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A67804 The rights of the people of England, concerning impositions stated in a learned argument, by Sir Henry Yelverton ... ; with a remonstrance presented to the Kings most excellent Majesty, by the honorable House of Commons, in the Parliament, An. Dom. 1610 ... Yelverton, Henry, Sir, 1566-1629.; England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons. 1679 (1679) Wing Y28; ESTC R12698 49,930 134

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But the matter so depending in the ordinary Court of Justice a Writ came out of the Parliament and did adjourn it thither again where it gave occasion of a good Law to be made to prevent the like Grants and to make them void notwithstanding any Judgment given upon them and to make such Judgments also void The Statute is 9 E. 3. c. 1. And in the Parliament Rolls 9. E. 3. c. 1. Every Alien and Denizen may carry his Merchandise where it pleaseth him notwithstanding any Charter granted or Judgment thereupon 16 17. R. 2. 2 H. 4. num 109. we finde a notable Record which gives warrant for the proceeding in Parliament in this manner as hath been in this Case notwithstanding the Judgment in the Exchequer and declares to the Kingdom that notwithstanding the great wonder made by some men nothing hath been done in this business by those that serve in the Parliament but in imitation of their worthy Predecessors in the like case In the second year of H. 4. the Commons shew that in the time of R. 2. by the means of John Waltham Bishop of Salisbury Treasurer of England wrongfully without authority of Parliament and by reason of a Judgemet given in the Exchequer 16 17. R. 2. by the Barons there against certain Merchants of Bristol and other places passage had been taken for Wines otherwise then in ancient times had been and therefore they prayed they might pay their prise Wines in the manner they had used to pay notwithstanding any Judgment given in the Exchequer or other Ordinance made by the said Treasurer contrary to the antient usage which Petition the King granted and the Judgment thereupon became void and the prisage Wine hath been paid contrary to the Judgment ever since In 1. El. Dier 165. upon the complaint 1. El. Dier 265. made by the Merchants of the impositions set upon Cloth by Queen Mary by her absolute power without assent of Parliament The Cause was thought too weighty to be decided in any one Court but as it appeareth in the Book it was referred to all the Judges of England who divers times had conference about it So it may well be there is nothing against it in our year books for there is nothing of it Another Objection was this which was made in the last argument viz. That Custom is originally due by the Common Law of England it can then have no other ground or cause but meerly by the Kings royal Prerogative as a right and duty originally belonging to his Crown which if it be it must necessarily follow he may impose for that is but the exercising of that right To prove this was alleadged the case 39. E. 3.13 by which case it appeareth 39 E. 3.13 that King John had a Custom of eight pence on a Tun of Wine in the Port of Southampton but the Book doth not tell you that the King had it by prerogative and he might have it as well otherwise as by prescription or convention which shall rather be intended by reason of the certainty of the sum paied for if it were by prerogative he might take sometimes more sometimes less at his will the right being indefinite and the quantity limited onely by his own discretion A common person may have such a custom certain as 18. El. Dier 352. The Mayor of London hath the twentieth part of Salt brought into the City by Aliens 18 El. Dier 352 which is a great Imposition but is good by prescription originally and that received greater strength since by Acts of Parliament made for the confirmation of the Liberties and Customs of the City of London So it appeareth that John of Britain had Custom of the ships that arrived at his Port of Little Yarmouth Dier 43. worth twenty pounds per annum And these instances do inefer that a Custom may be otherwise then by prerogative and therefore it is no good argument to conclude the King had such a custom Therefore he had it by Prerogative The Book in 30. H. 8. Dier 43. 30 Hen. 8. Dier 43. was much pressed on this point which saith that Custom belonged to the King at Common Law and doth instance in Wooll Wooll-fells and Leather begun at the Common Law but abridged by the Statute of 14 E. 3. ca. 21. stat 1. 14 Ed. 3. c. 21. stat but this appeareth to be a great error and mistaking in the Book for we do finde that that Custom of Woolls Wooll-fells and Leather was begun by a Grant in Parliament as appeareth in Statute 15 E. 1. cap. 7. The words be granted to us by the Commonalty aforesaid and the last mention before was that the King had granted to the Bishops Earls Barons and all the Commonalty of the Land c. Novemb. 3. Ed. 1. The King recited in his Letter Patents That Prelati magnates ac tota communitas mercatorum Regni granted this new Custom And so the ground and motive of that opinion being false all grounded upon that must needs be erroneous It was objected That the King holdeth at this day the encrease of four pence in the pound over due Custom paid by Merchants Aliens according to the purport of the Charta mercatoria 31 E. 1. by meer right of Prerogative at the Common Law Rot. char 31. E. 1. num 42. in Turri for by that Grant of the Merchants he cannot hold it they being no Body Politick at the time of the Grant and therefore the Grant is meerly void to binde in succession and yet the Merchants Aliens do pay it at this day It is agreed That by the Common Law a contract with a number not incorporate bindeth not succession but we must take notice that they by whom that Grant was made of the augmentation of Custom by three pence in the pound and other encreases 31. E. 1. were Merchants Aliens who by the Law of Merchants and Nations may contract to bind their successors in matters of Traffick For their contracts are not ruled by the Common Law of the Land but by the Law of Nations per legem Mercatoriam as the Book case is 3. Ed. 4.10 and there was a good consideration given them by the King for this encrease of Custom as discharge of prise Wines for two shillings the Tun and other Immunities which all Merchants Aliens hold and enjoy at this day by force of that contract made 21 E. 1. For a stranger paieth now but two shillings the Tun for prisage whereas it standeth an Englishman in much more so as the rule of commutative Justice maketh the contract available to the King against the Merchants because he parteth with part of his prisage to the Merchant and maketh it available to the Merchant against the King because he giveth him encrease of Custom above that is due by Law But the Statute of 27 E. 3. cap. 26. heretofore cited doth make this point clear without scruple 27 E.
yearly so if ever there was cause to put a King to his shifts it was then yet we see they did not venture to put in practice this supposed Prerogative It further appeareth in that Statute that the people among those reasons they alleadged why they were not able to retain the King gave this for one that they had so often granted him Tonnage and Poundage upon Merchandizes by which it appeareth he took nothing of Merchants by imposition without grant for if he had no doubt they would not have stuck to have put him in minde of it But I pray consider what became of this motion of the Chancellor and Treasurer The proposition had depended in Parliament many years the effect was the people entreated the King to resume all grants he had made from the beginning of his reign untill that time being the twenty eighth year of his reign excepting such as were made upon consideration valuable that he might so enable himself by that mean by which he had impoverished himself and the whole Kingdom This took effect and the Statute of Resumptions was thereupon made the same year which Record because it is not in print and declareth these things with great gravity and authority I will set down the very Text of it so much as is material to our purpose Prayen your Commons in this your present Parliament assembled to consider That where your Chancellor of your Realm of England 28. H. 6. Stat. de Resumpt in Turri Lond. not printed your Treasurer of England and many other Lords of your Council by your high commandment to your said Commons at your Parliament holden last at Westminster shewed and declared the State of this your Realm which was that ye were indebted 372000. l. which is grievous and that your livelihood in yearly value was but 5000 l. And forasmuch as this 5000 l. to your high and notable State to be kept and to pay your said debts will not suffice Therefore that your high Estate may be releived And furthermore it was declared That your expences necessary to your houshold without all other ordinary charge came to 24000 l. yearly which exceedeth every year in expence necessary over your livelihood 19000 l. Also pleaseth it your Highness to consider that the Commons of your said Realm be as well willing to their power for the releiving of your Highness as ever was people to any King of your Progenitors that raigned in your said Realm of England But your said Commons been so impoverished what by taking victual to your houshould and other things in your said Realm and nought paid for it and the quinzime by your said Commons so often granted and by the grant of Tunnage and Poundage and by the grant of Subsidy upon Woolls and other grants to your Highness and other lack of execution of Justice that your said poor Commons be full nigh destroyed and if it should continue longer in such great charge it would not in any wise be had ne born Wherefore pleaseth it your Highness the premisses graciously to consider and that ye by the advice and assent of your Lords Spiritual and Temporal and by the authority of this your present Parliament for the consideration of your high Estate and in comfort and ease of your poor Commons would take resume seise and retain in your hands and possession all honours c. This was very plain dealing by the people with their King and this is the success of the demand of supply and support had in those days being required in point of gratification without any recompence or retribution for it Thus then we have cleared this point that between 50. E. 3. and 4. Mariae there was not one Imposition set without assent of Parliament Queen Mary in the fourth year of her reign upon the Wars with France set an Imposition upon Clothes for this consideration That the Custom of Woolls was decayed by reason for the most part they were made into Clothes which afforded little Custom for that which in Wooll paid for Custom and Subsidy 40 s. made into Cloth paid but 4 s. 4 d. To recompence this by an indifferent equality there was set upon a Cloth 5 s. 6 d. which Imposition did not make up the loss sustained in the Custom of Wooll by 13 s. 4 d. in 40 s. This was Justum but not Juste This religious Prince invironed with infinite troubles in the Church and Commonwealth and much impoverished by her devotion in renouncing the profits of the Church-lands that were in the Crown by the suppression was the first that made digression from the steps of her worthy Progenitors in putting on that Imposition without assent of Parliament for that very consideration of the loss of Custom by turning of Wooll to Clothing came into treaty in the 24. year of E. 3. when the art of Clothing began first to be much practised in this Kingdom and then in the recompence of the loss so sustained in the decay of Custom of Woolls there was set upon a Cloth by Act of Parliament above the olde Custom 14 d. for a Denizen and for an Alien 21 d. This is recited in a Record in the Exchequer 48. E. 3. Rot. 2. R. Thes in origin But I pray you examine how this Imposition of Queen Mary was digested by the people We see in the case of my Lord Dier 1. Eliz. sol 165. That the Merchant found great greif at it and made exclamation and suit to Queen Elizabeth to be unburdened of it Orig. in Scac. 48. E. 3. Rot. 2. R. Thes 1. Eliz. dier so 165. The very reason of their grief expressed in that case is because it was not set on by Parliament but by the Queens absolute power So that was the ground of that complaint the very point of right This cause was referred to all the Judges to report whether the Qu. might set on this Imposition without assent of Parliament They divers times had conference about it but have not yet made report for the King which is an infallible presumption that their opinions were not for him for it is a certain rule among us that if a question concerning the Kings Prerogative or his profit be referred to the Judges if their opinions be for the King it will be speedily published and it were indiscretion to conceal it but if there be no publication then we make no doubt but that their opinions are either against the King or at least they stick and give none for him The same Queen Mary upon restraint of bringing in of French Commodities occasioned by the then wars with France set an Imposition upon Gascoyn Wines which continueth yet So the Kingdom of England by the injustice of that Prince was clogged with these two heavy Impositions contrary to the right of the Kingdom and the Acts of her Progenitors Queen Elizabeth set on that upon sweet Wines which grew also upon the occasion of the troubles with Spain That upon
Allome was none it was rather a Monopoly to Master Smith the Customer of London for the ingrossing of all Allomes into his own hands for which priviledge he gave a voluntary Imposition upon that Commodity It was like the priviledge granted to John Pechey of the sweet Wines by E. 3. for which the Patentee was called into the Parliament House 50. E. 3. and was there punished and his Patent taken away and cancelled What Impositions have been set on in the Kings time I need not express they are set down particularly in the Book of Rates that is in print they are not easily numbered The time for which they are raised is not short the Patent prefixed to that book bearing date 28 Julii 6 Jacobi will instruct you sufficiently in that point they be limited to the King his Heirs and Successors which I suppose is the first estate of Free simple of Impositions that ever man read of My eighth and last Observation is upon Tunnage and Poundage given to the King of this Realm upon Wares and Merchandizes exported and imported which is an Imposition by Act of Parliament and as it will appear was given out of the peoples good will as a very gratification to the King to enjoyn him thereby from the desire of voluntary Impositions and to conclude him by that gift in Parliament from attempting to take any other without assent of Parliament for after the ceasing of voluntary Impositions these Parliamentary ones were frequent in the times of the King that succeeded but they were never given but for years with express caution how the money should be bestowed As towards the defence of the Seas protection of Traffick or some such other publick causes Sometimes special sequestrators made by Act of Parliament by whose hands the money should be delivered as 5. R. 2. cap. 3. in a printed Statute 5. R. 2. Rot. Par. 7. R. 2. n. 13.10 R. 2. n. 12.7 R. 2. n. 12. The Rates that were given were very variable sometimes 2 s. Tunnage and 6 d. Poundage as 7. R. 2. 3 s. Tunnage and 12 d Poundage 10. R. 2. which grants were not to endure the longest of them above a year 18 d. Tunnage 6 d. Poundage in 17. R. 2. 3 s. Tunnage and 12 d. Poundage granted to H. 4. in the thirteenth year of his reign for a certain time in which Statute there is this clause That this aide in time to come should not be taken for an example to charge the Lords and Commons in manner of Subsidy unless it be by the wills of the Lords and Commons and that by a new grant to be made in full Parliament in time to come This clause in good and proper construction may be taken to be a very convention between the King and his people in Parliament that he should not from thenceforh nor any of his Successors set on Impositions without assent of Parliament The like Imposition was granted to H. 5. Rot. Par. 1. H. 5. n. 17. in the the first year of his reign for a short time towards the defence of the Realm and safeguard of the Sea upon condition expressed in the Act that the Merchants Denizens and strangers coming into the Realm with their Merchandizes should be well and honestly used and handled paying the said Subsidy as in the time of his Father and his noble Progenitors Kings of England without oppression or extortion In the end of which Act the Commons protested being bound by any grant in time to come for the purposes aforesaid H. 6. in the one and thirtieth year of his reign Rot. Par. 31. H. 6.12 E. 4. c. 3.6 H. 8. c. 12.1 E. 6. c. 13.1 Mar. c. 18.1 Eliz. c. 19.1 Jac. c. 33. had Tunnage and Pound age given him for his life E. 4. had it given him the third year of his reign as it appeareth in a Statute 12. E 4. cap. 3. H. 8. in the sixth year of his reign and all since in the first year of their reigns have had it given them for term of their life and being now so certainly setled do reach further at that from which they are in conscience and honor excluded by this voluntary gratification For can any man give me a reason why the people should give this Imposition of Tunnage and Poundage above the due Custom upon all Commodities if the King by his Prerogative might set on Impositions without assent of Parliament and were not that a weak action in a King to take that of his people as a benevolence from them with limitation of the same and in what it should be imploied and how they will be used for it and for what time he shall have it which he might justly take without their consents unclogged of these unpleasing incumbrances The Statute of Tunnage and Poundage made in our times that are altogether inclined to flattery do yet retain in them certain shews and rumors of those antient Liberties although indeed the substance be lost 1. Jac. c. 33. as in the Statute 1. Jac. cap 32. We declare that we trust and have sure confidence of his Majesties good will towards us in and for the keeping and sure defending of the Seas and that it will please his Highness that all Merchants as well Denizens as strangers coming into this Realm be well and honestly entreated and demeaned for such things whereof Subsidy is granted as they were in the time of the Kings Progenitors and Predecessors without oppression to them to be done By this clause as it now continueth the true intent of this Statute appeareth to be that there ought no other Imposition to be laid upon Merchants besides these given by this Statute and this intention hath been well interpreted by use and practice from the time of E. 3. to the time of Queen Mary as before is declared Thus much of this last reason made from observation and the action of our Nation I will answer now such main objections as have been made against the peoples right and have not been touched by me obiter in my passage through this discourse That which hath been most insisted upon is this that the King by his prerogative Royal hath the custody of the Havens and Ports of this Island being the very gates of this Kingdom that he in his royal function and office is onely trusted with the keys of these gates that he alone hath power to shut them and to open them when and to whom he in his Princely wisdom shall see good that by the Law of England he may restrain the persons of any from going out of the Land or from coming into it That he may of his own power and discretion prohibit exportation and importation of goods and Merchandizes and out of his prerogative and preheminence the power of imposing as being derivative doth arise and result for Cui quod majus est licet ei quod est minus licitum est So their reason briefly is