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A67861 The jurisdiction of the admiralty of England asserted against Sr. Edward Coke's Articuli admiralitatis, in XXII chapter of his jurisdiction of courts by Richard Zouch ... Zouch, Richard, 1590-1661.; Coke, Edward, Sir, 1552-1634. 1663 (1663) Wing Z22; ESTC R21844 62,368 170

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Law and Statute Laws of England take notice of the Law Merchant and do leave the ca●ses of Merchants to be decided by the Rules of that Law which Law Merchant he saith as it is part of the Law of Nature and Nations is universal and one and the same in all Countries of the World For as Cicero saith of that Law Non erit alia lex Romae alia Athenis alia nunc alia post haec sed et omnes gentes et omni tempore una eademque Lex obtinebit whereby it is manifest that the Causes concerning Merchants are not now to be decided by the peculiar and Ordinary Lawes of every Country but by the general Lawes of Nature and Nations He sayeth further that untill he understood the difference betwixt the Law Merchant and the Common Law of England he did not a little marvell that England entertaining traffique with all Nations of the World having so many Ports and so much good Shipping The King of England also being Lord of the Sea what should be the cause that in the Books of the Common Law of England there are to be found so few Cases concerning Merchants or Ships But now the reason thereof was apparent for that the Common Law of the Land did leave those cases to be ruled by another Law Namely the Law Merchant which is a branch of the Law of Nations The Law Mariner to which happily the answer to the French Agent mentioning Antient additions of the Realm related were such things as are contained and preserved in the Antient black Book of the Admiralty as certain Royal Ordinances made by Antient Kings of the Realm 2ly The Judgements or Resolutions of Oleron in the time of King Richard the first 3ly Certain verdicts given upon an Inquisition at Quinborough in the time of King Edward the third and some other matters touching the Admiralty of England Touching the black Book of the Admiralty Mr. Selden stiles it Vetusti Tribunalis maritimi Commentarii And Codex Manuscriptus de Admiralatu And in his notes upon Fortescue he saith that there are in it worthy of Observation Constitutions touching the Admiralty of Henry the first Richard the first King Iohn and Edward the first Touching the Judgements or Laws of Oleron and the use of them in the Admiralty Court Mr. Selden where he from them argues the Soveraignty of the Kings of England in regard King Richard the first did publish the Sea Lawes in the Island of Oleron which was then in his possession sayes that they are still in force And Sir Edward Cook likewise argues that the Jurisdiction of the Lord Admirall was long before the Reign of Edward the third from the Laws of Oleron So called because they were there made by King Richard the first The Inquisition at Quinborough was taken in the year 1376. in the 49. of King Edward the third by eighteen expert Sea-men before William Nevill Admirall of the North Philip Courtny Admirall of the West And the Lord Latimer Warden of the Cinque Ports And relates as by the Title appears to the usages of former times The verdicts there given were desired to be established by the Kings Letters Patents in the Cinque Ports and Towns adjoyning to the Thames to be observed by the owners Masters and Mariners of Ships under penalties c. And Malines writes That he had seen them enrolled amongst the Records of the Tower for the Government of the Admiralty That generally where Lawes have been provided for businesse concerning the Sea as also in England several Iudges have been appointed to determine differences and redresse offences concerning the same GRegorius Tholosanus sayes Iudicum diversorum ratio eo dirigitur ut lites facilius expediantur ne immortales sint sub judicibus mole negotiorum occupatis proinde cum commercia hominum sint maximae utilitatis placuit Negotiatoribus proponi proprios Iudices and accordingly First the Grecians had their special and proper Judges appointed for those businesses So Suidas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. The Natodicae were Magistrates who did Iustice to Seamen and others who trade by Sea And the Athenians had an expresse Law to that purpose 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. That actions concerning Seamen and Merchants should be commenced before the Iudges called The smothetae according to their Instruments of Contracts and dealings Secondly Amongst the Romans there was antiently an Officer called Praefectus Classis by Tully and Livy and Iavolenus makes mention of Seius Saturninus Archigubernius Classis Britannicae and Tacitus of Praetor Classis which name imports a power of Judicature in latter times they had also a Magistrate who was called Comes Commerciorum whose Office was to over-see matters of Commerce or Negotiation Thirdly the Roman Empire being broken into several States the lesser as Republiques had their Consuls and the greater Kingdomes had their Admiralls to order and determine those businesses The office of the Consuls is described in the Consolato Del Mare Consoli determinano ●utti le controversie c. The Consuls determine all controversies which are for Fraights for Dammages done to goods on shipbord for parts of ships to be set to sale at an outcry for Commissions given to Masters and Mariners for Debts contracted by Masters for the necessary use of the Ship for things promised or undertaken betwixt Merchants and Mariners for goods taken up at Sea and generally for all other Contracts and businesses which are declared amongst the Customs of the Sea Fourthly The Venetian State being a Seigniory when any great War is expected or undertaken have their General or Supreme Commander of the Navy who is of as high an esteem as any Magistrate of the City having absolute power over all Officers aud others of the Navy at other times the Legatus classis or Vice-General hath the power of disposing of the Navy and over the Captains of the Gallies and other persons of the Navy They have besides four Consuls who Judge and determine all matters concerning Negotiation and Trade Fifthly Admirals in Europe had their beginning as most affirm in the time of Constantine the Emperour and that in Magna Graecia which is now the Kingdome of Naples where the dignity of Admirall is the third place to wit after the Vice Roy and Constable To whom belongeth the Building Repayring and keeping of the Ships Royal and setting out of the Fleets for Warre with the Kings consent He hath also Jurisdiction Civil and Criminal amongst Commanders Officers and others employed about the Navy and all others who get their lively-hood by the industry and art of the Sea which are held to be such which transport in Ships and adventure their Estates by Sea as also such that make it their Trade to take Fish or do build Ships This Court is called Magna Curia and from it there lyes an appeal only to the supreme
Councell Garsias Mastrilli sayes he hath all Jurisdiction both Civil and Criminal in Maritime causes exclusive to all others The King of Spain hath divers other Admirals both in Europe and the Jndies of equal power Marinus Siculus sayeth of the Admirall of Castile that he is next unto the Constable and hath supreme Authority over all that use the Sea and is held to be Lord and chief Commander of the Sea as it is also largely described in the Partidos besides for the dispatch of ordinary Maritime businesse by the same Laws Judges are appointed to reside in Port Towns and other places on the Sea Coasts which are to hear the causes of Sea-men concerning Freight of Ships and Contributions for goods cast over-board or any other matter which Judges were to proceed plainly without solemnities and with all expedition c. In France by an Ordinance of Henry the third made upon a survey of all other former Ordinances ratifyed by the Parliament of Paris The Office of the Admirall in the Kings name is thus declared 1. That of all Armies which shall be raised and set to Sea the Admirall of France shall be chief and our Lieutenant General and shall be obeyed in all Maritime Towns and places which are or may be without contradiction Secondly He shall have Jurisdiction Conusance and determination of all things done or committed on the Sea or shoars of the Seas likewise of all acts of Merchandise fishing freighting or letting to freight or breach of ships of Contracts made touching the matters afore-said of Charter parties of Sea briefs and of all other things whatsoever happening upon the Sea or shoars thereof as our Lieutenant General alone and to all purposes in the places afore-said which Jurisdiction Cognizance and determination we have interdicted to all other our Judges He shall hold his principal Court at the marble Table in the Palace at Paris and shall appoint Judges Deputies in Maritime Cities and Towns who shall hear ordinary matters happening within their Circuits and if any businesse fall out worthy of greater consideration they shall referre the same to him In Denmark the third place of dignity in the Kingdom belongs to the Admirall who is commonly called Ry●ks Admirall and as Morisotus writes He hath the same Right and Power as the Admirall of France In Scotland as VVellwood a Scotish man writes the Admirall and Judge of the Admiralty hath power within the Sea-flood over all Sea-faring men and in all Sea-faring Causes and debates Civil and Criminal So that no other Judge of any degree may meddle therewith but only by way of Assistance as it was found in the Action brought by Anthony de la Tour against Christian Martens 6 Novemb. 1542. The Admirall of England as Mr. Selden observes hath another manner of Right and Jurisdiction than the Admirall of France or other ordinary Admiralls for that the Jurisdiction over the Seas of England and Ireland and the Dominions and Isles of the same as a Province are committed to his Custody and Tuition as to a President to defend the same as in the Dominion of the King by whom he is Authorized The bounds of which Jurisdiction are limited and determined in those Seas and besides as the French and other Admiralls he hath the power over the Navy and the Government over the Sea-men and Jurisdiction over the persons and moveable goods which come under his Judicature pour raison ou occasion del faie de la mer which Jurisdiction hath no bounds but extends to the Mediterranean African and Indian Seas or any other far remote What Mr. Selden delivers concerning the Admirall of Englands special Jurisdiction in the first respect is confirmed by an ancient Record in French in Archivis of the Tower of London set out at large by Sr. Edward Cook the effect and tenour whereof is That whereas during the Warrs between Philip King of France and Guy Earl of Flanders Reginerus Grimbaldus Admirall of the French Navy had spoiled the Merchants of divers Nations sailing towards Flanders in the English Seas and Commissioners being appointed by the two Kings to hear and redresse the Complaints concerning the same the Deputies of the Prelates Nobility and Commonalty of the Towns of England and of divers Maritime Countries as of Genua Catalonia Spain Germany Zeland Holland Friesland and Norway declare That the Kings of England by reason of that Realm time out of mind have been in peaceable possession of the Soveraign Dominion of the Sea of England and of the Islands therein situate by ordering and establishing Lawes Statutes and Counter-mands of Armes Vessels otherwise furnished than for Merchandising and by taking security and giving protection in all Causes needful by ordeining all other things requisite for the maintaining of Peace and Right amongst all other People as well of other Seignieuries as of their own passing through the same And all manner of Cognizance and Jurisdiction high and low touching those Laws Statutes Ordinances Countermands and all other Acts which may appertain to the Soveraign Dominion afore-said and that A. D. B. Admirall of the Sea deputed by the King of England and all other Admiralls appointed by him and his Ancestors heretofore Kings of England have been in peaceable Possession of the said Soveraign Protection together with the Conusance and Jurisdiction and all things before mentioned thereunto appertaining except in case of Appeals to their Soveraign Kings of England for default of doing Right or giving wrong Judgment and especially in making Restraint doing Justice and taking security for the peace of all manner of People bearing Arms on the Sea or Ships sailing otherwise apparelled or furnished than belongs to Ships of Merchandise and in all other points in which a man may have reasonable Cause of Suspicion against them touching Robbery or other misdemeanours Besides the Jurisdiction Extraordinary of the Admirall of England concerning Protection against depredations in the English Seas as Mr. Selden writes his Ordinary Jurisdiction is over the persons and goods moveable which come under his judicature by occasion of businesses relating to the Sea is not only agreeable to the Jurisdiction of the French and other Admiralls but is also warranted by the Kings Commissions as it is apparent by antient and later Patents granted by the Kings of England in which the Admiralls of Englands Ahthority and Jurisdiction is expressely fully declared as followeth Damus Concedimus c. We give and grant to N. the Office of our great Admiral of England Ireland Wales c. And we make appoint and ordain him Governour General of our Navies and Seas of the Kingdoms afore-said And be it further known that we of our special Grace and certain knowledge do give and grant to the same our great Admirall and Governour of our Navies all and all manner of Iurisdictions Liberties Offices Fees Profits Preheminences and Privileges Whatsoever belonging or appertaining So far is
and Weights within the Jurisdiction of the Admiralty 5 Of such as make spoil of wrecks so that the Owners coming within a year and a day cannot have their goods 6 Of such as claim wrecks having neither Charter nor Prescription 7 Of Wears Riddles Blind-stakes Water-mills● c. whereby ships or men have been lost or endangered 8 Of removing Anchors and cutting of Buoy-Ropes 9 Of such as take Salmons at unseasonable times 10 Of such as spoyl the breed of Oisters or dreg for Oisters and Mussels at unseasonable times 11 Of such as fish with unlawfull Nets 12 Of taking Royal Fishes viz. Whales Sturgeons Purpoises c. and detaining the one half from the King Thirdly Offences against the Admiral the Navy and Discipline of the Sea 1 Of Judges entertaining Pleas of Causes belonging to the Admiral and of such as in Admiralty Causes sue in the Courts of Common Law and of such as hinder the Execution of the Admirals process 2 Of Masters and Mariners contemptuous to the Admiral 3 Of the Admirals shares of Weifs or Derelicts and of Deodands belonging to the Admiral 4 Of Fletson Jetson and Lagon belonging to the Admiral 5 Of such as Freight Strangers bottoms where Ships of the Land may be had at reasonable rates 6 Of Ship-wrights taking excessive wages 7 Of Masters and Mariners taking excessive wages 8 Of Pilots by whose ignorance ships have miscarried 9 Of Mariners forsaking their ships 10 Of Mariners Rebellious and dis obedient to their Masters In the same antient Book of the Admiralty there is a Copy of a more antient Enquiry touching Admiral Causes wherein some things relate to Constitutions made by King Richard the first at Grimesby viz. That ships arrested for the Kings service breaking arrest shall be confiscated to the King and by King Iohn at Hastings That no private man should appropriate to himself the benefit of any salt waters by Meers Ridles and the like and that the same should be pulled down And the fishing cryed common to all people was likewise ordered by King Iohn This may suffice to confirm that there were certain special Causes both Civil and Criminal which did antiently belong and properly to the Conusance of the Admiral and to shew that his Jurisdiction was not wholly confined onely to the Sea That the Iurisdiction of the Admiral of England as it is granted by the King and is usually exercised in the Admiralty Court may consist with the Statutes and Laws of this Realm FIrst it appears by antient Record of the time of King Edward the first De superioritate Maris That it was acknowledged by the Deputies of the Parliament of England and of divers other Nations That the Kings of England time out of mind injoyed the Dominion and Soveraignty of the English Seas by prescribing Laws and Statutes for the preserving Peace and Justice and by exercising all kind of Authority in matters of Judicature and all other things which may concern his Soveraignty in the same which being granted his power to depute a Magistrate or Officer to those purposes with so much of his authority as he shall think fit cannot be denied Secondly That the Jurisdiction and power granted by the King in his Letters Patents to the Admiral is agreeable to Commissions antiently granted and which have been passed from time to time by the Kings learned Counsel and by the Lord Chancellor or the Lord Keeper for the time being who have thereunto set the Great Seal and that the authority and Jurisdiction of the Constable and Marshal is designed by St Edward Cook by referring to Grants of those Offices antiently made by many several Kings with exception onely to one irregular precedent in the time of King Edward the fourth Thirdly That Mr. Selden shews that all the Patents of the Office of the Lord Admiral from the beginning of Queen Mary's time to the time of King Charles have been conceived after one and the same form and tenor as of Edward Lord Clint●on afterwards Earl of Lincoln under King Philip and Queen Mary of Charles Howard Lord Effingham afterwards Earl of Nottingham under Queen Elizabeth of Charles Duke of York after King Charles under King Iames and of George Duke of Buckingham under King Iames and King Charles to which may be added the Patent of Algernon Earl of Northumberland under King Charles the first and of Iames the most Illustrious Duke of York under King Charles the Second Fourthly That the Lord Admiral and his Deputies proceeding according to his Commission is expresly allowed by King Philip and Queen Mary where they by a Statute restraining the exportation of Corn without Licence make a special provision That that Act shall not be prejudicial or hurtfull to the Lord Great Admiral of England for the time being or to the King and Queens Majesties Iurisdiction of the Admiralty but that the said Lord Admiral or his Deputies shall exercise use and execute all kinds of Iurisdiction belonging to the Sea according to his or their Commissions which provision although it seems to have been made in respect of that Statute yet it shews what respect the King and Queen intended to their Lord High Admiral their own Admiralty Jurisdiction in all matters belonging to the Sea and to the Commission by them granted Against the Jurisdiction of the Admiral as is granted by the King and as it is exercized in the Court it is pretended in general That it is not agreeable First To several Acts of Parliament Secondly To divers Judgments Book-Cases and Judicial proceedings to which may be added the Resolutions of the Judges upon the complaint of the Admiral in Sir Edward Cooks Articuli Admiralitatis All which more specially may be reduced to three heads First Where the Admiral meddles with Contracts and Writings concerning Sea businesses made within the Realm Secondly Where he meddles with other things done within the Bodies of Counties and Thirdly With such things as are made or done beyond the Sea The Acts of Parliament are First The Statute of the 13. Rich. 2. chap. 5. which restrains the Admiral from meddling with things within the Realm Secondly That of the 15. of the same King chap. 3. which declares that he hath no Jurisdiction within Bodies of Counties Thirdly That of 2 Hen. the 4. which inflicts penalties on those who sue or proceed contrary to that of the 13 Rich. 2. Fourthly That of the 5 of Elizabeth which is pretended to exclude the Admiral from meddling with things done within Ports and Rivers The First of these being more general may in this place be considered the rest being more particular may in discussing of some other particular points to which they are appliable be examined That of the 13 Rich. 2. chap. 5. ordains that the Admirals and their Deputies shall not meddle of any thing done within the Realm but only of things done upon the Sea as it hath been used in the time of King Edward the
Third Touching this Statute it may be observed what Sir Edward Cook delivers out of Plowdens Commentaries That the Praeamble of a Statute is the Key to open the meaning of the makers of the Act and the mischiefs which they intended to remedy now in the Praeamble of the Statute it ●s suggested that the Admiral had encroacht divers Jurisdictions and Franchises belonging to the King other Lords from whence it may be conceived that the Parliament intended only to restrain him from medling in his Courts with such things within the Realm wherein he had encroacht upon the Jurisdiction of the King and other Lords which what those things were it doth no wayes appear but it cannot be imagined or reasonably conceived that it was intended the Admiral should be debarred from proceeding in Causes of Navigation and Negotiation by Sea which never did belong to any other Courts of the King or other Lords and were formerly held proper for the conusance of the Admiral and as things were then stated could not be held encroachments So much may the rather be supposed because the Statute restraining him from meddling with things done within the Realm but only with things done upon the Sea further adds according to what hath been duly used in the time of the Noble Prince King Edward Grand-father to the King which was King Edward the Third Sir Henry Sp●●man writes that some men did conceive Causarum Nauticarum cognitionem forum rei maritimae quod hodie Curiam Admiralitatis vocant sub Edwardo Tertio illuxisse and it is probable that in that Kings time who did many other glorious things for the good of this Nation the Court of Admiralty received some setlement and grew more conspicuous than it was before but the Constitutions observed by Mr. Selden in the Book of the Admiralty of Henry the First Richard the First King Iohn and Edward the First do manifest that the Court was much more antient and Sir Edward Cook to shew the antiquity of the Court of Admiralty to have been long before the time of Edward the Third in whose dayes he sayes that some had dreamed that it had begun recite the antient Record De superioritate Maris before mentioned and likewise another quoted also by Mr. Seld●n wherein it is shewed that King Edw. the Third in the 12 year of his Reign did consult with all his Judges ad finem quod retineatur continuetur ad subditorum prosequutionem forma procedendi quondam Domini Regis c. that is To the end that the form of proceedings at the sute of the Subjects begun and ordained by his Grand-father King Edward the First and his Counsel for retaining and preserving the antient Soveraignty of the Sea of England and the Right of the Office of the Admiralty in the same might be resumed and continued touching the correcting interpreting and declaring the Laws and Statutes lately ordained for the maintaining of Peace and Iustice amongst the people of all Nations whatsoever passing through the English Seas and for punishing of Offences and for giving of satisfaction to such as were damnified which Laws and Statutes were corrected declared interpreted and published by King Richard the First King of England in his return from the Holy Land and were intituled Le Ley Oleron in the French tongue And it is manifest That the Law was continued all that Kings time in regard that in the 49 year of his Reign the selected Sea-men for the Inquisition at Quinborough in the conclusion say That touching some businesses proposed in the Articles of the Inquisition they know no better advise nor remedy than that which had been formerly used and practised after the manner which is conteined in the Law of Oleron All which being admitted and duly considered it may be presumed that such Causes as did originally by Civil Law belong to the Admiralty and what former Kings had antiently ordained for the regulating of the same as likewise such as were agreeable to the matters decided in the Iudgments of Oleron and what are conteined in the Inquisition taken at Quinborough in the time of King Edward the Third were within the conusance of the Admiralty Court and consequently the same are permitted to be tried and determined in the same Court by the Statute of the 13 of Rich. 2. Touching the Judgments Judicial Acts and Book-Cases intended to restrain the Admiral of England in exercise of his Jurisdiction as it is granted in the Kings Commission it may be answered in general First That those Judgments Judicial Acts c. are in Causes of difference in respect of Jurisdiction betwixt the Courts of Common Law and the Admiralty Court and it is incident to all professions where there is any competition or emulation with others to incline to that which is most to their advantage Secondly Such Judgment sand Book-Cases have been grounded upon the common understanding of the Statutes without any notice or respect to the Laws of the Sea or the condition of Maritime Causes the circumstances of the places being the chief Rule by which they have been framed Thirdly That many of them upon due examination may be found not so concluding as they are pretended and although much respect and reverence be due to the Authours yet we are not bound to believe that their judgments are infallible Fourthly That the Judicial proceeding as Prohibitions being the results of the former authorities they may be weighed accordingly Lastly Touching the main piece Sir Edward Cooks Articuli Admiralitatis carrying the reputation of the Resolutions of all ●●e Judges touching the matters therein conteined it will appear that they very much differ from the Concessions of the Judges of the Kings Bench 1575 and from the Resolutions of all the Judges the 18 of February 1632 subscribed unto by them in the presence of King Charls and twenty Lords of his Counsel The particular authorities which may be collected out of Sr. Edward Cooks Notes to prove that the Admiral of England hath no conusance of things done within the Realm but only of things done upon the Sea are as followeth 1 That in the 2 Rich. 2. Hibernici sunt sub Admirallo Angliae de facto super alto Mari. 2 That the 7 Rich. 2. in an Action of trespass brought for a Ship and Merchandises taken away the Defendant pleaded that he did take them en le haut Mer ou les Normans que la enemis la Roy and it was allowed a good Plea 3 That Fortescue who lived in the time of Hen. the Sixth saith Siquae super altum mare extra Corpus Comitatus in placito coram Admirallo deducantur per testes terminari debent 4 That Dyer in the time of Queen Mary saith That by the Libel in the Admiralty Court the Case is supposed to commence sur le haut mer intra Iurisdictionem de l' Admiralty To these authorities may be answered in general First That