Welch and Irish Parliaments as well as with us in England And in the Year 1128 Vide Sax. Chro. sub An. 112. I find that fam'd Scholar Gilbertus Universalis to be elected and consecrated Bishop of London Annuente Clero Populo This seems at a Parliament at London But this Right of the Commons in electing Bishops does more clearly appear in H. the 2d's Time when all Historians agree it to be a general Custom both here and in France and seems founded on divers express Canons of the Primitive Church Insomuch as Mezeray in his History asserts That until that Time i. e. the Middle of the 12th Century The Voice of the People in electing Bishops was esteem'd the Voice of God The Successors of K. H. 1. K. Steven Mat. Par. 51. took their Coronation Oaths in a Form much more enlarged for the Ease of the Commons than those of King Henry 1. or his two Predecessors Thus K. Steven swore Coram Regni Magnatibus i. e. the Lords and Commons convoked at London Ad meliorationem Legum juxta voluntatem Arbitrium singulorum which must mean That he would reform the Laws according to their common Consent in Parliament and afterwards going to Oxford i. e. to hold his Parliament Ibi confirmavit Pacta quae Deo Populo in Die Coronationis suae concesserat This I take to be meant of Danegelt Hydage Cornage c See there some Particulars of his Oath whereof the 3d is Tallagia Quae autecessores ejus accipere consueverant in aeternum condonaret And in the following Year on the Arrival of Rob. Earl of Glocester Ibid. 51. this King was again sworn to observe the Good Laws of the Realm and thereof granted his Charter and see there the conditional Homage paid to the King by that Earl I might here pursue this Thread of Coronation Oaths in those of H. 2. R. 1. K. John Vide Ib. 42. in pede 51. and the Praef. to Privilegia Londini Rights of the Kingdom p. 88. c. but my Intention is not to trace the Practices of Kings in taking Coronation Oaths an unlucky Blot remains in History as to those Princes I have already named it being generally observed Impudenter fregerunt c. An Author who seems to be very conversant in Matters of this Nature and observes thus The King's Oath is to confirm the just Laws which the Commons not the Lords shall elect or choose in Latin Quas vulgus elegerit and in the old French Oaths of Edw. 2. and Edw. 3. tis Les quels la Communaute aux Eslue And in the English Oaths of H. 8. and other Princes See Sir R. Atkyns ut supra p 28 29. tis Which the Commons of the Realm shall choose And that the antient Writs for summoning the Commons are Nobiscum tractur consilium impensur de arduis Negotiis Regni And the same Author The King dom's Rights ut supra a little before says thus The Mirror as well as Tacitus shews how our Lords were originally raised out of and by the Commons and with Bracton Fleta c. gives them a judicial Power over the Rest c. Nay the Modus Parliamenti will not only tell us That the Commons have better and stronger Votes than the Lords but that there may be a Parliament without the Prelates c. For there was a Time wherein there was neither Bishop nor Earl and yet there were Parliaments without them but never without the Commons and concludes with the Impossibility of holding a Parliament without them thus Parliamentum sine Communitate tenebitur pro nullo quamvis omnes alii status plenarie ibidem intersuerint Lastly Sir R. Atkyn's Power of Parliament p. 32. The Freeholders of England had originally the Election of the Conservators of the Peace who are become out of Date by introducing Justices of Peace who have their Power not by any Election of the Freeholders as of Right they ought nor are they nominated by them but by the King and have their Power by his special Commission c. i. e. contrary to the Common-Law And how and by what Means and in what tempered Times this came about may be read in Lambards Eirenarcha Lambards Justice f. 16.19.20.147 c. It was done by Act of Parliament in the Beginning of K. Edw. the 3d's Reign and in his Minority when the Queen and Mortimer ruled all The Freeholders did also originally Sir R. Atkyns supra and from all Antiquity at their Folkmotes or County Courts chuse their Heretochii and what were these You may call them Lords Lieutenants Deputy Lieutenants or it may be Lieutenants Generals For the Saxon Laws tell you their Duty and Office LL. Ed. Conf. 35. Vide ante and that they were to be Ductores Exercitus c. All these great Officers were chosen by the Freeholders as our Knights of the Shires now are and as Conservators or Justices of Peace formerly were and as Coroners and Verdredors formerly Men of great Power still are by Writ at the County Courts These were mighty Powers and Freedoms Sir R. Atkyns supra See 4 Inst 174.558 and were enjoy'd by the People as antiently as any of our Records do reach which are more authentic Proofs of our Constitution than the Writings of Modern Historians c. And do best shew the native Freedom which the People had by the antient Constitution of our Government contrary to all the new Doctrines of our late Writers and prove That the Privileges and Freedoms we yet enjoy are not meer Emanations of Royal Favour as our Novellists would impose upon us CHAP. II. Of the Dignity and Excellency of Parliaments THE Parliament is the Foundation and Basis of Government Rushw Coll. 3d Part Vol. 1. fo 739 and consequently of the Peace and Happiness of the Kingdom as it creates the Law by which we are ruled and governed in Peace and Quietness so it preserves the Law in Power and Authority It watches over our Religion that it be not supplanted and exchanged by suppositious Innovations or the Truth and Substance of it eaten up with Formality vain Pomp and unnecessary Ceremonies It is the Conservative of the Rights and Liberties of the Subject and the Corrective of Injustice and Oppression which by equal Right is distributed to all and every Man hath that Benefit and Protection of Justice which is due to him It is that by which alone common Necessities can be provided for and Publick Fears prevented so that I may say not only the Peace and Happiness and well Being but the very
against his Body and the like And by this it appeareth what Persons are de Jure triable by the Lords in Parliament viz. their Peers only which Bishops are not Judgments in Parliaments for Death have generally been strictly guided per Legem Terrae i.e. Lex Parliamenti d. 168. The Parliament hath three Powers Sir Rob. Atkyns Argument c. 36. a Legislative in Respect of which they are call'd the three Estates of the Realm a Judicial in respect of this it is call'd Magna Curia or the High Court of Parliament a Counselling Power hence it is call'd Commune Concilium Regni The Parliament gives Law to the Court of King's-Bench Id. 49. and to all other Courts of the Kingdom and therefore it is absurd and preposterous that it shou'd receive Law from it and be subject to it The greater is not judged of the less All the Courts of Common Law are guided by the Rule of the Common Law Id. 50 but the Proceedings of Parliament are by quite another Rule The Matters in Parliament are to be discussed and determined by the Custom and Usage of Parliament and the Course of Parliament and neither by the Civil nor the Common Law used in other Courts Ibid. The Judges of all the Courts of Common Law in Westminster are but Assistants and Attendants to the High Court of Parliament And shall the Assistants judge of their Superiors The High Court of Parliament is the dernier Refort Ibid. and this is generally affirm'd and held but it is not the last if what they do may yet again be examin'd and controlled Because the High Court of Parliament proceeds by a Law peculiar to that High Court Id 52. which is call'd Lex Consuetudo Parliamenti and not by the Rules of the Common Law and consists in the Customs Usages and Course of Parliament no Inferior Court can for this very Reason judge or determine of what is done in Parliament or by the Parliament A Statute Arc. Parl. 85. or Act of Parliament need not be proclaim'd for the Parliament represents the Body of the whole Realm for there are Knights and Burgesses of every County and Town But otherwise where it is ordained by the Act that it shall be proclaimed A Man Attainted of Felony Id. 100. or Treason shall not be restored in Blood without Parliament 28 Ed. 1. Petyt's Appendix to Miscel Parliam n. 38. A Truce being concluded between the English and French by King Edward's Ambassadors who therein had dishonourably agreed to include the Scots the Ambassadors at the ensuing Parliament were sharply rebuked and corrected not only by the King himself the Prelates and Nobles but by the Commons The Court of Parliament was the Sanctuary Turner's Case of Bankers 36. whether the distressed Subject in his Exigence fled for Shelter and Refuge and alway found it Into the Sacred Bosom of Parliaments it was Ibid Vide Several Precedent and Records that they poured out their Sighs and Groans with constant Success and when in Cases of high Nature the Common Law was arrested and stopt in her proceedings Parliaments evermore ran into ther Rescue and in dutiful ways discharged those Locks and Bars which had been unjustly fastned on the Exchequer The Right of the Crown of England Stat. Prov. 25 Ed. 3. Rast Stat. 99. and the Law of the said Realm is such that upon the Mischiefs and Damages which happen to the Realm the King ought and is bound by his Oath of the Accord of his People in Parliament thereof to make Remedy c. To conclude this Chapter Le Parliament ad Absolute poiar en touts Cases come a faire Leys d'adjuger Matters en Ley a trier vie del home a reverser Errors en Bank le Roy especialment lou est ascun Commune Mischief que l'ordinary Course del Ley n'ad ascun means a remedier en tiel Case ceo est le proper Court Et tonts choses que ils font sont come Judgments Et si le Parliament mesme erre Finche's Nomotecnia l. 2. c. 1. f. 21. 22. come il poet ceo ne poet estre reverse en ascun Lieu forsque en le Parliament Which because it is omitted as several other things are in the Book translated into English I will thus give it the Reader that does not understand French The Parliament hath Absolute Power in all Cases as to make Laws to adjudge Matters in Law to try Men upon their Lives to reverse Errors in the King's Bench especially where there is any Common Mischief which the ordinary Course of the Law hath not any means to remedy in such Case this is the proper Court And all things which they do are as Judgments And if the Parliament it self errs as it may that cannot be reversed in any place but in Parliament Sir Robert Cotton See Sir Robert Cot. Treatise of Parliaments p. 44 45 c in his Discourse of the Privilege and Practice of Parliaments says thus by Parliaments all the wholesom Fundamental Laws of this Land were and are Establish'd and Confirmed By Act of Parliament the Pope's Power and Supremacy in this Kingdom and the Romish Superstition and Idolatry were abrogated and abolished By Act of Parliament God's true Religion Worship and Service are or may be establish'd and maintain'd By Act of Parliament the two Universities of Oxford and Cambridge with other Cities and Towns have had many Privileges and Immunities granted em By Parliament one Pierce Gaveston a great Favourite and Misleader of King Ed. 2. was remov'd and Banished and afterwards by the Lords Executed Also by Parliament the Spencer's Favourites and Misguiders of the same King were Condemned c. and so was Delapool in H. 6. Time and others since By Parliament Empson and Dudley two notable Polers of the Common-wealth by exacting Penal Laws on the Subjects were Discover'd and afterwards Executed By Parliament the Damnable Gunpowder Treason hatch'd in Hell is recorded to be had in Eternal Infamy By Parliament one Sir Giles Mompesson a Caterpiller and Poler of the Common-wealth by exacting upon In-holders c. was discover'd degraded and Banished by Proclamation By Parliament Sir Francis Bacon Note the Censure on the late E. of Macclesfield Quere made by K. James 1. Baron of Verulam Viscount of St. Albans and Lord Chancellor of England was for Bribery c. discover'd and displac'd By Parliament Sir John Bennet one of the Judges of the Prerogative Court being Pernitious to the Common-wealth in his Place was discover'd and displac'd By Parliament Lyonel Cranfield sometime a Merchant of London and made by K. James 1. Earl of Middlesex and Lord Treasurer of England being hurfull in his Place to the Common-wealth was discover'd and displaced By Parliament Note Sir Francis Mitchell a jolly Middlesex Justice of Peace in the Suburbs of London another Canker-worm of the Common-wealth by Corruption in exacting an Execution of the Laws upon poor Alchouse-keepers Victuallers c. was discover'd and degraded from his Knighthood and
utterly disabled from being a Justice of Peace By Parliament Ib. p. 46. the Spanish Frauds were discovered and by an Act of Parliament the two Treaties i. e. touching the Spanish Match and for restoring the Palatinate both which had cost the King and his Subjects much Money and much Blood were Dissolved and Annihilated And we may remember says the same Author That that sage Councellor of State Sir William Cecil Lord Burley and Lord Treasurer of England was oft Times heard to say He knew not what a Parliament might not do which saying was approved by K. James 1. and is cited by him in one of his publick Speeches The Parliament says one is of an absolute and unlimited Power in all Things Temporal within this Nation Sir Robers Atkins's Argument p. 50. Bract. fo 34. Fleta p. 2. 17. Another says Parliamentum omnia potest Bracton and Fleta both affirm Rex habet Superiorem in Regno Scilicet Curiam suam i. e. Comites Barones doubtless the Lords and Commons qui apponuntur Regi ut si Rex sine Fraeno i. e. sine Lege fuerit Debent ei Fraenum apponere c. Nay some great Authors have asserted Quod Concilium hoc i. e. Parliamentum Facultatem habet Deponendi Regem Malum Substituendi Novum See Mat. Paris per Watts pag. 498. Knighton de Eventibus Angliae p. 2683. in the Decem. Scriptores and that this Power is claimed ex antiquo Statuto c. Knighton has a remarkable Passage concerning the Execution of that antient Statute in the Cases of E. II. and R. II. which at this Time I forbear to Transcribe or Translate Note It appears by Mat. Paris p. 99. c. That the Commons were then i. e. 15 H. II. summoned to the Parliament held at Clerkenwell and that they also were a Part of the Parliament in the Time of K. H. I. See before p. 34. 35. c. CHAP. IV. Of the House of Lords in general THE House of Peers Rushw eol vol. 3. part 1. p. 777. are the hereditary Counsellors of the King and Kingdom as the House of Commons are the representative Body of the whole Commons of the Kingdom There certainly cannot in the whole World be seen a more illustrious Court Nalson 566. than this high and honourable Assembly of Peers in Parliament nor any Thing of greater Benefit and Advantage to the Subjects of this Monarchy No Lord of Parliament can sit there Sir Simon d'Ewes's Jour 11. Col. 1. till he be full One and twenty Years unless by special Grace of the Prince and that very rarely unless they be near upon the Age of Twenty one Years at least A Bishop elect may sit in Parliament Ibid. ante 3 4 43 44. as a Lord thereof i. e. if called thereto by Writ Q. For he is not properly a Peer or even a Bishop till his Temporalties are granted to him If the King by his Writ calleth any Knight or Esquire to be a Lord of the Parliament 4 Inst 44. he cannot refuse to serve the King there in communi illo Consilio for the Good of his Country It lies in the Favour of the Prince Sir Simon d'Ewes Journal 2.4 Col. 2. to make Heirs of Earldoms Members of the upper House by summoning them thither by Writ but then they take not their Place there as the Sons of Earls but according to the Antiquity of their Fathers Baronies The Archbishop of Canterbury is the first Peer of the Realm Id. 140. Col. 1. The Earl-Marshal's Place in Parliament is betwixt the Lord Chamberlain Id. 535. Col. 2. and the Lord Steward See the Statute No Man ought to sit in that high Court of Parliament 4 Inst 45. but he that hath Right to sit there If a Lord depart from Parliament Id. 44. without License it is an Offence done out of the Parliament and is finable by the Law 4 June 1642 Rushw Col. Vol. 3. part 1.737 Post upon an Order of the House of Lords to those Lords that had left the Parliament and repaired to the King at York requiring their Appearance as Delinquents in the Answer they returned to it there are these Words We do conceive that it is the apparent usual and inherent Right belonging to the Peerage of England that in the highest Misdemeanors whatsoever no Peer is to answer to the first Charge but in his own Person and not upon the first Charge to come to the Bar. Any Lord of the Parliament 4 Inst 12. by License of the King upon just Cause to be absent may make a Proxy 43 Eliz. 1601 Towns Col. 135. Vide Sir Simon d'Ewes Journal 605. agreed by the Lords That the antient Course of the House is That the Excuses of such Lords as shou'd happen to be absent from the House upon reasonable Occasions ought to be done by some of the Peers and not by other Information Anno Domini 1626 Rushw Col. Vol. 1. p. 365. 2 Car. 1. resolved upon the Question by the whole House Nemine dissentiente 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 imprisoned or restrained without Sentence or Decree of the House unless it be for Treason or Felony or refusing to give Surety of the Peace N. B. This was upon the King's having committed the Earl of Arundel to the Tower without expressing the Cause of his Commitment All the Priviledges which do belong to those of the Commons House of Parliament Hakewell 82. a fortiori do appertain to all the Lords of the upper House for their Persons are not only free from Arrests during the Parliament but during their Lives Nevertheless the original Cause is by Reason they have Place and Voice in Parliament And this is manifest by express Authorities grounded upon excellent Reasons in the Books of Law A Proxy is no more than the constituting of some one or more by an absent Lord Sir Simon d'Ewes Journals 5. Col. 2. to give his Voice in the upper House when any Difference of Opinion and Division of the House shall happen for otherwise if no such Division fall out it never cometh to be question'd or known to whom such Proxies are directed nor is there any the least Use of them save only to shew prove and continue the Right which the Lords of the upper House have both to be summon'd and to give their Voices in the same House either in their Persons or by their Proxies As many Proxies as any Peer hath Ibid. Col. 2. so many Voices he hath beside his own and if there be two or three Proxies constituted by one absent Lord as is frequent then always the first named in the same is to give the Voice if he be present and if absent then the second sic de reliquis It is plain by the antient Treatise Ibid. 6. Col. 1. Modus tenendi Parliamentum That if a Peer neither came to the Parliament nor sent
a Speech spoken by him in the House he shou'd be sent to the Tower during the Parliament or presently after Darryel was sent for by the Serjeant to answer it to the House and upon Testimony of it he was committed to the Serjeant till Thursday following and then to acknowledge his Fault or to be committed to the Tower 16 Junij 1604 Ibid. Complaint being made of one Thomas Rogers a Currier dwelling in Colemanstreet for abusing Sir John Savil in slanderous and unseemly Terms upon his Proceedings at a Committee in the Bill touching Tanners c. he was sent for by the Serjeant at Arms to the Bar to answer his Offence Sir William Aston Rush Col. 656. Vid. Petyt 's Miscell Parl. 108. Acon 's Case Sheriff of London being examined before the Committee concerning some Matters about the Customs and not giving that clear Answer which he ought and as the House conceived he might have done was therefore committed to the Tower of London And a Question was made in the House at that Time Whether the House had at any Time before committed a Sheriff of London to Prison To which Mr. Selden made Answer That he could not call to mind a Precedent of sending one Sheriff of London to Prison but he well remembred a Precedent of sending both the Sheriffs of London to the Tower and instanced the Case One Trussel Towns Col. 20. Vid. Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour 438. Col. 1. being in Execution in one of the Compter's in London was order'd to be brought before the Committee with his Keeper without Danger of an Escape in the Execution Note the Case of Mr. W. Montague who being a Prisoner in Execution was notwithstanding elected a Burgess for Stockbridge and discharged of his Imprisonment by the House See the Case in Bohun's Collection of Debates pa. 275. to 281 where all the Precedents of this Kind are cited at large 4 Novemb. 1640 Scobel 16. upon a Report from the Committee for Priviledges That several Indentures were returned for Burgesses for the Borough of Bossinny in the County of Cornwal the one by the Mayor of the Town the other promiscuously the Committee were of Opinion upon view of the bare Indenture That Sir Charles Harbord who was return'd by the Mayor was well return'd See hereafter Ch. 12. and 13 but the House declar'd he shou'd not sit till the Election were decided 44 Eliz. 1601 the Course hath been Towns Col 297. if the House hath been desirous to see any Record the Speaker shou'd send a Warrant to the Lord Keeper to grant a Certiorari to have the Record brought into the House Decemb. 1641 Nalson 753. ordered That Mr. Speaker do write his Letters to the Mayor of Berwick enjoyning him to require such Papists and suspected Persons as reside there or make their constant Repair thither forthwith to depart the Town and to tender the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance to such as shall refuse and to proceed against them according to Law and to require him that a Guard be kept at the several Gates and that the Arms of that Place be in Readiness The like to the Mayor of Newcastle and of Hull The Commons Rush Col. 358. upon Imprisonment of their Members and the Offence taken by the King resolved to proceed in no other Business till they were righted in their Liberties See Nalson's Col. p. 3. to 21. Dec. 1641 Nalson 732. Mr. Long a Justice of the Peace sent to the Tower for setting a Guard without Consent of the Parliament A Knight 4 Inst 12. Citizen or Burgess of the House of Commons cannot by any Means make a Proxy because he is elected and trusted by Multitudes of People If the Commons accuse a Commoner of Misdemeanors Selden 's Jud. 101. in such a State of Liberty or Restraint as he is in when the Commons complain of him in such he is to answer Sir Francis Michel Seld. Jud. Ibid. and Sir John Bennet were both committed by the Commons before their Complaint to the Lords and so they answered as Prisoners but that in a Sort may be call'd Judicium parium suorum If the Commons impeach any Man Ib. 124. Ante they are in loco proprio and there no Jury ought to be only Witnesses are to be examined in their Presence or they to have Copies thereof and the Judgment not to be given until the Commons demand it The Presence of the Commons is necessary at the Parties Answer Ib. 158. Ante 56. and Judgment in Cases Capital Now one Reason for the King's Assent and the Commons Presence in such Judgments may be this Both King and People are to be satisfied for the Death of the Subject therefore all Trials for Life and Death are publick in the full Assembly of the Court and how can it be said in full Parliament when the Commons one of the States are absent Tho the Commons are not present when the Lords do consider of the Delinquents Answer and the Proofs Ib. 159. and do determine of their Judgment yet at their Return to their own Assembly they consider among themselves if the Proceedings were legal and may come again and shew it and require a Rehearing of the Cause as they did at the Judgment of the Duke of Clarence in 18 Ed. 3. In Judgments on Misdemeanors Ib. 162. Ante 58. the Presence of the Commons is not necessary unless they impeach a Delinquent prout 50 E. 3. and then they are present at all the Answers of those whom they impeach and are to demand Judgment When the Lords had determin'd one Part of the Complaint of the Commons against William Ellis touching the Wrong done to certain Scottish Merchants the Commons pray'd a general Inquiry might be made of the Residue whereof they complained Ibid. which the Lords granted When the Lord Nevil answered Id. 163. the Commons required that one Richard Love might be examined to prove that which the said Lord deny'd and so departed but two of the Commons remained and heard the Examinations and told the Lords That the said Richard had related otherwise to the Commons the Day before which the said Richard deny'd Then all the Commons came and justify'd it again and thereupon the said Richard Love confessed it and on their Demands was committed In the 10 Rich. 2. Ibid. when the Commons had Impeached the Lord Chancellor they were present at his Answer and so often reply'd and enforced his Oath against him Vid. Post 80. and required him to be committed and so he was before Judgment If the Commons do only complain Ibid. and do neither impeach the Party in Writing nor by Word of Mouth in open House nor demand Trial to be in their Presence in these Cases it is in the Election of the Lords Whether the Commons shall be present or not Issuing of Quo Warranto's out of the Court of King's-Bench Nalson 588. Court of Exchequer or any Court against Boroughs that anciently or recently sent Burgesses to Parliament to shew
and every the Sheriffs Mayors G. Britain Bailiffs and other Officers The Act to be read by the Sheriff c. after reading the Writ to whom the Execution of any Writ or Precept for electing any Members belongs shall at the Time of such Election immediately after the Reading of such Writ or Precept read or cause to be read openly before the Electors there assembled this present Act and every Clause therein contained and the same shall also openly be Read once in every Year at the General Quarter Sessions of the Peace after Easter and at the Quarter Sessions after Easter and on electing Magistrates c. for any County or City and at every Election of the chief Magistrate in any Borough Town Corporate or Cinque-Port and at the annual Election of Magistrates and Town Counsellors for every Borough in Scotland That every Sheriff Under-Sheriff Wilful Offence forfeits 50 l. Mayor Bailiff and other Officer to whom the Execution of any Writ or Precept for the electing of Members doth belong for every wilful Offence contrary to this Act shall forseit 50 l. to be recovered with full Costs as before directed Provided Prosecution to commence within two Years That no Person shall be made liable to any Incapacity Disability Forfeiture or Penalty by this Act unless Prosecution be commenced within two Years after such Incapacity c. incurred or in Case of a Prosecution the same be carried on without wilful Delay any Thing herein to the contrary After a Recital of the St. 7.8 St. 6. G. 11. c. 23. W. 3. and the Inconveniencies of County Courts being adjourned to Mondays Fridays or Saturdays it enacts That no County Court in England shall be adjourn'd to a Monday Friday or Saturday and all Adjournments and Acts done at such Courts so adjourn'd to be null and void any Law Custom or Usage to the contrary Provided That any County Court begun holden on or adjourned to any Day not prohibited by this or the said former Act for electing any Knight of the Shire for any County or for hearing and determining Causes or for such other Matters and Business as are usually transacted at County Courts may be adjourned over from Day to Day tho' the same may happen to be on a Monday Friday or Saturday until such Election or other Matters be fully finished any thing therein to the contrary c. CHAP. XIII Election of the Speaker THE Speaker is he that doth prefer and commend the Bills exhibited to the Parliament Arc. Parl. 3. Smyth's Common-wealth 75. and is the Mouth of the Parliament It is true 4 Inst 8. Smyth's Common-wealth 75. See Bohun's Coll. 352. contra the Commons are to choose their Speaker but seeing that after their Choice the King may refuse him for avoiding of expence of Time and Contestation the Use is as in the Conge d'Eslier of a Bishop that the King doth name a discret and learned Man whom the Commons elect But without their Election no Speaker can be appointed for them 4 Inst 8. because he is their Mouth and trusted by them and so necessary as the House of Commons cannot sit without him And therefore a grievous Sickness is a good Cause to remove the Speaker Id. 8. and choose another So in 1 Hen. 4. Sir John Cheyny discharged and so William Sturton So in 15 Hen. 6. Sir John Tyrrel removed So March 14. 1694. Sir John Trevor The first Day each Member is called by his Name Modus tenend Pal. 35. every one answering for what Place be serveth That done they are willed to choose their Speaker who tho' nominated by the King's Majesty is to be a Member of that House Their Election being made he is presented by them to the King sitting in Parliament 35. So Sir Thomas Gargrave 1 Eliz. So Christopher Wray 13 Eliz. So Robert Bell 14 Eliz. See Bohun's Coll. 352 353. So John Puckering 27 Eliz. So George Snagg 31 Eliz. So Edward Coke 35 Eliz. So Yelverton 39 Eliz. So John Crook 43 Eliz. So Sir Thomas Crew 19 Jac. 1. So Sir Heneague Finch 1 Car. 1. cum multis aliis The Speaker ought to be religious Towns Coll. 1.4 honest grave wise faithful and Secret These Virtues must concur in one Person able to supply that Place The long Use hath made it so material Elsyng 154 that without the King's Commandment or Leave they cannot choose their Speaker Sed aliter ab Antiquo Surely the Election of the Speaker was antiently free to the Commons Id. 155. to choose whom they would of their own House which appears in this that the King never rejected any whom they made Choice of Vide contra Sir Simon d'Ewes Journ 42. Col. 1. where he saith That 28 Hen. 6. Sir John Popham was discharg'd by the King i. e. on his excuse and thereupon the Commons chose and presented William Tresham Esq who made no Excuse See the like of Paul Foley in Bohun's Collection 353. The Cause of Summons being declared by the King or Chancellor Elsing 151 Cook 12 115. Smyth's Common-wealth 79. the Lord Chancellor confers first with his Majesty and then in his Name commands the Commons to assemble in their House and to choose one of their Members to be their Speaker and to present him to his Majesty on a Day certain Upon which the Commons shall presently assemble themselves in the Lower House Co. 12.115 and he is to be a Member of their Parliament The Commons being thereupon assembled in their House Elsyng 152 Vid. Town Coll. 174. See Bohun ut Supra one of the Commons puts the rest in mind of their Charge given in the Upper House touching the choosing of a Speaker and then doth of himself commend one unto them and desires their Opinions to be signified by their Affirmative or Negative Voices and if any Man stand up and speak against him so named alledging some Reason he ought to name another Some Person when the generality of Members are come Scobel 3. Vid. Town 174. Vide Sir S. d'Ewe's Jour passim and sit doth put the House in mind that for their better proceeding in the weighty Affairs they are come about their first Work is to appoint a Speaker and re-commends to the House some Person of Fitness and Ability for the Service and Dignity which usually hath been one of the long Robe If more than one Person be named for Speaker Scobel 3. and it be doubtful who is more generally chosen sometime one of the Members standing in his Place doth by Direction or Leave of the House put a Question for determining the same or the Clerk at the Board So it was in the first Session 1 Jac. 1. Scobel 4. when Sir Edward Philips the King's Serjeant at Law was first named by Mr. Secretary Herbert as fit for that Place and the Names of others were mention'd but the more general Voice run upon Sir Edward Philips and a Question being put he was by general Acclamation chosen Speaker When the Speaker
an Information exhibited against him in the Star-Chamber by the Earl of Huntington And Order was entered as the Act of that House 43 Eliz. 601. That he ought not to be molested in that Manner 10 Feb. 4 Car. 1. Rush Col. 653. Vid. Petyt 's Miscel Parl. p. 107. Whilst the House was in Debate the Warehouse of Mr. Rolls Merchant and Member of the House then sitting in Parliament was locked up by a Pursuivant and himself called from the Committee and served with a Subpoena This gave Occasion of smart Debates in the House Id. 654. After which the Attorney General writ a Letter That the serving a Subpoena was a Mistake and prayed a favourable Interpretation Resolved That Mr. Rolls Rosh Col. 659. a Member of the House ought to have Privilege of Person and Goods 16 Feb. 5. Memorials of the Method of Proceedings in Parliament 97. Vid. Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 85. Col. 1. Eliz. Robert Parker Servant to Sir William Woodhouse Knight for Norfolk being attached in London at the Suit of one Baker in Trespass had a Warrant of Privilege notwithstanding Judgment given against him for four hundred Marks 20 Febr. 18 Eliz. 1575. Ibid. Vide Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 251. Col. 1. Upon the Question and also upon Division of the House Edward Smaley Servant to Arthur Hall Esq one of the Burgesses for Grantham being arrested upon an Execution had Privilege 16 Dec. 44 Eliz. Anthony Curwen Ibid. Vid. Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 680. Col. 1. Servant to William Huddleston Esq one of the Knights of Cumberland being arrested upon a Capias ad Satisfaciendum out of the Common Pleas for six Pounds Debt and forty Shillings Damages and detained in Execution a Supersedeas was awarded and he was delivered And the House awarded the Officer that arrested him should be discharged Towns Col. 326. Vid. Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 680. Col. 1 686. Col. 1. paying his Fees and that Matthews should pay them and also his own Fees and remain three Days in the Serjeant's Custody for procuring the Arrest 11 Maii 19 Jac. 1. Memorials c. p. 98. The Under-Sheriff of Middlesex was called to the Bar for causing Alexander Melling Servant to the Chancellor of the Dutchy to be arrested He denied he knew him to be his Servant Mr. Speaker let him know the House had ordered him to have Privilege and therefore ordereth the Under-Sheriff to discharge him 1 Jac. 1. Sess 2. Ibid. Sir Edward Sandys moveth a Breach of Privilege by Sir Robert Leigh a Justice of the Peace for committing his Coach-Man to Newgate Sir Robert Leigh was sent for by the Serjeant and an Habeas Corpus for the Prisoner Sir Robert Leigh being brought to the Bar acknowledged his Fault and was discharged and so was the Prisoner 3 Martii Ibid. 1606. Valentine Syre Servant and Bag-Bearer to the Clerk of the Commons House being arrested upon an Execution was by Order and Judgment of the House enlarged 7 Sept. 1601. Id. 99. Vid. Towns Col. 196 206 210 Vide Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 629. Col. 1. Woodal Servant of William Cook Esq a Member of the House being arrested and in Prison in Newgate the Serjeant at Arms was presently sent to Newgate to bring him to the House sedente Curiâ And being brought to the Bar with his Keeper was discharged from his said Keeper and from his Imprisonment 1 Julii Memorials 99. 1607. John Pasmore the Marshal's Man being sent for and brought to the Bar for arresting John Jessop Waterman Servant to Sir Henry Nevil a Member of the House He denied that he knew he was Sir Henry's Servant until afterward notwithstanding he took an Assumpsit from him to answer the Action The House thought fit to commit him to the Serjeant till the House's Pleasure were further known and till he had discharged the Assumpsit and paid the Fees 17 Junii 1609. Ibid. Upon a Report from the Committee for Privileges That a menial Servant of Sir Robert Wroth was arrested eight Days before this Session the Serjeant was sent for the Prisoner and the Serjeant that made the Arrest one King who followed it and Fisher at whose Suit he was arrested 4 Junii 19 Jac. 1. Johnson Id. 100. a Servant to Sir James Whitlock a Member of the Commons House was arrested upon an Execution by Moor and Lock who being told That Sir James Whitlock was a Parliament Man Fulk one of the Prosecutors said He had known greater Men's Men than Sir James Whitlock 's taken from their Masters Heels in Parliament Time This appearing Lock and Moor were called in to the Bar and by the Judgment of the House were sentenced First That at the Bar they should ask Forgiveness the of House and of Sir James Whitlock on their Knees Petyt 's Miscel Parl. 118. Secondly That they should both ride upon one Horse bare-back'd Back to Back from Westminster to the Exchange with Papers on their Breasts and this Inscription For arresting a Servant of a Member of the Commons House of Parliament And this to be presently done sedente Curiâ Which Judgment was pronounced by Mr. Speaker against them at the Bar upon their Knees 28 Apr. 22 Jac. 1. Memorials 100. A Warrant was ordered to be issued by the Speaker for a Writ of Privilege to bring up Andrew Bates Servant to Mr. Richard Godfrey of the House in Execution with the Sheriff of Kent at the Suit of one Hunt This Privilege doth take Place by Force of the Election and that before the Return be made as appears in the Case following 19 Nov. 1601. Id. 107 108. Vide Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 642. Col. 2. 643. Col. 1. Vid. Petyt Miscel Parl. 119. Upon Information to the House that one Roger Boston Servant to Lanckton Baron of Walton who upon credible Report of divers Members of the House was affirm'd to be chosen a Burgess for the Borrough of Newton in Lancashire but not yet return'd by the Clerk of the Crown had been during that Session of Parliament arrested in London at the Suit of one Muscle the said Muscle together with the Officer that made the Arrest were sent for by the Serjeant and brought to the Bar and there charged by Mr. Speaker in the Name of the whole House with their Offence herein And having been heard Boston was ordered to have Privilege and to be discharged of his Arrest and Imprisonment and the Offenders for three Days committed to the Serjeant and ordered to pay such Charges to Boston as the Speaker shall set down and their Fees 6 Martii 1586. Memorials p. 108 109. Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 410. Col. 1.414 Col. 2. This Day William White brought to the Bar for arresting Mr. Martin a Member of the House made Answer That the Arrest was made above fourteen Days before the Beginning of the Parliament The House thereupon appointed a Committee to search the Precedents And March 11. the Committee made their Report of Mr Martin a Member of this House arrested upon mean