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A88231 The peoples prerogative and priviledges, asserted and vindicated, (against all tyranny whatsoever.) By law and reason. Being a collection of the marrow and soule of Magna Charta, and of all the most principall statutes made ever since to this present yeare, 1647. For the preservation of the peoples liberties and properties. With cleare proofs and demonstrations, that now their lawes and liberties are nigher subvertion, then they were when they first began to fight for them, by a present swaying powerfull faction, amongst the Lords, Commons, and Army, ... so that perfect vassalage and slavery (by force of armes) in the nature of Turkish janisaries, or the regiments of the guards of France, is likely (to perpetuitie) to be setled, if the people doe not speedily look about them, and act vigorusly for the preventing of it. / Compiled by Lievt. Col. John Lilburne, prerogative prisoner in the Tower of London, and published by him for the instruction, information and benefit of all true hearted English-men. Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657. 1648 (1648) Wing L2153; Thomason E427_4; ESTC R202741 121,715 88

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this collectio abroad I shall draw towards a conclusion and let my Country men here reape the benefit of the answer I sent to the querys of some of my friends mentioned in the Epistle Dedicatory which was the originall and principall occasion of my compiling this book which thus followeth By the statute of Westminster the first made in the 3. of Edward 1. chap. 26. which you may reade verbatim in the 7. page of the following collection their are no fees due from any free man of England to any Officer of Iustice whatsoever but what they have immediatly from the publique treasure of the Kingdom for ther sallories or wages and it is aginst a Iudges Oath to take any whose oath you may at large read in the 10. page following read also that remarkable page in the merror of Iustice pag. 258. 233. for the proof of this but especially read the marginall notes in the 69. page following and he that exacts any shal by the formencioned statue pay back again twice as much c. but it is true by some latter statues as the 23. Hen. 6. chap. 10. which you may reade verbatim in the 18.19 following pages and 33. Hen. 6.12 and 21. Hen. 7.17 c. there are some small fees to be paid And also Sir Edward Cook in the 1. part of his institutes lib. 3. chap. 13. sect 70. fol. 368. saith such reasonable fees as have been allowed by the Courts of justice of an ancient time to inferior ministers and attendants of Courts for their labour and at●tendance if it be asked and taken of the subject it is no extortion But there is none at all due for entring and recording of apperance nor for the removing upon a Certionary But against Sir Edward Cooks opinion in this particular I offer this to consideration that by the Petition of right the King himselfe with all his Lords cannot justifiably lay a penny upon nor take a penny from the meanest man in England without common consent in Parliament and if the King c. the greater cannot doe it then undeniably the Iudges or justices the lesser can much lesse doe it And besides by the same right that under pretence of dues or fees by their arbitrary wills and pleasures they take one farthing from you or me they may take a penny yea a shilling ye a pound yea a thousand pound and so ad infinitum and so Levell and destroy al properrity of meum tuum see for the power of an act of Parliament the notable arguments of Iudg Hutton Iudg Crooke in the case of ship-money but especialy the Parliaments votes annexed to those arguments for which very thing divers of the Iudges in the case of ship-money were this very Parliament impeached of Treason and the Bishops for makeing their cannons by the Kings single authority to binde their Cleargies pursses without authority of Parliament were for that and the like defunct of all their power † † See Mr. Nat. Fines his notable speech against the Bishops Cannons made 1640 and printed in a book called Speeches and passages prsnted for Will-Crook at Furnivals Inne gate in Holborne 1641. page 49. 50. 51. and the house of Commons vote Dec. 15. 1640. ibim page 328. and the statute made this Parliament that abolished Eccelesiasticall Iurisdiction 2. The presentment is often brought in English but it it must be entred and recorded in lattin by the statute of the ●6 Ed. 3. 15. which you may reade in the 12. following page and no processe is to be awarded but af the presentment is entred and recorded in lattin the presentment must mention the offence and so must the writ or processe as clearly appeares in the last foremencioned most notable and remarkable statute see also Sir Edward Cooks second part instituts upon the 29. chap of Magna Charta fol. 51. 52. 53. see Vox plebis page 37 and the merror of Iustice chap. 5. sect 1. division 98. page 238 nay the last author in his 233 page division 71. saith that it is abuse of the Common Law that any plaint is received to be heard without sureties present to testifie the plaint to be true 3. The Iustices siting upon the bench may verbally commit a man for an offence lying under their cognizance but there must be a Mittitur or Commitment entred upon Record See the 14. Henry 7. fol 8. in Sir Thomas Greenes case See also the 70. page of the following discourse 4. The Iustices of peace cannot continue a man bound above two or three Sessions at most and if they continue him more they may aswell continue him for thirteen and so for thirteen score for it is a vexation and the Law gives him remedie by an action of the case against the Iustices wherein they shall be sined to the King for the vexation and pay damages to the partie Plaintiffe 5. An Indictment for extortion must be in the proper County before the Iustices of Oyer and Terminer or Iustices of the peace 6. Vpon an arrest the Officer must declare at whose suit for what and what returne the processe hath see the Countesse of Rutlands case of arrest in the sixt part of Cookes Reports 7. For a Plea against an Indictment for not comming to Church to heare Common Prayer c. It is framed to your hand in the 20 21 22 ●3 pages of my large Epistle to Col. Henry Martin of the 31. of May 1647. called Rash Oaths to which I referre you 8. Thou go you be committed justly and legally be sure as soon as you are committed if possible you can proffer legall Baile in person to those that commit you but for this I wholly referee the Reader to the 70 71 72. pages of the following discourse in which I have given some directions to my Country men how to guide themselves by the rules of the Law of England in all ordinary molestations that can befall them by Knaves malicious men or Tyrants saving in the point of panniling of Iuries upon them in case they come to any triall for their lives c. and for that point I doe wholly referre the Reader to the 24 25 26. pages of my notable book called the Resolved mans resolution where also the cheats and illegallities of Committees procedings are anotamised and to the 1. part of Sir Edward Cooks Inst lib. 2. chap. 12. Sect. 234 fo 156 157 and his 3. part fo 32. 33. My labours herein I desi●e may find a courteous acceptation at the hands of my oppressed friends and Country-men and I have my reward and shall therein reioyce and be incouraged for the future improvement of my poore talent to doe them further service Iohn Lilburne From my causelesse captivitie in the Tower of London upon a now account this 17 of Feb. 1647. For upon the 19. of Ian. last the House of Commons committed me to prison as their prisoner for treasonable and seditious practises against the state And
other Court shall directly or indirectly or by any art shift colour or device have take or receive any money fee reward covenant obligation promise agreement or any other thing for his report or Certificate by writing or otherwise upon pain of the forfeiture of 100. l. for every such Report or Certificate and to be deprived of his office and place in the same Court the one moity of the said forfeitures to be our Soveraign Lord the King his heires and successors the other moity to the party grieved which will sue for the same at any time during the said suit or within one yeare after the same cause discontinued or decreed and in his default of such suit to him or them that will sue for the same by originall Writ Bill plaint or Information in his Majesties high Court of Star Chamber or in any his Majesties Courts of Record at Westminster in which suit by Writ Bill plaint or Information no wager of Law Essoin Priviledge Supersedeas Protection or any other delay shall be suffered or admitted Provided neverthelesse that it shall be lawfull for the Clerke to take for his paines for writing of every such Report or Certificate 12. d. for the first side and 2. for every side after and no more upon paine to forfeit 10. s. for every peny taken over and above the said summe to be had and recovered as aforesaid Having given you the most materiall Statutes that I conceive at present makes for your most advantage that I can find in the Statutes at large I shall here insert three or foure Statutes made this present Parliament that in my judgement is extraordinary well worth your knowledge and understanding the first thus followes Anno 17. Caroli Regis An Act for regulating of the Privie Councell and for taking away the Court commonly called the Star Chamber WHereas by the GREAT a a 9. H. 3. 29. CHRTER many times confirmed in Parliament It is inacted that no freeman shall be taken or imprisoned or disseised of his free hold or Liberties or free Customes or be Outlawed or exiled or otherwise destroyed and that the King will not passe upon him or condemne but by lawfull judgement of his Peers or by the Law of the Land And by another Statute made in the b b 5. E 3. 9. fifth yeare of the Reigne of King Edward the third It is inacted That no man shall be attached by any accusation nor fore-judged of life or lim nor his Lands Tenements Goods nor Chattels seised into the Kings hands against the forme of the GREAT CHARTER and the law of the land And by another Statute made in the five and twentieth year c c 25 E. 3. 4. of the reigne of the same King Edward the third It is accorded assented and established that none shall be taken by petition or suggestion made to the King or to his Councell unlesse it be by Indictment or Presentment of good and lawfull people of the same Neighbourhood where such deeds be done in due manner or by Processe made by Writ originall at the Common Law and that none be put out of his Franchise or Free-hold unlesse he be by duty brought in to answer and fore-judged of the same by the course of the Law and if any thing be done against the same it shall be redressed and holden for none And by another Statute made in the 28 year d d 28. E. 3. 3. of the Reign of the same King Edward the third It is amongst other things inacted that no man of what estate or condition soever he be shall be put out of his Lands or Tenements nor taken nor imprisoned nor disinherited without being brought in to answer by due processe of Law And by another Sta●●te made in the 42. yeare e e 42. Ed. 3. 3. of the Reign of the said King Edward the third It is enacted that no man be put to answer without presentment before Iustices or matter of Record or by due Processe and Writ originall according to the old Law of the Land and if any thing be done to the contrary it shall be void in Law and holden for error And by another Statute made in the 36. year of f f 36. Ed. 3. the same King Edward the third It is amongst other things inacted That all Pleas which shall be pleaded in any courts before any the Kings Iustices or in his other places or before any of His other Ministers or in the Courts and places of any other Lords within the Realm shall be entred and enrolled in Latine And whereas by the Statute made in the third yeare of King Henry the seventh power is given to the Chancellour the Lord Treasurer of England for the time being and the Keeper of the Kings Privie Seale or two of them calling unto them a Bishop and a Temporall Lord of the Kings most honourable Councell and the two chiefe Iustices of the Kings Bench and common Pleas for the time being or other two Iustices in their absence to proceed as in that Act is expressed for the punishment of some particular offences therein mentioned And by the Statute made in the one and twentieth yeare of King Henry the eighth The President of the Councell is associated to ioyne with the Lord Chancellour and other Iudges in the said Statute of the third of Henry the seveth mentioned But the said Iudges have not kept themselves to the points limited by the said Statute but have undertaken to punish where no law doth warrant and to make Decrees for things having no such authority and to inflict heavier punishments then by any law is warranted And forasmuch as all matters examinable or determinable before the said Iudges or in the Court commonly called the Star-Chamber may have their proper remedy and redresse and their due punishment and correction by the Common Law of the Land and in the ordinary course of justice elsewhere And forasmuch as the reasons and motives inducing the erection and continuance of that Court doe now cease and the proceedings Censures and Decrees of that Court have by experience been found to be an intolerable burthen to the Subiect and the meanes to introduce an Arbitrary power and Government And forasmuch as the Councell Table hath of late times assumed unto it self a power to intermeddle in Civill causes and matters only of private interest between party and party and have adventured to determine the Estates and Liberties of the Subiect contrary to the Law of the Land and the rights and priviledges of the Subiect by which great and manifold mischiefes and inconveniencies have arisen and hapned and much incertainty by meanes of such proceedings hath been conceived concerning mens rights and estates For setling whereof and preventing the like in time to come Be it Ordained and Enacted by Authority of this present Parliament That the said Court commonly called the Star-Chamber and all Iurisdiction power and authoritie belonging unto or exercised in
this expresse command upon them that they shall in any wise set a King over themselves from amongst their brethren and that they shall not in any wise set a stranger over them which is not their brother but saith God he shall not multiply Horses to himself nor cause the people to return to Aegypt that is to say to vassalage slavery or the house of bondage Neither shall he multiply wives to himself that his heart turne not away neither shall he greatly multiply to himself silver Gold And it shall be when he sitteth upon the Throne of his Kingdome that he shall write him a copy of this law in a book out of that which is before the Priests the Levits And it shall be with him and he shall read therein all the dayes of his life that he might learne to feare the Lord his God to keep all the words of this law and these statutes and do them That his heart be not lifted up above his brethren marke that well and that he turne not aside from the commandement to the right hand or to the left Deut. 17 15 16 17 18 19 20. Here is a cleare declaration by God himself that Kings the single greatest of Magistrates are not to walke and act upon the people by the rules of their own wills but by the law of God which is as binding to them as the meanest of the people and for my part I say and aver that that man whether King or Parliament man that declares himself to be lawlesse was never in that condition of Gods creation but of the Divils And pertinent to this purpose is the comp●aint of our antient English Lawyer Andrew Horne in his Mirror of Iustice in English ch 5. Sect. the first division the first and second pag. 225. where complaining of the abusions of the Common law he saith the first and chiefe abusion is that the King is above the law whereas he ought to be subiect to it as it is contained in his oath Which as Sir Richard Hutton one of his own Iudges in his Argument in Mr. Iohn Hampdens case against Sip-money pag. 32. which argument was made before this Parliaments doctrine was broached saith that by the Kings Oath he agrees to give consent to such lawes as shall in Parliament be propounded for the profit and good of the Kingdome and be further declares that he is to rule and govern thereby see also the petition of Right in the following pages 1. 2 So that by this it clearely appeares that in his own imagination nor the opinion of his Iudges he is neither omnipotent nor unlimited but his office is an office of trust conferred upon him for the good of the people And therefore saith our forementioned Author Andrew Horne ibim the second abuse of the common Law is That whereas Parliaments ought to bee for the salvation of the soules of Trespassors twice in the yeare at London that they are there but very sildome ond at the pleasure of the King for subsidies and collections of Treasure c. And the Act made the first yeare of this Parliament in the 16. of the present King called an Act for the preventing of inconveniences hapning by the long intermission of Parliaments expresly saith Whereas by the Lawes and Statutes of this Realm the Parliament ought to beholden at least once every yeare for the redresse of Grievances c. Which Lawes and Statutes are the 4. Ed. 3. 14 36. Ed. 3. 10. which are printed virbitum in the following discourse pag. 9 12 and which are expresly ratified and confirmed to be duly kept and observed In which Acts the Parliament are prescribed their worke what to doe which is to maintaine the Lawes and redresse the mischiefes and grievances that dayly happen but not in the least to our destroy Lawes unlesse they give us Letter for them nor to make our mischiefes and grievances greater nor to rob and poule the Kingdome of their treasure by taxations Excize c. and then share it by thousands and ten thousands amongst themselves which i● expresly against the Lawes of the kingdome for Feesies in trust and they are no more at most by the Law of this Land can give nothing to themselves and therefore their sharing as daily they doe the Common wealths money amongst themselves is no better then absolute state robbery against whom an indictment or an Action of recovery if not of death † For Andrew Horne declares p. 239 that it is an abuse of the common Law that Iustices and their Officers who kill people by false judge●ent be not destroyed as other murtherers which King Alfrid caused to be done who caused 44 Iustices in one yeare to be hanged as murtherers for their false judg●ments and page 241 he saith that he hanged Arnold because he saved Boylife who robbed the people by cullour of distresses whereof some were by selling distresses some by extortions of fines c. ought in equity and reason to lye as well as against robbing and cheating servants and stewards And for them for ever to shelter themselves from the lash and stroak of justice or for ever from being called to accompt for all their Cheats Robberies and murthers by getting the Kings hand to an Act to make them an everlasting Parliament no more lyes in the Kings power Justly and legally to do then to give them power to make us al absolute Vassels and Slaves and to destroy all our Lawes libertys and propertys and when they have so done then to cut the throats of all the men in England besides themselves therefore it behoves the people to keep up the interest of a Parliament but yet annually at least to chuse new Parliament ment to call their predicessors to a strick accompt and for my part J conceive that not onely by the rules of equity and reason but by the strength of the Law of the land which requires a Parliament to be chosen and held at least once every yeare the people that are willing in the severall Sheires Cities and Burrowes may call home their Parliament men and send new ones in their places to call them to accompt and to make Laws to punnish such betrayers of their trust as men as full of unnaturalnesse as those that murder and kill their owne fathers which is an act abhorred even amongst bruts and yet this very thing is acted upon us by the grandees amongst our trustees who themselves have told us that it is as old a law as any is in the Kingdom that the Kingdome never ought to be without a meanes to preserve it selfe 1. part book decl pag. 207. pag. 690. And that those things which are evell in their owne nature cannot be the subject of any command or induce any obligation of obedience upon any man by any authority whatsoever 1. par book p. cl pag. 201. pag. 150. And therefore the conclusion that I draw from Gods subjecting of all men equally
as long as ye shall be Iustice nor robes of any man great or small but of the King himself And that ye give none advice nor councell to no man great nor small in no case where the King is party And in case that any of what estate or condition they be come before you in your sessions with force and armes or otherwise against the peace or against the forme of the Statute thereof made to disturb execution of the common law or to menace the people 2. Ed. 3. 3. that they may not pursue the Law that yee shall cause their bodies to be arrested and put in prison And in case that be such that yee cannot arrest them that ye certifie the King of their names and of their misprision hastily so that he may therof ordain a convenable remedy And that ye by your selfe nor by other privily nor apertly maintain any plea or quarrell hanging in the Kings Court or elsewhere in the country And that ye deny to no man common right by the Kings letters not none other mans not for none other cause and in case any letters come to you contrary to the law that ye doe nothing by such letters but certifie the King thereof and proceed to execute the law notwithstanding the same letters And that yee shall doe and procure the profit of the King and of his Crown with all things where ye may reasonably doe the same And in case ye be from henceforth found in default in any of the points aforesaid ye shall be at the Kings will of body land and goods thereof to be done as shall please him as God you help and all Saints The 20. of Edward the 3. Chap. ● fol. 14● The Iustices of both Benches Assise c. shall doe right to all men take no fee but of the King nor give councell where the King is party FIrst we have commanded all our Iustices that they shall from henceforth doe equall Law and execution of right to all our subjects rich and poore without having regard to any person and without omitting to doe right for any letters or commandement which may come to them from us or from any other or by any other cause And if that any letters writs or commandements come to the Iustices or to other deputed to doe law and right according to the Usage of the Realm in disturbance of the Law or of the execution of the same or of right to the parties the Iustices and other aforesaid shall proceed and hold their Courts and processes where the pleas and matters be depending before them as if no such Letters Writs or Commandements were come to them And they shall certifie us and our Councell of such Commandements which be contrary to the Law as afore is said And to the intent that our Iustices should doe even right to all people in the manner aforesaid without more favour shewing to one then to another we have ordained and caused our said justices to be sworne that they shall not from henceforth as long as they shall be in office of Iustice take fee nor to be of any man but of our self and that they shall take no gift nor reward by themselves nor by other privily nor apertly of any man that hath to doe before them by any way except meat and drink and that of small value and that they shall give no councell to great men or small in case where we be party or which doe or may much us in any point upon pain to be at our will body Lands and goods to doe thereof as shall please us in case they doe contrary And for this cause we have increased the fees of the same our Iustices in such manner as it ought reasonably to suffice them St. 2. Ed. 3 8. St. 11. R. 2. 10. Regist fo 1●6 The 25 of Edward the 3. Chap. 8. fol. 155. None shall be bound to find men of armes but by tenure or grant by Parliament ITem it is accorded and assented that no man shall be constrained to find men of Armes hoblers nor Archers other then those which hold by such services if it be not by common assent and grant made in Parliament St 1. Ed. 3. 5. St. 4. H 4. 13. The 28. of Edward the 3. Chap. 7. fol. 172. No Sheriffe shall continue in his office above one yeare ITem it is ordained and established that the Sheriffe of the Counties shall be removed every yeare out of their offices so that no Sheriffe that hath been in his office by a yeare shall abide in the same office the year next following 2. H. 7. fol. 5. And that no Commission be made to him thereof or renued for the same ye●●e following St. 14. 8. 3 7. 32. Ed. 3. 9. 23. H. 6. 8. Rast pl. fo 202. The 34. of Edward the 3. Chap. 4. fol. 180. What sort of people shall be returned upon every Iur● ITem because that Sheriffes and other ministers often doe array their panels in maner of Inquests of people procured and most far of from the Counties which have no knowledge of the deed whereof the Inquest shall be taken it is accorded that such panels shall be made of the next people which shall not be suspect nor procured And that the Sheriffes Coroners and other ministers which doe against the same shall be punished before the Iustices that take the said Inquest according to the quantity of their Trespasse as well against the King as against the party for the quantity of the damage which he hath suffered in such maner St. 21 〈◊〉 1. St. 28. E. 1. 9. 20. Es 3. 6. 42. Ed. 3. 11. Regist fo 178. Regist pla fo 117. THe 36 of Edward the 3. chap. 10. fol. 186. A Parliament shall be holden once in a yeare ITem for the maintenance of the said Articles and Statutes and redresse of divers mischiefs and grievances which dayly happen d Parliament shall be holden every yeare as an other time was ordained by a Statute St. 4 Ed. 3. 14. The 36. of Edward the 3. chap. 15. fol. 187. Pleas shall be pleaded in the English tongue and inrolled in Latine ITem because it is often shewed to the King by the Prelats Dukes Earles Barons and all the Comminalty of the great mischiefes which have happened to divers of the Realme because the Lawes Customs and Statutes of this Realme be not commonly holden and kept in the same Realm for that they be pleaded shewed judged in the French tongue which is much unknown in the said realm so that the people which do implead or be impleaded in the Kings Court and in the Courts of other have no knowledge nor understanding of that which is said for them or against them by their Serjeants other Pleaders And that reasonably the said Lawes and Customes the rather shall be perceived and known better understood in the tongue used in the said Realm by so much every man of the said Realm
be named in the said Commissions shall be bound by force of this Statute to hold the said Sessions foure times in the yeare as the other Commissioners the which be continually dwelling in the Country but that they shall doe it when they may best a●ound it The 13. of Richard the 2. Chap. 6. fol. 225. How many Serieants at Armes there shall be and with what things they shall meddle ITem at the grievous complaint made by the Commons to our Lord the King in this Parliament of the excessive and superfluous number of Serjeants at Armes and of many great extortions and eppressions done by them to the people The King therefore doth will that they shall be discharged and that of them and other there shall be taken of good and sufficient persons to the number of thirty and no more from henceforth And more over the King prohibiteth them to meddle with any thing that toucheth not their office And that they doe no extortion nor oppression to the people upon pain to loose their office and to make a fine and ransome at the Kings pleasure and full satisfaction to the party The 20. of R●chard the 2. Chap. 3. folio 243. No man shall sit upon the Bench with the Iustices of Assise ITem the King doth will and forbid that no Lord nor other of the Country little or great shall sit upon the Bench with the Iustices to take Assises in their Sessions in the Counties of England upon great forfeiture to the King and hath charged his said Iustices that they shall not suffer the the contrary to be done The 2. of Henry the 4. Chap. 23. fol. 253. The fees of the Marshall of the Marshallsey of the Kings house ITem whereas the Marshall of the Marshallsey of the Court of our Lord the Kings house in the time of King Edward grand father of our Lord the King that now is and before was wont to take the fees which doe hereafter follow that is to say of every person that commeth by Capias to the said Court foure pence and if he be let to mainprise till his day two pence more and of every person which is impleaded of trespasse and findeth two mainpernors to keep his day till the end of the plea to take for that cause two pence of the defendant and of every person committed to prison by judgement of the Steward in whatsoever manner the same be foure pence of every person delivered of felony and of every felon let to mainprise by the Court foure pence which fees were wont to be taken and paid in full Court as the King hath well perceived by the complaint of the said Commons thereof made in the said Parliament The same our Lord the King to avoid all such wrongs and oppressions to be done to his people against the good customes and usages made and used in the time of his progenitors by the advice assent of the Lords Spiritual Temporal at the supplication of the said Commons hath ordained and established that if the said Marshall or his Officers under him take other fees then above are declared that the same Marshall and every of his Officers shall loose their Offices and pay treble damages to the party greeved and that the party greeved have his suit before the Stewards of the said Court for the time being Also it is ordained and established that no Servitor of Bills that beareth a staffe of the same Court shall take for every mile from the same Court to the same place where he shall do his service any more then one penny and so for 12. miles twelve pence and for to serve a Venire facias 12. homines c. or a Distringes out of the same Court the double And if any of the said Servitors of Bills doe the contrary he shall be punished by imprisonment and make a fine to the King after the discretion of the Stewards of the same Court and also be fore judged the Court and the same Steward shall have power to make proclamation at his comming to the said Court in every Country from time to time of all the articles aforesaid and thereof to execute punishment as afore is said 9. R. 2 5. The 4 of Henry the 4 Chap. 23. fol. 259. Iudgements given shall continue untill they shall be reversed by attaint or error ITem where as well in plea reall as in plea personall after judgement given in the Courts of our Lord the King the parties be made to come upon grievous pain sometime before the King himself sometime before the Kings Councell and sometimes to the Parliament to answr therof of new to the great impoverishing of the parties aforesaid and in the subversion of the Common law of the land it is ordained and established that after judgement given in the Court of our Lord the King 19. H. 6 fo 39. Dyer fo 315. 321. 376. the parties and their heires shall be thereof in peace untill the judgement be undone by attaint or by error if there be errors as hath been used by the Lawes in the time of the Kings progenitors The 5. of Henry the 4. Chap. 5. fol. 261. It shall be felony to cut out the tongue or pull out the eyes of the Kings liege people ITem because that many offenders doe daily heat wound imprison and maime divers of the Kings liege people and after purposely out their tongues or put out their eyes It is ordained and stablished that in such case the offenders that so cut●eth tongues or puts out the eyes of any the Kings liege people and that duly proved and found that such deed was done of malice prepensed they shall incur the pain of felony The 5. of Henry the 4. Chap. 10. fol. 263. Iustices of peace shall imprison none but in the Common Gaole ITem because that divers Constables of Castles within the Realme of England be assigned to be Iustices of Peace by Commission of our Lord the King and by colour of the said commissions they take people to whom they beare evill will and imprison them within the said Castles till they have made sine and ransome with the said Constables for their deliverance It is ordained and established Cook li. 9. fo 119. that none be imprisoned by any Iustice of the Peace but only in the common Gaole Saving to Lords and other which have Gaoles their franchise in this case Now comes in some Statutes of palpable Bondage about chusing Parliament men c. The first I shall give you is the 1. of Henry the 5. Chap. 1. fol. 274 What sort of people shall be chosen and who shall be the choosers of the Knights and Burgesses of the Parliament FIrst that th● Statuts of the election of the Knights of the Shirs to come to the Parliament be holden and kept in all points adioyning to the same that the Knights of the Shires which from henceforth shall be chosen in every Shire be not chosen unlesse they be
resident within the Shire where they shall be chosen the day of the date of the Writ of the summons of the Parliament And that the Kni●hts and Esquires and other which shall be choosers of those Knights of the Shires be also resident within the same Shires in manner and forme as is aforesaid Rast pl. fo 446. And moreover it is ordained and established that the Citizens and Burgesses of the Cities and Boroughs be chosen men Citizens and Burgesses resiant dwelling and free of the same cities and boroughs and no other in any wise 7. H. 4. 15. 8 H. 6. 7. 10. H. 6. 2. 23. H. ● 15. The 2. of Henry 5. Chap. 1. and 3. fol. 282. What sort of men shall be Iustices of the Peace FIrst that the Iustices of the peace from henceforth to be made within the Counties of England shall be made of most sufficient persons dwelling in the same counties by the advice of the Chancellor and of the Kings Councell without taking other persons dwelling in forain Counties to execute such office except the Lords and Iustices of Assises now named and to be named by the King and his Councell 1. Ed. 3. 16. 34. Ed. 3. 1. And except all the Kings chiefe Stewarde of the Land and Seigniories of the Duchie of Lancaster in the North parts and in the South for the time being 13. R. 2. 7. Chap. 3. Of what estate those Iurors must be which are to passe touching the life of man plea reall to forty markes damages ITem the King considering the great mischiefes and disherisons which daily happen through all the realm of England as well in case of death of a man as in case of freehold and in other cases by them which passe in enquests in the said cases which be common Iurors and other that have for little to live upon but by such inquests and which have nothing to loose because of their false oaths whereby they offend their conscience the more largely and willing thereof to have correction and amendment 2. H. 7. fo 13. 10. H. 7. fo 14. 9. H. 5. fo 5. 10. H. 6. fo 7. 8. 18. 7. H. 6. fo 44. Dyer fo 144 Cook Inst part 1. 272. a. Rast pl. fo 117. hath ordained and established by assent of the Lords and Commons aforesaid that no person shall be admitted to passe in any enquest upon tryall of the death of a man nor in any enquest betwixt party and party in plea reall nor in plea personall whereof the debt or the damage declared amount to forty marks if the same person have not Land or Tenements of the yearly value of forty shillings above all charges of the same so that it be challenged by the party that any such person so impanelled in the same cases hath not Lands or tenements of the yearly value of forty shillings above the charges as afore is said 28. Ed. 3. 13. 8. H. 6 29. The 8. of Henry the 6. Chap. 7. fol. 304. What sort of men shall be choosers and who shall be chosen Knights of the Parliament ITem Whereas the election of Knights of Shires to come to the Parliament of our Lord the King in many Counties of the Realm of England have now of late been made by very great outragious and excessive number of people dwelling within the same Counties of the Realm of England of the which most part was of people of small substance * * This is a Statute of bondage and lesse of liberty 1. H. 5. 1. 10. H. 6. 2. 6. H. 6. 4. 11. H. 4. 1. 23. H. 6. 15. Rast pla fo 440. and of no value whereof every of them pretended a voice equivalent as to such elections to be made with the most worthy Knights and Esquires dwelling within the same Counties whereby manslaughters riots batteries and divisions among the Gentlemen and other peoples of the same Counties shall very likely rise and be unlesse convenient and due remedy be provided in this behalf Our Lord the King considering the premisses hath provided ordained and established by authority of this present Parliament that the Knights of the Shires to be chosen within the same Realm of England to come to the Parliaments of our Lord the King hereafter to be holden shall be chosen in every County of the Realm of England by people dwelling and resident in the same Counties whereof every one of them shall have land or tenement to the value of forty shillings by the year at least above all charges and that they which shall be chosen shall be dwelling and resident within the same Counties And such as have the greatest number of them that may EXPEND FORTY SHILLINGS by yeare and above as afore is said shall be returned by the Sheriffes of every County Knights for Parliament by Indentures sealed betwixt the said Sheriffes and the said choosers so to be made And every Sheriffe of the Realm of England shall have power by the said authority to examine upon the Evangelists every such choos●● how much he may expend by the yeare And if any Sheriffes re●urn Knights to come to the Parliament contrary to the said Ordinance the Iustices of Assises in their Seasions of Assises shall have power by the authority aforesaid thereof to enquire And if by enquest the same he found before the Iustices and the Sheriffes thereof be duly attainted that then the said Sheriffe shall incura●● pain of an hundred pound to be paid to our Lord the King and also that he have imprisonment by a yeare without being le● to mainprise or baile And that the Knights for the Parliament returned contrary to the said Ordinance shall loose their wages 10. H. 6. 2. Provided alwayes that he which cannot expend forty shillings by yeare as afore is said shall in no wise be chooser of the Knights for the Parliament And that in every writ that shall hereafter goe forth to the Sheriffes to choose Knights for the Parliament mention be made of the said Ordinances The 18. of Henry the 6. Chap. 11. fol. 332. Of what yearely value in lands a Iustice of Peace ought to be ITem whereas by Statutes made in the time of the Kings noble Progenitors it was ordained that in every County of England Justices should be assigned of the most worthy of the same counties to keep the peace and to doe other things as in the same Statutes fully is contained 1. Ed. 3. 16 18. Ed. 3. 2. 13. R. 2. 7. 17. R. 2. 10. which Statutes notwithstanding now of late in many Counties of England the greatest number have been deputed and assigned which before this were not wont to be whereof some be of small behaviour by whom the people will not be governed nor ruled and some for their necessity doe great extortion and oppression upon the people whereof great inconveniences be likely to rise daily if the King therefore doe not provide remedy The King willing against such inconveniences to provide
remedy hath ordained and established by authority aforesaid That no Iustice of peace within the Realm of England in any County shall be assigned or deputed if he have not lands or tenements to the value of 20. l. by yeare and if any be ordained hereafter to be Iustices of peace in any County which hath not lands or tenements to the value aforesaid that he thereof shall give knowledge to the Chancellor of England for the time being which shall put another sufficient in his place and and if he give not the said knowledge as before within a moneth after that he hath notice of such Commissions or if he sit or make any warrant or precept by force of such Commissions he shall incur the penalty of 20. l. and neverthelesse be put out of the Commission as before and the King shall have the one half of the said penalty and he that will sue for the King the other half and he that will sue for the King and for himself shall have an action to demand the same penalty by writ of debt at the common Law Provided alwayes that this Ordinance shall not extend to Cities Towns or Boroughs which be Counties incorporate of themselves nor to cities towns or boroughs which have Iustices of peace of persons dwelling in the same by commission or warrant of the King or of his progenitors Provided also that if there be not sufficient persons having lands tenements to the value aforesaid learned in the Law and of good governance within any such County that the Chancellor of England for the time being shall have power to put other discreet persons learned in the Law in such Commissions though they have not lands or tenements to the value aforesaid by his discretion 27. H. 8. chap. 24. The 20. of Henry the 6. Chap. 8. fol. 336. In what case the Kings Purveyors that would take Cattell may be resisted ITem it is ordained by the authority aforesaid that the Statutes before this time made of Purveyors and buyers shall be holden and kept and put in due execution And in case that any purveyor buyer or taker will take and make purveyance or buy any thing to the value of forty shillings or under of any person and make not ready payment in hand that then it shall be lawfull to every of the Kings liege people to retain their goods and cattels and to resist such purveyors and buyers 28. Ed. 3. 12. and in no wise suffer them to make any such p●rveyances buyings or takings And to keep the peace better every constable tithingman or chief pledge of every town or hamlet where such takings or purveyances shall be made shall be helping or assistant to the owner or seller of such things to be taken against the forme of this Ordinance to make resistance in the manner aforesaid in case that such constables tithingmen or chiefe pledges be required so to doe upon pain to yeeld to the party so grieved the value of the things so raken with his double damages and that none of the Kings liege people be put to losse or damage by the King or any officer for such resistance And that none of the K●ngs officers shall cause to be arrested vexed or impleaded in the Court of the Marshalsey or else where any of the Kings liege people for such detaining or not suffering to be done upon paine to loose 20. l. the one moity thereof to the King and the other moity to him which will in such case sue and that the Iustices of peace in evety County shall have power by authority of this Ordinance to inquire hear and determine as well at the suit of the King as of him that will sue of any thing done against this Ordinance and thereof to make due punishment and execution and to award damages to the party plaintife when any defendant is thereof duly convict and that upon every action to be taken upon this Ordinance every party defendant shall be put to answer unto it without the aid of the King and in such actions to be taken processe shall be made as in a writ of trespasse done against the peace and that in every Commission of Purveyors buyers or takers to be made this Ordinance shall be contained and expressed And moreover that this Ordinance among other Statutes of purveyors buyers or takers before this time made shall he sent to the Sherifes of every County of England to proclaim and deliver the said Statutes and Ordinances in the manner and forme contained in the Statute of purveyors and buyers 2. H. 6. 2. 36. E. 3. 6. made the first year of the reign of our said Lord the King upon the paine contained in the Statute And moreover the King will and commandeth that the Statute made the 36. year of King Edward late King of England the third after the conquest touching the purveyors of other persons then of the King shall be put in due execution 2. H. 4. 14. The 23. of Henry the 6. Chap. 10. fol. 340. No Sheriffe shall let to Farme his County or any Bailiwick The Sheriffes and Bailiffes fees and duties in severall cases ITem the King considering the great perjury extortion and oppression which be and have been in this realme by his Sherifes under Sherifees and their Clerkes Coroners Stewards of franchises Bailifes and keepers of prisons and other officers in divers counties of this realm hath ordained by authority aforesaid in eschewing of all such extortions perjury 20. H. 7. fo 12. 21. H. 7. fo 36. 4. H. 4. 5. Kel fo 108. ●1 H 7. fo 16. Rast pla fo 318. Coke pla 365. 3. E. 1. 26. Dyer fo 119. and oppress●ion that no Sherife shall let to farme in any manner his county nor any of his Bailiwicks Hundreds nor wapentakes nor that the said Sherifes under Sheifes baili●ffes of Franchises nor any other Bailiffe shall return upon any writ or precept to them directed to be returned any inquests in any panell thereupon to be made any Bailiffes officers or servants to any of the officers aforesaid in any panell by them so to be made nor that any of the said Officers and Ministers by occasion or under colour of their office shall take any other thing by them nor by any other person to their use profit or avail of any person by them or any of them to be arrested or attached nor of any other of them for the omitting of any arrest or attachment to be made by their body or of any person by them or any of them by force or colour of their office arrested or attached for fine fee suit of prison mainprise letting to baile or shewing any ease or favour to any such person so arrested or to be arrested for their reward or profit but such as follow that is to say For the Sheriffe twenty pence the Bailiffe that maketh the arrest or attachment foure pence and the Gaoler if the prisoner be committed to
the same Court or by any of the Iudges Officers or Ministers thereof be from the first day of August in the yeare of our Lord God 1641. clearly and absolutely dissolved taken away and determined and that from the said first day of August neither the Lord Chancellour or Keeper of the great Seale of England the Lord Treasurer of England the Keeper of the Kings Privie Seale or President of the Councell nor any Bishop Temporall Lord Privie Councellor or Iudge or Iustice whatsoever shall have any power or authority to heare examin or determin any matter or thing whatsoever in the said Court commonly called the Star-Chamber or to make pronounce or deliver any Iudgment Sentence Order or Decree or to doe any Iudiciall or Ministeriall Act in the said Court And that all and every Act and Acts of Parliament and all and every Article clause and sentence in them and every of them by which any Jurisdiction power or authority is given limited or appointed unto the said Court commonly called the Star-Chamber or unto all● or any the Iudges Officers or Ministers thereof or for any proceedings to be had or made in the said Court or for any matter or thing to be drawn into question examined or determined there shall for so much as concerneth the said Court of Star-Chamber and the power and authority thereby given unto it be from the said first day of August repealed and absolutely revoked and made void And be it likewise enacted That the like jurisdiction now used and exercised in the Court before the President and Councell in the Marches of Wales and also in the Court before the President and Councell established in the Northern parts And also in the Court commonly called the Court of the Duchy of Lancaster held before the Chancellor and Councell of that Court And also in the Court of Exchequer of the County Palatine of Chester held before the Chamberlain and Councell of that Court The like iurisdiction being exercised there shall from the said first day of August 1641 be also repealed and absolutely revoked and made void any Law prescription custome or usage Or the said Statute made in the third yeare of King Henry the seventh Or the Statute made the one and twentieth of Henry the eighth Or any Act or Acts of Parliament heretofore had or made to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding And that from henceforth no Court Councell or place of Iudicature shall be erected ordained constituted or appointed within this Realm of England or Dominion of Wales which shall have use or exercise the same or the like Iurisdiction as is or hath been used practised or exercised in the said Court of Star-Chamber Be it likewise declared and enacted by authority of this present Parliament That neither his Majestie nor his Privie Councell have or ought to have any Iurisdiction power or authority by English Bill Petition Articles Libell or any other Arbitrary way whatsoever to examine or draw into question determine or dispose of the Lands Tenements Hereditaments Goods or Chattels of any the Subiects of this Kingdome But that the same ought to be tryed and determined in the ordinary Courts of iustice and by the ordinary course of the law And be it further provided and enacted That if any Lord Chancellor or Keeper of the great Seale of England Lord Treasurer Keeper of the Kings privie Seale President of the Councell Bishop Temporall Lord Privie Councellor Iudge or Iustice whatsoever shall offend or doe any thing contrary to the purp●rt true intent and meaning of this Law Then he or they shall for such offence forfeit the summe of five hundred pounds of lawfull money of England unto any party grieved his Executors or Administrators who shall really prosecute for the same and first obtain judgement thereupon to be recorded in any Court of Record at Westminster by action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information wherein no Essoine Protection Wager of Law Aid Prayer Priviledge Injunction or Order of restraint shall be in any wise prayed granted or allowed nor any more then one Imparlance And if any person against whom any such Iudgement or Recovery shall he had as aforesaid shall after such Iudgement or Recovery offend again in the same then he or they for such offence shall forfeit the summe of one thousand pounds of lawfull money of England unto any partie grieved his Executors or Administrators who shall really prosecute for the same and first obtaine Iudgement thereupon to be Recorded in any Court of Record at Westminster by action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in which no Essoine Protection Wager of Law Aid Prayer Priviledge Injunction or Order of Restraint shall be in any wise prayed granted or allowed nor any more then one Imparlance And if any person against whom any such second Iudgement or Recovery shall be had as aforesaid shall after such Iudgement or Recovery offend againe in the same kind and shall bee thereof duly convicted by Indictment Information or any other lawfull way or meanes that such persons so convicted shall be from thenceforth disabled and become by vertue of this Act incapable Ipso facto to beare his and their said Office and Offices respectively and shall be likewise disabled to make any Gift Grant Conveyance or other disposition of any his Lands Tenements Hereditaments Goods or Chattels or to make any benefit of any Gift Conveyance or Legacy to his own use And every person so offending shall likewise forfeit and loose unto the party grieved by any thing done contrary to the true intent and meaning of this Law his trebble dammages which he shall sustain and be put unto by meanes or occasion of any such Act or thing done the same to be recovered in any of His Majesties Courts of Record at Westminster by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information wherein no Essoine Protection Wager of Law Aid Prayer Priviledge Injunction or Order of Restraint shall be in any wise Prayed Granted or Allowed nor any more then one Imparlance And be it also provided and enacted That if any person shall hereafter be committed restrained of his liberty or suffer imprisonment by the Order or Decree of any such Court of Star-Chamber or oth●r Court aforesaid now or at any time hereafter having or pretending to have the same or li●e jurisdiction Power or Authority to commit or imprison as aforesaid Or by the Command or Warrant of the Kings Maiestie his Heires or Successours in their own person or by the Command or Warrant of the Councell-board or any of the Lords or other of his Majesties Privie Councell that in every such case every person so committed restrained of his libertie or suffering imprisonment upon demand or motion made by his Councell or other employed by him for that purpose unto the Iudges of the Court of Kings Bench or Common Pleas in open Court shall without delay upon any pretence whatsoever for the ordinary Fees usually paid for the same
protection of the Law and ought not to be condemned unheard neither agreeth it with the honour and justice of this Court to deny Councell to plead and open their Clyents cases as was done in your petitioners case which your petitioner hopes you will rectifie and alow his Councel to be reheard and to set forth the sufficiencie in Law of his Plea and Answer whereby your petitioner may not have cause or occasion to Appeale from this Court or complaine of you to the Parliament for obstructing of Justice which if your petitioner receive not timely redresse and reliefe in the Promises he must be constrained to do That without ever any order or further processe serving the said Mr. Hoyle for want of further answer hath prosecuted severall processes of contempts against your petitioner and threatned to lay your petitioner in Goale upon a Commssion of Rebellion for the same and hath served your petitioner with a Subpena for forty shillings cost upon your petitioners first plea and answer which Mr. Hoyle will without doubt do if your honour give not present order for stay of further proceedings upon the said last Subpena and processe of contempt already taken out against your petitioner Your Petitioner therefore humbly prayeth that you wil be pleased for the love and honour of justice and removeing the cause of your petitioners appeale from this Court and complaining of you that you will give direction for stay of the said cost and proceedings upon the said processes of contempts against your petitioner and that you wil declare and order that your Petitioners councel may be reheard without check or offence and allowed freely to shew out to the Court the sufficiencie in Law of your petitioners plea and answer to the end there may not be a failer of justice through you and your petitioner left without relief or remedy by being denied to be heard upon the mirit and equity of his cause according to Law which in the worst of times by the worst Iudges was never done to any either in the case of ship-money or any other cause as Burton Prinn and Bastwicks cases all which your petitioner refereth to your honourable consideration And prayeth as before he hath prayed c. William Browne To the right honourable the Commmons assembled in Parliament the humble petition of Will. Brown of Stepney alias Steben heath in the County of Midlesex SHEWETH THat Josua Hoyle Vicar of the parish of Stepney aforesaid in Michaelmas terme last exhibited his bill in the Court of exchequer against your petitioner and divers other parishioners there for substraction of tythes to which bill your petitioner by his learned councell pleaded and answered the same terme but the said Mr. Hoyle obtained an order from that Court for your petitioner to shew cause why his plea and answer should not be taken of the file as scandalous That your petitioner according to the order of that Court the 18. May last by his counsell Mr. NORBERY and Mr. KING offered to the Court to maintaine his said plea and answer to be good and sufficient in Law but Baron Atkins one of the Barons of that Court would not suffer your petitioners councel to open your petitioners cause in a threatning manner telling them that the Councellour who subscribed your petitioners Plea and answer should never be allowed in that Court and if they meaning Mr. NORBERY and Mr. KING or any other Councellour did appeare in any such cause they should never againe plead in that Court and so your petitioners said councell were overawed and silenced that without further heareing or debate the Court adjudged your petitioners plea and answer scandalous and futher ordered Mr. Fage who signed the same his hand should never be allowed to any pleadings in that Court and your petitioner to pay forty shillings cost to Mr. Hoyle as by the order in the Court in that cause will appeare which doing of the said Baron Atkins and the said last recited Order are contrary to the rule of justice and the great Charter of Liberty wherein it is said Iustice and Right shall de denied to no man That the said Mr. Hoyle since without ever serving the said Order upon your Petitioner having procured severall processes of contempts against him for want of further answer and served him with a Subpena for the 40. s. cost your petitioner thereupon having petitioned the Barons of that Court for justice and to have libertie to shew forth to the Court the sufficiencie in law of the said plea and answer which Mr. NORBERY and Mr. KING had before undertaken to your petitioner to doe and offered to the Court if they might have been heard as they were not to have maintained for good and sufficient in law which petition hereunto annexed Baron Trevers having read and acquainted his Brother Atkins with the contents thereof Baron Atkins replyed and said let Brown complain if he will I have done him justice his businesse shall be no more heard And thus your Petitioner being deprived and destitute of all meanes of obtaining right and justice in that Court is constrained for his own safetie to forsake his own house and familie and live as an exile and fugitive Mr. Hoyle threatning to cast him into prison upon the said Barons Order which doubtlesse he will doe to your petitioners undoing unlesse your petitioner be protected by the justice of this honourable house That your petitioner hath largely and many wayes manifested his good affection to the Parliament in his free and voluntary gifts and contributions over and above his abilitie and by his ready payment of all taxes and assessements having long voluntarily served the Parliament in this war against the enemy to the often endangering his life and the much impoverishing his estate having lost 16. Horses in the Parliaments service for which he hath not had one penny satisfaction besides almost 200. l. due to him in Arrears for his service as a Wagoner That as your Petitioner is informed Mr. Hoyle by law cannot sue your petitioner in any Court for substraction of Tyths then in the Court Christian so called * * 2. 3. Ed. 6. 13. Coo. li. 2. fol. 43. the same being now taken away by authority of Parliament * * See the act of the 17. of C.R. for abolution of Ecclesiastical jurisdiction And so Mr. Hoyle if in case the same were due as they are not he hath no meanes or the recovery of the same but by the Ordinance of this present Parliament which your petitioner did never oppose whensoever the said Mr. Hoyle did take your petitioners goods upon the same as sometimes he did amounting to a considerable value Your Petitioner therefore humbly prayeth this honourable House will be pleased to take your Petitioner under protection to stay the contempts and illegall proceedings of Mr. Hoyle in that Court against your petitioner and to call the said Barons of the Exchequer and in particular Baron
alike to his law is by way of advice to all my Countrymen earnestly to prosecute the obtaining the things desired in the 3 first heads of our great Petition especially for promoting of which I am lately as a trayter committed by the House of Commons that the powers of King Parliament and people may be destinctly and particularly declared and setled that we may be no longer in confusion by having the little ones ●o be subject to the punishment of the law the great ones to be subiect to none but their lusts ●he law of ther own wils therfore I do with confidence beleeve those expressions of my imprison●d Comrade Mr. Iohn Wildman in the 11. pag. of his late masculine English peace called truths try●mph or treachery anatomized where he saich that he beleeves the freedome of this Nation will ●ever be secured until the extent of the power and trust of the peoples representatives and the peoples ●eservations to themselves be clearly declared in reference to the Legislative power And for my particular after the grand and superlative Apostacie of so tall a Caeder as Lievt Gen. Cromwell See that notable discourse of him in ●urney Projects and also in a little book ●alled the Grand Design and the justi●●cation of Sir Iohn Maynard prisoner in ●e Tower called the Royall Quarrell pretended to be for the liberties and freedomes of the people of this nation I shall never hereafter in state affaires for his sake trust either my father brother or any other relations I have in the world but shall always to all I converse with incultate the remembrance of that deare experienced truth or maxime recorded in the margent of our forementioned large Petition which is That it hath been a maxime amongst the wisest Legislators that whosoever meanes to settle good lawes must proceed in them with a sinister opinion of all mankind and suppose that whosoever is nor wicked it is for want only of the opportunitie And that no state can wis●ly be confident of any publique Ministers continuing good longer then the ●ods is held over their heads Now as God hath made all men subject to his lawes alike so in the. Second place he hath been very sha●● positive and plain to his lawes see Gen. 2.17 and 9.5.6 Ex. 20. see also the 10.11.13.14 pages of my Epistle to Iudge Reeves edition the 2. where these particulars are largely and pithly discursed But Iuglers deceivers deluders and Tyrants● study how to make their Lawes ambiguous and doubtfull that so the people may continually be together by the eares in the true understanding of them that so the mysterious and jugling lawyers who are the principall makers of them may under pretence of opening them continually pick the peoples pockets with a kind of Hocus Pocus or Clenly conveiance and have made them so voluminous that it shal be almost impossi●le for an ordinary man ever to reade them over or if he doe reade them over yet it shall be impossible for an ordinary braine to carry all the contradictions of them one against an other in his head Thirdly God gave all his lawes and the proceedings therein to his people in their owne mother tongue and commanded them to teach them to their Children and Servants and that their Iudges that did execute them should sit openly in the Gates and judged it farre below and beneath that Iustice that is inherant in him to give his Lawes or any proceedings in them so unto his people that it was impossible for the most of them to know them read seriously so proofe hereof ●the forementioned pages of my Epistle to Iudg Reeves for writing of which al my present troubles are come upon me But juglers deceivers deluders and tyrants will have their lawes not in the peoples mother tongue but will have them put into Lattin or French that so the people that are governed by them may never come to understand them * But saith the aincient Lawyer Andrew Horne in his Mirror of justice chap. 5. Sect 1. de 3 page 225. it is an abuse of the common Law of England that the Lawes and customes of the Realme with their occasions are not put in writing whereby they may be known so as they might be knowne by all men that so their lives liberties and estates may be at the wills of those the ride and tyrannise over them as Mr. Daniel in his history well observes the people were in Will the conquerours time and if possible they g●t their pleadings to be it English as the people of this Kingdome did theirs with much strugling in Edward the third time as appeares by that remarkable statute of the 36. Ed. 3. chap. 15. printed in the following discourse page 12● yet they shall be fettered with this bondage that their ent eyes proces and procedings sha●l be in Lattin and that in such a hand that not one lattin scholler in twenty shall reade them and if any follow the command of God to teach the people the understanding of their Lawes O cry the knaves and tyrants like Bishop Gardiner in the book of Marters open this doore and we are all destroyed and therfore by any meanes suppresse all such schooles as Henry the third did those schooles that were in his dayes set up to teach the people the knowledge of Magna Charta as Sir Edward Cook well declares ●n the 3. page of his proeme to his 2. part instit●tes And therefore it is that those makke bate firebrand Lawyers in the House of Commons have bin so transendently active to burne and ●ruth in peeces all such honest and just petitions as have desired our lawes and proceepings therein may be put into a short plain and easie to be understood method in the English tongu yea an have made it their study to grinde to powder the promoters of all such iust honest petition as they and their accomplisses lately did in Mr. Iohn Wildmans case and mine and indeed to speak truly without feare they are the grand supporters of all corrupt interests in the Kingdome that make it their study to keepe the people in bondage and vassolage and therefore O ye Commons of Enland as one man cry out by petition speedily to the Parliament to throw them all out of the House as unsavery salt never to sit there any more unlesse as assistance who I will maintaine it with my life have been and still are for the preservation of their owne corrupt interest no small instruments in the by past and present subversion of our liberties and occasion of the blood shed and late warre in the Kingdome and the main hinderers of the granting setling and accomplishing of those many just and righteous things that hath so often bin petitioned for to the Parliament though hitherto all in vaine O therefore cry and cry mightily against them as the vermine of the House and Common-wealth But because I have longed and still doe to have
unto the power of the House in committing me J stooped but at their doore desired to be committed by a legall Warrant which by their own Law published in Sir Edward Cooks institutes Votes and Ordinances all warrants of commitments whatsoever ought expresly to containe the certaine particular case wherefore a man is committed and ought to conclude and him safely to keep till he be delivered by due course of Law and for the full proof of this read the 68 69. pages of the following discourse and the 11 12 13 14 15 pages of Mr. Iohn Wildmans late defence called Truths Triumph or Treachery anotamised But if the Warrant be in generall words and be also to keep him during their pleasure and made by the Parliament the prisoner is murthered and destroyed by such an imprisonment For he must either stoop to their wills and so betray his liberties and sin against his own soule or else he must remaine in prison till he starve and rot before any Iudge in Westminster Hall will grant him a Habeas Corpus to bring him up to the barre of Justice either to receive his punishment according to Law or else his liberties as uniustly imprisoned and this made me the other day at the House of Commons to contest for a legal warrant before I would go to Prison but that mercinary Turkish Ianisary Col. Baxster laid violent hands upon me telling me expresly he was not either to reason or dispute the Houses commands but to obey them caused his Soldiers to draw their swords upon me in halling of me away by force violence he stabed Magna Charta the Petition of Right c. to the very heart and soule did asmuch as in him lyes by that act destroy all our Lawes and liberties for if authority must be backt with the sword to put in execution all their unjust commands then farwell all law and liberty forever and accursed be the day that ever the Parliament raised an Army to fight for the preservation of our lawes and liberties if now they convert their power and turne their swords and guns against us by force of armes to destroy our lawes and liberties John Lilburne 6. Feb. 1647. In the third yeare of the reign of Charles King of England Scotland France and Ireland AT the Parliament begun at Westminster the seventeenth day of March An. Dom. 1627. in the third yeare of the reigne of our most gracious Soveraigne Lord Charles by the grace of God of England Scotland France and Ireland King Defender of the Faith c. And there continued untill the 26. day of Iune following and then prorogued unto the 20. day of October now next ensuing To the high pleasure of Almighty God and to the weale publique of this Realme were enacted as followeth The petition Exhibited to his Majestie by the Lords Spirituall and Temporall and Commons in this present Parliament assembled concerning divers Rights and Liberties of the Subiect with the Kings Majesties royall answer thereunto in full Parliament To the Kings most Excellent Majestie HVmbly sheweth unto our Soveraigne Lord the King the Lords Spirituall and Temporall and Commons in Parliament assembled That whereas it is declared a●d inacted by a Statute made in the time of the reigne of King Ed. the first commonly called Statutum de Tallagio non concedento a a 34. Ed. 1. chap. 1. That ●o tallage or aid shall be laid or levied by the King or his Heires in this Realme without the good will and assent of the Arch B●shops Bishops Earles Barons Knights Burgesses and other the free men of the Commonalty of this Realme And by authority of Parliament holden in the five and twentieth yeare of the reigne of King Edward the third b b 25. Ed. 3 Rot. Par. it is declared and inacted That from thenceforth no person should be compelled to make any loanes to the King against his will because such loanes were against reason and the franchise of the Land And by other Lawes of this Realme it is provided that none should be charged by any charge or imposition called a Benevolence nor by such like charge c c 25. Ed. 1. 6. 1. Ed. 3. 6 11. R. 2. 9. 1. R. 3. 2. by which the Statutes before mentioned and other the good Lawes and Statutes of this Realme your Subjects have inherited this Freedome That they should not be compelled to contribute to any tax tallage aid or other like charge nor set by common consent in Parliament 1. R. 3. 2. Yet neverthelesse of late divers Commissions directed to sundry Commissioners in severall Counties with instructions have issued by meanes whereof your people have been in divers places assembled and required to lend certaine summes of money unto your Majestie and many of them upon their refusall so to do have had an oath administred unto them not warrantable by the Lawes or Statutes of this Realme * * Oaths Ex Officio unlawfull and have been constrained to become bound to make appearance and give attendance before your privie Councell and in other places and others of them have been therefore imprisoned confined and sundry otherwayes molested and disquieted And divers other charges have been laid and levied upon your people in severall Counties by Lord Lievtenants Deputy Lieutenants Commissioners for Musters Iustices of Peace and others by command or direction from your Maiesty or your privie Councell against the Lawes and free customes of the Realme * * All Magistracy in England is bounded by the law thereof e e 28. Ed. 3. 3. And where also by the Statute called THE GREAT CHARTER OF THE LIBERTIES OF ENGLAND d d 9 H. 3. 29. It is declared and enacted f f 25. Ed. 3. That no free man may be taken or imprisoned St. 37. Ed. 3. 18. St. 38. Ed. 3. 9. St. 42. Ed. 3. 3. St. 17. R. 2. 6. or be disseized of his Free hold or Liberties or his free Customs or he outlawed or exiled or in any manner distroyed but by the lawfull iudgement of his PEERS or by the Law of the Land And in the eight and twentieth yeare of the reigne of King Edward the third e it was declared and enacted by authority of Parliament That no man of what estate or condition that he be should be put out of his Land or Tenements nor taken nor imprisoned nor disherited nor put to death without being brought to answer by due processe of Law Neverthelesse against the tenour of the said Statutes and other the good Lawes and Statutes of your Realme to that end provided f divers of your Subiects have of late been imprisoned without any cause shewed * * Imprisonment without cause shewed is illegall See also Cooke 2. part institutes upon the 29. chap Magna Charta And when for their deliverance they were brought before your Iustices by your Majesties Writs of Habeas corpus there to undergoe and receive as the
Court should order and their Keepers commanded to certifie the causes of their detainer no cause was certified but that they were detained by your Maiesties speciall command signified by the Lords of your privie Councell and yet were returned back to severall prisons without being charged with any thing to which they might make answer according to law And whereas of late great companies of Soldiers and Marriners have been dispersed into divers Counties of the Realme and the inhabitants against their wills have been compelled to receive them into their houses and there to suffer them to sojourne against the Lawes and Customes of this Realme † † Compulsive billiting of Soldiers unlawfull and it is very observable that the King at the time of this complaint had warres with France and to the great grievance and vexation of the people And whereas also by authority of Parliament in the five and twentieth yeare of the reigne of King Edw. the third g g 25 Edw. 3. 9. it is declared and inacted that no man should be fore iudged of life or limbe against the form of the Great Charter and the Law of the land And by the said Great Charter and other the Lawes and Statutes of this your Realme no man ought to be ad●udged to death but by the Lawes established in this your Realme h h No man ought to be adiudged but by the established lawes 9. H. 3. 29. 5. Ed 3. 9. 25. Ed 3 4. 28. Ed. 3. 3. either by the Customs of the same Realme or by acts of Parliament And whereas no offender of what kind soever is exempted from the proceedings to be used and punishments to be inflicted by the Lawes and Statutes of this your Realme Neverthelesse of late divers Commissions under your Majestes great Seale have issued forth by which certaine persons have been assigned and appointed Commissioners with power and authority to proceed within the land according to the Iustice of Martiall Law against such Soldiers and Marriners or other dissolute persons joyning with them as should commit any murther robberie felony mutinie or other outrage or misdemeanor whatsoever and by such summary course and order as is agreeable to Martiall Law and as is used in Armies in time of warre to proceed to the tryall and condemnation of such offenders and them to cause to be executed and put to death according to the Law Martiall By pretext whereof some of your Maiesties Subjects have been by some of the said Commissioners put to death when and where if by the Lawes and Statutes of the Land they had deserved death by the some lawes and Statutes also they m●ght and by no other ought to have been iudged and executed † † Marshall law altogether unlawfull in England in times of peace especially and therefore that Soldier of Col. Robert Lilburnes Regiment that was lately shot at the Rendezvouz neere Ware was meerely murthered And also sundry grievous offendors by colou● thereof claiming an exemption have escaped the punishments due to them by the Lawes and Statutes of this your Realme by reason that divers of your officers and Ministers of Iustice have uniustly refused or forborne to proceed against such offendors according to the same Lawes and Statutes upon pretence that the said offendors were punishable only by Martiall law and by authority of such Commissions as aforesaid which Commissions and all other of like nature are wholly and directly contrary to the said Lawes and Statutes of this your Realme They doe therefore humbly pray your most excellent Maiestie that no man hereafter be compelled to make or yeeld any gift loane benevolence tax The Petition or such like charge without common consent by act of Parliament And that none be called to make answer or take such oath or to give attendance or be confined or other ways molested or disquieted concerning the same or for refusal thereof And that no Freeman in any such manner as is before mentioned be imprisoned or detained And that your Maiestie would be pleased to remove the said Soldiers and Marriners and that your people may not be so burthened in time to come And that the foresaid Commissions for proceeding by Martiall Law may be revoked and annulled And that hereafter no Commissions of like nature may issue forth to any person or persons whatsoever to be executed as aforesaid lest by colour of them any of your Maiesties Subiects be distroyed or put to death contrary to the lawes and franchise of the land All which they most humbly pray of your most excellent Maiesty as their rights and liberties according to the Lawes and Statutes of this Realme And that your Maiestie would also vouchsafe to declare that the awards doings and proceedings to the prejudice of your people in any of the premisses shall not be drawn hereafter into consequence or example And that your Maiestie would be also graciously pleased for the future comfort and safety of your people to declare your royall will and pleasure That in the things aforesaid all your officers and Ministers shall serve you according to the Lawes and Statutes of this Realme † † All the administrators of the law are to execute their places according to the law and not otherwise as they tender the honour of your Maiestie and the prosperity of this Kingdome Which Petition being read the second of Iune 1628. The Kings answer was thus delivered unto it THe King willet● that right be done according to the Lawes and customes of the Realme And that the Statutes be put in execution that his Subiects may have no cause to complaine of any wrong or oppression contrary to their iust Rights and Liberties to the preservation whereof he holds himself in conscience as well obliged as of his Prerogative But this answer not giving satisfaction † And the reason was because in this his first answer he doth not grant that the things claimed in the Petition as they are laid down are the lawes rights and liberties of England and so had left it in the Iudges breasts to have given their Iudgements as well against as with the Petition but his second answer let right be done as is desired is full to the purpose the King was againe petitioned unto that he would give a full and satisfactory answer to their Petition in full Parliament Whereupon the King in person upon the seventh of Iune made this second Answer My Lords and Gentlemen THe answer I have already given you was made with so good deliberation and approved by the iudgements of so many wise men that I could not have imagined but that it should have given you full satisfaction but to avoid all ambiguous interpretations and to shew you that there is no doublenesse in my meaning I am willing to please you in words as well as in substance Read your Petition and you shall have an answer that I am sure will please yo● And then causing the Petition to
may the better govern himself without offending of the Law and the better keepe save defend his heritage and possessions and in divers regions and countryes where the King the Nobles and other of the said Realm have been good governance and full right is done to every person because that their Lawes and Customes be learned and used in the tongue of the Country The King desiring the good governance and tranqullity of his people and to put out and eschew the harmes and mischiefs which do or may happen in this behalf by the occasions aforesaid hath ordained and established by the assent aforesaid that all Pleas which shall be pleaded in any Courts whatsoever before any of his Iustices whatsoever or in his other places or before any of his other ministers whatsoever or in the Courts and places of any other Lords whatsoever within the Realme shall be pleaded shewed defended answered debated and iudged in the English tongue and that they be entred and inrolled in Latine And that the Lawes and Customes of the same Realme Termes and Processes be holden and kept as they be and have been before this time and that by the ancient tearmes and formes of Pleaders 46 Ed. 3. fo 21. Dyer fo 2 99. Cooke li. 8. fo 163. li. 10 fo 132. Co. inst 304. no man be prejudiced so that the matter of the action be fully shewed in the Declaration and in the Writ And it is accorded by the assent aforesaid that this ordinance Statue of pleading begin and hold place at the fifteenth of S. Hillary next coming The 37. of Edward the 3. chap. 18. fol 190 The order of persuing a Suggestion made to the King ITem though it be contained in the great Charter that no man be taken or imprisoned nor put out of his freehold without processe of the Law never the lesse divers people make false suggestion to the King himselfe as wel for malice as otherwise whereof the King is often grieved St. 9. H 3.29 and divers of the Realm put in damage against the forme of the same Charter Wherefore it is ordained that all they which make such Suggestions shall be sent with the same suggestions before the Chancellor Treasurer and his grand Counsell and that they there finde surety to pursue their suggestions and incurre the same paine that the other should have had if he were attainted in case that his Suggestion he ' found evill St. 38. Ed. 3. 9. And that then processe of the Law be made aganst them without being taken and imprisoned against the form of the said Charter and other Statutes St. 25. Edward 3. 4. 42. Ed. 3. 3. The 42 of Edward the 3. Chap 1. ●093 A confirmation of the great Charter and the Charter of the Forest And a repeale of those Statutes that be made to the contrary AT the Parliament of our Lord the King holden at Westminster the first day of May the two and fortieth yeare of his reigne It is assented and accorded That the great Charter and the Charter of the Forest be holden and kept in all points and if any Statute be made to the contrary that shall be holden for none The 8. of Richard the 2. Chap. 2. fol. 217. No man of Law shall be a Iustice of Assise or Gaole delivery in his own Country ITem it is ordained and assented That no man of ●●w shall be from henceforth Iustice of Assises or of common deliverances Gaoles in his own Country And that the chiefe Iustice of the common Bench be assigned amongst other to take such Assises and deliver gaoles but as to the chiefe Iust●ce of the Kings Bench it shall be as for the most part of an hundred yeares last past was wont to be done St. 13. H. 4 2.33 H. 8.24 The 8. of Richard the 2 Chap. 4. fol. 218 The penaltie if a Iudge or Clerke make any false Entry rase a Roll or change a verdict ITem at the complaint of the said Communalty made to our Lord the King in the Parliament for that great disherison in times past was done of the people and may be done by the false entring of Pleas rasing of Rolles and changing of verdict It is accorded and assented that if any Iudge or Clerk● be of such default so that by the same default there ensueth disherison of any of the parties sufficiently convict before the King and his Councell by the manner and forme which to the same our Lord the King and his Councell shall seem reasonable and within two yeares after such default made if the partie grieved be of full age and if he be within age then within two years after that he shal come to his ful age he shal be punished by sine and ransome at the Kings wil and satisfie the party And as to the restitution of the inheritance desired by the said Commons the party grieved shall sue by Writ or otherwise according to the Law if hee see it expedient for him St. 8 H. 6.82 The 12 of Richard the 2. Chap. 10. fol. ●23 How many Iustices of peace there shall be in every County and how often they shall keep their Sessions ITem it is ordained and agreed that in every Commission of the Iustices of Peace there shall be assigned but six Iustices with the Iustices of Assises and that the said six Iustices shall keep their Sessions in every quarter of the yeare at the least and by three dayes if need be upon pain to be punished according to the discretion of the Kings Councell at the suit of every man that will complain And they shall inquire diligently amo●g other things touching their offices if the said Majors Bailifes Stewards Constables and Gaolers have duly done execution of the said Ordinances of servants and labourers beggars and vagabonds and shall punish them that be punishable by the said paine of an hundred sh●llings by the same paine and they that be found in default and which be not punishable by the same pain shall be punished by their discretion And every of the said Iustices shall take for their wages foure shillings † † 36. Ed. 3. 12. 14. R. 2. 11. See also the wages of the Clerke of the peace in the Statutes of 27 H. 8. 16. and 5. Eliz. 12. and 13. Eliz. 25. the day for the time of their foresaid Sessions and their Clerke two shillings of the fines and amerciaments rising and comming of the sa●e Sessions by the hands of the Sheriffes And that the Lords of franchises shall be contributary to the said wages after the rare of their part of sines and amerciaments aforesaid And that no Steward of any Lord be assigned in my of the said Commissions And that no association shall be made to the Iustices of the peace after their first Commission And it is not the intent of this Statute that the Iustices of the one Bench or of the other nor the Serjeants of the Law in case that they shall
them and the said agreement or opinion of the greater part of the said Iustices and Barons and the said Iudgement given against the said IOHN HAMPDEN were and are contrary to and against the Lawes and Statutes of this Realm the right of property the liberty of the Subiects former resolutions in Parliament and the PETITION OF RIGHT made in the third yeare of the Reign of his Maiestie that now is And it is further declared and enacted by the authority aforesaid That all and every the Particulars prayed or desired in the said PETITION OF RIGHT shall from henceforth be put in execution accordingly and shall be firmly and strictly holden and observed as in the same PETITION THEY ARE PRAYED AND EXPRESSED and that all and every the Records and Remembrances of all and every the Iudgement Inrolements Entry and proceedings as aforesaid and all and every the proceedings whatsoever upon or by pretixt or colour of any of the said Writs commonly called Shipwrits and all and every the Dependents on any of them shall be deemed and adiudged to all intents constructions and purposes to be utterly void and disannulled and that all and every the said Iudgement Inrolments Entryes Proceedings and Dependents of what kind soever shall be vacated and cancelled in such manner and forme as Records use to be that are vacated Anno XVII Caroli Regis An Act for the prevention of vexatious proceedings touching the Order of Knighthood VVHereas upon pretext of an antient custome or usage of this Realm of England That men of full age being not Knights and being seised of Lands or Rents of the yearly value of forty pounds or more especially if their seising had so continued by the space of three years next past might be compelled by the Kings writ to receive or take upon them the order or dignity of Knighthood or else to make Fine for the discharge or respite of the same Severall Writs about the beginning of his Majesties reign issued out of the Court of Chancery for Proclamations to be made in every County to that purpose and for certifying the names of all such persons and for summoning them personally to appeare in the Kings presence before a certain day to be there ready to receive the said Order or Dignity Vpon returne of which writs and transmitting the same with their Returns into the Court of Exchequer and upon other Writs for further inquiry of the names of such persons issuing out of the said Court of Exchequer Processe by Distringas was thence made against a very great number of persons many of which were altogether unfit in regard either of estate or quality to receive the said Order or Dignity and very many were put to grievous Fines and other vexations for the same although in truth it were not sufficiently known how or in what sort or where they or any of them should or might have addressed themselves for the receiving the said Order or Dignity and for saving themselves thereby from the said Fines Processe and vexations And whereas its most apparent that all and every such proceedings in regard of the matter therein pretended is altogether uselesse and unreasonable May it therefore please your most Excellent Maiestie that it be by authority of Parliament declared and enacted And be it declared and enacted by the Kings most excellent Maiestie and the Lords and Commons in this Parliament assembled and by the authority of the same That from henceforth no person or persons of what condition quality estate or degree so ever shall at any time be distrained or otherwise compelled by any writ or processe of the Court of Chancery or Court of Exchequer or otherwise by any meanes whatsoever to receive or take upon him or them respectively the Order or Dignity of KNIGHTHOOD nor shall suffer or undergoe any fine trouble or molestation whatsoever by reason or colour of his or their having not received or not taken upon him or them the said order or dignity And that all and every Writ or Processe whatsoever and all and every proceeding which shall hereafter be had or made contrary to the intent of this Act shall be deemed and adiudged to be utterly void and that all and every Processe proceeding and Charge now depending by reason or colour of the said pretended custome or writs aforesaid or of any the dependants thereof shall from henceforth cease and stand be and remain discharged and utterly void Any former Law or Custome or any pretence of any former Law or Custome or any other matter whatsoever to the Contrary in any wise notwithstanding I shall conclude this collection at present with the Bill of Attainder past against Thomas Earl of Strafford this present Parliament as I find it printed in the 303. pag. of a book printed for Will. Cook at Furnifalls Inne gate in Holbourne 1641. called Speeches and Passages of this Parliament from the 3. Novemb. 1640. to this instant Inne 1641. which thus followeth The Bill of Atainder that passed against Thomas Earle of STRAFFORD WHereas the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons in this present Parliament assembled have in the name of themselves and of all the Commons of England impeached Thomas Earle of Strafford of high Treason for endeavouring to subvert the Antient and Fundamentall Lawes and Government of his Maiesties Realms of England and Ireland and to introduce an Arbitrary and Tyrannicall Government against Law in the said Kingdoms and for exercising a tyrannous and exhorbitant power over and against the Lawes of the said Kingdomes over the Liberties Estates and Lives of his Maiesties Subiects and likewise for having by his own authority commanded the laying and asseising of Soldiers upon his Subiects in Ireland against their consents to compell them to obey his unlawfull commands and orders made upon paper Petitions in causes between party and party which accordingly was executed upon divers of his Maiesties Subiects in a warlike manner within the said Realm of Ireland and in so doing did LEVIE WARRE against the Kings Maiestie and his liege people in that Kingdome And also for that he upon the unhappie Dissolution of the last Parliament did slander the House of Commons to his Maiestie and did councell and advise his Maiestie that he was loose and absolved from the rules of Government and that he had an Army in Ireland by which he might reduce this Kingdome for which he deserves to undergoe the pains and forfeitures of high Treason And the said Earl hath been also an Incendiary of the wars between the two Kingdoms of England and Scotland all which offences have been sufficiently proved against the said Earle upon his impeachment Be it therefore enacted by the Kings most Excellent Maiesty and by the Lords and Commons in this present Parliament and by authority of the same that the said Earl of Strafford for the hainous crimes and offences aforesaid stand and be adiudged and attainted of high Treason and shall suffer such pain of
Atkins before you to answer this Petition to the end according to your many Declarations Promises and Protestations iustice may not be obstructed or your Petitioner denyed the benefit of the law or priviledge of a free borne Denizon And the said Barons receive such condigne punishment for their uniust dealing and proceedings against your Petitioner as shall seeme meet and agreeable to the wisedome and iustice of this honourable House The like not any of the Iudges in the worst of times durst ever doe that ever your Petitioner heard of And your Petitioner if he may be protected and allowed by this honourable House to prosecute this Petition he will give securitie to make good the contents thereof And as in duty bounden your Petitioner shall ever pray c. Will. Brown Take notice and marke it well that though tyths are by law to be sued for in Ecclesiasticall Courts only yet trebble damages for none payment of tyths are to be sued for by the same Statute of the 2. and 3. Ed. 6 13. in Civill Courts at the Common Law and therefore the best plea to a bill of trebble damages is that you owe the Parson c no tyths at all and put him to prove the first Here you see what gallant Iustice is to be found amongst the Iudges at Westminster Hall that the pleaders of honest causes cannot be suffered to presse the law freely for their Clyents but must be threatned and commanded to hold their peaces before they have pressed fully either law or reason for those that hire them to be their mouths to doe it for them Is this to performe their oath which you may read before pag. 10. In which they sweare to doe equall law and execution of right to all kinds of men rich and poore without having regard to any person or persons whatsoever And that they shall deny to no man common right by the Kings letters nor none other mans nor for no other cause and in case any letters or commands shall come to them contrary to the law that they shall doe nothing by such letters or commands but proceed to execute the law notwithstanding Or is not this their dealing with Mr. Brown and his Councell a cleare demonstration of their breaking their Oaths and absolutely forswearing themselves And therefore seeing neither Mr. Brown not no man else that complains to the parliament against the injustice of the Iudges can get the least justice against them is not this and other of their visible breaking of their Oaths a true and legall cause to indict them for perjury upon which if conviction follow they are ipso facto disabled for ever to sit Iudges any more or to be witnesses in any causes whatsoever betwixt party and party For this is to be taken notice of that if a Iury bring in a false verdict against the expresse evidence given in unto them that thereupon by law they are to have their houses rased down to the ground and never to be built againe their trees puld up by the roots their ground to lye follow and wast without tillage or use their names and their childrens to be infamous reproachfull and contemptable c. And therefore without doubt the Iudges punishment for palpable iniustice must needs be much more then theirs And an excellent piece of justice and worth the highest commendation it was in King Alfred to hang 44 Iustices in one year as murtherers for their false judgments * See Andrew Horns mirror of iustice in English chap. 5. Sect. 1. pag. 239 240 241. 242. c printed for Ma● Walbank at Grays Inne gate 1646 where all their crimes are set down which book is most extraordinarily well worth your reading But seeing the Parsons Vicars curates cannot recover their tyths by law they have unjustly illegally got up a custom to come or send their illegall Agents into mens grounds or houses to take away their goods and chattells and men are so foolish as to let them although by law if any man under any pretenc of authority whatever shall dare to endeavour by force to come into a free-mans house unlesse it be under pretence of Treason or Felony committed or suspition of Treason or Felony or to serve an execution after Iudgement for the King the free man may stand upon his guard as against so many Theeves and Robbers and if he shoot or kill them every one I know nothing to the contrary but they have their mends in their own hands and they nor none for them can iustly requ●e any of him or them that so in his or their own legall defence destroyes them And if they take away your goods as usually they doe you have your remedy at law by way of Replevie to get * Which writs of Replevy you may have out of the Cusitore office belonging to every County but get at one and the same time a writ of Replevin a writ of Al as and a writ of Pluries which last Writ runs with a penaltie and if the Sheriff doe not execute it there lyes an attachment against him and in case he return that the goods are sold and gone before he could repleve them or drove into another County then you may have a Capias in withernam to distrain and take the parties own goods that caused the first goods to be distrained or any of those that had a hand in distraining and no supersedeas whatsoever will lye to controule or dam the writ or hinder the execution of it which writs with all other in force you may read in the Law book called the Register by the help of which you may make all the Parsons in England goe whistle for their Tyths Which Register doth very well deserve your care and pains by authority to be translated into English your goods againe putting in baile to the Sheriffe to answer the law against him that distrained your goods so you shall bring him to a tryal at law to prove his title or clame to your goods and this I conceive to be cleare from the Statutes of Marle bridge in the 52. H. 3. Anno 1267. Chap. 1 2 3 4. 15 21. and 3. 8. 3. Chap. 17. Compared with Sir Edward Cooks Exposition upon those severall Statutes in the 2. part of his Institutes fol. 103 104 105 106 107. 131 132 133. 139 140 141. 193 194. and his discourse in his first part Institutes lib. 2. chap. 12. Sect. 219. fo 143. But that you may not rest in an implicite beliefe I shall give you the fore mentioned Statutes verbatum which thus followeth Chap. 1. fol. 16. The penaltie for taking a distresse wrongfully WHereas at the time of a commotion late stirred up within this Realme and also sithence many great men and divers other refusing to be justified by the King and his Court like as they ought and were wont in the time of the Kings noble progenitors and also in his time but took great revenges and distresses
Lord or for him that tooke them Bro. Riot 2. 3. 52. H. 3. 3. 13. Ed. 1. 39. V. N. B. fo 43. 44 Regist fo 85. 52. H. 3. 21. Regist fol. 81. Fitz. N.B. fo 68. F. for to answer and make the deliverance after such time as the Lord or taker shall be admonished to make deliverance by the Sheriffe or Bailiffe if he be in the Country or neere or there whereas he may be conveniently warned by the taker or by any other of his to make deliverance if he were out of the Countrey when the taking was and did not cause the Beasts to be delivered incontinent that the King for the trespasse and despite shall cause the said Castle or Fortresse to be heaten down without recovery And all the damages that the plaintife hath sustained in his beasts or in his gainure or any otherwise after the first demand made by the Sheriffe or Bailiffe of the beasts shall be restored to him double by the Lord or by him that tooke the beasts if he have whereof and if he have not whereof he shall have it of the Lord at what time or in what manner the deliverance be made after that the Sheriffe or Bailiffe shall come to make deliverance And it is to wit that where the Sheriffe ought to return the Kings writ to the Bailife of the Lord of the Castle or Fortresse or to any other to whom the return belongeth if the Bailife of the Franchise will no● make deliverance after that the Sheriffe hath made his return unto him then shall the Sheriffe doe his office without further delay and upon the foresaid paines And in like manner deliverance shall be made by Attachment of the plaintife made without writ and upon the same paine And this is to be intended in all places where the Kings writ lyeth And if that be done in the Marches of Wales or in any other place where the Kings Writs be not currant the King which is soveraign Lord over all shall doe right there unto such as will complain Now after this businesse of Tyths which by the universall complaint against it all over the Kingdome appeares to be an intollerable and insupportable burthen I shall a little open unto you another mischiefe of far more dangerous consequence and that is the subvertion of our fundamentall lawes and liberties and the exercising of an Arbitrary Tyrannicall government which I find to be the principall crime laid to the charge of the late Earl of Strafford for which he lost his head upon the Tower Hill at London in the yeare 1641. And that it was his principall crime appeares clearly to me by his Bill of Attainder which you may read before pag. 29. and by the fi●st Article of his impeachment which as I find it printed in the 117. pag. of a book called Speeches and Passages of this Parliament from the 3. of Novemb. 1640. to Iune 1641. printed for Will. Crook at Furnifalls Inne gate in Holbourne 1641. The very words of which thus followeth That he the said Thomas Earl of Strafford hath traiterously endeavoured to subvert the fundamentall lawes and government of the Realmes of England and Ireland and in stead thereof to introduce an Arbitrary and Tyrannicall Government against law which he hath declared by trayterous words councells and actions and by giving His Majestie advice by force of Armes to compell his loyall Subiects to submit thereunto Now whether this very traiterous crime of the Lord of Strafford be not really acted since the warres ended both by the present House of Lords and by the present Grandees in the Army I thinke is obvious to every knowing rationall understanding unbiosed mans eye in England in that both of them have taken upon them to meddle with things not within their cognizance or jurisdiction and to out men of their lives liberties and properties without any legall processe and proceeding all the ordinary Courts of Iustice in England being open where only and alone all causes whatsoever between party and parties desidable by the lawes of this land are to be tryed and determined and no where else it being as lawfull for a Iudge Iustice of peace or a Constable to make Laws as for a House of Lords to execute Laws their legall and proper work at most upon their own usurped principalls being to make new laws repeal old laws to give their consent to raise mony for the preservation of the publique and to see it be rightly disposed of but they themselves ought not in the least to finger it much lesse by votes to give it to each other it being contrary to the Law of England for Fofees in tru●t which they would have us to believe they * And it ● but a b● belief s● I say an● wil maintain it against a● the proc●ers of th● present ● House o● Lords hav● in England tha● they have no more right to their pretended legislative ● power the● a thiefe that by force tak● my purse● from me Nor no more right to b● called th● legislator● of England the● a man to be called an honest womans husband that by force and violence robs her of her virginitie and so commits a rape upon her and by threat to save her life compells her to hold her peace And I desire all the Commons of England seriously to consider how the Lords that flow from William the Conquerers sword and the meer will of his successors can rationally pretend to a legislative power when in their joynt Declarations with the present House of Commons they have declared the King their Creator hath none but is bound by his Coronation oath to pass● all such lawes as the folk or Commons shall chuse and what greater evill can there be in the world the● seeing that all legislative power in the nature of it is Arbitrary that for life an arbitrary power should b● placed in the Lords and heriditary in their sons be they fooles or knaves therefore up with them by the roots and let no power hereafter be exercised in England but what acknowledgly flowes as a trust from th● people or their Representatives and who are subiect as other men to the Lawes are to give any thing to themselves to punish all mayle Administrators of Iustice and to heare and redresse all appeares upon eronious judgements given or made in any of the Courts in Westminster-Hall or elsewhere Yet notwithstanding have they Arbitrarily and Tyrannically summoned and convened men before them for things desideable and determinable only at Common Law without any due processe of Law and have taken upon them contrary to all law Iustice equitie and conscience to be both Informers Prosecutors Witnesses Parties Iurie and Iudges and thereupon have past most illegall arbitrary and tyrannicall censures upon the free Commons of England and thereupon have distroyed and outted them of their lives liberties properties free holds and estates when as by the fundamentall law of the Land no Iudge
had beene Engaged to oppose them pay they could not have cashiered one Soldier that joyned in the Engagement for they promised each to other not to suffer themselves to be divided before the ends of their Engagements was accomplished 2. The station of the Members of this new councel in this Army was different from the station of al M●mbers of former Councels by the Engagement there was to be two Soldiers in no office out of every Regiment to have voices equall to the Generall himself in all votes a thing never practised nor heard of in an Army serving the will of a State 3. The number of the Members of this Councel is different from al customes and rules of Martiall Discipline In this Councel there was to be but foure of every Regiment with the General Officers which concurred thus this Councel differed from all Customes in any Army in respect of the Members whereof it was constituted 2. This new Councell differed from the rules of Warre in the manner of its constitution this was not to be constituted by the Gens wil or according to the degrees or offices of men in th● Army but in a Parliamentary way by the Soldiers free election the Gen. is bound from calling an Officer to the Councell unlesse he be chosen by his Regiment 3. Reason proving the dissolution of Martiall Government in the Army The Gen. in associating with the Soldiers did in the very Engagement give away all his power of exercising Martial Disciplin he engaged to them they to him that they would not suffer themselves to be disbanded or devided till the ends of their uniting were obtained Hereby he divested himselfe of his arbitrary power of cashiering Officers and Soldiers at his pleasure the cashiering one Officer or Soldier which associated with the body of the Army in the engagement is a disbanding at deviding on part of the Army from another which he the Army mutually ●●ciprocally engaged neither to attempt nor suffer likewise by this engagment he divested himself of power to command the Soldiers to march to what distance he pleaseth one from an other this is an other kinde of dividing the Army which he enaged neither to effect nor suffer 4. Reason proving the dissolution of the Government of the Army by Law Martiall The whole Army by agreement or joynt consent cashiered all Officers at New maket Heath that would not associate with them and engage to stand for common right and freedom though against the Parliament and so they houted divers Officers out of the field unhorsed some and rent their cloathes and be at them this in the face of the Gen. al which acts weare death by Martiall Law but this was an actuall declaration that the Army did admit of Officers by mutuall agreement onely and therefore Government by law Martiall was dissolved unlesse it had been established by mutuall consent throughout the Army for Officers at that time being only admitted by mutuall consent they could have no power but what was betrusted to them by the Soldiers 2. Plea But in case the Government of the Army by Law Martiall had not been dissolved by a mutuall ingagement yet the very being of peace did dissolve its for in the Petition of * See Poultons collection of statutes p. 1431. 1432. Right its declared that ●● person ought to be adjudged by Law Martiall except in time of Warre and that all Commissions given to execute Martiall Law in time of peace are contrary to the Lawes and Statutes of the Kingdome and it was the Parliaments complaint that Martiall Law was then commanded to be executed upon Soldiers for robbery mutiny or murther And it was setled as the undoubted right of every English man that he should be punishable only in the Ordinary Courts of justice according to the Lawes and Statutes of the Kingdome By all this it appeares that it is illegall and uniust for the Officers of the Army to try or punish any Agent or other by Law Martial upon pretence of Muteny or any other offence the whole Army stand as Englishmen and if they offend are not exempted from the proceeding against them and punishments to be inflicted upon them by the lawes and statutes of the Kingdome and therfore cannot in Iustice be subject also to law martiall so that all Agents and Soldiers now accused for mutiny for their late prosecution of publick freedome according to the agreement of the people without their Officers content shall unworthily betray their owne and their Countreys Liberty if they shall submit to be tryed in any other way then by the knowne Lawes and statutes of the Land The forementioned Plea of William Thompson who was lately a Corporal in Colonell Whaleyes Regiment and was formerly cashiered at the head thereof and yet after that imprisoned and indeavoured to be hanged for his honesty thus followeth Englands Freedome Souldiers Rights Vindicated against all Arbitrary uniust Invaders of them and in partcicular against those new Tyrants at Windsore which would destroy both under the pretence of Marshall Law OR The just Declaration Plea and Protestation of William Thompson a free Commoner of England unjustly imprisoned at Windsore Delivered to his Excellency Sir Thomas Fairfax and that which is called his Councell of Warre the 14. of December 1647. Unto which is annexed his Letter to the Generall wherein the said Plea was inclosed Also a Petition of the rest of his Fellow-Prisoners to his Excellency May it please your Excellency I Am by birth a free Commoner of England and am thereby intailed or intituled unto an equall priviledge with your self or the greatest men in England unto the freedome and liberty of the Lawes of England as the Parliament declares in their Declaration of the 23. of October 1642. 1 part book Decl. pag. 660. And the 29. Chap. of Magna Charta expresly saith That no man shall be taken or imprisoned or be disseised of his Freehold or Liberties or free customes or be outlawed or exiled or any other wayes destroyed nor pest upon nor condemned but by the lawfull Iudgement of his Peers or Equalls and that by due course or processe of the Law of the Land † † See Sir Edw. Cooks Exposition hereof in his 2. part Institut fol. 46 47 50 51. which expresly saith that no man shall he taken or restrained of his libertie by petition or suggestion made unto whomsoever in authority unlesse it be by indictment or presentment of good and lawfull men where such deeds be done and that no man whatsoever be put to answer any crime whatsoever without presentment before Iustices or matter of record or by due processe and writ orinall according to the old law of the land and if any thing from henceforth be done to the contrary it shall be void in law and holden for * * Se the 5. Ed. 3.9 25. Ed. 3.4 28. Ed. 3.3 37. Ed. 3.18 42. Ed. 3.3 and the Petition of
Right in the third of the King and the Statutes that abolished the Starre-Chamber and Ship money made this present Parliament and Lievtenant Col. Iohn Lilburnes Book called the Resolved mans Resolution p. 2. 3 8 9. and his Grand Plea against the Lords pag. 7 8 9. error Therefore Sir for you who are a Generall of an Armie and other of your Marshall Officer's who are are no Civill Court of Iustice nor authorized with the least legall power in the world to administer Iustice and execute the law of the land upon or unto any of the Commoners of England to dare or presume to restraine imprison trie or meddle with me as you have done who am in no other capacitie in the world but barely and altogether as a Commoner of England is the height of arbitrary tyranny injustice and * * Well saith Sir Edward Cook in the 2. part of his Institutes fol. 48. that every oppression against law by colour of any usurped authority is a kind of destruction for when any thing is forbidden all that tends to it is also forbidden and it is saith he the worst oppression that is done by colour of justice See also Lib. 10. fo 74. in the case of the Marshalsea oppression and an absolute destruction of the very fundamentall Lawes of England the bare endeavouring of which cost the Earl of Strafford his head And what the doome of him is that destroyes the fundamentall Lawes of the Land I shall give you out of the very words of your own friend Mr. St. Iohn in his Argument of law concerning the Bill of Attainder of high Treason of Thomas Earl of Strafford at a conference in a Committee of both Houses of Parliament printed by G. M. for John Bartlet at the signe of the gilt Cup neer St. Austins Gate in Pauls Church Yard 1641 who in the 70. page thereof saith That the destruction of the Lawes d●ssolves the arteries and ligaments that hold the body together ●he that takes away the Laws takes not away the allegiance of one Subiect alone but of the whole Kingdome it was saith he made treason by the Statute of the 13. El. for her time to affirme that the Lawes of the Realme doe not bind the discent of the Crowne no Law no descent at all No Laws saith he no Peerage no ranks or degrees of men † † And therefore you with your dealings with me that am meerly a free Commoner of England and so not in the least under your Marshall Discipline but solely and only under the discipline of the known declared and established Lawes of England by your arbitrary tyrannicall actings upon me have absolutely as much as in you lyes destroyed the fundamentall Lawes of England and therefore are as absolute Hedge breakers and Levellers as ever were in this Kingdome the same condition to all It 's treason to kill a Iudge upon the Bench this kills not the Iudge but the Iudgement And in page 71. he saith Its felony to imbezell any of the Iudiciall Records of the Kingdome this viz. the destruction of the law sweeps all away and from all It s treason to counterfeit a twenty shilling piece here is a counterfeiting of the Law we can call 〈◊〉 the counterfeit not the true coyne our own It s treason to counterfeit the great Seale for an Acre of Land no property hereby viz. the destruction of the Law is left to any Land at all nothing treason now either against King or Kingdom no law to pun●sh it And therefore I advise you as a friend to take heed that you goe no further on in your illegall arbitrary tyrannicall and law-destroying practises with and towards me least when for your own lives you claime the benefit of the Law you be answered in the words of your foresaid friend in pag. 72. That he in vaine calls for the help of the Law that walkes contrary unto Law and from the Law of like for like he that would not have others to have law why should he have any himself why should not that be done to him that himself would have done to another it is true saith he Ibid. we give law to Hares and Deers because they be beasts of chase but it was never accounted either crueltie or foule play to knock Foxes and Wolves on the head as they can be found because these be Beasts of Prey the Warrener set traps for Poulears and other vermin for preservation of the Warren And in pag. 76. he saith in the 11. R. 2. Trisilian And some other attainted of treason for delivering opinions in the subvertion of the Law and some other for plotting the like * * Read also to this purpose Mr. Iohn Pyms Speech against the Earle of Strafford the 12. of April 1641. printed for Iohn Battler but especially p. 5. 6. 8. 9. 13. 18. 23. 24. But if you shall object that you deale with me as you are a Generall and Officers of an Army by Marshall Law for endeavouring to make mutinies or tumults in your Armie or by bi●●●ing and defaming your reputations and so drawing your Soldiers from their affection and obedience unto you I answer in the first place there can in this Kingdome be no pretence for Martiall Law but when the Kingdome is in a generall hurly burly and uproare and an Armie or Armies of 〈◊〉 enemies in the Field prosecuting with the sword the destruction of the whole and thereby stopping the regular and legall proceedings of the Courts of Iustice from punishing offenders and transgressors But now there being no Armie nor Armies of declared enemies in the field nor mo●● prisons in the possessions of any such men nor no generall hurly-butlies and uproars by any such men in the Kingdome but all such as are visibly subdued and quieted and all Courts of justice open and free to punish offenders and transgressors and therefore even to the Armie is selfe and the Officers and Soldiers therein there is no reason or ground for exercising of Martiall Law much lesse over Commoners that are not under the obedience of the Army which is my case And that in time of peace there neither is nor can be any ground of exercising and executing of Martiall Law I prove out of the Petition of Right which was made in the third yeare of the present King and is printed in Pultons Collection of the Statutes at large fol. 1431 1432. * * And in the 1. 2. 3. pages before which expresly saith that by authority of Parliament in the 25. year of the Reign of King Edward the 3. it is declared and enacted That no man shall be forejudged of life or limb against the forme of the great Charter and the law of the land and by the said great Charter and other the lawes and Statutes of this Realme no man ought to be adiudged to death but by the law established in this Realm † † See the 9. H. 3. 29. 5. Ed. 3.9
25. Ed. 3.4 28. Ed. 3.3 And whereas no offender of what kind soever is exempted from the proceedings to be used and punishments to be inflicted by the lawes and Statutes of this your Realme Neverthelesse of late divers Commissions under your Maiesties great Seale have issued forth by which certaine persons have been assigned and appointed Commissioners with power and authority to proceed within the land according to the iustice of MARTIALL LAW against such Soldiers and Marriners or other diss●lute persons ioyning with them as should commit any MVRDER ROBBERIE FELONIE MVTINIE or OTHER outrage or misdemeanor whatsoever and by such summarie course and order as is agreeable to Martiall Law and as is used in Armies in time of Warre to proceed to the tryall and condemnation of such offendors and them to cause to be executed and put to death according to the Law Martial By pretixt wherof your Maiesties Subiects have bin by some of the said C●●mission put to death when and where if by the lawes and Statutes of the land they had deserved death by the same lawes and Statutes also they might and by no OTHER ought to have been been iudged and executed † † Yet it is very observable that at the very time when this Martiall Law complained of was executed the King had warres with France a forraign enemie but there is no such thing now and therefore the Army or the grand Officers thereof have not the least shadow or pretence to execute it in the least or to deale with me a free Commoner as they haue done And also sundry grievous offendors by colour thereof claiming an exemption have escaped the punishment 〈◊〉 to them by the lawes and Statutes of this your Realm by reason that divers of your Officers and Ministers of Justice have uniustly refused or forborn to proceed against such offenders according to the same laws and statutes upon 〈◊〉 that the said offendors were publi●able only by Martiall Law and by authority of such Commissioners as aforesaid Which Commissions AND ALL OTHER OF L●●E NATVRE are wholly and directly contrary to the fall lawes and Statutes of this your Realm Therefore Sin if you have any cat● of your own heads and lives though you have none of the Liberties and Freedomes of England I againe as a friend advise you to take heed what you doe unto me any further in your illegall arbitrary and tyrannicall way that hitherto you have proceeded with me● for I largely understand that Canterbury and Strafford were this Parliament questioned for their arbitrary and tyrannicall actions that they did and acted many years before and the Lord Keepers Finch was by this Parliament questioned for actions that he did when he was Speaker of the House of Commons in the third of the present King An. 1628. and forced to flie to save his head In the second place I answer that if since the warres ended it was or could be judged lawfull for your Excellencie and your Councell of Warre to execute Marshall Law yet you have divested your self of that power upon the 4. and 5. of June last at New market Heath you owned the Souldiers and joyned with them when they were put out of the States protection and declared enemies and further associated with them by a mutuall solemn ingagement as they were a Company of free Commoners of England to stand with them according to the Law of Nature and Nations * * See the late Plea for the Agents printed before pag. 42 43 44. to recover your own and all the peoples Rights and Liberties the words are these We the Officers and Soldiers of the Army subscribing hereunto doe hereby declare agree and promise to and with each other that we shall not willingly disband nor divide nor suffer our selves to be disbandad nor divided untill we have security that we as private men or other the free borne people of England shall not remain subiect to the like oppression iniury or abuse as have been attempted † † See the ingagement in the Armies book of Decl. pag. 24 25. 26 27. Hereby it appeares that from this time you and the Souldiery kept in a body and so were an Army not by the States or Parliaments will but by a mutuall Agreement amongst all the Soldiers and consequently not being an Armie by the Parliaments wills they were not under those rules of Martiall Government which were given by the will of the Parliament and your Excellency could no longer exercise any such power over them as was allowed you by those Martiall lawes nay the Soldiers keeping in a body and continuing an Army only by mutuall consent did by their mutuall Agreement or Ingagement constitute a new kind of Councell whereby they would be governed in their prosecution of those ends for which they associated and made every Officer incapable of being in that Councell which did not associate with them in that Ingagement The words of the Agreement or Ingagement are these we doe hereby declare agree and promise to and with each other that we shall not willingly disband nor divide nor suffer ourselves to be disbanded or divided without satisfaction in relation to our grievances and desires heretofore presented and securitie that we as private men or other the free-born people of England shall not remain subject to the like oppression and injury as hath been attempted and this satisfaction and security to be such as shall be agreed unto by a councell to consist of those generall Officers of the Army who have concurred with the Armie in the premises with two Commission Officers and TWO SOVLDIERS to be chosen for each Regiment who have concurred and shall concurre with us in the premises and in this Agreement So that your Excellency is so farre from having a power to exercise the old Martiall Discipline that you would have been no Officer or Member of the Councell appointed to governe them unlesse you had associated with them and by that Association or mutuall Ingagement the Soldiers were so far from allowing to their Generall who ever it should have been for at that time it was uncertaine the power of exercising the old Martiall D●scipline that according to the Ingagement no Officer or Soldier can be rightly cashiered unlesse it be by the Councell constituted by that Engagement so that your Excellency by your owne Engagement have put a period to your power of exercising your old Martiall Discipline and whatsoever D●scipline shall appeare to the Army to be necessary must be constituted by the mutuall consent of the Army or their representatives unlesse you and they will disclaim the Engagement at New market and those principles upon which you then stood * * And if you do what are you better then a company of Rebels Traytors to the Parliament for your then opposing their power authority orders and ordinances and yeeld up your selves to the Parliaments pleasure as their hirelings to serve their
arbitrary power like Turkish Janisaries In the rhird place I answer that it is against reason law conscience justice and equity to subject me at one and the same time or any other free Commoner of England under the sting and power of two distinct Lawes and such a bondage as is insupportable and such a snare of intanglement that no mans life whatsoever can be safe or secure under it that I shall be liable to be questioned and destroyed by the common Law of the Kingdome and then be at the wills of mercenarie Turkish Ianisaries in case the common Law will not reach me to be questioned and destroyed by an unjust arbitrary Martiall law and if it can be justly proved against me that I have made any tumults the Law and the ordinarie Courts of justice are open by which and by no other rules and proceedings J ought to be tryed and if it be said or can be proved that J have belied or scandalized the Generall to the taking away of his good name c. yet scandalum Magnatum is not to be tried by Martiall Law nor yet either by the House of Commons or the House of Lords but only alone now the Star-Chamber is down by an Action at cōmon Law † † As is cleare by the Statutes of 3. Ed. 1. 33. 37. Ed. 3. 18. 38. Ed. 3. 9. 42. Ed. 3. 3. 2. R. 2. 5. 12 R. 2. 11. 5. part Cookes reports pag. 125. 13. H. 7. Kelway 11. Eliz. Dier 285. 30. Affiz pla 19. Liev. Col. John Lilburnes Grand Plea of 20. October 1647. pag. 7. 8. by a Jurie of my equals no where else it being a Maxime in Law That wher remedy may be had by an ordinary course in law the party grieved shall never have his recourse to extraordinaries * * See Vox Plebis pag. 38. Lievt Col. Jo. Lilburnes Anatomie of the Lords Tyranny pag 10. And besides for you to proceed with me and to be both Parties Jury and Iudges is a thing that the Law abhorres † † See 8. H. 6. fol. 21. Eliz. Dier 220. Dr. Bonhams case 8. part of Cooks Repots and Lievt Col. Jo. Lilburnes grand Plea pag. 10. In the fourth and last place J answer that the Parliament it selfe neither by Act nor Ordinance can justly or warrantably destroy the fundamentall liberties and principles of the common Law of England * * See Mr. Henry Martins answer to the Scotchpapers called the Independency of England at the last end it being a maxime in law and reason both That all such Acts and Ordinances are ipso facto null and void in law and bind not at all but ought to be resisted and stood against to the death But for them to give you a power by Marshal Law or under any other name or title whatever by your arbitrary tyrannicall wills without due course and processe of Law to take away the Life or Liberty of me or any free Commoner of England whatsoever yea or any of your own Souldiers in time of peace when the Courts of Iustice are all open and no visible declared enemie in Armes in the Kingdome ready to destroy it is an absolute destroying of our fundamentall Liberties and a rasing of the foundation of the Common Law of England † † But besides all this I doe confidently believe that the Parliament never gave power unto the Generall since the wars ended to execute Martiall Law neither doe I believe that some chiefe Executors of Martiall Law have any Legall Commission from the Parliament who never that I could heare of ever gave power unto the Generall of himself to make generall Officers and besides all the Parliament men that are Officers in the Army were as I have been groundedly told formerly taken off by an Ordinance of both Houses which was never repealed since And therfore such a power of Arbitrary Marshall Law cannot justly by the Parliament in time of peace c. be given unto you nor if it were be justly or warantably executed by you And besides both houses themselves by an Ordinance unlesse they alter the whole constitution of this Kingdome can take away the life of no free Commoner of England whatsoever especially in time of peace And therefore that which is not within their owne power to do they cannot by an Order or Ordinance grant power to Sir Thomas Fairfax c. to do it being a Maxime in nature That beyond the power of being there is nor can be no being But it is in the power of the Parliament or the two Houses or the House of Commons themselves as the present constitutions of this Kingdome stands either by Order or Ordinance to take away the life of any free commoner of England * * See Sir E Cooks 2 part institut fo 47 48. 3. part fol. 22. and 4. part fol. 23. 25. 48. 291. all of which bookes are published for good law to the Kingdom by 2. speciall Orders of the present House of Commons as you may read in the last pa. of the second part institut see also the Petition of Right And therefore they cannot by an Ordinance or Order especially in times of peace give power to Sir Thomas Fairfax by Marshall Law unlesse they totally alter the Constitutions of the Kingdome to take away the life or lives of any free Commoners of England which all Souldiers are as well as others † † See the Armies Declaration of the 14. Iune 1647. Book of their Declarations pag. 39. and their Letter from Royston to the Lord Mayor of London of the 10. Iune 1647. which the Printer hath neglected to print in their book of Declarations * and therefore it is absolute murther in the Generall and the Councell of Warre now to shoot to death hang or destroy any Souldier or other Commoner what ever by Marshall Law for which they may be indicted at the Kings Bench barre And therefore J doe the third time as a friend advise you to cease your illegall arbitrary tyrannicall Marshall Law proceedings with me that am no Souldier and so not under the least pretence of your Marshall Iurisdiction least in time to come you pay as deare for your arbitrarie illegall proceedings with me as Sir Richard Empson and Mr. Edward Dudley Iustices did who as Sir Edward Cook declares in his 2. and 4. part of his Institutes where very officious and ready to execute that illegall Act of Parliament made in the 11. H. 7. cap. 3. which gave power unto Iustices of Assize as well as Iustices of the Peace without any finding or presentment by the verdict of twelve men being the ancient birth-right of the Subject upon a bare information for the King before them made to have full power and authority by their discretions to heare and determine all Offences or contempts committed or done by any person or persons against the form ordinance
That the government of the Army by Law Marshall is only necessary when the Kingdome is invaded by a forraign enemie or in a generall hurly burly in it self being ready to march against a declared professed enemie ready to destroy it with fire and Sword and thereby shut up the legall administration of iustice upon Transgressors and Offenders in the ordinary course thereof But now there is no forraigne enemie upon the march against England nor no generall Hurly Burly in the Kingdome by professed and declared enemies against the peace thereof ready to destroy it with fire and sword but all at the present is visibly in peace and quietnesse and the Courts of iustice all open to punish all manner of offenders whatsoever yea Souldiers in Armes that have taken the States pay * * For whom the Statute law in such a condition hath appointed punishments to be inflicted upon them in the ordinary Courts of iustice either for false musters cheating the Soldiers of their pay or for lucer giving them leave to depart or for the Souldiers going from their Cullours without lawfull leave or for imbeasing Horse or Armes c. See the 18. H. 6. 19. and 2 and 3. Ed. 6. 2. and 4. and 5. P. and M. chap. 3. and 5. Eliz. 5. and 5. Iames. 25. who only in times of peace as this is are solely to be punished by the rules and proceedings of the known and declared law of England and by no other rules whatsoever And therefore it being now time of peace there is no need of Marshall Law neither can your Excellency nor any other under you upon any pretence whatsoever derived from any power whatever execute it upon paine of being esteemed and iustly iudged to be absolute executers of an Arbitrary and tyrannicall power and grand destroyers of our Lawes and liberties and so in time may receive the Earle of Straffords doome one of whose principall crimes I understand was That he in Ireland in time of peace when he was Generall of an Army on foot shed the blood of Warre by executing a Souldier by Marshall Law when the Courts of iustice were open And therefore I doe absolutely protest against the name and power of your pretended Court Marshall And doe further declare that I iudge my self bound in conscience with all my might power and strength both by words actions and gestures now I know so much as I doe to oppose as the case now stands all Marshall Courts whatsoever and to judge my self a Traytor to the lawes and liberties of England if I should doe any action that might but seeme to support or countenance that law and liberty destroying power of Marshall Law and can neither esteem nor iudg him an honest iust truobred English man that now hereafter so much in print being declared against it either executes it or stoops unto it So with my humble service rendred to your Excellency I commend you to the tuition of the just and powerfull God and rest From my uniust captivity and imprisonment in Windsore which is both against the Law of England and our Agreement at New Market the 4. and 5. Iune last this 20. of Decemb. 1647. Your honours faithfull servant and Souldier to the death so you turn not the mouth of your own Cannons against me to destroy me Iohn Crosseman The forementioned Letter or Plea of Captain John Ingram thus followeth To his Excellency Sir Thomas Fairfax these present May it please your Excellency I Was condemned the 20. Decemb. 1647. by divers Officers assembled together in the manner of a Court Marshall for speaking before them my own Conscience and judgement with sobernesse about Maior Cobits businesse Now in justification of my self I must declare unto your Excellencie that in all Councells whatsoever the members thereof ought without check controule molestation or feare of ruine and destruction freely to speak and declare the dictates of their iudgement and consciences And undoubtedly the denyall thereof would render all Councells whatsoever uselesse and vaine And it s no lesse then the hight of tyranny in any prevailing partie in a Councell to usurp such a power as by terrors censures or force to stop the mouths of those who are of different opinions and against whose arguments or saying they offer no reasons And it s no lesse against law and justice yea the common light of nature for the members of that Councell who were the only offended parties to assume to themselves to be prosecutors witnesses Iury and Judges as they did in my case And therefore I am resolved in the strength of God never to betray my innocencie by acknowledging an offence according as the censures of my accusers require when my conscience beares me witnesse that as in the fight of God I did my duty so I doe freely declare that I am still clearely satisfied That since our association by mutuall Ingagement at New-Market to stand as free Commons of England for common right and freedome And since our constituting a new Councell to be our directer in the manner of prosecuting those publique ends of justice right and freedome there is no assembly but that new constituted Councell only which is a competent Iudge of the Actions of any Member in the Armie and in his prosecution of the ends aforesaid And of this nature I conceive was Maior Cobits case † † Whom those godly pious and righteous Gentlemen of the Councell of Warre tryed for his life for no other crime but for his honesty in prosecuting that just paper called The Agreement of the People and his life was saved but by two voices O malicious and bloody men And I must further declare that I am not only willing but I account it my honour to be under your Excellencies conduct so long as you shall act according to the first principles manifested in the Commission received from your Excellency according to the publique declaration of the Souldiery upon Triplo Heath for Iustice Iustice And according to the Solemn Ingagement neither shall any man be more obedient to your Excellencies commands tending to those ends then my self But I must declare that I clearely apprehend the highest injustice of executing Marshal Lawe in time of peace those lawes are appointed for cases of necessity and extremitie when the Armie is marching against an enemie and it s then only justifiable either because other Courts of justice are not open or there cannot be a timely prosecution of offenders in those Courts But when all other Courts of justice are open and no enemie in the field to obstruct a free accesse to them and when every Souldier is punishable in those Courts and by the known lawes of the land for any crime or offence I conceive common justice dictates Marshall Lawes to be null otherwise two Courts not subordinate each to other claiming the iurisdiction over a Souldier supposedly offending when the Known Lawes shall have acquitted him he may suffer by the will
of a Court Marshall And therefore the Petition of Right complained of executing such Marshall Lawes in time of peace Which Petition being granted it remaineth as a valid Act of Parliament against it And the Earle of Strafford was impeached of High Treason for proceeding against and condemning the Lord Mount Norris by Marshall Law † † See the 5. Article in the impeachment of the Earl of Strafford Se also the 15. and 19. Article of that Impeachment though the sentence was not executed Upon all these considerations I cannot but be confident that the justice and conscience which dwels in your Excellencie will compell you to restraine the proceedings of that Assembly of Officers against me who are my accusers And I hope your Excellencie is so carefull of your honour and reputation in the peoples eyes that you will not suffer my place to be taken from me unlesse my declining from the ends for which I associated with the Armie can be proved against me or else some crime which according to law and justice merits such a censure And I am not yet conscious to my self of the least unfaithfullnesse but doe remaine as ever Your Excellencies humble servant Iohn Ingram whom since they have cashiered because he was too honest and quick sighted for them and whom I heare hath a larger discourse comming out against their unjust proceedings with him December 23. 1647. The proceedings of the Grandees at Windsore being so furious unjust and illegall as they were in which they led the Generall on hoodwink as their stalking Horse to the pits brink of his own ruine and destruction and to the Apparent hazzard of shedding more innocent and precious blood of extraordinary choice English men and sweet Christians and to the visible rooting up by the roots of the fundamentall lawes and liberties of England and in its place set up and executed an arbitrary tyrannicall government of Marshall Law by the rules and justice of which they might have as well as justifiably and as warrantably condemned to death all the free men of England as those Souldiers they did The serious meditating upon all which perplexed my very spirit and therefore I drew out my pen to make an assay upon the Generall thereby if it were possible to stop those most desperate and unjust proceedings The substance of which Letter thus followeth To his Excellency Sir Thomas Fairfax these present May it please your Excellency HAving hoard that your Excellency should say there was a great deale of reason in your apprehension in Thompsons plea And you wished the Offices would well weight it and returne an answer to It. And being yesterday at the House of Commons doore I met with divers of your Officers and in particular with Quarter Master Generall Ireton who in his discourse with me was pleased to say That the late Plea for the Agents was full of falsehoods and mistakes and my self in discourse came close to him before many people and proferred him to maintaine before any competent Iudges in England upon the perill of a sufficient disgrace to prove by the genuine sense of your own Declarations and the Lawes of England that there was not a false nor mistaken sentence in it all Now may it please your Honour having many Obligations upon me to your particular selfe not only as I am an English man but also as a sufferer And being much perplexed in my own spirit at those many late unworthy actions that are done pretendedly by vertue of your Authority by men of a powerfull and corrupt influence in your Armie the disgrace and danger of which lyes very deep upon your selfe which I am afraid in conclusion will cost you very deare yea the head upon your shoulders if you persevere or suffer them to persevere in their late murthering arbitrary tyrannicall illegall wayes and therefore out of that reall and strong affection that I truly beare unto your Excellency J am compeld to propose and offer unto your Honour that if you please under your hand to grant safe comming and going to my self and a friend or two and in dempnitie for our discourse upon the debate we will come and waite upon your Excellency at Windsore And against all your Officers in and belonging to your Army maintaine the legallity and rationality of every line and sentence of Thompsons Plea and the Plea for the Agents the printers faults excepted your Excellency in your own person at the dispute sitting as Moderator and Iudge So with my heartiest and truest service presented to your Honour I humbly take my leave of your Excellency and rest As true and faithfull a servant to you as any you have in your Army though an absolute abhorrer and detestor of the late actions of your pretended Councell of Warre John Lilburne From my most illegall and uniust Captivity which I am confident is continued by the powerfull influence of some great Officers in your Armie * * Viz. ●ievt Gen. ●rom●ell ●is po●tique Sonne in Law Com. Gen. Ireton who are I will maintaine it the principall supporters uphol●ers a betters preservers and defenders of the usurping House of Lords in all their usurpations ille●all oppressions tyranny and murthering crueltie for which if there were any justice to be had they ●eserved better to be impeached of High Treason for subverters of our lawes and liberties then the ●arle of Strafford did in that before their eyes they have seen his severe punishment and yet walk in ●s steps this 23. December 1647. Postscript Sir I have assigned the prisoners at Windsore to waite upon your Excellency for an answer to this my Letter and I desire further to let you know that if your Officers be unwilling to imbrace my desires herein It will be a cleare demonstration to your Excellency and all the people of the whole Kingdome that they have jugled with deceived and deluded you and brought you into life and honour destroying snares Iohn Lilburne This letter of mine was delivered to the Generals own hands as I have been informed by some that was by but I have not received the least answer unto it which makes me conclude that Cromwell and Ireton and there under Creaturers are convict in their consciences that there is not the least shaddow or ground in the world for them in times of peace to execut Marshall Law the full knowledge of which they would not willingly the Generall should be possessed with as it is probable at such a dispute as before I offer and am ready to performe he might be and so might be sorry for that murder committed upon the Soldier that was shot at Ware for which I am sure Cromwell Ireton Paul Hobson yea and my Brother Henry Lilburne if he were one that had a hand in the causing of him to be shot as well as all others that had may by the Law of England be apprehended indicted and tryed as wilfull murderers and I am sure in the eye of the Law
of God or England no plea can save their lives in any one of whose condition in the eye of the Law to be tyed to live in England that had a hand in that mans willful murder I would not be for al the gold in England and let me without contempt give this advice to the two great forementioned Nimrods of the Army whose present power is bent to suppresse our fundamental laws and liberties and to build up and establish the highest of Tyranny and protect Tyrants to turne over a new leafe and turne honest if they have any graines thereof left with in them and bend not their parts and power to plead for and protect the present tyrannicall House of Lords in their unjust usurpations and to destroy me in my unjust imprisonment which I know is only continued by their power and meanes for doing my duty to my selfe country and posterity to oppose them therein least they necessitate and compell me for the preservation of my selfe wife and children to finde out a man that shall dare in the hight of all there unlimited potency and unbounded greatnesse to indict them both for murderers at the Kings bench barre or elsewhere and shall dare to indict the Iudges for perjury c. if they shall dare to obey any command in England that shall command them not to doe iustice and right in that particular And now O unworthy and dishonourable Cromwell that I averre and will justifie to thy face that brought and drew me into my first contest with the Earle of Manchester and when thou hadest served thy ends of me viz. to helpe to pull him downe from his Major Generall-ship left me in the Bryers to be worried and torne in peeces by him and now keepest me in Prison to the apparent hazard of my totall destruction by thy power and influence for being true to those principles of reason truth and iustice that I will iustifie to thy face thou wast as high in as my selfe when thou engaged me against Manchester the Earle of Essex c. though now thou art visably and desperatly apostatized from them to thy shame eternall dishonour be it spoken but seeeing as my owne soule tells me by thy meanes I cannot get one dram of iustice at the hands of the House of Commons upon my complaint against the prest he tyrannicall usurping house of Lords I here proclame an open defiance to thee as a professed enemy to the fundamentall lawes and liberties of my native country to doe the worst thou came to me a man in some sence almost devoured by the Tyranny of thy fellow grand Tyrants in England under which I have transendantly suffered this cleaver yeares together and therefore seeing that thou and the rest of thy Tyrannicall confederates in the present house of Lords and there 〈◊〉 Speaker Sr. John and Nat. Fines c in the house of Commons necessituously compells me to 〈…〉 ●●●dent straits and extremities as you do and 〈◊〉 all my own subsistance from me * For the Parliament owes me for my just arreares the greatest part of a 1000. pound and my Ordinance for 2000. l. reparations against my uniust Star-chamber Iudges hath layd dorment in their house this two yeares although since then I know severall of there owne Members to whom out of the publique money they have given 5000 l. a peece unto that I wil upon the losse of my life evidently make it good never suffered one hundreth part of that which I did before this Parliament and yet I am told some of them have received all there 5000. pounds yet according to Law the iust custom of the Tower where am Prisoner wil not allow me a subsistance according to my quality out of the publique treasure or those that most vniustly and illegally committed me by meanes of which in the eye of reason I am likely shortly to perish and be destroyed yet in these great straits in the might and strength of God I say to thee O Cromwell with an undaunted resolution as the the three children did to that grand Tyrant Nebuchad-nezzar when he was ready to throw them into the hot fiery furnace O Cromwell I am not carefull for all thy greatnesse to tell thee thy owne and to let thee to know that the God whom I serve is able to deliver me from thy power and greatnesse But if not be it known unto thee O Cromwell that I will not serve thee nor worship or stand in feare of thy tyrannicall power or that golden or painted Image the present House of Lords which in thy Imaginations and fancy thou hast lately set up that so in time thou mayest be one thy selfe Now upon these Pleas and Protestations of the forementioned honest men comming so thick upon them with the gallant and heroicall carriage of divers of the other prisoners at Windsore with the late thunders of Mr. Sidgwick and precious Mr. Saltmarsh these new Tyrants the Grandees had such a curb put into their mouth that it so stopped the furiousnesse of their bloody and murthering Carreare that they were as my often Intelligence gives me to understand confounded and amazed amongst themselves and therefore set their Imps and underhand pentionary Agents at worke to perswade the honest Agent Prisoners to close in love and union with some litle kind of though it were but seeming reluctancy of spirit † And then they and some of there Pencionary Imps lyingly get their Diurnall Mercuries to print to the view of the whole Kingdome that they all had acknowledged their faults and cry'd peccavie when as some of them that are named in the Diurnall so to doe have told me that it is the falsest lye in the world for they never did any such thing but ever did and still doe abhorre the thoughts of such a base and wicked acknowledgement and then the Generalls almightinesse in whom those ficosantising Grandees place as great an omnipotency as ever the Courtiers or Cavialeers did in the King the more to serve their wicked and desperate ends for this I dare confidently say if his Excellency would not let his Creator Cromwell rid him he should shortly and as fearcely charge him with as impeachment of Treason and breach of trust as ever he did the Earle of Manchester by meanes of which his Lordship hath of lare been very ra●e and gentle to his greatnesse Lievt Gen. Cromwell should pardon all their iniquities and passe by all their transgressions and forthwith one of Ahabs fosts is called that so they may more closely and cowardly smite with the fist of wickednesse that being too much the apparent end of all their howling lamentations Which God amount but mockings unto him and without amendment of wayes and doing justice and iudgement reliving the afflicted and oppressed and breaking all the heavie yoaks are odious and abominable in his sight Esay ●8 4 5 6 7. and Micah 5 6 7 8. And after the fist which was by
in Hillary Tearm Anno 16. Caroli Regis after a verdict obtained a Iudgement in his Maiesties Court of Kings Bench of 7000. l. debt and 7. l. 12. d. dammages against Thomas Wright who afterwards was charged in execution for the same in the custodie of Sir Iohn Lenthall Knight then and yet Marshal of the said Court and the said Wright being so in execution for Composition offered your Petitioner above 2000. l. and security for the residue of the said debt all the same appearing to be true by Records and by proceedings in Chancery under the Great Seale of England but before any part thereof satisfied the said Sir Iohn Lenthall suffered the said Wright to escape out of Execution Your Petitioner therefore in Hillary Terme 17. Caroli Regis Ten dayes before the end of that Terme caused an action of debt to be brought for the said 7007. li. 12 d. at your Petitioners suit for the said escape and then filed a declaration against the said Sir Iohn Lenthall for the same But the said Sir Iohn to deprive your petitioner of the said debt and all remedie for the same 10 Trin. 18. Caroli Regis notwithstanding your Petitioner had severall Rules against Sir Iohn Lenthall for judgement upon his declaration so filed in Hillary 17. He the said Sir Iohn Lenthall procured an Order to be made by Sir Iohn Brampston Knight and Sir Thomas Mallet Knight in open Court that your petitioners Declaration filed in Hillary 17. should be filed as of Easter Tearme the 18. contrary to justice the law of this Kingdom the libertie of the Subjuct and the rules of the said Court as your petitioner is advised And for that your petitioners being so advised that the said Order doth utterly barre your petitioner of his said debt Your Petitioner severall times publiquely in Court and otherwise moved the Iudges to alter the same but could not prevaile as appeareth by the Order of the said Court and for that that notwithstanding your petitioner earnest solicitation for his judgement due by the rules of the said Court for the space of above foure yeares together and his great expence after 15. Orders made in the said Court the now Iudges of the said Court Mr. Iustice Bacon and Mr. Iustice Roll hath confirmed the same as appeareth by an Order by them made per Hillar 22. Caroli Regis now readie to be shewed In tender consideration of the premises that your petitioner according to the Law filed his declaration in Hillary 17. when the prisoner was escaped and at liberty and for that the said Iudges Order contrary to Law barreth your petitioner from prosecuting upon that declaration and bindeth your petitioner to file his declaration as of Easter terme 18. Caroli when the said Marshall aleadged that he had retaken the said prisoner again and that he was dead and that your petitioners debt is destroyed by the said Iudges Order to your petitioners dammage above 10000 l. And for that other debts may be destroyed by the like If men be barr'd from the benefit of their just Records duly fil'd as the petitioner is contrary to the Lawes of the Kingdome and the libertie of the Subiect which appeares to be done in this Cause by the Orders themselves Your Petitioner humbly craveth releife according to his damages And your Petitioner shall pray Henry Moore Which petition the said Moore delivered to Col. Henry Martin and divers other Parliament men but can not so much as get his petition read in † Jt is worth the taking notice the Speaker is Sir John Lenthalls brother and it is almost grown to a common proverb in England that Parliament mens neer Allyes as well as themselves are above the reach of all law and justice which I am sure if they look not speedily well about them will destroy them every man the House upon whom he hath long attended and still waiteth most earnestly and deplorably cryeth out to be releived from this intollerable oppression by which the said Moore is damnified as in his printed complaints to the House he declares above ten thousand pound to the hazzard of his utter ruine Now I shal here crave the liberty to insert the epittomy of my own cruel barbarous sufferings with this desire to al that reads it seriously to consider that what hath befaln me by the cruell tyrany of by past Tyrants and oppressors if not strongly remedied and repaired may for future be incouragement for the present Tyrants to inflict when they dare for fear of being dismounted the like if not worse upon the first Nown-Substantive Englishman that shall resolutely stand in their way * And it is the clearest demonstration to me in the world that the present men in power alwayes intended to walk in the oppressive tyranous ways of the Star-chamber High commission councel board in that they have done no man effective iustice or right that suffered by them least their own Acts should be binding presidents to pay their own Acts should be binding Presidents to pay themselves by in future times The summe of what I have here to insert I shall lay down in the very words that J delivered in print to the Members of the House of Commons at the House doore the 23. Novemb. last which thus followeth A new complaint of an old grievance made by Lievt Col. Iohn Lilburne Prerogative prisoner in the Tower of London Novemb. 23. 1647. To every Individuall Member of the Honourable House of Commons SIR MY exceeding urgent necessities and my extraordinary sufferings by your neglect in doing me justice and right according to your many oaths and declarations presseth me above measure still to play the part of the poore importunate widdow mentioned in the Gospel and to resolve whatever befalls 〈◊〉 never to give over till I have attained her end viz. Iustice You may please truly to take notice and the rather because many of you are new Members that in the year 1637. and 1638. I suffered a most barbarous sentence by the Star Chamber occasioned by two false oaths sworne against me by Edmond Chillington † † The substance of which with my defence against them in open Star Chamber and when I stood upon the Pillory at Westminster you may largely read in the relation of my first sufferings called The Christian mans tryall reprinted by Will. Larner 1641. now dwelling at the black boy within Bishops-Gate now a Lievtenant under Col. Whaly and by my refusing to answer interrogatories against my self in executing of which sentence the 18. of April 1638. I was tyed to a Car●● tayle at Fleet bridge and whipt through the streets to Westminster and had given me above the number of 500. stripes with a threefold knotted corded whip the weeles made in my back thereby being bigger then Tobacco pipes c. And set two houres upon the Pillory bare head in an extraordinary hot day and a gag put into my mouth above an houre to
for if I must dye by yours and the Lords murthering oppression I am resolved if I can helpe it I will not dye alone nor in a corner in silence Therefore helpe me unto my owne to leave subsistance unto my Wife and Children that they may not beg their bread when I am dead and gone And if nothing but my blood will serve my cruell adversaries if they be men I challenge the stoutest of them in England 〈◊〉 unto hand with his sword in his hand like a man to put a period to my dayes being ready to ●nswer any man in England Lord or Commoner that hath any thing to lay to my charge Either First as a rationall man Or Secondly as a resolved man Or Thirdly as an English man In the last of which I shall desire no more favour then every Traytor Rogue or Murtherer that is arraigned for his life at Newgate Sessions injoyes viz. the benefit of the declared known law of England And so at present I rest Your oppressed friend that loudly cryes out to you for iustice and right Iohn Lilburne From my most illegall starving and murthering tyrannical imprisonment in the Tower of London this 23. Novem. 1647. going into the eight yeare of my fruitlesse expecting justice from the deafe and hard hearted house of Commons Be pleased to take notice that divers hundreds of this halfe sheete of paper I delivered the day of the date of it to the Parliament mens own hands at their doore and the Soldiers and the by Standers and while I was delivering them at there doore out came Mr Iohn Ashe the clothier to me a man that hath fingered about ten thousands pounds for his pretended losses of the States mony besides what he hath got as Chair man to the Committe for composition at Gold-Smiths Hall which if common fame be not a lyar hath been largely profitable to him as well as other of the like places are said to be to others of his bespoted bretheren and told me to this effect that he had formerly honoured me for my great sufferings but I had of la●● Ioyned with David Ienkins to destroy this Parliament which he was pleased to say was the bases and foundation of the peace and being of this distressed Common-wealth for which I very well deserved to be executed as he said unto which with a good resolution I replyed having my back against their house doore to this purpose Sir I scorne your word●s and charge of joyning with Iudge Ienkins or any other whatsoever either to destroy this Parliament or the Common wealth for I am the same man in principles that ever I was and as true to mine as Iudge Ienkins is to his though you and the most of the Members of your House be changed from yours Sir I tel you that before ever I see Judg Jenkins face I had law enough to deale with twenty such as you are though I confesse I have lost nothing in the particular by my acquaintance with him but have gained much by my imprisonment with him in the knowledge of the Law but Sir I retort your owne words back upon you and averre that it is you and such as 〈◊〉 are by that palpable injustice that so acted by you that will not only destroy this House but hazzard the totall distruction of the whole Kingdome for I my selfe have waited upon you seaven yeares for Iustice to my large expence but yet cannot obtain one dram of right from your hands although you can finde time enough to shaire the Common-wealths money amongst your selves by thousands and ten thousands wheras you say that I deserve to be executed I would have you to know I scorne your courtesie or mercy and desire you from me to tell your house that I am ready to answer the whole house or any particular Member in it according to the Law of the Kingdome at any barre of Iustice in England when and where they please without craving or desiring the least drame of favour or 〈◊〉 at their hands and here upon the Gentleman want away as though he had had a flee in his Eare. And by and by came out of the House an ancient man as I was told called Mr. Jenner and he rusly demanded where the man was that delivered those bookes one of which he had in his hand and I having my back fast against their doore and looking him full in the face told him after this manner that I was he that not only delivered them but also made them and would justifie them to the death saith he can you expect any good at our hands to give as such language as at the conclusion of it you doe unto which I replyed Sir I wish you had not given me too much cause by your delaying to doe me justice and right and tossing and tumbling ●● as you have done from our Goale to another to give you a great deale 〈◊〉 whereupon hee departed and left me and I went on giveing away the aforesaid papers But now in regard I can neither obtaine law nor justice at the hands of the House of Commons either upon my Star-chamber Iudges nor yet upon nor against the present House of Lords most barbarous tyrannicall arbitrary and murdering dealing with me and seeing it is clearely discovered every day more then other and obvious in my apprehesion to every rational mans eye that the designe of the present seeming sanctified swaying faction which who they principally are I have named before is totally to subject the freemen of this Kingdome to vassaledge and slavery and subdue there fundamentall lawes and liberties by crushing in peeces arbitrarily and tyrannically euery cordial hearted and Noun-Substantive English man that dare peepe out in the least to owne his freedomes and liberties or stand for them thereby demonstrating that they have learned their lesson well from that old guided Fox the Lord Say whose maxime it is if he be not wronged that it is as dangerous to let the people know their liberties and freedomes as to let a stomackt Horse know his strength and therefore it is that my Lord and the rest of his new factionated Independents who in my Judgement are grown more tyrannicall already then either the Episcopalls of old or the late swaying Presbyterians have so many Beagles and Cur-dogg not only to sharlar but to bite the shins of every man they can find out that dare presume to write print or publish any light or information to the people and if they hold on but a little longer as they have begun it is to be feared they will make it death as the great Turke doth for any man to keep a printing presse And seeing they have in my eyes laid aside the studying the Gospell of truth and peace or practising any thing that is commended by it and are totally studying and practising of Machievell and are closing and dabbing with the interest of the publique Priests to make the publique pulpits sound forth
their rotten praises and uphold their new confu●●d Babell sandy interest though in this book by reason of the great distractions of the kingdome I thought to have been very tender of the House of Commons and its committees yet because slavery and tyranny is already goe over the threshold I must furnish my friends with some weapons to keep it out of the kitchine and Hall least it get possession speedily of the whole house and for that end I shall insert my Defiance to Tyrants in a plea which thus followeth A Defiance to Tyrants Or a Plea made by Lievt Col. Iohn Lilburne Prerogative Prisoner in the Tower of London the 2. of Decemb. 1647. Against the proceedings of the close and illegall Committee of Lords and Commons appointed to examine those that are called London Agents with divers large additions unto which is annexed a Plea for the said Citizens of London against the Committee for plundered Ministers for their illegall imprisoning them for refusing to pay Tithes ALL Magistracy in England is bounded by the ●o●wn and declared Law of England a a See the Petition of right and Sir Edw. Cooks 4. part institutes Chap. high Court of Parliament and while they Act according to Law I am bound to obey them but when they leave the rules thereof and walk by the arbitrarie rules of their own Wilt they doe not act as Magistrates but as b b See King Iames his speech to the Parl. at White Hal 1609. and 1. par book Decl. pag. 150. and my book called the Out-cryes of oppressed Commons pag 16 17. 18. and my Epistle to Mr. Martin of the 31. May 1647. called Rash Oaths pag. 56 Tyrants and cannot in such actings challenge any obedience neither am I bound to yeeld it but am tyed in conscience and duty to my self and my native Country therein to resist and withstand them and if their Officers goe about by force and violence to Compell me to obey and stoop unto their arbitrary and illegall command c c See Cooks 2. part inst upon the 29. chap. of Magna Charta fo 52. 53. and fo 590 591. and regall Tyrany p. 78. 79. 80 81. and Vox Plebis p. 37. and my plea before Mr. Mart●n of the 6. Novem. 1646. called an anatomy of the Lords tyrany pag. 5. 7. ● I may and ought if I will be true to my native and legall freedoms by force to withstand him or them in the same ma●ner that I may withstand a man that comes to rob my house or as I may withstand a man that upon the high way by force and violence would take my purse or life from me And therefore all Warrants comming from any pretended or reall Committees of Lords and Commons to command me before them that are not formed according to the Law of England I ought not to obey but withstand and resist upon paine of being by all the ambiased understanding men of England esteemed a betrayer and destroyer of the Lawes and liberties of England for the preservation of which I ought to contest as Naboth did with King Ahab for his vineyard 1 King 21.2 3 4 13. And by the Law of England no warrant or processe ought to issue out to summon up any man to any Court of Justice in England whatsoever till a complaint by a certain prosecutor be filed or exhibited in that Court of iustice from whence the warrant processe or Summons comes which warrant processe or Summons ought expresly to containe the nature of the cause to which I am to answer and the name of my prosecutor or complainants or else it is not legall and so not binding but may and ought to be resisted by me and the Court must be sure to have legall jurisdiction over the causes Secondly All the Capacities that either the House of Commons or Lords can sit in is First Either as a Councell and so are to be close and for any man whatsoever in that Capacitie to come or offer to come in amongst them that doe not belong unto them is unwarrantable and so punishable d d Se Cooks 2. part inst fol. 103. 104. 4. part inst Chap. High Court of Parlm and the book called the manner of holding Parlmts Mr. Prinns relation of the triall of Col. Nath Fines p. 13. and regall tirany pag. 82. 83. or else Secondly As a Court of Iustice to try and examine men in criminall causes and in this capacitie they or any of their Committees ought alwayes to Sir open for all peaceable men freely to behold and see e e See 2. part inst fol. 103 104. and my book called the resolved mans resolution p. 56. and regall tyrany p. ●● ●2 83. Mr. Prinns relation of Col. Nath. Fines his tryall p. 11 12 13. or else I am not bound to go to any tryall with them or answer them a word and therefore in this sense most illegall is the close Committee of Lords and Commons f f See my grand plea and my letter 11. Nov. 1647. to every Jndividuall Member of the House of Commons See Sir Edw. Cooks exposition of the 14. and 29. Chap of Magna Charta in his 2. part inst and regall tyranny p. 43 44 72 73 74 85 86. and Vox Plebis pag. 38 39 40 41 42. and my Epistle to the Lievt of the Tower the 13. Ian. 1646. called the oppressed mans oppressions declared p. 17. 18 19. for examining those they call London Agents or any other whatsoever And Thirdly that Close Committee is most illegall being a mixture of Lords with Commons seeing the Lords are none of their or my Peers and Equalls by Law and so cannot nor ought not to be there to be my examiners tryers or Judges and a traytor I am to the lawes and liberties of England if I stoop or submit to the jurisdiction or power of such a mixt Committee f Thirdly It is contrary to Law and expresly against the Petition of right either for this Committee of Lords and Commons g g See Vox Plebis p. 38. my anatomy of the Lords tyrany p. 10. and Thompsons plea against Marshall Law or any other Court of justice or Committee whatsoever to force mee or any man to answer to interrogatories against my self or my neer relations Fourthly Neither can they legally go about to try or punish me for any crime that is triable or punishable at Common law i i See the proofes in the third Maginall note at the letter C. k k Which Statute you may read before p. 6. and take notice of this that all misdemeanors whatsoever are Baileable l l See the 3. E. 1. c. 26. and 4. E. 3. 10. and 23. H. 6 10. Rast plea. fo 31. 7. Vox Plebis p. 55 56. 57. and my late Epistle to C. West late Liev. of the Tower calle● the oppressed mans oppressions declared p. 3 4. 1. part Cooks inst Lib. 3. chap. 13.
Sect 71. fol 368. where he positively declares it was the native ancient rights of all Englishmen both by the Statute and Common Law of England to pay no fees at all to any administrators of justice whatsoever or any Clarke or Office● whatsoever officiating under them who were only to receive their Fees Wages and Salleries of the King out of the publique treasure See also 2 part inst fol. 74. 209. 210. The Publique treasure of the Kingdom being betrusted with the King for that and such ends see also that excellent book in English called the Mirror of justice chap. 5. Sect. 1. pag. 231. and Iudge Huttons argument in Mr. Hamdens case against ship money pag. 41. m m See 1. part inst lib. 3. Chap. 7. Sect. 438. fo 260. and the 2. part fo 43 315 590. see my book called the oppressed mans oppressions declared p. 3. Vox plebis p. 47 55. 56. and liberty vindicated against slavery p. 14 15 16 n n in his 2. part iust fol. 42 43. which is exceeding well worth your reading see fo 315 316 590 591. see the mirror of justice in English chap. 5. Sect. 1. devision 53 54 55 57 58. pag. 231. Fiftly and if in case there be no Law extant to punish their Pretended London Agents for doing their duty in prosecuting those iust things that the Parliament hath often declared is the right and due of all the free men in England they ought to goe free from punishment for where there is no Law there can saith the Apostle Paul be no transgression h h see Rom. 4.15 Englands Birth right p. 1. 2 3 4 and the resolved mans resolution p. 24 25 26. but if that Committee or any other power in England shall Commit me or any Commoner in England to prison for disobeying their illegall and Arbitrary Orders it is more then by Law they can doe neither ought I to goe to prison but by force and violence which I cannot resist and I ought to see that the warrant be legall in the form of it that is to say that it be under hand and seale and that he or they in law have power to commit me and that the warrant contain the expresse cause wherefore I am committed and also have a lawfull conclusion viz. and him safely to keep untill he be delivered by due course of Law and not during the pleasure of this House or Committee or till this house or Committee doe further order and I may and ought to read the warrant and to have a copie of it if I demand it without ●aying any thing for it and if I be committed for any crime not mentioned in the statute of 3. Ed. 1 Chap. 15. k k Which Statute you may read before p. 6. and take notice of this that all misdemeanore whatsoever are Baileable I am Baileable which I may and ought to tender in person to the parties that Commit me either if I have them by me before I goe to prison or else as soone as I am in prison or as soon as I can conveniently get f● baile for me and in case I be legally committed both for power matter and forme and be kept in prison after I have proffered baile as before I may bring my action of false imprisonment and recover damages therefore but besides know this that there is not one farthing token due to the Serient at Armes or any other Officer whatsoever that carries me to prison neither is there one peny due to any Gaoler whatsoever for fees from me but one bare groat at most I and when I am in prison I ought to be used with all civilitie and humanitie for that great Lawyer Sir Edw. Cook expresly saith m That imprisonment must only be a safe custodie not a punishment and that a prison ought to be for keeping men safe to be duly tryed according to the Law and custome of the Land but not in the least to punish or destroy them or to remaine in it till the party committing please and he further saith in his exposition of the 26. chap. of Magna Charta ●n that the Law of the Land favouring the libertie and freedome of a man from imprisonment and so highly hating the imprisonment of any man whatsoever though committed or accused of heinous and odious crimes that by law it self is not baileable yet in such a case it allowes the prisoner the benefit of the Writ called de odio aria anciently called breve de bono Malo to purchase his liberty by which he saith he ought to have out gratis o o Only this is to be taken notice of that if I commit an offence before the view of a Iudge or Iustices fitting upon the Bench I ought to goe to prison with or by his verball command with any officer of the Court he shall Command me to goe with only he ought to enter a Mittiter send it after me when the Court riseth and I may if I please proffer him baile to answer the Law when he Commits me which he ought not to refuse and if he doe it is false imprisonment if my pretended or reall crime were baileable and my action I may have against him which writ is in force to this day and therefore he saith ibid. that the Iustices of assize Iustices of Oyer and Terminer and of Gaole delivery have not suffered the prisoner to belong detained but at their next comming have given the prisoner full and speedy iustice by due tryall without detaining him long in prison Nay saith he they have been so far from allowance of his detaining in prison without due tryall that it was resolved in the case of the Abot of St. Albon by the whole Court that where the King had granted to the Abott of St. Albon to have a Gaole and to have a Gaole delivery and divers persons were committed to that Gaole for felony and because the Abott would not be at the cost to make deliverance p p In his 2. part inst fo 52 53. in which pages you may read the very words of an Habeas Corpus as also in the 79 80 81. pages of Regall tiranny where you may have them in English as well as Latin he detained them in prison long time without making lawfull deliverance that the Abott had for that cause forfeited his franchise and that the same might be seized into the Kings hand q q Vpon which Habeas Corpus if you be brought up to the barre you ought if wrongfully imprisoned clearely to be discharged without baile and with baile if justly imprisoned if your crime be baileable or else the Iudge forsweares himself for which you may indict him for perjury and also have an action at Law for false imprisonment against him that falsely committed you or they that forced you hither yea and in divers cases against the Gaoler himself who ought not by law upon their perills
to receive or detaine you but by a legall warrant flowing from a legall power as before I have more fully noted See also 1. p. book decl p. 201. And you are to know that any house keeper that stand not committed of crimes but are legall men paying scot and lot though they be no subsidie men are good baile and if refused you have your action of false imprisonment against him that so doth and you are further to know that if the prisoner be in a Country Gaole who is ●o be brought up to the Bar in Westminster Hall upon the Habeas Corpus that he is only to beare his owne charges but by law is not bound to beate the Gaolers or to pay him any thing for bringing him And in case the party be committed to prison unjustly and no Baile will be taken for him he ought to require a Copy of his Mittimus and to have it gratis and if I should demand it and it would not be given me I would not goe unlesse I were carried by force by head and heeles and then I would cry out Murder Murder ●o and doe the best I could to preserve my self till I had got a Copy of it for many times when a man comes to prison the dogged Gaoler will refuse to let me have it which may be a great ●e●riment to me and if I stirre or busse for it his will shall be a Law unto me to du●geon me b●●t and fetter me contrary to Law It being as Andrew Horne saith in his excellent book called the Mirrour of justice in English Chap. 5. Sect. 1. devision 54. pag. 231. an abuse of Law that a prisoner is laden with irons or put to paine before he be attainted of fellony c. And when J am thus in prison committed by what authority soever the first thing that J am to doe is to send my friend be he what he will be a● well a private understanding resolute man as a Lawyer for either my self or any one I will appoint may and ought to plead my cause before any Iudge in England as well as any Lawyer in the kingdome and neither ought by the Iudge to be forbidden snub'd or brow beaten to the Chancery for a Habeas Corpus if it be out of Tearm for as Sir Edward Cook on the 29. chap. of Magna Charta well p saith the Chancery is a shop of iustice alwayes open and never adiourned so as the subiect being wrongfully imprisoned may have justice for the liberty of his person as well in the Vacation time as in the Tearme but if it be Tearm time it is most proper to move for the Habeas Corpus at the Kings bench barre and if the Judges refuse to grant it unto you it being your right by Law as the Petition of right fully declare q and the Iudges by their oath before printed pag. 10 36 are bound to execute the Law impartially without giving care in the least to the unjust command of the Parliament or any other against it then you may by the Law indict the ●udge or Iudges for Perjury and if then they shall deny you the benefit of the Law I know no reason but you may conclude them absolute Tyrants and that the foundation of Government is overturned you as the Parliament hath taught you are left to the naturall remedy to preserve your selves which self preservation they have declared no people can be deprived of see their declarations 1. part book decl p. 207 690. 728 150. Iohn Lilburne in adversity and prosperity and in life and death alwayes one and the same for the liberties of himself and his native Country From my arbitrary tyrannicall and Murthering imprisonment in the Tower of London this 2. of Decemb. 1647. Postcript BVt while I was concluding this second edition of the London Agents plea with the fore-expressed additions newes is brought me that the committee of plundered Ministers summons up Londoners and commits them for non payment of Tythes for whom I frame a Plea thus That the houses of Parliament have already made two Ordinances about tythes of the 8. of Novem. 1644. and the 9. of August 1647. and by those Ordinances referred the London-Parsons or ministers in London to get their tythes according to the statute of the ●7 H. 8. 12. which statute authorised such and such men to be Commissioners as are therin named or any fix of them to make a decree which decree shall be as binding to the Londoners as an expresse act of Parliament in which they give the Parsons two shillings nine-pence in the pound for all house-rents c. which the Londoners are bound to pay unto their parsons if the said decree had as by the foresaid statute it ought to have been entred upon record in the High Court of Chancery which it never was nor is no● her to be found a● Me●arborow the Lawyer in Roben-hoods court in Bow-lane London proved by certificate under the Record keeper● hand before Alderman Adams when he was Lord Mayor of London In a case betwixt Parson Glendon of ●arkins by Tower-hill and one of his Parishoners viz. Mr. Robert a Merchant as I remember for I was by and heard all the Plea And therefore the Parsons of London can neither by Law nor those Ordinances recover or justly require one farthing token of Tythes from any Citizen of London And for the Committee of plundered Ministers by any pretended authority that yet is visible to take upon them to execute those Ordinances or to compel the Citizens of London to pay tythes to their Parsons or Ministers they have no more authority or right to doe it then a Three hath upon the high way to rob me of my purse or life and for them by the Law of their owne will to take upon them to send Summons to any Free-man of England and to force them to come before them without due processe of * * And what due processe of Law is you may read in the 2. part institutes upon the 29. Chap. of Magna Charta and Vox Plebis pag. 11 12 14 15. c. and my book called The resolved mans resolution page 3 4 5 6. c. and my grand plea against the Lords and Thompsons plea against the new Tyrants at Windsore executing Marshall Law law to pay so much money to the Parsons upon any pretence whatsoever and for unwillingnesse to pay to commit him or them to prison is a crime in my Judgement of as high a nature in subverting our fundamentall lawes and liberties and se●ing up an Arbitrary Tyrannical government as the Earle of Strafford was accused of and lost his head for and as wel do the actors in this arbitrary Committee deserve to dye for these actions as Trayterous subverters of all lawes as the Earle of Strafford did for his against whom in the fift Article of his aditionall Impeachment of treason it is alledged against him That h● did use and
exercise a power above and against and to the subversion of the said fundamentall Lawes extending such his power to the goods free-holds inheritances liberties and lives of the people And in the sixt Article of his said impeachment it is laid unto his charge as a transcendent treasonable crime That the said Thomas Earle of Strafford without any legall proceedings and upon a paper Petition of Richard Rolstone did cause the said Lord Mount Norris to be disseized and put out of possession of his free-hold and inheritance without due processe of Law And in the seventh Article he the said Earle is charged That in the terme of holy Trinity in the 13. yeare of his now Maiesties raigne did cause a case commonly called the case of Tenures upon defective Titles to be made and drawne up without any Iury or Tryall or other legall Processe without the consent of parties by colour of which lawlesse proccedings divers of his Maiesties subiects and particularly the Lord Tho. Dillon were outed of their possessions and disseized of there free-hold by colour of the same resolution without Legall proceedings whereby many hundreds of his Maiesties Subiects were undone and their Families utterly ruinated And in the 8. Article he is impeached That upon a petition of St. Iohn Gilford Knight the first day of Febr. in the said 13. yeare of his Maiesties raigne without any legall protesse made a decree against Adam Viscount Lo●tus of ●lie and did cause the said Viscont to be imprisoned and kept close Prisoner on pretence of disobedience to the said decree or order and without any Legall proceedings did in the same 13. yeare imprison George Earle of Kildare against law thereby to inforce him to submit his Title to the Manner and Lordship of Castle Leigh being of great yearly value to the said Earle of Strafford wil and pleasure and kept him a yeare Prisoner for the said cause two Monethes whereof be kept him close Prisoner † † All which you may at large reade in the 12● 124 125 pages of a book called Speeches and Pallages printed for Wil. Cook at Furnivalls-Inne gate in Holburn 1641. c. Now the Parliament it selfe or the Members thereof being as Sr. Edward Cook well declares In his 4. part institute published for good Law by their own speciall orders as subiect to the Law as other men saving in the freedome of arrests that so their person may not be hindred from the discharge of their trust in the house which their Country hath inposed in them and unto whom till it be repealled it is a rule as well as to any other man in England whatsoever especially in all actions or differences betwixt party and party and that Parliament man that shall say that any Committee of Parliament or the whole houses is the Law shewes and declares himselfe either ignorant of the Law or a voluntary wilfull deceiver for what is within their breasts I neither can know nor am bound to enquire after for to know or take notice of * * See Englands Birth-right p. 3 4 5 6 7 8. neither is any thing therein till it he legally put in writing legally debated passed and legally published binding in the least unto me or or any man in England and indeed to speake properly the Parliaments worke is to repeale old Lawes and to make new ones to pull downe old Courts of Justice and erect now ones to make warre and conclude peace to raise money and see it rightly and providently disposed of but themselves are not in the least to finger it † † For the third Article in the first impeachment of the Earle of Strafford in the above said book page 118. runs thus that the better to inrich and inable himselfe to go thorow with his traiterous designs he hath detained a great part of his Maj revenue without giving legal account and hath taken great sums out of the Exchequer converting them to his own use when his Maiesty was necessitated for his owne urgent occasions and his Army had been a long time unpaid it being their proper work to punish those that imbezle and wast it but if they should finger it and wast it may not the Kingdom easily be cheated of its treasure and also be left without meanes to punish them for it and most dishonourable it is and below the greatnesse of Legslators to stoop to be executors of the law and indeed it is most irrationall and unjust they should for if they doe me injustice I am robed and deprived of my remedie and my Appeale it being no where to be made but to them whose worke it is to punish all male or evill administrators of justice and therefore I wish they would seriously weigh their owne words in their declaration of the 17. of Aprill 1646. 2. part book declaration page 878. where to the whole Kingdome they declare that they will not nor any by colour of any authority derived from them shall interrupt the ordinary course of justice in the severall Courts and Iudicatories of this Kingdome nor intermeddle in cases of private interest otherwhere determinable unlesse it be in case of male administration of Iustice wherein we shall see say they and provide that right be done and punishment inflicted as there he occasion according to the lawes of the kingdome and the trust reposed in us And therefore seeing that by the law of their owne will without due course or pocesse of Law or any visible shadow or colour of Law the Committe of plundered Ministers will Rob the Citizens of their proper goods which is not in the least justifiable for as Iudge Crook in the 6● pag. of his Argument in Mr. Hampdens Cause against Ship money saith that the Law book called the Dr. and studient chap. 5. pag. 8. setting down that the Law doth vest the absolute property of every mans goods in himself and that they cannot be taken from him but by his legall consent saith that is the reason if they he taken from him the party shall answer the full value thereof in damage and so saith Iudge Crook I conceive that the party that doth this wrong to another shall besides the damages to the party be imprisoned and pay a fine to the King which in the Kings bench is the tenth part of as much as he payeth to the party so then if the King will punish the wrong of taking of Goods without consent between party and party much more will be not by any prerogative take away any mans goods without his assent particular or generall But if they will either have your goods or your libertie from you by the Law of their one wills be sure you play the Englishman not foolishly or willingly to betray your liberty into their hands but in this case part with them as you would part with your purse to a Theefe that robs you upon the high way for the forementioned Lawyer in the forementioned 8. pag. saith that
have forthwith granted unto him a writ of Habeas Corpus to be directed generally unto all and every Sheriffs Gaoler Minister Officer or other person in whose custody the party so committed or restrained shall be and the Sheriffs Gaoler Minister Officer or other person in whose custody the party so committed or restrained shall be shall at the return of the said writ and according to the command thereof upon due and convenient notice thereof given unto him at the charge of the party who requireth or procureth such Writ and upon security by his own bond given to pay the charge of carrying back the prisoner if he shall be remanded by the Court to which he shall be brought as in like cases hath been used such charges of bringing up and carrying back the prisoner to be alwayes ordered by the Court if any difference shall arise thereabout bring or cause to be brought the body of the said party so committed or restrained unto and before the Iudges or Iustices of the said Court from whence the same writ shall issue in open Court and shall then likewise certifie the true cause of his deteinour or imprisonment and thereupon the Court within three Court dayes after such return made and delivered in open Court shall proceed to examine or determine whether the cause of such Commitment appearing upon the said return be just and legall or not and shall thereupon doe what to iustice shall appertain either by delivering bailing or remanding the prisoner And if any thing shall be otherwise wilfully done or omitted to be done by any Iudge Justice Officer or other person afore mentioned contrary to the direction and true meaning hereof That then such person so offending shall forfeit to the party grieved his trebble dammages to be recovered by such meanes and in such manner as is formerly in this Act limitted and appointed for the like penaltie to be sued for and recovered Provided alwayes and be it enacted That this Act and the severall Clauses therein contained shall be taken and expounded to extend only to the Court of Star-chamber and to the said Courts holden before the President and Councell in the Marches of Wales and before the President and Councell in the Northern parts And also to the Court commonly called the Court of the Dutchy of Lancaster holden before the Chancellor and Councell of that Court And also in the Court of Exchequer of the County Palatine of Chester held before the Chamberlain and Councell of that Court And to all Courts of like Jurisdiction to be hereafter erected ordained constituted or appointed as aforesaid And to the warrants and Directions of the Councell-board and to the Commitments restraints and imprisonments of any person or persons made commanded or awarded by the Kings Majestie his Heires or Successours in their own person or by the Lords and others of the Privie Councell and every one of them And lastly provided and be it enacted That no person or persons shall be sued impleaded molested or troubled for any offence against this present Act unlesse the party supposed to have to offended shall be sued or impleaded for the same within of two yeares at the most after such time wherein the said offence shall be committed Anno XVII Caroli Regis An Act for the declaring unlawfull and void the late proceedings touching Ship money and for the vacating of all Records and Processe concerning the same VVHereas divers Writs of late time issued under the Great Seal of England commonly called Shipwrits for the charging of the Ports Towns Cities Boroughs and Counties of this Realm respectively to provide and furnish certain Ships for his Majesties service And whereas upon the execution of the same Writs and Returnes of Certioraries thereupon made and the sending the same by Mittimus into the Court of Exchequer Processe hath bin thence made against sundry persons pretended to be charged by way of contribution for the making up of certain sums assessed for the providing of the said Ships and in especiall in Easter Tearm in the thirteenth yeare of the Reign of our Soveraign Lord the King that now is a Writ of Scire facias was awarded out of the Court of Exchequer to the then Sheriffe of BVCKINGHAM-SHIRE against IOHN HAMDEN Esquire to appeare and shew cause why hee should not be charged with a certain summe so assessed upon him upon whose appearance and demurrer to the proceedings therein the Barons of the Exchequer adiourned the same case into the Exchequer Chamber where it was solemnly argued divers dayes and at length it was there agreed by the greater part of all the Justi●es of the Courts of Kings Bench and Common Pleas and of the Barons of the Exchequer there assembled that the said Iohn Hambden should be charged with the said summe so as aforesaid assessed on him The maine grounds and reasons of the said Iustices and Barons which so agreed being that when the good and safety of the Kingdome in generall is concerned and the whole Kingdome in danger the King might by writ under the Great Seale of England command all his Subiects of this his Kingdom at their charge to provide and furnish such number of Ships with Men Victualls and Munition and for such time as the King should think sit for the defence and safegard of the Kingdome from such danger and perill and that by Law the King might compell the doing thereof in case of refusall or refractarinesse and that the King is the sole Iudge both of the danger and when and how the same is to be prevented avoided according to which grounds reasons a● the Iustices of the said courts of Kings Bench Cōmon Pleas the said Barons of the Exchequer having bin formerly consulted with by his Majestis command had set their hands to an extraiudiciall opinion expressed to the same purpose which opinion with their names thereunto was also by his Maiesties command inrolled in the Courts of Chancery Kings Bench Common Pleas and Exchequer and likewise entred among the Remembrances of the Court of Star-Chamber and according to the said agreement of the said Iustices and Barons judgement was given by the Barons of the Exchequer that the said IOHN HAMPDEN should be charged with the said summe so assessed on him And whereas some other Actions and Processe depend and have depended in the said Court of Exchequer and in some other Courts against other persons for the like kind of charge grounded upon the said Writs commonly called SHIPWRITS all which Writs and proceedings as aforesaid were VTTERLY against the Law of the Land Be it therefore declared and enacted by the Kings most Excellent Maiestie and the Lords and Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by the authority of the same That the said charge imposed upon the Subiect for the providing and furnishing of Ships commonly called Ship-money and the said extraiudiciall opinion of the said Iustices and Barons and the said Writs and every of