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A69830 A vindication of the Parliament of England, in answer to a book written by William Molyneux of Dublin, Esq., intituled, The case of Irelands being bound by acts of Parliament in England, stated by John Cary ... Cary, John, d. 1720? 1698 (1698) Wing C734; ESTC R22976 59,166 136

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by the same Argumentation Scotland it self may be bound by English Laws I confess I would gladly pay a great Respect to your Person but I would not willingly be drawn aside by your Opinion which I should be if I were thereby perswaded that the Parliament of England have no more Power to make Laws to bind Ireland than they have to bind Scotland since it does appear that they have done it from the first time of our Statutes being extant and long before it can be rationally concluded there was a Parliament there And yet I do not think they can make Laws to bind Scotland because they themselves never pretended to any such Power save in the Case aforementioned that ever I heard of England and Ireland are not two distinct Kingdoms as England and Scotland are Ireland is a Kingdom dependant on and annexed to the Imperial Crown of England and the Parliament of Ireland is likewise subordinate to the Parliament of England therefore the Laws made by the latter will bind the former This I hope I have prov'd notwithstanding what you say That the contrary will be denied by no Man As to what you say in relation to France pag. 94. Whether on this way of reasoning the People of England had not been subject to the King of France had our Kings continued the Possession of that Country and there kept the Seat of the Monarchy I answer No for those two Kingdoms had not been united as England and Ireland are but as England and Scotland However you will find That it was provided against by a Statute made 14 Edw. 3. Anno 1340. All I find of it in Keeble is this not being printed at large By a Statute it was ordained That the Realm of England and the People thereof shall not be subject to the King or Kingdom of France But you say pag. 94. That the Statute Laws of England have not received your Assent and you argue thence That the People of England will consider whether they also are not the King's Subjects and may therefore by this way of reasoning be bound by Laws which the King may assign them without their assent c. I shall have occasion to speak to this hereafter so I shall for the present wave it here And now I find you have done with your three Ancient Precedents the last of which was in the Second of Henry VI. and I have cited to you several other Statutes made before that time which do undoubtedly bind Ireland being intended by the Parliament so to do which I suppose you never saw or would not cite because you had nothing to say against them I shall next follow you to your Modern Instances which you likewise call Modern Precedents pag. 98 99. And here you assert That before the Year 1641. there was no Statute made in England introductory of a new Law that interfered with the Right which the People of Ireland have to make Laws for themselves except only those which you have before-mentioned Is this really so What think you of those I have before cited I am very unwilling to swell this Answer but I find my self obliged to follow wherever you will lead even to 41. Well then besides them What think you of these several Statutes under-mentioned viz. 32 Hen. 8. cap. 24. Whereby the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem in Ireland were dissolved 1 Edw. 6. cap. 1. Whereby the Sacrament is directed to be administred in both Kinds unto the People in Ireland 1 Edw. 6. cap. 2. Entituled an Act for Election of Bishops wherein Ireland is named 1 Eliz. cap. 1. Whereby the Queen hath power given her to assign over to any Person power to exercise Ecclesiastical Authority in Ireland 8 Eliz. cap. 3. Against exporting of Sheep from Ireland I think all these Laws bound Ireland But what you mean by Introductory of a new Law or Interfering with the Right which the People of Ireland have to make Laws for themselves I shall not labour to understand these seem to be nice Quibbles All I proposed was That the Parliament of England have and always had power to bind Ireland by their Statutes which you have denied and I hope I have proved And now I am come with you to 41 where you end your Assertion and acknowledge That in that Year and since some Laws have been made in England to be of force in Ireland I take your own words p. 99. These Acts you say are of 17 Car. 1. you do not name the Chapters but they are 33 34 35 37. which being expired are not to be found in the Statute-Book any more save the Titles therefore I must apply my self to what you say of them p. 100. The Titles say you of these Acts we have in Pulton 's Collection of Statutes but with this remark That they are made of no force by the Acts of Settlemement and Explanation passed in King Charles the Second's time in the Kingdom of Ireland And having gained this Advantage against the Parliament of England you make use of it to the utmost and presently conclude That they plainly shew that the Parliament of Ireland may Repeal an Act passed in England in relation to the Affairs of Ireland Sure I cannot think so for if the Parliament of Ireland can Repeal any one Act made by the Parliament of England they may Repeal all they make which cannot be except they have a Jurisdiction above them For the Power which any one Body or Society of Men hath to Repeal Laws made by another Body or Society must proceed from a Superiority that Body or Society hath over the other whose Laws it doth Repeal So that then if what you say be true it follows That the Parliament of Ireland is Superiour to the Parliament of England and then we have brought our Hogs to a fair Market instead of the Parliament of England's making Laws to bind Ireland the Parliament of Ireland may make Laws to bind England and likewise Repeal those Laws they have already made You Gentlemen of Ireland are angry That we will not give you leave to carry away our Trade and therefore you now undertake to prove That your Parliament can Repeal the Laws our Parliament makes 'T is very pretty truly but I hope you will not put this your Power in Execution and Repeal our Act of Navigation or our Plantation Acts and particularly that Act wherein is the Clause against landing Tobacco in Ireland This I am fond of for a certain reason therefore I beg your favour for it We will part with our Woollen Bill provided you will spare us the Acts already made It will be a great loss to the Kingdom of England if you should Repeal the Acts against planting Tabacco in Ireland 't would very much prejudice our Settlements in Virginia a Trade which besides the great Revenues it brings to the Crown whereof you pay a part does likewise encourage our Navigation expends our Manufactures and employs our
35. This Ordinance and Act the King willeth to be observed from henceforth through his Realm of England and Ireland What think you of the Statutes made at Westminster 11 Edw. 3. Anno 1337. which I recited before where cap. 3. all Foreign Clothes are prohibited to be brought into Ireland and cap. 5. Clothworkers are invited to settle in Ireland and are encouraged thereto by Franchises promised them What think you of the Statute of the Staple mentioned before made 27 Edw. 3. Anno 1353 In the Preamble of which Statute Ireland is mentioned and cap. 1. bears this Title Where the Staple for England Wales and Ireland shall be kept whether Merchandizes of the Staple shall be carried and what Customs shall be paid for them Which Chapter shews That the Parliament of England had Power of raising Money by laying Customs on Commodities in Ireland At this Sessions were made Twenty eight Acts or Chapters call them which you will and all point at Ireland But I cannot pass by this last Statute of 27 Edw. 3. without making observation on its Preamble which I here give you verbatim Edward by the Grace of God c. To our Sheriffs Mayors Bayliffs Ministers and other our faithful People to whom these present Letters shall come greeting Whereas good deliberation had with the Prelates Dukes Earls Barons and great Men of the Counties that is to say of every County one for all the County and of the Commons of our Cities and Boroughs of our Realm of England summoned to our great Council holden at Westminster the Monday next after the Feast of St. Matthew the Apostle the 27th Year of our Reign of England and of France the 14th For the damage that hath notoriously come as well to us and to our great Men as to our People of our Realm of England and of our Lands of Wales and Ireland because that the Staple of Woolls Leather and Wool-fells of our said Realm and Land have been holden out of our said Realm and Lands and also for the great Profits which should come to the said Realm and Lands if the Staple were holden within the same and not elsewhere to the Honour of God and in Relief of our Realm and Lands aforesaid and to eschew the Perils that might happen of the contrary in time to come by the Counsel and common Consent of the said Prelates Dukes Earls and Barons Knights and Commons aforesaid we have ordained and established the things under written Here the King is called King of England and France without mentioning Ireland but we find the Laws made in that Sessions to be binding to his Lands of Wales and Ireland as I have before observed The King also takes notice of the Summons sent to the Prelates Dukes Earls Barons and great Men of the Counties and Commons of Cities and Boroughs of his Realm of England summoned to his great Councel holden at Westminster c. without mentioning any thing of Ireland though it was bound by the Laws made in that Sessions By all which it doth appear to me That Ireland was lookt on in those days as an Appendix to the Kingdom of England all one as Wales and yet the Laws of that Sessions were received in Ireland Why did not the Parliament of Ireland if there was then any make an early Protestation against this irregular Proceeding and condemn it as an Encroachment on their Priviledges which had been much better then for you to undertake this Task three hundred and fifty years after But to proceed What think you of the Statute made at Westminster 34 Edw. 3. Anno 1360 the Preamble is These be the things which our Lord the King the Prelates Lords and Commons have ordained in this present Parliament holden at Westminster the Sunday next before the Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul to be holden and openly published through the Realm and yet the Title of cap. 17. is Merchandize may be carried into and brought out of Ireland By which it appears That the Parliament of England made Laws to regulate the Trade of Ireland in those early days and that the Bill relating to the Woollen Manufactures now depending before the present Parliament is not a Modern Instance of that Power Cap. 18. of that Sessions hath this Title They which have Lands in Ireland may carry their Goods thither and bring them again From both which I make this observation That the Preamble saith These are to be holden and published openly thorough the Realm and the 17th and 18th Chapters shew that Ireland is part of that Realm In the 4th of Henry 5. cap. 6. an Act was made but is now Ob so I find nothing but its Title in the Statute Book which is this If any Archbishop Bishop c. of Ireland Rebel to the King shall make collation of a Benifice to any Irish-man or bring any Irish-man to the Parliament to discover the ●ounsel of English-men to Rebels his Temporalities shall be seized until he hath made Fine to the King By which it doth appear That the Parliament of England took notice there was a Parliament in Ireland and made Laws to bind that Parliament All these Statutes bound Ireland and doubtless many more there are had I time to look after them but I mention these because they come within the compass of your old Precedents being before the Second of Henry 6. But before I speak to your old Precedents give me leave to mention one Statute more viz. 1 Hen. 6. cap. 3. which though I do not produce as a Precedent binding Ireland yet it will serve to show what opinion the Parliament of England had of Ireland in those days the words are these Forasmuch as divers Manslaughters Murders c. and divers other Offences now late have been done in divers Counties of the Realm of England by People born in the County of Ireland repairing to the Town of Oxford c. I will make no Paraphrase on them they are easie to be understood by any English Reader and this is a Modern Statute in respect to the time of Henry II. when you say Ireland was made a separate Kingdom and settled by him on his Son John in a Parliament at Oxon whereas this Parliament calls it a County Well then let us see what you say against these Ancient Precedents you have produced before we come to the Modern Instances as you call them These Statutes you say pag. 86. especially the two first meaning Statutum Hiberniae and Ordinatio pro Statu Hiberniae being made for Ireland as their titles import have given occasion to think that the Parliament of England have right to make Laws for Ireland without the consent of their chosen Representatives Surely every Body I think is of that Judgment that hath lookt into the matter no you dissent from it and for this gives several Reasons The first is pag. 86 87 88. which I am obliged here to transcribe The Statutum Hiberniae 14 Hen. 3. as
't is to be found in the Collection of English Statutes is plainly thus The Judges in Ireland conceiving a doubt concerning Inheritances devolved to Sisters or Coheirs viz. whether the younger Sisters ought to hold of the eldest Sister and do homage unto her for their Portions or of the chief Lord and do homage unto him therefore Girald Fitz-Maurice the then Lord Justice of Ireland dispatched four Knights to the King in England to bring a Certificate from thence of the practice used there and what was the Common Law of England in that Case whereupon Henry III. in this his Certificate or Rescript which is called Statutum Hiberniae merely informs the Justice what the Law and Custom was in England viz. That the Sisters ought to hold of the chief Lord and not of the eldest Sister And the close of it commands That the foresaid Customs that be used within our Realm of England in this case be proclaimed throughout our Dominion of Ireland and be there observed Teste meipso apud Westminst 9 Febr. An. Reg. 14. From whence you infer That this Statute was no more then a Certificate of what the Common Law of England was in that case which Ireland by the original Compact was to be governed by And do you really speak your Thoughts herein Was it ever customary for the Judges to send to the King to expound Law to them and for the King by Certificates to direct them what they should give for Law I thought their Business had been to declare the Law impartially between the King and his Subjects and that if they doubted in any Points of the Common Law their Custom had been to advise one with another or with some other Learned Councel in the Law Is it to be thought the King knew Law better than his Judges I would not have you insist on this for the Honour of the Long Robe in Ireland But Sir there is more in this then perhaps at first you think for either this is a Statute Law and our Books call it so therefore in your favour I will believe it so or else the King had in those days an Absolute Power and Authority to impose on Ireland what Laws he thought fit For in the close of that Statute 't is said Therefore we command you That you cause the foresaid Customs that be used within our Realm of England in this case to be proclaimed throughout our Dominion of Ireland and to be straitly kept and observed If all our Acts of Parliament which declare the Common Law of England shall be called Certificates pray what will become of Magna Charta Charta Foresta and most of our old Laws which were generally Declarations of what was the Common Law of this Kingdom and what were the Rights and Liberties of the Subjects before the making of them I come now to your second old Precedent the Statute called Ordinatio pro Statu Hiberniae made at Nottingham 17 Edw. 1. Anno 1288. This you say pag. 88. was certainly never received or of force in Ireland And you further say That this is manifest from the very first Article of that Ordinance which prohibits the Justice of Ireland or others the King's Officers there to purchase Lands in that Kingdom or within their respective Bailiwicks without the King's Licence on pain of Forfeitures But that this has ever been otherwise and that the Lords Justices and other Officers here have purchased Lands in Ireland at their own Will and Pleasure needs no proof to those who have the least knowledge of this Country Is this a fair Argument against the Validity of a Statute That it hath not had due obedience rendred to it If this be Law I am afraid many of our late good Statutes have run the same fate but I never knew till now That the Peoples Obedience was an Essential part in a Statute I thought the Consent of King Lords and Commons given to it in Parliament had been enough But we will not let this Matter fall without further examining into your Argument That Statute consists of eight Chapters let us see which of those Chapters have not been received and obeyed you only mention the first viz. That the Lords Justices of Ireland and other Officers have purchased Lands in Ireland at their own Will and Pleasure as you recite it pag. 88. But the words in the Statute are these That the Justices of Ireland nor any other Officers of ours of the same Realm so long as they are in our Service there shall purchase any Land or Tenement within the List or bound of their Bailiwicks without our special Licence Which makes a great Alteration in the Matter for they might purchase Lands or Tenements both before and after they were in their Offices But we will take the Words as you give them how does it appear that this Law was not observed You say p. 89. It does not appear by any Inquisition Office or Record that any one ever forfeited on that account It may be so perhaps it was never broke and then there was no need of an Inquisition or the King might grant Licence as that Law does direct to his Justices and other Officers to purchase Lands during their being in their Offices or they might purchase them without the List or Bounds of their Bailiwicks and then the Terms of the Law were complied with But I am apt to think you will carry this farther and say That in later Years the Justices of Ireland and other the King's Officers have not taken notice of this Law perhaps so and what would you draw from this How many old Laws have we in England that are obsolete and disregarded by Time which though they fitted the Circumstances of the Times they were made in yet are not proper for our Days Witness the Statutes against going Arm'd the Statutes about Bows and Arrows and many others which were and still remain Statutes till repealed though perhaps 't will be thought hard to put them in Execution without giving publick Notice thereof sometime before to the Subject But after all how do you know but that these Officers you last mentioned may have Licences from the King to purchase Lands though I think it not at all to the matter whether they have or no. But to proceed That Statute as I said before consists of Eight Chapters you have taken notice only of the First therefore we will come to the next Chapter of that Statute The Title is In what Case only Purveyance may be made in Ireland Is that observed in Ireland or do the Justices or other the King's Officers by colour of their Offices take Victuals or any other things of any Person against his Will contrary to that Chapter The Third Chapter is about Transporting Merchandizes out of Ireland Do the Justices or any of the King's Ministers by colour of their Offices Arrest the Ships or other Goods of the People of Ireland The Fourth settles The Fees of a Bill of