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A61271 Episcopal jurisdiction asserted according to the right constitution thereof, by His Majesties laws, both ecclesiastical and temporal, occasioned by the stating and vindicating of the Bishop of Waterford's case, with the mayor and sheriffs of Waterford / by a diligent enquirer into the reasons and grounds thereof. Stanhope, Arthur, d. 1685?; Gore, Hugh, 1612 or 13-1691. 1671 (1671) Wing S5221; ESTC R21281 74,602 136

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of Fifty years of King Edward the Third the great Charter was several times confirmed The liberties priviledges and franchises of the Clergie were new ratified in the fourteenth and five and twentieth years of His Reign And so in the first sixth and eighth and twelfth years of Richard the second In the first second and fourth years of Henry the fourth It was enacted That the Lords Spiritual as well as Temporal should have and enjoy all their Rights and Liberties I grant indeed that in the Reign of two of these preceding Kings viz Edward the third and Richard the second that the two statutes of Proviso's and Praemunire were made But he that shall duly observe the end wherefore and the matter wherein and the persons against whom these statutes were made will not be able to find that any abridgment but rather a firmer settlement of Episcopal jurisdiction in the right Constitution of it was intended and came thereby That which was mainly aimed at and provided against in these statutes was to repress the encroachments of the Pope of Rome even upon the Bishops legal jurisdiction it self The Pope by His Emissaries in England from time to time drained the Kingdom of its Wealth He invaded the Kings Soveraign Rights by Mandates De providendo and expectative Graces granted of Ecclesiastical livings before the Incumbents were dead And besides He boldly intrenched on the Kings Temporal Courts many such unreasonable greivances there were which both King and People felt the load of and which to make them the heavier were fetch as far as Rome to be put upon them But all this while here are no exemptions to any particular persons or civil Officers to free them from Ecclesiastical jurisdiction where it proceeded in due manner and was exercised in matters properly cognizable by it That which must have the note of remark put upon it is this Provision is here made under severe penalties against acting by a derived power from and in an Usurped jurisdiction under the See of Rome This no English Bishop might do then This no Bishop in England or Ireland might or does or may do now One Act of Parliament will best serve to give light to another Now the statute 25 Hen. 8. cap. 21 affirms expresly that the statute of provision and praemunire of the 16th Richard secundi was made against such as sue to the Court of Rome against the Kings Crown and Dignity so that Episcopal jurisdiction in each respective Diocess and in matters of Ecclesiastical cognizance is so far from being impaired by these statutes that in truth it is more firmly fixed and corroborated thereby All these things were before the Reformation in England towards the dawning of which we meet with a noted statute in the 23th year of King Henry 8. cap. 9. designed as is conceived to restrain the Exorbitances used in summoning people out of the Diocess wherein they inhabit without leave of their Ordinaries which thing as it tended to the great vexation of the persons so cited it also aimed at the very encroaching on the several Ordinaries Rights on pretence of some legantine power or Nuncio's Court or other extraordinary cause In the preamble of which Statute it is affirmed That all persons of any quality or condition may be cited before their Ordinaries so it be in proper cause and due Order The body of that statute provideth that no citation be made out of the Diocess where the party dwelleth but where some spiritual offence or cause is committed or done So that a contrario sensu sayes the learned and judicious Dr. Cosen Apol. p. 67. in any offence or cause spiritual any Subject may be cited within his or her Diocess And in some peculiar causes there mentioned and recited they may be cited out of their Diocess Now the power of citing presupposes a full jurisdiction that is a power to proceed further thereupon in all due requisits and forms that belong to any cause whether it be upon instance or of matter of correction Since the Reformation that all jurisdiction Ecclesiastical is de facto as it was alwayes de jure united to and so derived from the Imperial Crown of England there is by the statute of the first of Queen Elizabeth cap. 1. Full power and authority given to the Ecclesiastical Judges for the Executing of Ecclesiastical jurisdiction as before time See also a statute made in Ireland in the 28. year of King Henry the 8. called an Act against the Authority of the Bishop of Rome towards the latter end thereof Provided that notwithstanding this Act or any other Act made for the taking away of the said Bishop of Romes Vsurped power Authority Preheminence Jurisdiction or any other thing or things in the same comprised That all and every Archbishop Bishop Arch-Deacon Commissary and Official and every of them shall and may use and exercise in the name of the King only Vid. infra p. 53. all such Canons Constitutions Ordinances and Synodals provincial being already made for the direction and order of Spiritual and Ecclesiastical causes which be not contrariant nor repugnant to the Kings Lawes statutes and customs of this Land nor to the Damage and Hurt of the Kings Prerogative Royal in such manner and form as they were used and Executed before the making of this Act till such time as the Kings Highness shall order and determine according to his Lawes of England and such order and determination as shall be requisite for the same and the same to be certified hither under the Kings Great Seal or otherwise ordered by Parliament And while I am thus enumerating the several statutes which the former position is not contrariant to but rather strengthned by I must not omit the making mention of those statutes and Acts of Parliament that are set out and published meerly upon Ecclesiastical causes and matters which are reckoned by some as those that enter into and make up the body of the Kings Ecclesiastical Laws Zouch de jure Eccles p. 1. Sec. 1. c. whether these be matters of a civil or criminal Nature matters of civil cognizance are either such as concern Precontracts and other matrimonial causes In Ireland 33 Hen. 8 cap. 6. In England 32 Hen. 8. c. 38. 1 and 2 Edward 6. c. 23. 1 Elizab. 1. o● such as concern Testamentary matters 21 Hen. 8. cap. 5. In this Kingdom 28 Hen. 8. cap. 18. Also matters of Tythes and the pursuits and impleadings thereup on He●● 33 Hen. 8. c. 12. In England to the two Statutes mentioned before called circumspecte Agatis and Articuli Cleris These may be added viz. 1 Richard 2. c. 14.27 and 28 Hen. 8. c. 20. 32 Hen. 8. c. 7. 2 Edward 6. cap. 13. Concerning all which all persons without distinction of place or office who are concerned in any of these causes they are subject to Episcopal jurisdiction to which the same causes do appertain and by which they are managed And for matters
of King Edward the third Now if it be here said that these Constitutions were made before the Statute of Praemunire came forth and so proceeded more peremptorily and not with that submissive regard and dutiful obedience to the Crown as they ought to have done I answer by acknowledging those Constitutions to aim indeed at the restraining of the Kings Prerogative and of his Temporal Courts and therefore not of any force now or that proceedings should be guided thereby * Sir Tho. Ridley in his View c. leaves it without decision whether these constitutions be annulled by the Act of Parliament viz. 25. Hen. 8. c. 19. He determines not absolutely I say but refers it to better judgements But this mention is made of them to shew Historically what was then practised and held usually and moreover to evince that where the Rights of the Crown are not thereby impaired nor any of the Kings Temporal Courts invaded Ecclesiastical proceedings may be made against any Person and his being in any subordinate civil office does not exempt him therefrom I must yield to and acknowledge what the Statute 25 Hen. 8. cap. 19. has determined viz. All Canons Constitutions Ordinances and Synodals Provincial that had been then made are received into the body of the Ecclesiastical Laws and are Established to be the Ecclesiastical Lawes of England and become of good force and validity but with this necessary proviso herein quatenus consuetudinibus statutis Regninon repugnant nec prerogativae Regiae adversa●tur Dr. Zouch de jure Ecclesiast p. 1. Sect. 1. So the Statute it self reports of them that they are of force and still binding so far forth as they be not contrariant nor repugnant to the Laws customs and statutes of this Realm nor to the Danger or Hurt of the Kings prerogative Roya In the Formula of Juridical practice for causes Ecclesiastical set forth by Francis Clerk and which is approved in all the Consistories and other Ecclesiastical Courts of England and Ireland In this Formula I say There is a title namely the two hundred and fifteenth title of that Book after what manner to begin and proceed in any Ecclesiastical cause perhaps at the instance of a party against any Community as Dean and Chapter Master Fellows and Scholars of any Colledge c. In the body of which title the manner of proceeding against any Mayor and Community of a City particularly that of London is described whence I make this Collection That what is declared as a matter to be observed in Ecclesiastical practice when occasion requires a proceeding against any Mayor or Community of a City that does certainly imply that such a Mayor and Community are subject to Ecclesiastical jurisdiction and consequently to such penal coercions and censures the matter so requiring it as are properly inflicted thereby Hitherto concerning the first particular that this position is agreeable to the Ecclesiastical Law 2. As this position is agreeable to the Ecclesiastical Law so it is not repugnant to the Kings Temporal Laws or the Municipal Laws of these Kingdoms It is not repugnant to the Statute Law The Statute called Magna Charta confirmed by King Henry the Third in the Ninth year of His Reign and by so many Kings since this Statute said to be the Ancientest written Law that is now extant and the Breviate and Summary of all the written Laws of England and most beneficial to the Subject declares in the first Chapter thereof That the Church of England shall be free and have all her Holy rights and liberties inviolable * Et habeant omnia jur a sua integra that is all Ecclesiastical persons shall enjoy all their lawful jurisdictions and other rights without any diminution or substraction whatsoever D. Coke on Magna Charta cap. 1. Jura sua sayes the same Author ibidem prove plainly that no new rights were given to them but such as they had before hereby are confirmed so that it followes that what amplytude and fulness of jurisdiction they had before is hereby confirmed In the Thirty seven Chapter of the said Statute There is a Reserve to all Archbishops Bishops c. Of all their Liberties and Priviledges one branch of which Liberties and Priviledges and Rights is this power of jurisdiction over all persons in their respective Diocesses Edward the first the Son and Successor of this King ordained the Statute called circumspecte Agatis in the thirteenth year of His Reign It has been affirmed concerning this Law that it was a prelatical Constitution because inserted in the Provincial Constitutions in the title de foro competenti or at the most one onely of the Kings Writs issuing out on some occasion leading thereunto But to confirm the Authority hereof My Lord chief Justice Coke determines of it after this manner though some have said this was no Statute but made by the Prelates themselves Yet that it is an Act of Parliament is not only proved by our Books but also by an Act of Parliament Instit p. 2. p. 487. In this Statute then set down as a boundary betwixt the Spiritual and Temporal jurisdiction full power and authority is given or confirmed rather to the exercise of jurisdiction Ecclesiastical over all persons indistinctly in such cases as belong to and are mentioned in it In the Ninth year of His Son and Successor King Edward the second came forth the statute called Articuli cleri by the form and purport of which it appeareth that for any matter Ecclesiastical indefinitely Men may be cited and if cited then subject to all judicial consequences therein In the Twelfth Chapter of this statute The question is put Whether the Kings Tenants be subject to the Ecclesiastical jurisdiction as others are and if they may be Excommunicated for their manifest contumacie and after forty dayes continuing so whether they may be signified and attached by the Kings Writ The answer given to the question is such It was never yet denyed nor shall be hereafter * The close of which Statute is after this manner Ratifying confirming and approving all and every of the Articles aforesaid with all and every of the Answers made and contained in the same do grant and command them to be kept firmly and observed for ever willing and gran ting for us and our Heirs that the foresaid Prelates and Clergie and their Succe●sors shall use execute and practise for ever the jurisdiction of the Church in the Premises after the Tenor of the Answers aforesaid without quarrel inquieting or vexation of our Heirs or any of our Officers whatsoever they be Poult Collect of statutes p● 101. in fine cap. 16. It seems the Kings Tenants supposed themselves such specially priviledged persons as to be thereby exempted from spiritual jurisdiction but that would not serve their turns And so a pari what would not be sufficient for them will not be sufficient for others though in office under the King During the long Reign
any dare to say That they pare off some rights or pluck some flowers from the Kings Imperial Crown I suppose not How comes it to pass then that the Bishops jurisdiction does Whatsoever may be alledged in defence of the other may be said and it may be something more too in justification of this And know moreover That proceedings in these Temporal distinct jurisdictions go much further upon the persons of men than those of any Ecclesiastical Court does even to the imprisoning of them and in all of them except that of the University to the inflicting of capital punishments And it deserves our further observing what the great Lawyer Sir Edward Coke sayes touching this very thing Albeit the proceedings and process in the Ecclesiastical Courts be in the Name of the Bishops c. It followeth not therefore that either the Court is not the Kings or that the Law whereby they proceed is not the Kings Law for taking one example for many every Leet and View of franck pledge holden by a subject is kept in the Lords Name and yet it is the Kings Court and all the proceedings therein are directed by the Kings Laws and many subjects in England have and hold Courts of Record and other Courts and yet all their proceedings be according to the Kings Laws and customs of the Realm De jure Regis Eccles p. 39. The Learned Bishop Sanderson has convincingly demonstrated That Citations and Decrees in the Bishops Name no way encroacheth on the Kings Authority and that they who urge the contrary have this meaning rather to do the Bishops hurt than the King service and that their affections so far as by what is visible we are able to judge are much what alike towards both His Book called Episcopacy not prejudicial to Regal power p. 3 4. Bishops proceedings in Ecclesiastical Courts under the Name Stile and Seal of the Bishop See this largely discussed and declared to be warrantable by Law by my Lord Coke's comment on the Statute of Marriage 32 Hen. 8. p. 685 686 687. But this Objection is taken up again and urged with new force from hence That in the First year of King Edward the Sixth it was by Statute Enacted That the Bishops should make their processes in the Kings Name and that their Seals should be the Kings Arms. This Statute sayes Mr. Rastall was repealed 1 Mariae 1. And that Statute not being revived by Queen Elizabeth in her Reign all proceeded well enough without danger But in the first Parliament of King James there passed an Act for continuing and reviving divers Statutes and for repealing of some others 1 Jaccb c. 29. Into the body whereof a clause was cunningly conveyed for the repealing of that Statute of the Reign of Queen Mary by which King Edward 's stood repealed Upon this account it was that a little before our late turbulent confusions in England this very thing was urged against the Bishops and their proceedings were declared to be bold usurpations and encroachments on the Prerogative Royal and violations of the Law But as it is usual where men are prepossessed against any thing they are apt to run into many mistakes about the s●me It happened so in this very matter Much ●●lse was raised much stir made hereupon by the Anti●prelatical party as if the Bishops who had given themselves out to be the most zealous assertors were indeed become the onely dangerous impugners of the Kings Prerogative That now they were deprehended in the very design and therefore must needs fall having no plea to make for themselves and having the mischief of their own visible and illegal actings witnessing against them At this rate their Adversaries vaunted and fore-judged them and no doubt as matters went in those times the severest animadversion that could have followed hereupon would have been made if further proceedings therein had not been seasonably prevented by the wisdom of a pious and prudent Prince For the Blessed King Charles the First having beee made acquainted what advantage these forward and busie people were designing to make hereof to the overthrow of His Ecclesiastical Courts and the Bishops His Judges in them He did as Dr. Heylin reports in the life of Archbishop Laud p. 342. call together in the year 1637 the two Lords Chief Justices the Lord Chief Baron and the rest of the Judges and Barons and propounds to them these three following particulars to be certified of 1. Whether processes may not issue out of the Ecclesiastical Courts in the Name of the Bishops 2. Whether a Patent under the Great Seal be necessary for the keeping of Ecclesiastical Courts and enabling Citations Suspensions Excommunications and other censures of the Church 3. Whether Citations ought to be in the Kings Name and under His Seal of Arms And the like for Institutions and Inductions to Benefices and corrections of Ecclesiastical Offences And the like for Visitations whether an express Commission or Patent under the Great Seal of England were requisite To which three Proposals the said Judges unanimously on the First of July in the fore mentioned year concurred and certified under their Hands By Answering to the First thing propounded affirmatively and to the other two negatively And that the fore-mentioned Statute of Edward the Sixth is not now in force Whereupon the King issues out His Proclamation wherein having first taxed the libellous Books and Pamphlets published against the Bishops and after a recital made of these proceedings He concludes the Proclamation thus That His Majestie thought good with the advice of His Council that a publick Declaration of these the opinions of His Reverend and Learned Judges being agreeable to the judgement and resolution of former times should be made known to all His Subjects as well to vindicate the legal proceedings of His Ecclesiastical Courts and Ministers from the unjust and scandalous imputation of invading or intrenching on His Royal Prerogative as to settle the minds and stop the mouths of all unquiet spirits That for the future they presume not to censure His Ecclesiastical Courts or Ministers in these their just and warranted proceedings And hereof His Majesty admonisheth all His subjects to take warning as they will Answer the contrary at their peril c. * Resolutions unanimously given by all the Judges and the Earons of the Exchequer saith my Lord Coke are for matters of Law of Highest Anthority next unto the Court of Parliament Sir Edward Coke 2 Instit p. 618. But some mens minds will not be satisfied with any thing of this nature yet are willing to embrace what is fortified with Parliamentary Authority Both therefore to gratifie them and more throughly to confirm the matter in hand we have also this Parliamentary Authority to offer unto them For although by an Act of Parliament in the Seventeenth year of King Charles the First all jurisdiction Ecclesiastical was quite abrogated and annulled I speak in respect of England for here in Ireland no such Act
either bestowed for the erecting of Hospitals and Alms-houses and endowing them with sufficient means and adding to such endowments for the sustentation and maintenance of aged sickly decrepid weak and helpless persons as Prisoners Orphans Widows c. Or such as are bestowed for the erecting and repairing of Churches and providing of such decent O●naments and other Utensils as are requisite therein also such as are bestowed for the celebration of Divine offices at certain times and seasons appointed Now although I have delivered this Assertion universally yet it is to be understood with restriction to those kinds of pious causes that I have particularly specified The Imperial Law allows a very ample and large power to Bishops in order to the regulating and disposing of these to their intended purposes Authent collat nona Tit. de Sanctissimis Episcopis cap. 23. See also the Canons called the Apostles Canons cap. praecipimus 40 ibidem Item cap. Tua nob is cap. Johannes de Testamentis And concerning such things as belong to Alms-houses and Hospitals of any but Royal foundations our Statute Law is very express herein And as to other Hospitals which be of another foundation and patronage than the Kings the Ordinaries shall enquire of the manner of the foundation estate and governance of the same and of all other matters and things necessary in this behalf and upon that make correction and reformation after the Laws of Holy Church as to them belongeth An. 2. Hen. 5. cap. 1. stat 1. And whereas in some particular cases of this nature it is appointed by the Statute 43 Elizab. cap. 4. That by certain Commissioners authorized thereunto to under the Great Seal of England such Lands Moneys Goods and Chattels as have been given to such Godly uses as are there mentioned should be rightly ordered and all misemployings thereof be prevented and regulated yet there is a proviso in that Statute to this end That neither this Act nor any thing therein contained shall be any way prejudicial or hurtful to the Jurisdiction of the Ordinany or power of the Ordinary but that he may lawfully in every case execute the same as though this Act had never been had or made Rastall And where there is a grant of Money or other moveable goods made by any person either in his life time or bequeathed by Legacy at the time of his decease for such pious causes as the erecting and repairing of Churches or buying such decent Ornaments and Furniture as belong to the same c. That the Money or other moveable goods thus granted or bequeathed be disposed for such uses and according to the intent of the Donor belongs to the Bishops care to look after and see performed Insomuch as they in whose hands such Moneys and Goods are detained may be convented before the Bishop and made to render an accompt thereof And the prosecution made herein may be either of office or at the promotion of the Church wardens of that or such other Parish to which the same is given Detentio legatorum ad usum pauperum quemlibet alium pium usum detentio bonorum ad publicos usus Ecclesiae destinatorum ad Episcopalem jurisdictionem pertinent Cosen Tab. vii A. To this purpose it is that in Articles given at Episcopal Visitations one is to enquire what Lands Possessions or other Richts are belonging or deemed and reputed to belong unto any Ecclesiastical Benefice and in whose hands they are and how they have been in their hands Which Article of Enquiry is grounded on the 44th Canon of this Church of Ireland and cognizance of these things belong to the Ecclesiastical Courts and may as I said be taken therein by the Ecclesiastical Judge either of meer office or office promoted c. and whether soever it be that such Rights become due by Legacy or any other Donation A man by his Testament bequeaths Goods to the Fabrick of a Church the Executor is to be sued for this in Court Ecclesiastical and thus it is determined at common Law see for this a consultation granted Register p. 57. a. cited at large by Dr. Cosen Apol. par 2. p. 100. But what if any issues and profits out of certain Lands and Tenements growing and belonging to any Church be detained They also may be sued for and recovered in Court Ecclesiastical If a Terr-Tenant holding Land that hath usually paid for such a Tenement a pound of wax or such like unto the Church do with-hold it the Churchwardens may sue him for it in Court Ecclesiastical Dr. Cosen par 1. p 45. And he alledges for this an ancient Author one Goodall who wrote in the time of King Henry 8th and intituled his Book Of the Liberties of the Clergy by the Laws of the Realm And observe that although a pound of wax and such like is only here mentioned yet it is not the tenuity and meaness of the thing that gives a right in this case to sue for it in the Spiritual Court But because there is a right so to do the same course of proceedings may be followed were the profits so accrewing and so to be disposed of far more valuable I will instance but in one case more which the Dr. mentions in p. 3. chap. 8. p. 102. An Ordinary proceeded ex Officii sui debito to the correction of crimes and excesses of those that were under his jurisdiction And amongst other objected Articles against a Knight for not sufficient reparations of a Church tending to the correction of his soul by reason of his detaining of that which he ought not This sayes he is allowed in the Register Tit. consultations fol. 53.6 I might but shall not need to add more for the proof of this first Assertion 2. Reparation of Churches with the incidents thereunto both by Temporal and Spiritual Law appertains to Ecclesiastical cognizance I call these the incidents thereunto The business of making Rates for such Reparations inspecting the money so rated questioning those that refuse to contribute their proportion and calling to account for money so collected These are all dependant on the other in case of any judicial proceeding that shall happen to be made thereon the reason is given in this as in all other things of like nature in that excellent law Nulli prorsus Cod. de judiciis the sum of which is this Ne continentiae causarum dividantur Now the Temporal Law is express for the proof of this in the Statute of circumspecte agatis An. 13. Edwardi Primi Among the thirteen cases there recired and appropriated to the Ecclesiastical Tribunal This is one viz. Prelates may punish for leaving Church yards unclosed or for that the Church is uncovered or not conveniently decked This Statute is also inserted in the provincial constitutions collected by Lindwood Tit. de fore competenti and so is become part of the Kings Ecclesiastical Law Several Common Law cases are cited for this by Meriton in his Guide for Church-wardens
them I cannot pass by although I do but touch at them the many Errors concurring in this latter Essay As that first the time of Appealing from that which they pretended themselves aggrieved with was lapsed when this Appeal was interposed Moreover that one and the same cause by the same persons at the same time was thus brought to tryal before two distinct Judicatories which is vexatious at least in those that procure the same to be done so That the intermediate Jurisdiction was passed by contrary to the ancient liberties and customs in such cases observed and which was among other matters digested into Articles and Chapters confirmed in the Parliament held at Clarendon in the Reign of King Henry 2d Anno Domini 1164. namely That all Appeals in England must proceed regularly from the Archdeacon to the Bishop from the Bishop to the Archbishop and if the Archbishop failed to do justice the last complaint must be to the King to give order for redress that is sayes my Lord Primate Bramhall Vindication of the Church of England p. 75. by fit Delegates See to this purpose The Statute of Appeals 24 Hen. 8. cap. 12. And this contrary to the 56 Canon of this Church Whereby the pain of Nullity is inflicted on all Acts which are sped in Appeals where the Jurisdiction intermediate is passed by for although it is true That the Kings Authority ought not to be disputed or disobeyed by any Subject where it does appear to be yet that must ever be esteemed a true and regular obedience which the King himself by Law has prescribed it should be And lastly supposing the Appeal entred by them to have been antecedently good that is good in respect of time and manner observed in interposing the same yet it is not good nor valid in its consequents because the time appointed for these pretended Appellants to receive their Apostles that is dimissory Letters from the Bishop or Judge Aquo intimating his deferring and yielding to the said Appeal and assigning of time for prosecution of the same is long since passed away without doing either And besides this slipping the Terminus Hominis that is the Term limited and appointed by the Judge from whom the Appeal is Moreover the primum fatale juris for prosecuting and ending of Appeals is likewise lapsed and no impediment can be warrantably alledged in favour and on behalf of the Appellants so as to enjoy benefit of restitution into and being allowed their secundum fatale or second year for prosecuting their former Appeal No impediment I say can warrantably be alledged by these Appellants to capacitate them for this restitution for although the matter and pretended Grievance complained of against the Bishop at the hearing thereof before the most Honourable Council was refer●d to two Honourable Members of the same and in the issue thereof from those Hononrable Referrees something like the nature of a compromise was made between both parties which might seem sufficient to stop the running on of these Fatalia Juris namely in respect of the Complainants their engaging to perform what belonged to them to do and had been required from them by the Bishop as to give account of the Money received for the Churches use and making good the Reparation of the Body of the Cathedral and other particular matters before mentioned and in respect of the Bishop his promising to withdraw his proceedings against them thereupon Although I say this seeming compromise might appear as a sufficient ground of granting admission to the secundum fatale supposing the first to be irrecoverably past Nevertheless it is not at all sufficient thereto the reason is because conditions were not performed on which this respite and seeming compromise was grounded and this non-performance of conditions was on the Appellants own part The Bishop performed more than his part in desisting hitherto from any further proceeding against them And they not performing the conditions required on their parts not then nor since nor to this very day which yet they ought to have done forthwith the benefit therefore of the other fatale is not allowable to them but being uncapable of any restitution thereunto they are really in the lapse and the said Appeal may be pronounced pro desertâ and no advantage on the Appellants part to be expected therefrom And if the Bishop should thus pronounce and resume into his cognizance the whole proceeding again as there would be both Law and Right enough to justifie his so doing so there would be a want of both these and of every thing else that might be needful to make up a safe and warrantable defence for the Complainants It is a noted and approved Maxim in poenal proceedings That Contempts of all crimes are least capable of favour or lenity Upon the whole view it sufficiently appears how little of truth or reason this exception against the manner of proceedings has to bear its self up withall Look we upon the crimes censured they were deeply scandalous and provoking Look we upon the censure inflicted 't was comparatively to the crime and a greater censure that might have been inflicted moderate and easie Look we to the manner of proceeding it was proper and without the omission of any one requisite or formality that of right ought to be used therein Look we to the Order observed It was not loose and confused but grave and regular Look we upon the whole cognizance it self This was not hasty and precipitous but prudentially guided and proceeding with good maturity and deliberation convenient intervals of time dividing seasonably every Court throughout the whole Transaction and preventing any thing of surprize that might be suspected therein I pretend not much skill to these Affairs yet being upon the design of searching as well as I was able into the whole state of this matter I have viewed and reviewed the whole series of these proceedings with the several Acts of Court Decrees and other matters incident thereunto And according to the best of what I am able to judge I cannot find in the same where to fasten any Error no not in the very niceties and punctualities of practice much less in any material point and essential matter thereof And now after all If Offenders complaints against the forms and prescriptions of Courts may pass for just Exceptions and fair Vindications of themselves we shall have many crimes but few criminals many that will be bold to offend but few that will ever acknowledge their being legally convicted for their Offences 'T is high time for persons invested with judiciary power to look about them and provide some new wayes of securing the Authority of their judicial proceedings if every bold attempt to question the legality of them may pass for a justifiable Plea of not obeying them or imprint a nullity upon them When such Offenders so justly and mildly censured shall dare openly to tell my Lord the Kings Deputy and my Lords of His Majesties Council as
these men did That a Bishop the Kings principal Ecclesiastical Judge within his own Diocess has put the Inhabitants of a City into very much disorder by such arbitrary and unheard of manner of proceedings when all the disorder proceeded from themselves and no other but legal proceedings have been used herein this comes very near the saying That they are wronged in spight of any thing that can be said against it and that if they to whom they make their Application will not believe and redress them as they would have it themselves they will venture to speak as hardly of them too They will commit faults and then complain and be pettish and froward if they be not stroak't and soothed up in their complaints He that charges any in subordinate power with arbitrariness of proceedings and may escape so will at the next turn charge as bad upon those that are in superiour Authority if he have but any matter of concern then at stake and may think to be secure when he does so This begins in the Ecclesiastical Courts but will it end there it's to be feared it will not Success impunity and hopes of being countenanced therein will embolden such men to go further even to pronounce the like upon all judiciary proceedings in Civil Courts where their persons or interests are concerned and where they may be heard with freedom and safety of popular approbation it might pass for a pretty smooth contrivance for a Criminal to avoid the force of a judiciary sentence by first traducing it and to get free from the Obligation of submitting to what is decreed by affirming confidently and standing to it That the proceedings were illegal and therefore not to be obeyed If this would serve the turn who would be such a Fool as ever to be guilty or so careless of his own ease as ever to undergo any punishment But 't is worth the wonder of a sober man to think that any one should shew himself and believe others ought to think him serious herein But in truth what has preceded so much out-does this that all our wonder may be well spent upon it That men called to answer in Law should question the known and approved course and proceedings thereof carries something extraordinary with it but here is much more That they themselves should against Law so plainly fore-judge their own cause and their own persons as to exempt both from what and to confine them to what Jurisdiction they themselves best liked of The Enquiry into the absurdity unreasonableness and ill consequences of which and the evincing the Right of Episcopal Jurisdiction in the case in hand against any such illegal pretensions and attempts The putting a new mound about that ancient and established Jurisdiction which every pragmatical pettish and conceited Novelist is now seeking either by detraction in his speech or other crafty Machinations in his practice first to retrench a little and by and by utterly to abolish has hitherto employed my Thoughts and my Pen. In prosecution of which design it is now no more than time I should tell the Reader so much I have promiscuously made use of English Statutes since the time of King Henry the seventh and some memorable passages of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction done in England as well as what peculiarly relates to this Kingdom And I cannot altogether deny but that I have done this for the Nonce for setting aside some particular Statutes relating to the peculiar state and condition of this Kingdom As to Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction we here conform in the practice and exercise of it and in the Rules and Laws it is exercised by to the same that are used in England If I be blamed for this I protect my self with what a Learned person has collected from Sir John Davys Reports in Case de commendam Ex quibus constat Hibernos sese accomodare non ad jura Anglicana tantum sed ad Leges Caesareas etiam jus Canonicum quatenus ea inter Leges Anglicanas admittuntur Dr. Duck de Authoritate Juris Civilis in Regno Hiberniae Sect 8. To whom I may add the Authority of that greatly Learned Prelate Primate Vsher for to this Chapter of the said Book as he did to all the rest he gave his particular Attestation under his own hand I mentioned at first two ends which I proposed to my self in this undertaking these I have had all along in my eye The one was that by the best reason I had and was able to improve and by the best authority I could find and was able to pr●duce I might justifie the Right and in the present case the right proceedings of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and so give my self a true satisfaction therein The other end is to give a satisfaction to others also for what concerns my self I have sufficiently attained it for what concerns others I have at least endeavoured to do something in Order thereto FINIS Some mistakings or omissions in Pointing the intelligent Reader may easily observe and correct And that he may please to do the like in such Lapses as are either Literal or tend to vitiate the Sense they are here in one view set down before him ERRATA PAge 17 line 7 for Jurisdictions read Jurisdiction ibid. line 8 for cognizances read cognizance page 24 margent line 2 for Statutis read Statute page 25 line 29 for in read is ibid. line 32 for paenes read penes ibid. line 34 for sine read five page 26 line 4 for vir read viz. ibid. line 8 for tali read rati ibid. line 27 for sanctis read sanctio page 29 margent Sect. 2 for amplytude read amplitude page 30 margent line 32 for without read without page 32 line 16 instead of propper cause read a proper cause page 34 line 13 for Clerii read Cleri page 41 line 20 for Regie read Regiae ibid. line 32 for Prerogativa read Praerogativa page 44 line 34 for King read King page 56 line 26 for beee read been page 68 line 15 for cognizanced read cognizance page 73 line 12 for powers read power page 82 line 4 for has read had page 103 line 26 for diversi read diversae FINIS