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A93123 The Kings supremacy asserted. Or A remonstrance of the Kings right against the pretended Parliament. By Robert Sheringham M.A. and Fellow of Gunvill, and Caius-Colledge in Cambridge Sheringham, Robert, 1602-1678. 1660 (1660) Wing S3237A; ESTC R231142 93,360 138

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respect of the power it self the Monarchy is absolute simple pure independent without profanation of outward mixture the King alone without further influence from the two Houses having ful power and authority to do or cause to be done all acts of Justice The King alone makes Laws by the asscent of the two Houses and if the two Houses are said at any time to make Lawes it is by a delegate power and authority communicated to them from him and not by any power and authority which they have radically in themselves Secondly I say that the King alone is not onely invested with all the rights of Soveraingty but hath them also so inseperably annexed to hs Royal person by the Lawes of the Land that they cannot be separated from him by any Act of Parliament by any civil constitution or pragmattical Sanction by any Law or Ordinance whatsoever but in case the King himself should improvidently by Act of Parliament agree to any thing tending to the diminution of his Royal Dignity it is then in the power of the Common-law to controul such a Statute to make voyd all such acts as tend to the degradation much more such as tend to the annihilation of Majesty Having thus opened the state of the Question I will now proceed to demonstrate the truth by Statutes by Common-Law and by reasons depending upon the laws and customes of the land CHAP. II. The Kings Supremacy in general shewed by the Statutes of the land I Could both from Saxon and divers other lawes and antiquities shew the Kings of England to have ruled more absolutely and to have anciently exercised a larger Jurisdiction then hath of later years been exercised or challenged by their Successors but because many immunities and priviledges have been granted to the Subjects since their times I will therefore confine my self to such statutes as have been made since the giving of the great Charter And to avoyd tediousnesse I will omit many statutes wherein the King is by both Houses collectively taken acknowledged to be supreme for they frequently in the statutes style him Our gracious Soveraign Lord the King Our dreadful Soveraign Lord the King I will likewise omit many others wherein they acknowledge themselves to be his Subjects and that when they were in their site relation order and union in which posture the fuller Answerer fancies them to be coordinate for such expressions run through divers statutes Most humbly beseech your most excellent Majesty your faithful and obedient subjects the Lords spiritual and temporal and the Commons in this your present Parliament assembled In their most humble wise shewen unto your Royal Majesty your loving subjects the Lords spiritual and temporal and the Commons of this present Parliament assembled I will only alledge such statutes as have been made on purpose to declare to whom Supremacy and all power and jurisdiction belong for there hath been divers acts of Parliament made to that end upon several occasions wherein the Kings Supremacy hath been acknowledged and confirmed unto him In the four and twenty year of Henry the eighth an Act was made that no Appeals should be used but within the Realm the Reason alledged in the Statute is because the King alone is the onely Supreme head of the Realm and is furnished with plenary and entire power to do all acts of justice Where by divers sundry old authentick Histories and Chronicles it is manifestly declared and expressed that this Realm of England is an Empire and hath so been accepted in the world governed by one supreme head and King having the dignity and Royal estate of the imperial Crown of the same unto whom a body politick compact of all sorts and degrees of people divided in tearms and by names of spiritualty and temporalty been bounden and owen to bear next to God a natural and humble obedience he being also institute and furnished by the goodnesse and sufferance of Almighty God with plenary whole and entire power preheminence authority prerogative and jurisdiction to render and yield justice and final determination to all manner of folk resiants or subjects within this his Realm This clear testimomy of the Kings Supremacy is thus eluded by the fuller Answerer saith he Answer what is meant by governed by one supreme head such a one as is able to do all acts of needful justice which the King in his natural capacity cannot do he cannot make a law it must therefore be understood in his full and intire politick capacity which takes in Law and Parliament nor can it be said that by those words a body politick compact of all sorts and degrees the Parliament is properly meant but the Kingdome at large Reply The sum of his Answer is this that in this Statute by the King not the King alone but the King and the two Houses of Parliament are to be understood and so although he would have the Kings power to be lesse yet to make him amends he will have his name to signifie more then it did before But this is nothing else but the evaporation of his own brain for if in any place the word King could signifie the King and the two Houses of Parliament yet in this it must of necessity signifie the King alone 35. H. 8. cap. 1. these words having the dignity and Royal estate of the Imperial Crown of the same can have reference to no other Besides in this Answer he contradicts his own Principles for if the two Houses be coordinate with the King and have power radically in themselves not derived from him they cannot be comprehended under his politick capacity Whereas he saith the King cannot make a Law and infer from thence that the King alone without taking in the two Houses hath not intire and plenary jurisdiction his inference is very infirm for it doth not diminish Majesty but redounds to the glory of it Argum. l. 8. c. de legibus to give lawes to the people by the counsel and assent of wisemen It hath been and is for the most part the practise in absolute Monarchies to make Lawes that shall bind posterity by general consent and agreement which yet doth not deprive the Monarch of his power or derogate any way from the plenitude and intirenesse thereof But I shall speak more of this when I come to answer their objections Whereas he saith that by a body politick compact of all sorts and degrees not the Parliament but the Kingdome at large is properly meant I know no man will contradict him yet I say the two Houses are comprehended under the Kingdome at large and are representative thereof in Parliament and representatives cannot be the head when the Kingdome at large whose Representatives they are is but the body And therefore here the fuller Answerer hath a little overshot himself for if by the body politick the Kingdome at large be understood then is the King major universis greater then all the people collectively taken by his
his Courts not in his private capacity and to speak properly only in his high Court of Parliament wherein he is absolutely supreme Head and Governour from which there is no appeal Object 2 And if the Parliament may take account what is done by by his Majesty in his inferiour Courts much more what is done by him without authority in any Court Object 3 And it is preached to the people in the Kings Declarations that by the Supremacy is meant a power inherent in the Kings person without above against all his Courts the Parliament not excepted whereby the excellent Lawes are turned into an arbitrary Government Reply Argus Eyes will scarce be able to discover a word of Law or truth in all this every sentence seemeth rather to be a Sarcasme then to contain matter of serious importance wherein they deal with his Majesty as the Jews did with our Saviour Christ who having stripped him of his apparrel and used all the spiteful and opprobrious tearms they could devise against him added at last a mock to their other incivilities bowing unto him and saying HARLE KING OF THE JEWES The pretended House having likewise seized upon all his Majesties Revenues and rights of the Crown and offered him all the indignities they could invent do yet style him their King and supreme Head and Governour but in such a manner as they may seem like the Jews rather to do it by way of derision then in earnest The Kings Supremacy they say is meant in Curia non in Camera in his Courts not in his private capacity As they fancy the people to have conveyed all authority to the King so they fancy the King to have poured it out again into his Courts as if he had no power authority or jurisdiction adherent in his person but had committed all to his delegate Judges or rather which they say is to speak properly unto themselves Manwood of sorrest lawes part 1. whereas he hath by law a royal and supiremenent jurisdiction above all his courts and may call causes out of them before himself or hear appeals and reform their abuses when occasion require Lambart Archaion fol. 95. I shall not need to repeat that which I have before this time opened touching the beginning of the Kingly power and authority for the delivery of justice to all the sorts and in all the suits of his subjects but I will confirm by proofes drawn out of our country lawes and lawyers that the self same generall jurisdiction is appropriated to all the Kings of this realm of England Master Henry Bracton that lived in the time of King Henry the third hath in the ninth and tenth chapter of his book these words following Rex non alius debet judicare si solus ad id sufficere possit cum ad hoc per veritatem Sacramenti teneatur astrictus exercere igitur debet Rex potestatem juris sicut Dei Vicarius minister in terra Sin Dominus Rex ad singulas causas determinandas non sufficiat ut levior sit illi labor in plures personaspartito onere eligere debet viros sapientes timentes Deum ex illis constituere justiciarios The words do prove two things serviceable to this purpose first that the K. onely is to be the judge of his people if he alone were able to performe that office as well because he is within his own Kingdome the vice-Roy of God the supream judge of the world as also for that he is thereunto bound by oath taken at the Coronation The second that albeit he doe for the multitude of causes substitute others underneath him yet is he not thereby discharged himself for it is done ut levior sit illi labor that his labour be the lighter not that he should sit unoccupied and least you should doubt that so much is not comprised in that oath of his one question therein amongst others is this Facies fieri in omnibus judiciis tuis aequam rectam justitiam discretionem in misericordia veritate secundum vires tuas To which he answereth faciam wherein the words judiciis tuis vires tuas doe more properly denote his own doing then the doing of his subalterne justices albeit their judgment be after a certain manner the judgement of the King himself also from whence their authority is derived Much like the words of Bracton speaketh King Edward the first in the beginning of his book of law commonly called Britton where after he had shewed that he is the Vicar of God and that he hath distributed his charge into sundry portions because he alone is not sufficient to heare and determine all complaints of his people theu he addeth these words Nous volons que nostre jurisdiction so it sur touts jurisdictions en nostre realm issent que in touts manners de felonies trespas contracts en touts maners de autres actions personals on real ayons poer a rendre faire rendre les jugements tiels come ils afferont sans a uter processe par la ou nous scavons la droit verite come judges We Will saith the King that our own jurisdiction be above all the jurisdiction of our realm so as in all manner of felonies trespasses contracts and in all other actions personalls or realls we have power to yeild or cause to yeild such judgements as do appertaine without other processe wheresoever we know the right truth as judges Neyther may this be taken to be meant of the Kings bench where there is onely an imaginary presence of his person but it must necessarily be understood of a jurisdiction remaining and left in the Kings Royall bodie and breast distinct from that of his Bench Marshalsey Common pleas Exchequer and the other ordinary courts because he doth immediatly after in the same place severally set forth by themselves as well the authority of the Kings Bench as of the rest of those his ordinarie Courts of justice And that this was no new made law or first brought in by the Normin conquest I must put you in mind of that which I touched before out of tho Saxon lawes of King Edgar where you did read it thus Nemo in lite Regem appellato nisi quando domi jus consequi non poterit sin juris summi onere domi prematur ad regem ut is id oneris allevet provocato Let no man in suit appeale to the King unlesse he may not get right at home but if that right be to heavy for him goe to she King to have it eased By which it may evidently appeare that even so many years agoe there might appellation be made to the Kings Person whensoever the cause should inforce it Hitherto Mr. Lambart who doth afterwards further prove this supreame and supereminent jurisdiction of the King by divers precedents and acts of Parliament And although the Commons in some other Parliaments have seemed to impugne this prerogative yet here as he saith
or ligeance is due Now that allegiance or ligiance is due to the King and onely to the King will appear by several Acts of Parliament In the first year of King James the Lords and Commons declared that both the ancient and famous Realms of England and Scotland were united in allegiance and loyal subjection in his royal person 1. Jac. cap. 2. to his Majesty and his posterity for ever In 34. H. 8. cap. 1. and 35. H. 8. cap. 3. c. the King is called the liege Lord of his subjects and in the Acts of Parliament of 13. R. 2. cap. 5. 11. R. 2. cap. 1. 14. H. 8. cap. 2 c. subjects are called the Kings liege people By other Acts of Parliament divers oaths have been framed and given to the people the contents and effects whereof were that they should bear all faith and allegiance to the King and his heirs In the six and twenty year of Henry the eighth an oath was taken by all the Kings subjects for the surety of the succession of the crown of England 26. H. 8. cap. 2. the oath was this Ye shall swear to bear faith truth and obedience all onely to the Kings Majesty and to the heirs of his body of his most dear and intirely beloved lawful wife Queen Anne begotten and to be begotten and further to the heirs of our said Soveraign Lord according to the limitation in the statute made for surety of his succession in the crown of this Realm mentioned and conteined and not to any other within this Realm nor forrain authority or Potentate and in case any oath be made or hath been made by you to any person or persons that then ye repute the same as vain and adnihilate and that to your cunning wit and utmost of your power without guile fraude or other undue mean ye shall observe keep maintain and defend the said act of succession and all the whole effects and contents thereof and all other acts and statutes made in confirmation or for execution of the same or for any thing therein conteined And this ye shall do against all manner of persons of what estate dignity degree or condition soever they be And in no wise do or attempt nor to your power suffer to be done or attempted directly or indirectly any thing or things privately or apertly to the let hinderance damage or derogation thereof or of any part of the same by any manner of means or of any manner of pretence so help you God and all Saints and the holy Evangelists There are two things observable in this oath first that they swear inclnsivè to bear all faith truth and obedience to the Kings Majesty and his heirs and onely to them Secondly that they swear exclusivè to bear faith truth and obedience to no other either within the realm or without not to other persons nor to other authority by both which clauses of the oath it appears that the King 28. H. 8. cap. 7. and none but the King can challenge faith and allegiance from the people Afterwards in the eight and twenty year of King Henry the eighth the like oath was injoyned to be taken by all his subjects touching his succession by Queen Jane for the former Act touching his succession by Queen Anne was repealed but the oath injoyned was otherwise the same And in the five and thirty year of his reign an other oath was framed wherein besides the contents of the former touching allegiance due to the King and his heirs some other additions were inserted touching his Supremacy in Ecclesiastical causes because the former oaths were not thought full enough to that effect and purpose And these oaths were extraordinary and imposed by special appointment l. 35. But besides these there is another ordinary oath of Allegiance which was first instituted by King Arthur l. 59. and is mentioned amongst the laws of King Edward and confirmed by the laws of William the Conquerour this oath cominueth still in force and should by the law be given in every Leer The order and form of it appeareth in Britton who wrote in the reign of Edward the first and compiled a book of the Statutes and lawes which were then in use the effect of it is this Coke lib. 7. in Calvins case You shall swear that that from this day forward you shall be true and faithful to our soveraign Lord the King and his heirs and truth and faith shall bear of life and member and terrene honour and you shall neither know nor hear of any ill or damage intended unto him that you shall not defend so help you almighty God By this it is clear enough that allegiance is due to the King the pretended house on the other side is so far from having authority to exact allegiance from the people that they were all bound themselves by law to take the oath of Allegiance before they were admitted to sit in the house and having every one taken the said oath how they should be absolved none but themselves can understand whose common practice hath been to play with oaths as children play with toyes and trifles seeming rather to make them their pastime then to esteem them religious acts or sacred obligations Fourthly to pardon the transgression of the laws to remit treason murder felony man-slaughter to appoint subordinate Judges to make leagues with forraign Princes and States all these are rights of soveraignty and all these are declared and determined by the Statutes of the land to belong to the Kings Majesty First the power of pardoning the transgressions of the law and of remitting treason murder felony manslaughter and such like offences is declared and determined to be in the Kings Majesty by a Statute made in the twenty seventh year of Henry the eighth 27. H. 8. c. 24. Where divers of the most ancient prerogatives and authorities of Justice appertaining to the imperial crown of this realm have been severed and taken from the same by sundry gifts of the Kings most noble progenitors Kings of this realm to the great diminution and detriment of the Royal estate of the same and to the hinderance and great delay of justice for reformation whereof be it enacted by authority of this present Parliament that no person or persons of what estate or degree soever they be of from the first day of July which shall be in the year of our Lord God 1536. shall have any power or authority to pardon or remit any treasons murders manslaughters or felonies or any utlaries for any such offences aforesaid committed perpetrated done or divulged or hereafter be committed done or divulged by or against any person or persons in any part of this Realm Wales or the marches of the same but that the Kings highness his heirs and successors Kings of this Realm shall have the whole and sole power and authority thereof united and knit to the imperial crown of this realm as
the common law made void Stanford lib. 2.101 because they cut off part of the Kings prerogative So likewise to grant letters patents of Denization is esteemed by the common law inter jura Majestatis insignia summae potestatis Coke in Calvins case and is so inseparably and individually annexed to the Royal person of the King as it cannot be divided from it That which I have hitherto said of the rights and preheminences of Majesty is to be understood of those rights and preheminences that are so essential to it as they cannot be separted without the diminution or destruction of Majesty As the power of the Militia the power of making laws the power of appointing Judges and such like Acts of jurisdiction as also the power of dispensing with penal Statutes the power of pardoning the transgressions of the Law the power of prosecuting the law and such like supreme acts of justice and mercy some of which rights and preheminences cannot be taken away without giving a wound others not without bringing death and dissolution to Majesty yet there are other rights and preheminences that are called priviledges which are not so essential to Majesty but that they may by special grace of the King be separated Bracton lib. 2. cap. 24. Ea vero quae jurisdictionis sunt pacis ea quae sunt justitiae paci annexa ad nullum pertinent nisi ad Coronam dignitatem Regiam nec à Corona separari poterunt cum faciant ipsam Coronam Ea vero quae dicuntur Privilegia licet pertineant ad Coronam tamen à Corona separari possunt ad privatas personas transferri sed de gratia ipsius Regis speciali id est Those things which belong to jurisdiction and peace and those which are annexed to justice and peace pertain to none but the Crown neither can they be separated from it because they make the Crown But those which are called Priviledges although they pertain to the Crown yet they may be separated from it and transferred to private persons but not without the special favour of the King It may seem strange that the King and the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the House of Commons which are virtually the whole kingdome should not have power to make what Laws they please and to bind themselves and the whole kingdome by them in things not repugnant to the law of God yet if we consider the ground of this restraint we shall find it reasonable for they which lay the first foundation of a Common-wealth have authority to make lawes that cannot be altered by posterity in matters that concern the rights both of King and people for foundations cannot be removed without the ruin and subversion of the whole building As for example the division of things which is made at the first foundation of a Commonwealth whether the people took the countrey they divide from the Inhabitants by conquest in a just war or whether they did first actually possesse it themselves as being before emptie and vacant cannot be altered by posterity and a new division made without manifest injustice The Laws which they then make for the preservation of their right and propriety in the said division can not be disannulled by succeeding Parliaments nor can any particular man be deprived of his inheritance which descends unto him by virtue of that division or of any part or parcel or appurtenances thereof by any contrary law which shall be made by them I speak not what Parliaments may do by force but what they may justly do for they have not such an arbitrary power but that they are alwayes in a morall subjection to the rules of justice and natural equity And in this case the Kings condition ought not to be worse then the peoples but his share and rights in the said division are as firmly and unchangeably to be preserved as the share and rights of particular men And both the King and people are obliged to this not only by the rules of Justice and natural equity but by oath and by the municipal Lawes of the Land l. 17. to which they are both sworn That the King is bound to this appears by the Lawes of King Edward Debet vero de jure Rex omnes terras honores omnes dignitates jura libertates coronae regni hujus in integrum cum omni integritate sine diminutione observare defendere dispersa dilapidata amissa regni jura in pristinum statum debitum viribus omnibus omnibus revocare i. e. The King ought by right to maintain and defend all the Lands honours dignities rights and liberties of the Crown entirely without diminution and by all means to recall again those rights which are lost and separted from the Crown That the people are bound to this l. 35. l. 56. appears likewise by the Lawes of King Edward and of William the Conquerour who did a little inlarge the Lawes of King Edward in this particular Statuimus etiam firmiter praecipimus ut omnes liberi homines totius regni nostri praedicti sint fratres conjurati ad Monarchiam ad Regnum nostrum pro viribus suis facultatibus contra inimicos pro posse suo defendendum viriliter servandum pacem dignitatem coronae nostrae integram observandam ad judicium rectum justitiam constanter omnibus modis pro posse suo sine dilatione faciendam Hoc decretum sancitum est in civitate London i. e. we will and command that all free men of our Kingdom be sworn Brothers to defend and keep our Monarchy and Kingdome according to their power against the Enemies of the same and to maintain the peace and dignity of our Crown entire and to exercise right judgement and justice according to their power without deceit and delay This Decree was enacted in the City of London By the civil law also the rights of Soveraignty cannot be separated from the Prince and the reason alleadged is because they are essential to Majesty Suprema jurisdictio potestas regia etsi Princeps velit se separari non possunt sunt enim ipsa forma substantialis essentia Majestatis ergo manente ipso Rege ab eo abdicari non possunt Cabedo practic observ par 2. decis 40. n. 8. Io. Andr. in addit ad specul tit de jurisdict c. Cum Marthae de celebrat Missar i. e. Supreme jurisdiction and Kingly power cannot be separated from the Prince although he would himself for they are essential to Majesty and cannot be abdicated whilst he remaineth King CHAP. V. The Kings Supremacy in particular shewed by the Common Law I Come now to the particular rights of Soveraignty which are all by the Common law wholly in the power of the King First 19 E. 4.6 Coke 7.25 B. the Militia is his by the Common Law and to him it only pertaineth to make War with
forrain Princes and Estates as also to maintain the peace to suppresse Rebellions and to see justice executed at home within his own Kingdome Fleta lib. 1 cap. 17. Habet Rex in manu sua omnia jura quae ad Coronam Laitalem pertinent potestatem materialem gladium qui pertinet ad Regni gubernaculum i. e. The King hath all the rights in his hand which belong to the Crown and to Temporal jurisdiction and the power of the sword which belong to the Government of the Kingdome So likewise saith Bracton lib. 1. cap. 8. Sunt alii potentes sub Rege qui dicuntur Barones hoc est robut belli sunt alii qui dicuntur Vavasores viri magnae dignitatis vavasor enim nihil melius dici poterit quam vas fortium ad valetudinem sunt sub Rege milites s ad militiam exercendam electi i. e. There are other great men under the King which are called Barons and other which are called Vavasours men of great dignity There are also soldiers under the King chosen to exercise the Militia And in the beginning of his Book he saith that it is necessary this power should be in the King In rege quirecte regit necessaria sunt duo haec arma videlicet Leges quibus utrumque tempus bellorum pacis recte possit gubernari utrumque enim istorum alter us indiget auxilio quo tam res militaris possit esse tuta quam ipsae Leges usu armorum praesidio possint esse servatae Si autem arma defecerint contra hostes rebelle indomitos sic erit regnum indefensum Si autem Leges sic exterminabitur justitia i. e. In a King that governeth well two things are necessary armes and lawes by which he may be enabled to rule both in times of peace and war and both these help the need of one another whereby both armes and lawes may be preserved If arms be wanting against enemies and rebells the Kingdome shall be without defence if Lawes be wanting without justice This is also evident from the Tenures whereby most of the chief men in the Kingdome hold their estates for all that hold in capite by Knights service are bound for their fee to assist the King in his wars whensoever they shall be summoned by him whether it be to suppresse rebellion or to resist a forraign invasion And this hath been the known Law of the Land ever since the time of William the Conquerour in the fourth year of whose reign this right was confirmed unto him by Act of Parliament The words of the Statute are these Statuinus firmiter pracipimus ut omnes Comites Barones Milites Servientes universi liberi homines totitu regni nostri praedicti habeant teneant se semper bene in armis in equis ut decet oportet quod sint semper prompti parati ad servitium suum integrum nobis explendum peragendum cum semper opus adfuerit secundum quod nobis debent de feodis tenementis suis de jure facere sicut illis statuimus per commune consilium totius Regni nostri praedicti illis dedimus concessimus in feodis jure hereditario i. e. We will and command that all Earls Barons Knights Villeins and all Freemen of out whole kingdom be alwayes well provided with horse and armes as it behoveth them and that they be alwayes in a readinesse to serve us as often as need shall require according as they are bound by their Lands and Tenements and as we have appointed them to do by the Common-Councell of our whole Kingdome and for that consideration have given and granted them lands in Fee for ever Secondly The Legislative power belongs to the King alone by the Common Law the two Houses have authority granted them by the King to assent or dissent but the power that makes it a law the authority that animates it and makes it differ from a dead Letter is in the King who is the life and soul of the law by whose authority alone the lawes command and forbid and vindicate and punish offenders So saith Bracton lib. 1. cap. 2. Hujusmodi verò Leges Anglicanae consuetudines Regum authoritate jubent quandoque quandoque vetant quandoque vindicant puniunt transgressores i. e. These Lawes and customes of England by the Kings authority do sometimes command sometimes sorbid and sometimes chastise and punish transgressors This was also resolved by divers Earls and Barons and by all the justices in the time of Edward the third For one Haedlow and his wife having a controversy with the King and desiring to have it decided in Parliament a reference being made to divers Earls and Barons and to all the justices to consider of the businesse it was resolved that the two houses were not coordinate with the King in the Legislative power but that the King alone made lawes by the assent of the two Houses that he had none equal or coordinate with him in his Realm and that he could not be judged by the Parliament 22. E. 3.6 Fuit dit que le Roy fist les leis per assent des peres de la Commune non pas les peres le Commune Et que il ne avera nul pere en sa terre demesne que le Roy per eux ne doit estr ajuge i. e. It was resolved that the King makes lawes by the assent of the Lords and Commons and not the Lords and Commons and that he could have no Peer in his own land and that he could not be judged by them The Common practice of the law confirms this as well as the resolution of the Judges for the breach of any Statute whether it be by treason murder felony perjury or by any other way is an offence against the Kings authority alone and pleas made against such offences are called the pleas of the crown because they are done encounter la corone dignitie le Roy Stanford les plees del corone lib. 1. cap. 1. against the crown and dignity of the King So that it is not the dignity and authority of the Lords and Commons which is violated by contempt of the law but the dignity and authority of the King He may dispense also with such laws as forbid a thing which is not malum in se and pardon the transgression of others as Treason Felony and the like which in reason he ought no more to do then to dispense with the laws of Germany Spain or France or pardon the transgressours thereof if they were not made by his own authority Again it is an uncontroulable Maxime of Law Ejusdem est leges interpretari cujus est condere None can interpret the laws but the same power that makes them Now that the King calling the Judges to him hath this power is evident by his exposition
Vicecomites alios Ballivos Ministros suos quibus referantur tam quaestiones super dubiis quam querimoniae super injuriis i. e. And if our Lord the King be not sufficient to determine all controversies himself he ought to select wise men fearing God and hating coveteousness and out of them constitute Justices Sheriffs Bailies and other officers to whom controversies and complaints may be referred The practice of the law hath alwayes been the same since Bracton's time and all Judges and chief officers appointed by writ patent or commission from the King Hence it is that all patents and commission of Judges and other such officers are determined by the common law at the Kings death Coke tit discontinue de proces c. part 7.30 Al common ley per demise le Roy le plea fuit discontinue le proces que fuit agard nient returne devant le mort le Roy fuit perde Car per le breve del predecessor rien poit estre execute in le temps del novel Roy si non que il soit in especial cases car le mort le Roy non solement les justices de lū Bank de laūt Barons del exchequer mes les viconts auxi eschetors touts commissions de Oyer Terminer Goale delivery justices de peace sont determine per le mort le predecessor qui eux fist i. e. By the Common law all pleas were discontinued by the death of the King and process awarded and not returned before his death was lost for by the writ of the predecessour nothing can be executed in the time of the new King except it be in some special causes for by the death of the King not onely the justices of both the benches and the Barons of the exchequer but Sheriffs also and Escheatours and all commissions of Oyer and Terminer Goal delivery and Justices of peace are determined by the death of the predecessor that made them Fifthly the power of making leagues and contracting alliance as also of making war with foraign States is in the King alone Coke lib. 7.25 Leagues between our Soveraign and others are the means to make aliens friends foedera percutere to make leagues onely and wholly pertaineth to the King wars do make aliens enemies and bellum indicere belongeth onely and wholly to the King and not to the subject as appearath in 19. E. 4. fol. 6.6 It hath been resolved by the Judges 19. E. 4.46.22 E. 4. Fitz. jurisdiction last placite Judge Jenkins fol. 17. that if all the people of England collectively taken should break the league made with a forraign Prince without the Kings consent the league holds and is not broken There are yet other rights of Majesty as the power of Coynage the power of granting letters patents of Denization the power of dispensing with such laws as are dispensable and the power of pardoning the transgression of them with divers others all which belong to the King by the Common law but because they are not called in question I will pass them over CHAP. VI. The Kings Supremacy both in general and particular shewed by reasons depending upon the laws and customes of the Land ALthough I esteem positive Laws and customes more demonstrative then deductions and inferences yet these have also their weight and importance I will therefore in the last place add such reasons as shall sufficiently confirm the Kings Supremacy although the laws had positively declared or the Judges resolved nothing concerning it First that power which is so under controul that it can be annihilated at the will of another must needs be inferiour to that power which doth so overrule and master it Now such is the condition of Parliaments that the King by law can annihilate them at his pleasure for they depend upon him quoad existentiam for their existence and continuance If it should be granted that Parliaments are in actu signato by original constitution yet the precise time of their existence and continuance hath alwayes been at the Kings appointment it being in his power to call them and dissolve them when he please so that they must needs be subordinate to him and depend upon him for their operation when they depend upon him for their existence Answer To this the reverent Divines answer for the convention of Parliaments the State hath authority in some eases to meet together in Parliament without a legal warrant from the King as if the King be a prisoner in the enemies hands or distracted and have done it de facto in the infancy and minority of some Kings and for the dissolution of Parliaments they say that they have heard wise men affirm that by law a Parliament can not be dissolved whilst there are any petitions of grievances or such matters of importance depending and unfinished Reply What needed the reverent Divines to have cited these wise men Could they not as easily have said themselves that Parliaments could not be dissolved by the Kings command as they said they might be called without it Perhaps they thought that such notorious falsities would never pass currently amongst the people if they were not confirmed by the authority of wise men as well as by their owne yet I beleeve the wise men they speak of were not so wise as Thales Milesius but whatsoever they were their magisteriall dictates must not passe for law for both that which these wise men affirm and that which they affirm themselves is manifestly opposit to law and truth There was never yet since the first foundation of the Monarchie a Parliament called without a legall warrant from the King nor can a Parliament be called without it for the cases put by them are altogether impertinent and can not be supposed the King according to his politique capacity can not be a prisoner or an infant or distracted but in case his condition be such as make him uncapable to guide and manage his charge in person as in case of infancy or distraction the law hath made sufficient provision who shall exercise the regall power in such occurrencies if he be prisoner in the enemies hands he may substitute others or if he be so closely kept as that can not be permitted in such events also the law is not deficient but in all these cases nothing can be acted by authority inherent in the people but by the Kings authority which can never be in prison nor is it subject to infancy or distraction and Parliaments called at such time by those that have authority by law to exercise the Royall power are called by a legall warrant from the King and without such a legall warrant they never were nor can be called It there have been any generall Conventions without it as the reverent Divines who should have done well to have quoted their authors and their words assure us their acts were never esteemed lawes nor such Conventions Parliaments And that the King
wings to be clipt before he made the said grant he caused all the Lawes and Customes that were in force in the time of King Edward to be written out and then after good deliberation finding nothing in them prejudicial to his Crown and Royal authority he ratified and confirmed them For whereas some of them say the Fundamental Lawes are not written that so they might cover their fraud and deceit who pretending fundamental Laws are able to alledge nothing out of them this is contrary to all the Histories and Records of those times which testifie that Willam the Conquerour commanded twelve of the wisest men to be chosen in every County who did upon oath declare all the Lawes and Customes which they knew not adding or omitting any thing Aldered Arch-bishop of York who had crowned him and Hugo Bishop of London as Chronicon Lichfieldense relateth writ them out with their own hands Yet he granted not these Lawes without some emendations Leges H. 1. c. 2. as appears by the Laws of Henry the first Lagam Regis EDWARD I vobis reddo cum illis emendationibus quibus eam Pater meus emendavit Consilio Baronum suorum i. e. I restore unto you the Laws of King Edward with those emendations which my father by the advice of his Barons added unto them For although he let the old foundation stand yet he inlarged it and added divers new dignities and preheminencies to the Crown 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fol. 151. not wholely relinquishing the rights he had gained by conquest as some without ground or reason affirm but joyning the rights of law and conquest together And this was all done by consent and agreement of the people and confirmed by Act of Parliament Thirdly the two Houses of Parliament are but the Kings Counsell according to their usual style both in our Statutes and Law Books at first the Members of the Pretended Parliament gave themselves no other name and in propability would have been longer content with it upon condition his Majesty would have observed their counsells as Laws and have acknowledged himself bound to obey them for they were willing then he should have had the title of a King so themselves might have had all the power and authority belonging to the Crown But the truth is there is a great distance between Counsels and Commands Counsellours are but subordinate officers and may not impose their Counsells for Lawes upon those which they serve in that employment Answer 1 To this it is answered first That the two Houses are called the Counsel of the Realm as well as the Kings Counsell and are trusted by the People as well as by the King Reply Although in some respects they be trusted by the people yet as touching the office of Councellours they are trusted by the King and when they are called the Councel of the Realm it is all one as if they were called the Councel of the King for under divers phrases the same thing is signified it being an usual custome in law in expressions of this kind to take the Realm or kingdome for the King himself Coke lib. 7.12 And oftentimes in the reports of our Book cases and in acts of Parliament also the Crown or Kingdom is taken for the King himself as in FITZ NATVR BRE FOL 5. tenure IN CAPITE is a tenure of the Crown and is Signory in grosse that is of the person of the King and so is the 30. H. 8. Dyer fol. 44 45. a tenure in chief as of the Crown is meerly a tenure of the person of the King and therewith agreeth 28. H 8. tit tenure Br. 65. The Statute of the 4. Hen. 5. cap. ultimo gave Priors aliens which were conventual to the King and his heirs by which gift saith 34. H. 6.34 the same were annexed to the Crown And in the said Act of 25. E. 3. whereas it is said in the beginning within the ligeance of England it is twice afterward said in the ligeance of the King and yet all one ligeance due to the King So in the 42. E. 3. fol. 2. where it is first said the ligeance of England it is afterward in the same case called the ligeance of the King wherein though they used severall manner and phrases of speech yet they intended one and the same ligeance So in our usual Commission of Assize of Goale delivery of Oyer and Terminer of the Peace c. power is given to execute justice secundum legem consuetudinem regni nostri Angliae and yet Little lib. 2. in his Chapter of Villenage fol. 43. in disabling of a man that is attainted in a praemunire saith that the same is the Kings Law and so doth the Register in the writ of ad jura Regia style the same Answer 2 Secondly it is answered although the two Houses be the Kings Counsell yet they are not chosen by himself the Lords are consiliari nati born Counsellours and the Commons are consiliari dati Counsellours given him by Election of the people Reply Although the Lords be born Counsellours and the Commons chosen by the people yet they cannot sit in Counsell but at such times as the King is pleased to make use of them and when he is pleased to summon them and command them to sit the Lords cannot refuse to come or the people to send their Deputies nor doth it alter their condition whether they be born his Counsellours given him by the people or chosen by himself they which are born to places of dignity and jurisdiction or they which are chosen to them by the people cease not for all that to be subordinate to the King they are all his Subjects and Ministers and are so far from having authority to challenge obedience to their Counsels that if their Counsells be not such as they ought they are themselves obnoxious to a censure of Law A King is obliged in time of Parliament to follow the advice and direction of the two Houses and out of Parliament of his Privy Counsell when their advice and direction tendeth to the preservation of his person and of his Royal authority and to the preservation of his people and of their rights and priviledges not that Counsellours have authority over Kings but because the matter of their Counsels do morally oblige their consciences but if their advice and direction tend to the ruin of either he may and ought to recede from their Counsels and such a King is not a tyrant but such Counsellours traitors by the law This is mysteriously represented to the Lords when they are first preferred to that degree and dignity by the usuall solemnities then performed for if in stead of giving counsell for the King they give counsell against him they are not only by the Statutes of the Land declared to be traitors but if the Statutes were silent by a tacite condition of law annexed to their dignities and vayled under certain ceremonies used at their first creation
categorically they may take an accompt what is done by his Majesty in his inseriour courts yet they would have the people think them to have such a power and therefore they lay it down as a supposition which they seem to take for granted although they know it to be false If they were a full and legal Parliament they might indeed take an accompt what is done in his Courts by subordinate Officers but not what is done by his Majesty who as King can do no wrong His authority is from God and if injustice be committed in his Courts his Kingly authority is not the cause thereof but the corruption of his judges who abuse it and his Majesty may take an accompt of them either privately or in his Parliament but is not himself accountable for their abuses For although the judgement of his courts may and is termed in law the judgement of the King yet that is to be understood of the act it self which cannot be effected without his influence and concurrence K. H. 7.4 not of the obliquity and deviation from justice which is in it Nor is he yet accomptable to any but God for his perfonal actions by the lawes of the land he cannot be obnoxious to any guilt had he committed treason or any other crime before he was King by taking the Crown upon him all attainder of his person is purged ipso facto Enough hath been said already to prove both the Houses and the Members thereof as well collectively as severally taken to be his inferiour delegate and subordinate ministers that derive their authority from him and in case of grievance are to sue unto him by petition which is all the help the law giveth in such exigencies for they are so far from having any jurisdiction over him in matters of misdemeanour that they cannot take knowledge of those cases wherein Majesty without disparagement may submit it self to a legal triall as in controversies of right or of title to land c. except he be pleased to have the businesse decided in that Court. In Haedlows case before mentioned it is resolved by all the Justices that controversies which concetn the King cannot be determined in Parliament 22. E. 3.6 and it is there added above what hath been cited that Kings may not be judged by others then themselves and their justices unques Roys ne serra adjuge si non per eux mesmes lour justic And this is true as it was resolved by Scrope in the Bishop of Winchesters case not only in respect of others but in respect of the Members of Parliament themselves for although they are to be tryed by their own respective houses in things which concern the Parliament if the fact touch not the King yet if it touch the King and the case be prosecuted by him they cannot then take cognisance of it except he thinks it expedient who hath power if he please to try it in any of his other Courts Fitz. tit coron p. 3. E. 3. p. 161. Ceux queux sount judges in Parliament sount judges de lour Pieres mes le Roy naver Piere in sa terre demesne per que il ne doit per eux estre judge ne ailours faire son suite vers cestui qui luy trespassa quam la ou luy pleist i. e. They which are judged in Parliament are judged of their Peers that is the Lords by the House of Lords and the Commons by the House of Commons bur the King can have no Peer in in his own Land and therefore he ought not to be judged by them nor to make his processe against him that offends but where he please himself Object 3 Last of all they charge the King for atttibuting too much power and authority to himself And it is preached to the People in the Kings Declarations that by the Supremacy is meant a power inherent in the Kings person without above against all his Courts the Parliament not exceped whereby the excellent Lawes are turned into an Arbitrary Government It is no wonder if the Members of the Pretended House were more inclined to hear what their own seditious Divines preached in Saint Margarets then what the King preached in his Declarations yet I believe it had been better for them if they had entertained his Majesties Person and Declarations with more respect and duty However for the present may seem to have ruined him and his people too yet they which have mounted to places of dignity and profit upon the dead bodies of the King and People may find in the end that Rebellion and Murder sit not so high but that vengeance and divine Justice sit above them As for the charge which they bring against his Majesty it is partly false his Majesty never used such expressions as they pin upon him where doth he say that he hath a personal power above and against the Parliament let any man produce the words out of which he can force such a sense Their Charge is also partly vain and frivolous for whereas they accuse him for saying his Supremacy was inherent in his Person they might as well accuse him for saying he was King Supremacy is an essential attribute of Majesty and cannot be seperated without the corruption of its Subject to say the Kings Supremacy is in his Courts and not in his person is not only to contradict the Lawes but the Common principles of reason This hath been demonstrated in divers places yet because occasion is offered again I will hear adde the resolution of all the Judges made in the first year of Henry the seventh concerning this matter for a Parliament being then called and both the King himself and divers of the Members being attainted of high Treason it was resolved by the Judges that the Attainder of the Members ought to be adnulled before they could sit in the house but touching the King it was resolved that his attainder was adnulled upon his admittance to the crown because the King is personable that is because his Kingly authority was inherent in his Person by reason whereof he was discharged of all guilt against the Laws 1. H. 7.4 Et donques fuit move un question que serra dit pur le Roy mesme pur ceo que il fuit atteint puis communication ew entor eux touts accordront que le Roy fuit Personable discharge de ascune atteind eo facto qil prist sur luy le Reigne ee Roy. i. e. And then a Question was moved what shall be said of the King himself for he was also attainted and after communication had amongst them all agreed that the King was Personable and discharged from all attainder in the very act that he took the Kingdome upon him and became King Nor is the other part of their charge lesse frivolous and vain wherein they accuse his Majesty as if he had committed a great crime in saying his Supremacy was a power inherent
instances to which I could yet add more if I thought it needful But it would be superfluous to illustrate and interpret this place by other when the words considered by themselves imply no more for he maketh no distinction of Superiority but calleth God and the Law and the Earls and Barons in his court superiour to the King after the same manner Now it is evident that God in this place is said to be superiour to him in respect of the directive power his Law hath over him for although God hath de jure a coercive power and jurisdiction over Kings and shall de facto after their death dispose of them as their Judge and in this life also doth often restrain them by his secret judgements yet Bracton speaketh not in this place as will appear immediately when the whole and intire period shall be cited of either of those kinds of jurisdiction but of giving present and open judgement upon the Kings fact and upon his charter which is a jurisdiction that he exerciseth not but giveth his Law only for direction by which all Princes ought to be regulated both in granting their charters and in the whole administration of their power It is also clear that the Laws of the Land are said to be superiour to him in respect of the directive power of them having otherwise no force or influence upon him Bracton therefore meaneth that the Earls and Barons in his Court are superiour to him in the same respect and not in respect of any jurisdiction they ought to exercise over him But if we look upon the coherence of these words and their dependence upon the precedent and subsequent matter Bracton's intention will more fully and easily be discerned I will therefore set down as much as is necessary to the present purpose and explain every clause of it and shew the relation and connexion one thing hath with another and let the Reader judge whether this testimony of Bracton doth not strengthen the Kings cause and might not rather be alledged for him then against him Nec factum Regis nec chartam potest quis judicare ita quod factum Domini Regis irritetur Sed dicere poterit quis quod Rex Justitiam fecerit bene si hoc eadem ratione quod male ita imponere ei quod injuriam emendet ne incidat Rex justiciari in judicium viventis Dei propter injuriam Rex autem habet superiorem Deum Item legem per quam factus est Rex item curiam suam videlicet Comites Barones quia Comites dicuntur quasi socii Regis qui habet socium habet Magistrum ideo si Rex fuerit sine frano i. e. sine lege debent ei fraenum ponere That is No man may judge of the Kings fact or his charter so as to make void the fact of our Lord the King But some may say the King hath done justice and well and if so by the same reason that he hath done ill and impose upon him to amend the injury lest he and his justices fall into the judgement of the living God for the injury But the King hath God his superiour and the Law by which he is made King and his Court namely his Earls and Barons for they are called Comites as being Companions to the King and he that hath a Companion hath a Master and therefore if the King be without a bridle that is without Law they ought to put a bridle upon him If this passage be well considered it will be clear that Bracton in the words alleadged calleth not the Earls and Barons superiour to the King in a civill and legall but in a moral regard alone First he saith No man may judge of the Kings fact or his charter so as to make void the fact of our Lord the King How can the words alledged agree with this if their exposition be admitted How can the Earls and Barons in his Court be superiour to the King in respect of a coercive power or civil Jurisdiction when they cannot judge his charter or his fact No man can have a coercive power or civil jurisdiction over another but he hath authority to judge him according to Law and to force the execution of his Sentence Secondly he saith But some may say the King hath done Justice and well and if so by the same reason that he hath done ill and impose upon him to amend the injury lest he and his Justices fall into the hands of the living God for the injury But the King hath God his superiour and the Law by which he is made King and his Court namely his Earls and Barons Having declared what power the Earls and Barons have not over the King here he declareth what power they have In case justice be not duly administred there are some he saith which may advertise him of it and impose upon him to reform what is amisse and those he declares to be the Earls and Barons in his Court who as well as God and the Laws of the Realm are superiour to him that is are superiour to him in the same manner namely by a directive power For he saith not that they should by constraint but by admonition impose upon him to amend the injury using this reason lest He and his Justices fall into the hands of the living God according to that which he saith in the place before quoted Cap. 4. p. 37. Satis sufficit ei pro poena quod Dominum expectet ultorem Thirdly he saith For they are called Comites as being Companions of the King and he that hath a Companion hath a Master Here he giveth a reason why the Earls and Barons may be called his Superiours namely because they are his Companions and he that hath a Companion hath a Master This reason holds good if he indevoureth by it to prove them his Superiours in respect of a directive power and moral superiority but is ridiculous if he should indevour by it to prove them his Superiours in respect of a coercive power or civil jurisdiction for every one cannot be Superiour to his Companions in respect of jurisdiction and be a leige Lord or Legal Master over all the rest But every one may instruct Counsell and direct all his Companions and be a moral Master over them in that respect all Companions may be mutually one anothers Masters Fourthly he saith And therefore if the King be without a bridle that is without Law they ought to put a bridle upon him This inference which he maketh out of the former words doth also confirm that Bracton calleth them not his Superiours in respect of a coercive power or civil jurisdiction for because they are his Companions and so in a moral regard his Masters they ought therefore he saith if he be without a bridle to put a bridle of the Law upon him This bridle then must be a bridle of Law and not a bridle of their own
posse Comitatus if need be to expell this Officer of the Kings and bring him to condigne punishment for resisting the Kings authority in his Lawes Here now is raising of Arms by the Kings legal authority against the Kings Title and the Kings Officer notwithstanding any pretended authority from the Kings personall command and that Officer hath a Writ of Rebellion sent against him and shall be punished by Law for offering to resist the Law upon any pretence ask the Lawyers whether in sence this be not the Law and ordinarily practised save that the King do not command the contrary but whether that would hinder Law or not the Parliament may then in case of necessity raise arms against the Kings personall command for the generall safety and keeping possession which is more necessary then the hope of regaining of the Houses Lands Goods Liberties Lives Religion and all and this by the Kings legall Authority and resisters of this are the Rebells in the Lawes account and not the instruments so imployed legally though with Arms by the Parliament Reply For matter of fact it was themselves that withheld Delinquents from a legall tryall the King detained none but when divers Members of the Parliament were assaulted in the streets driven from the house defamed by Libells and Justice not permitted to take place it was the office of the King to protect them in their Rights and Liberties and to force the due execution of the Lawes and if he refused to yield up those to their injustice which assisted him this was not to keep Delinquents from their tryall but to protect his loyall subjects according to law this for matter of fact But for matter of Right suppose the King had taken up arms unjustly the Law doth not permit his Courts to oppose him or to call any in question that are assistant to him when the King taketh up arms they which attend upon his Person or are imployed in other places about the same service may not be molested or troubled by processe of Law either in Parliament or in any of his Courts as is declared and enacted by a Statute made the eleventh year of Henry the seventh The King our Soveraign Lord calling to his remembrance the duty of Allegiance of his Subjects of this his Realm 11. H. 7. cap. 1. and that they by reason of the same are bound to serve their Prince and Soveraign Lord for the time being in his wars for the defence of Him and the Land against every rebellion power and might reared against him and with him to enter and abide in service in battail if case so require and that for the same service what fortune ever fall by chance in the same battail against the mind and will of the Prince as in this Land sometime passed hath been seen that it is not reasonable but against all Laws Reason and good Conscience that the said Subjects going with their Soveraign Lord in Wars attending upon him in his Person or being in other places by his Commandement within this Land or without any thing should lose or forfeit for doing their true duty and service of Allegiance It be therefore ordained enacted and established by the King our Soveraign Lord by the advice and assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and authority of the same that from henceforth no manner of person or persons whatsoever he or they be that attend upon the King and Soveraign Lord of this Land for the time being in his person and do him true and faithful service of Allegiance in the same or be in other places by his Commandement in his Wars within this Land or without that for the said deed and true duty of Allegiance he or they be in no wise convict or attaint of high treason ne of other offences for that cause by Act of Parliament or otherwise by any processe of Law whereby he or any of them shall lose or forfeit Life Lands Tenements Rents Possessions Hereditaments Goods Chattels or any other things but to be for that deed and service utterly discharged of any vexation trouble or losse As for the case that is put by them it is very impertinent and the whole Objection made both by Mr. Bridge and themselves full of erronious passages and mistakes first they assume the two Houses to be the whole Parliament Secondly they assume them to be a Court of judicature Thirdly they assume the Judges to have a power of suppressing any Delinquents and maintaining themselves by arms The two former assumptions are absolutely false and the latter true only in some cases so far as they have order of Law and no man deny such a power to be in either of the Houses they may force Delinquents to appear before them in such cases and in such a manner as the Law hath provided for what is so done is done by the Kings Command in Law which is to be obeyed before his personal commands But they must proceed no further nor after any other manner then the King commands in Law And first although the Kings bare Command be not sufficient to warrant his Tenant or others to resist the sentence of his Courts yet if the King in Person taketh up arms and granteth Commissions to any to assist him his Courts must then forbear all processe of Law and desist from all further opposition as is provided in the foresaid statute And secondly although the King doth not authorize the fact in person or by Commission yet neither the two Houses in Parliament nor the Judges can make what Ordinances they please to raise arms or imploy their own instruments to bring in Delinquents but must proceed according to order of Law and commit the whole carriage of the businesse to such of the Kings Officers as are appointed for that purpose which are chiefly the high Sheriffs of Counties who are also confined by Law and may not exceed their Commission For both in the case put by the reverent Divines and also in all cases whatsoever if Delinquents grow so strong that they be able to resist the posse Commitatus and cannot be suppressed but by a War and by the Militia of the Kingdom the Sheriffe ought then to certifie the Court thereof and the prosecution of the matter must be left to the King to whom only it is reserved to preserve the peace of the Kingdome in such cases Object 2 Secondly against the Kings Negative voyce they urge the Oath taken at his Coronation whereby they say he is bound to give his assent to all Bills offered him by the Lords and Commons They have found out a form in Latin which they say was anciently used and ought now to be taken the Form is this Concedis just as leges consuetudines esse tenendas promittis pro te eas esse protegendas ad hónorem Dei corroborandas quas vulgus elegerit secundum vires tuas Resp Concedo
words seeing that all authority of jurisdiction Spiritual and Temporal is derived and deducted from the Kings Majesty as Supreme head of these Churches and Realms of England and Ireland do clearly intimate the two houses to have no authority radically in themselves and to be no way coordinate with the Kings Majesty in the rights of soveraignty For conclusion of this Chapter I will add one Act more made in the first year of King James wherein the two houses of Parliament collectively taken made an humble recognition of their faith and obedience to him We your most humble and loyal Subjects the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled do from the bottome of our hearts yield to the Divine Majesty all humble thanks and praises not onely for the said inestimable benefit and blessings above mentioned but also that he hath further inriched your Highness with a most Royal progeny of most rare excellent gifts and forwardness and in his goodness is like to encrease the happy number of them and in most humble and lowly manner do beseech your most excellent Majesty that as a memorial to all posterities amongst the records of your high court of Parliament for ever to endure of our loyalty obedience and hearty and humble affection it may be published and declared in this high court of Parliament and enacted by authority of the same that we being bounden thereunto both by the laws of God and man do recognize and acknowledge and thereby express our unspeakable joys that immediately upon the dissolution and decease of Elizabeth late Queen of England the imperial crown of the Realm of England and of the Kingdomes Dominions and Rights belonging to the same did by inherent birthright and lawful and undoubted possession descend and come to your most excellent Majesty as being lineally justly and lawfully next and sole heir of the blood Royal of this Realm as is aforesaid and that by the goodness of Almighty God and lawful right of discent under one imperial crown your Majesty is of the Kingdomes of England Scotland France and Ireland the most potent and mighty King and by Gods goodness more able to protect and govern us your loving subjects in all peace and plenty then any of your noble Progenitors And thereunto we most humbly and faithfully do submit and oblige our selves our heirs and posterities for ever until the last drop of our bloods be spent And do beseech your Majesty to accept the same as the first fruits of this high court of Parliament of our loyalty and faith to your Majesty and your Royal progeny and posterity for ever This is a far different strain from that which the present pretended Parliament have used to his Majesty who although bound both by oath and duty to have been as respectful and obedient towards him yet have they themselves after many insolences cōmitted against his person most audaciously and unadvisedly taken away his life and procured others by defamatory libels to blast his credit who according to the trust reposed in them cease not to traduce him and by malicious aspersions to stain his chiefest vertues creeping like Snailes over the sweetest flowers and leaving behind them their slime and filthiness CHAP. III. The Kings supremacy in particular shewed by the Statutes of the Land THe Kings supremacy in general being thus confirmed by several Acts of Parliament I will now descend into particulars and shew his Majesty to be legally invested with all the particular rights of soveraignty I will beginne with the Militia which is a right so essential to Majesty that it can not nor ought not to be separated from it For Majesty consists not in a bare and empty title but in the rights of soveraignty which he cannot be said to possesse who wants the Sword to protect the Scepter It was confessed by the pretended Parliament at the beginning of these dissentions that the Militia by right pertained to his Majesty and therefore at the first they laboured to have it assigned to them by his own assent but he opposing their unjust desires as knowing both his own and the ruin of his posterity would be the necessary consequences of such a grant they resolved seeing they could not gain it by surrender to take it by assault and assisted by men of like natures and inclinations they seised upon his Majesties forts and Magazins and have since exercised an arbitary and tyrannical power over the lives and estates of all that pleased them not and none could ever please them but such as are of the same humour and disposition with themselves I must confess I am amazed when I consider how confidently and desperately they have carried on their designs in a case so contrary to law and justice for they could not have begun a war or contested with his Majesty about a matter more clear then that of the Militia which is a right so inherent in the crown setled upon it by the fundamental Laws of the Land and confirmed by so many several acts of Parliament that although the pretended Parliamentarians have a great dextetity in coyning distinctions to elude the laws yet they will not easily coyn such as shall serve their turn in this particular In the seventh year of Edward the first a Statute was made to injoyn all men to go to Parliaments Treatises and general Assemblies without force and armes wherein the Kings power over the Militia is acknowledged The King to the justices of his bench sendeth greeteng Whereas of late before certain persons deputed to treat upon sundry debates had between us and certain great men of our Realm amongst other things it was accorded that in our next Parliament after provision shall be made by us and the common assent of the Prelates Earls and Barons that in all Parliaments Treaties and other Assemblies which should be made in the Realm of England for ever that every man shall come without all force and armour well and peaceably to the honour of us and the peace of us and our Realm And now in our next Parliament at Westminster after the said Treatise the Prelates Earls Barons and the Commonalty of our Realm there assembled to take advice of this business have said that to us it belongeth and our part is through our Royal seigniory straitly to defend force of armour and all other force against our peace at all times when it shall please us and to punish them which shall do contrary according to our laws and usages of our Realm and hereunto they are bound to aid us as their Soveraign Lord at all seasons when need shall be We command ye that ye cause these things to be read afore you in the said bench and there to be inrolled Given at Westminster the thirtieth day of October In another Statute made the eleventh year of Henry the seventh it is declared that all subjects of the Realm but especially those that have by the King any
Promitto The word Elegerit they say may and ought to be taken in the future tense and doth obleige the King to agree to all acts that shall be thought convenient by the Houses And to confirm this they alledge a Heraulds Book wherein they say the Oath is found so Englished They alledge also an ancient French Form wherein they say it is so taken The Form is this Sire grantes vous a tener garder les leis customes naturelles les quels la communaute de vostre Royaume aur ' eslue les defenderer efforceeer a l' honeur de Dieu a vostre poiare Resp je le grante promitte Reply In all the authentical Records of the Exchequer the word Elegerit is Englished in the Preterperfect tense and not in the future tense proposing no more unto the King but that he would uphold and maintain the Lawes and Customes only which are actually then in use when he taketh the said Oath not such as shall be offered him by the Houses The words in the oath taken by his Majesty following the usual presidents were these BISHOP Sir will you grant to hold and keep the Lawes and rightful Customes which the Commonalty of this your Kingdome have and will you uphold them to the honour of God so much as in you lyeth KING I grant and promise so to doe The ancient Oath which is upon record used in the time of Henry the eight in whose reign they say the Herauld whose Book they speak of lived was this That he shall keep and maintain the Liberties of the Holy Church Book of Oath Fol. 1. of old time granted by the righteous Kings of England and that he shall keep all the Lands honours and dignities righteous and free of the Crown of England in all manner holy without any manner of minishments and the rights of the Crown hurt decay or losse to his power shall call again into the ancient estate and that he shall keep the peace of the holy Church and of the Clergy and of the people with good accord and that he shall do in his judgement equity and right justice with discretion and mercy and that he shall grant to hold the Lawes and Customes of the Realm and to his power keep them and affirm them which the flock and people have chosen and the evil Laws and Customes wholly to put out and stedfast and stable peace to the people of his Realm keep and cause to be kept to his power As for the French Form I cannot but wonder they should alledge it for it doth manifestly contradict that which they say and indevour to prove by it word for word it is thus to be rendered in English Sir do you grant to hold and keep the rightful Laws and Customes which the Commonalty of your Reaelm shall have chosen and to defend them and give them force to your power Answ I grant and promise it Who is there that understands the French Tongue which sees not that these words aur ' eslue shall have chosen which are put in the future tense can have reference to no other Lawes and Customes but those only which the Commonalty shall have chosen when the King taketh the Oath for the Form should have run thus quels la Communaute de vostre Royaume eslirà that is which the Commonalty of your Realm shall choose if Laws which were afterwards to be made had been intended in the Oath But let it be granted that Elegerit ought to be taken is the future tense yet leges consuetudines cannot relate to the Laws which shall be presented to the King by the two Houses in Parliament for the word vulgus cannot be applyed to the Lords Yet let that also be given them the Oath binds him to protect and corroborate only just Lawes not all which they shall say are just for it is evident whether Elegerit be taken in the preter perfect tense or in the future tense that by justas leges consuetudines it is implied that he is not bound to protect and corroborate all Laws and Customes but only those which are just whereof he himself assisted by his Justices and Council at Law who ought to inform him were he wanteth information is to be the Judge To conclude let the word Elegerit and all the other words signifie what they please it is not much important to their cause for the said Latin Form was never used to be taken In the time of Henry the third the Kings Oath contained only these three things Bracton l. 3. Cap. 9. 1. Se esse praecepturum pro viribus opem impensurum ut Ecclesiae Dei omni populo Christiano vera pax omni suo tempore observetur 2. Ut rapacitates omnes iniquitates omnibus gradibus interdicat 3. Vt in omnibus judiciis aequitatem praecipiat misericordiam In later times the English Form above mentioned without any alteration importing their sense hath been used to be taken many ages together Now if they could shew which I believe they cannot that divers Kings have taken the Latin Form they speak of yet that is not sufficient to prove a Custome seeing the practise was formerly and is at the present otherwise Object 3 Thirdly some infer that the King hath not a power of dissenting from the usual answer which he giveth when he refuseth to passe a Bill Le Roy s'adviserâ wherein they say he doth not peremptorily deny his assent but only craveth time to deliberate upon it Reply To what purpose should he crave time to deliberate about that which cannot be avoided there is no consultation to be used de necessariis Yet he may answer otherwise if he please a Judge Jenkins Fol. 32. Roy ne veult or b Hollinsh vol. 1. Fol. 108. il ne plaist are usuall forms as well as that Object 4 Fourthly they alledge Presidents The Militia and the chief Officers of the Kingdome they say have been disposed of in Parliament Reply If I should give a particular Answer to all their Presidents I should weary the Reader with such impertinencies sometimes they alledge a seditious speech of some of the Members for an Act of Parliament sometimes they say such or such a thing was done by Act of Parliament and and cite an Authour in the margin whereas no such thing is to be found in the said Authour Sometimes they urge a President wherein the Houses denied to give the King such subsidies and assistance as he required to his wars because the said wars were undertaken without their assent and conclude from thence that the power of making war and treating with forain states belong to the two Houses when the reason of their deniall was the miscarriages of the war and the mis-imployment of former subsidies not that they challenged the power of making war or treating with forrain states to pertain unto them They thought it would have been more