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A54632 Lex parliamentaria, or, A treatise of the law and custom of parliaments shewing their antiquity, names, kinds, and qualities ... : with an appendix of a case in Parliament between Sir Francis Goodwyn and Sir John Fortescue, for the knights place for the county of Bucks, I Jac. I.; Lex parliamentaria. English Petyt, George. 1690 (1690) Wing P1944; ESTC R8206 195,455 448

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received no little Advantage from a Manuscript of that judicious and learned Judge the late Mr. Justice Price who having been many Years a Member of the House of Commons had made divers curious historical Collections with several Notes and References relating to the Subject Matter hereof And in this Edition the Reader may find collected from authentick Records and Histories all that is necessary to be known touching the Rights and Privileges of Parliaments and in a great Measure the legal Prerogatives of the Prince and just Liberties of the People The CONTENTS CHAP. I. Of Parliaments in general Shewing their Antiquity Names Natures Kinds and Qualities British Saxon c. Ordinarily annual and without Summons Extraordinary on Summons pro arduis c. Of the three Estates Bishops no essential Part excluded elected created by Patent Commons ever represented and how Their Right to a Free Election of all Magistrates c. and Consent to all Aids and Taxes This Right invaded by the Norman Kings William I. and II. Reslored by Henry I. Of English Parliaments in his Time who the Magnates and Barones Regni then were Of Coronation Oaths c. Page 1. CHAP. II. Of the Dignity and Excellency of Parliaments The Supream Power of the Kingdom and when Free Protectors of the People's Rights and Preservers of the legal Government and Constitution Of the three Estates and to what End assembled Lords and Commons anciently sate together The highest Court of Justice c. Page 49. CHAP. III. Of the Power and Authority of Parliaments superior to the Law may judge the Greatest remove evil Ministers redress Grievances of all Kinds Their three Powers viz. Consultive Legislative and Judicial their absolute Power over all Persons c. Page 66. CHAP. IV. and V. Of the Power Authority and Jurisdiction of the House of Peers distinct from the Commons Page 90 101. CHAP. VI. and VII Of the seperate Powers and Authorities of the House of Commons both in general and in particular Cases Page 109 114. CHAP. VIII Shews their Power over their own Members and how executed c. Page 136. CHAP. IX Treats of the Election of Members of the House of Commons in general and of the several Statutes relating thereto Page 149. CHAP. X. Shews who may be Electors and the●r Rights Duties and Manner of Election with the Statutes and Oaths referring thereto Page 156. CHAP. XI Who may be elected their Qualifications and Duties c. with such Statutes Oaths c. as concern the same Page 180. CHAP. XII Of the Returns to Parliament and of Amendments of Returns the Sheriffs and other Officers Duty therein with such Statutes and Oaths as relate thereto Page 226 CHAP. XIII and XIV Of the Manner of Election of the Speaker of the House of Commons and of the Business and Duty of the said Speaker Page 263 272. CHAP. XV. and XVI Of Orders to be observed in and by the House of Commons or the Members thereof Page 278 285. CHAP. XVII Of the Manner of passing Bills c. in the said House Page 306. CHAP. XVIII XIX and XX. Concerning Committees in general as also of the Orders Powers and Proceedings of Grand Committees and of Standing Committees c. Page 327 336 341 CHAP. XXI Of Sessions of Parliament what makes a Session as also of Prorogations and Adjournments Page 347 Note CHAP. XXII Of the proper Laws and Customs of Parliament and of Acts and Ordinances Page 358. CHAP. XXIII Of the Privilege of Parliament with the Statutes for regulating it c. Page 379. The APPENDIX being the Case of Sir Francis Goodwyn admitted a Member though returned outlawed c. Concluding with divers additional Pariculars relating to the Privileges and Duties of Parliaments Page 415. Lex Parliamentaria OR A TREATISE OF THE LAW and CUSTOM OF THE PARLIAMENT of England c. CHAP. I. Of Parliaments in General their Definition constituent Parts c. with a brief Inquiry into the Original and Nature of our British Saxon and Norman Parliaments THE Word Parliament Minshew in verbo Parlamt in French Parlement and in Spanish and Italian Parliamento is Spelm. Gloss verbo Debate See Coke on Littl. p. 110.164 in its principal Part deriv'd from the French Parler to speak and as Lord Coke and some Others conceive The General Council or National Assembly of this Kingdom is so call'd Spelm. Gloss in verbo Parlament Hales of Parliaments 122. Elsing of Parliaments 167. 4 Inst 8. Bohun's Collection 353. because every Member thereof should in the Matters there debated Parler la Mente i. e. Freely speak his Mind And tho some Authors have oppugned this Derivation yet tis evident from the very Nature and Essence of a Parliament That every Member thereof ought to speak his Mind freely in what relates to the Publick Welfare And this Freedom of Speech is now constantly claimed by the Speaker of the House of Commons at the first Meeting of every New Parliament and in insisted on as a Claim of Right The Word Parlament is in France now taken for one of those High Courts of Justice in that Kingdom Minshew ut supra See Vincent Lupanus lib. 2 c. Parliament No. 28. wherein Men's Causes and Differences are publickly heard and determined without further appeal Of these Parliaments there are Seven viz. 1. Paris now superiour to the Rest 2. Vide Du Haillan Pasquier c. of the Fr. Parlements Tholouse 3. Grenoble 4. Aix 5. Bourdeaux 6. Dijon 7. Roan whereto some add an 8th viz. Rhenes in Bretaigne But with us in England or rather Great Britain The universal Assembly of all the Estates of the Kingdom i. e. The King Sir Tho. Smith De Repub. Angl. lib. 2. c. 1.2 Lords and Commons wherein every Freeman of the Kingdom is said to be present either in Person or by Representation and who are met together for debating of Matters touching the Commonwealth especially for the enacting of Laws and Statutes is properly called a Parliament Cro. Jur. f. 1. c. Cambd. Brit. 6. c. 4 Inst 1. and such Laws and Statutes when agreed on are significantly term'd Acts of Parliament Indeed various Authors Of the three Estates viz. 1. King Cotton's Records 709.710 4 Inst 1. Hales of Parliaments 1. Finch's Nemotecnia lib. 2. c. 1.2 The Lords Sadler's Rights of the Kingdom p. 79. to 93. Kelway's Reports 184. Stamf. P. Cor. 153. See Bagshaw's Reading p. 17. to 21. have had various Sentiments and even Acts of Parliament differ about the three Estates some alledging the King to be the Head of but not included in the Number assert That the three Estates are 1st The Lords Spiritual 2dly The Lords Temporal And 3dly The Commons but Others more rationally say The King is one of the three Estates which compose the Parliament and that the second Estate is constituted of both the Spiritual and Temporal Lords jointly for say they Tho the Archbishops and Bishops are denominated Spiritual yet they sit in Parliament as Temporal
that such Person be thereupon Convicted such Person so discovering and not having been before that time Convicted of any Offence against this Act shall be indemnified and discharged from all Penalties which he shall then have incurred by any Offence against this Act. Enacted that forty five shall be the number of the Representatives of Scotland in the House of Commons of the Parliament of Great Britain Stat. 5. Annae c. 8. the Union Act. Of the said Forty-five Representatives of Scotland Members for Scotland Thirty shall be chosen by the Shires and Fifteen by the Royal Burghs as follows viz. one for every Shire and Stenartry excepting the Shires of Bute and Caitness which shall choose one by turns Bute having the first Election the Shires of Nairn and Cromarty which shall also choose by turns Nairn having the first Election and in like mannet the Shires of Clackmannan and Kinross shall choose by turns Clackmannan having the first Election and in case of the Death or legal Incapacity of the said Members from the said respective Shires or Steuartries Scotland the Shire or Steuartry who elected the said Member shall elect another Member in his Place And that the said Fifteen Representatives for the Royal Burghs shall be chosen as follows viz. That the Town of Edinburgh shall have Right to elect and send one Member and that each of the other Burghs shall elect a Commissioner in the same manner as usual to elect Commissioners and Burghs Edinburgh excepted being divided into fourteen Classes or Districts shall meet at such time and Burghs within their respective Districts as her Majesty her Heirs or Successors shall appoint and elect one for each District viz. the Burgs of Kirkwall Week Dornock Dingwall and Tain one The Burghs of Fortrose Inverness Nairn and Forress one The Burghs of Elgin Cullen Bamff Inverary and Kintore one The Burghs of Aberdeen Inverbery Montrose Aberbrothock and Brochine one The Burghs of Forfar Perth Dundee Coupar and St. Andrews one The Burghs of Craill Kilrenny Anstruther Easter Anstruther Wester and Pittenween one The Burghs of Dysart Kirkaldie Kinghorn and Bruntsland one The Burghs of Innerkethen Scotland Dunfermline Queens-ferry Culross and Sterling one The Burghs of Glasgow Renfrew Ruglen and Dumbarton one The Burghs of Haddington Dunbar North-Berwick Lauder and Jedburgh one The Burghs of Selkirk Peebles Linlithgow and Lanerk one The Burghs of Dumfreis Sanquhar Anna Lockmaben and Kirkeudbright one The Burghs of Wigtown New Galloway Stranraver and Whitehorn one The Burghs of Air Irvin Rothesay Cambletown and Inverary one And where the Votes of the Commissioners for the said Burghs met to choose Representatives from their several Districts shall be equal the President of the Meeting shall have a casting or decisive Vote and that by and according to his Vote as a Commissioner from the Burgh from which he is sent the Commissioner from the eldest Burgh presiding in the first Meeting and the Commissioners from the other Burghs in their respective Districts presiding afterwards by turns in the order as the said Burghs used to be called in the Rolls of the Parliament of Scotland and that in case any of the said fifteen Commissioners from Burghs shall decease or become legally incapable to sit in the House of Commons then the Town of Edinburgh Scotland or the District which chose the said Member shall elect a Member in his or their Place That none shall be capable to elect a Representative for any Shire or Burgh of Scotland unless twenty one Years of Age complete and Protestant excluding all Papists or such who being suspect of Popery and required refuse to swear and subscribe the Formula contained in the third Act made in the eight and ninth Sessions of King William's Parliament in Scotland nor shall be capable to elect a Representative to a Shire or Burgh in the Parliament of Great Britain for Scotland except such as were at the time of passing this Act capable by the Laws of Scotland to elect as Commissioners for Shires or Burghs to the Parliament of Scotland Enacted Stat. 6 A. c. 6. c. That when any Parliament shall at any time hereafter be summoned or called on Notice to be forthwith given after Receipt of the Writs by the Shertff or Stewart of the time of Election for Knights of the Shire or Commissioners for Scotland at such time of Election the several Freeholders in the respective Shires and Stewartries shall meet and convene at the head Burghs of their several Shires and Stewartries and proceed to the Election of their respective Commissioners or Knights for the Shire or Stewartry Scotland and the Clerks of the said Meetings shall respectively return the Names of the Persons Elected to the Sheriff or Stewart of the Shire or Stewartry on a Precept in like manner to be directed by the Sheriffs of Edinburgh to the Lord Provost of that City and on Receipt of such Precept the City of Edinbusgh shall elect their Member and their common Clerk shall certify his Name to the Sheriff of Edinburgh On Precepts in like manner to be directed by the Sheriffs or Stewarts of the several Shires or Stemartries where the other fourteen Districts of Royal Burghs respectively are reciting the Contents and Date of the Writ and commanding them to elect each of them a Commissioner as they used formerly to elect Commissioners to meet at the presiding Borough of their respective District naming it on the thirtieth day after the Teste of the Writ unless Sunday and then the next day after and then to choose their Burgess for the Parliament The common Clerk of the then presiding Borough shall immediately after the Election return the Name of the Person so Elected to the Sheriff or Stewart of the Shire Scotland or Stewartry wherein such presiding Borough is And in case a vacancy shall happen in time of Parliament by the decease or legal incapacity of any Member a new Member shall be Elected in his Room conformable to the method herein before appointed and in case such Vacancy be of a Representative for any one of the said fourteen Classes or Districts for Royal Boroughs that Borough which presided at the Election of the deceased or disabled Member shall be the presiding Borough at such Election That from and after the Determination of this present Parliament 2 St. 12. Annae no Conveyance or Right whatsover whereupon Infeoffment is not taken and Seisin registred One Year before the Teste of the Writs for calling a New Parliament shall upon Objection made in that Behalf intitle the Person or Persons so Infeoft to Vote at that Election in any Shire or Stewartry in that Part of Great Britain called Scotland and in case any Election happen during the Continuance of a Parliament no Conveyance or Right whatsoevel whereupon Infeoffment is not taken One Year before the Date of the Warrant for making out a new Writ for such Election shall upon Objection made in that Behalf Scotland intitle the
Great Britain or of Commissioners for choosing Burgesses in Scotland to administer the Abjuration upon Oath or Affirmation to Quakers and Electors refusing it incapable to vote or being a Quaker shall refuse to declare the Effect thereof upon his solemn Affirmation as directed by an Act of Parliament made 7 W. 3. to be administred by the Sheriff President of the Meeting or chief Officer taking the Poll at any Election of Members to serve in the House of Commons for any Place in Creat Britain or Commissioners for choosing Burgesses for any Place in Scotland at the Request of any Candidate or other Person present shall not be capable of giving any Vote for any Election of any such Member to serve in the House of Commons for any Place in Great Britain or Commissioner to choose a Burgess for any Place in Scotland That no Register for the Registring Memorials of Deeds St. 6 Ann. c. 35. The Register for the East-Riding of Tor●shire c. or his Deputy incapacitated Conveyances Wills c. within the East-Riding of the County of York or the Town and County of Kingston upon Hull or his Deputy for the Time being be capable of being chosen a Member to serve in Parliament Vide ante 212. That no Person shall be capable to sit or vote as a Member of the House of Commons St. 9 Ann. Persons incapacitated to sit or vote in the House of Commons who have not an Estate Freehold or Copyhold for Life or greater in England of 600 l. for a Knight of the Shire manfully and 300 l. for a Citizen Burgess c. and if any such elected c. the Election c. void for any County City c. within that Part of Great Britain called England c. who shall not have an Estate Freehold or Copyhold for his own Life or for some greater Estate either in Law or Equity to his own Use in Lands Tenements or Hereditaments above what will satisfy and clear all Incumbrances within that Part of Great Britain called England c. of the annual Value of six hundred Pounds above Reprizes for every Knight of a Shire and of three hundred Pounds above Reprizes for every Citizen Burgess c. And if any Persons elected or returned to serve in any Parliament as a Knight of a Shire or as a Citizen Burgess c. shall not at the Time of such Election and Return be seized of or intituled to such an Estate before required such Election and Return shall be void Nothing in this Act contained shall extend to make the eldest Son or Heir Apparent of any Peer or Lord of Parliament Eldest Son or Heir Apparent of a Peer or Person qualified to serve as a Knight of a Shire excepted Universities in England also excepted or of any Person qualified by this Act to serve as Knight of a Shire uncapable of being elected and returned and sitting and voting as a Member of the House of Commons Nor extend to either of the Universities in that Part of Great Britain called England but that they may elect and return Members to represent them in Parliament as heretofore they have done No Person shall be qualified to sit in the House of Commons No Person qualified by Virtue of a Mortgage unless in Possession of the mortgaged Premisses for seven Years before his Election by virtue of any Mortgage whereof the Equity of Redemption is in any other Person unless the Mortgagee shall have been in Possession of the mortgaged Premisses for seven Years before the Time of his Election Every Person except as aforesaid who shall appear as a Candidate Candidates to be sworn to their Estates if required by any other Candidate or two Electors or shall by himself or any others be proposed to be elected shall upon Request at the Time of such Election or before the Day to be prefixed in the Writ of Summons for the Meeting of the Parliament by any other Person who shall stand Candidate at such Election or by any two or more Persons having Right to vote at such Election take a Corporal Oath in the Form in this Act contained which see ante The respective Oaths aforesaid shall be administred by the Sheriff or Under-Sheriff Before the Sheriff or other Officer by whom the Poll is to be taken or Return made or 2 or more Justices of the Peace The Election and Return of Candidates refusing to take the Oath void for any County or by the Mayor Bailiff or other Officer or Officers for any City Burrough c. to whom it shall appertain to take the Poll or make the Return at such Election or by any two or more Justices of the Peace within England c. And if any of the said Candidates c. shall wilfully refuse to take the Oath the Election and Return of such Candidate or Person shall be void That from and after the Determination of this present Parliament 2 St. 12 Ann. No Conveyance or Right whereon Infeoffment is not taken and Seisin registred a Year before the Teste of the Writs shall intitle the Person to be elected in any Shire or Stewartry in Scotland The like as to Inoffments not taken a Year before the Date of the Warrant for a new Writ during 〈◊〉 Continuance of a Parliament Any Elector present su●pecting Persons to have Estates in Trust may require the Praeses of the Meeting to swear such to their Estates no Conveyance or Right whereupon Infeoffment is not taken and Seisin registrated one Year before the Teste of the Writs for calling a new Parliament shall upon Objection made in this Behalf intitle the Person so infeost to be elected at that Election in any Shire or or Stewartry in Scotland and in case any Election happen during the Continuance of a Parliament no Conveyance or Right whatsoever whereupon Infeoffment is not taken One Year before the Date of the Warrant for making out a new Writ for such Election shall upon Objection made in that Behalf intitle the Person so Infeoft to be elected at that Election and that it shall be lawful for any of the Electors present suspecting any Person or Persons to have his or their Estates in Trust and for Behoof of another to require the Praeses of the Meeting to tender the Oath in this Act contained intituled The Form of the Freeholders c. Oath to be taken upon Objection made by Stat. 12. Annae and is the same mutatis mutandis to any Elector and the said Praeses is required to administer the same In case such Elector Electee Q. refuse to Swear On Refusal to swear and subscribe the Oath incapable to be elected Stat. 1 G. 1. c. 13. and also to subscribe the said Oath such Person or Persons shall not be capable of being Elected at such Election That after the 29th of September 1715 no Person that now is or hereafter shall be a Member of the House of Commons shall Vote in the House of Commons or
David was consecrated Bishop of Bangor by the then Archbishop of Canterbury but tis expresly said That he had been thereto elected A Principe Clero Populo Walliae i. e. by a Welch Parliament And in the same Reign one Gregory an Irish Abbot was elected to the Bishoprick of Dublin a Rege Hiberniae Clero Populo an Irish Parliament So that the Commons at this Time were a a constituent Part of the Scottish Welch and Irish Parliaments as well as with us in England And in the Year 1128 Vide Sax. Chro. sub An. 112. I find that fam'd Scholar Gilbertus Universalis to be elected and consecrated Bishop of London Annuente Clero Populo This seems at a Parliament at London But this Right of the Commons in electing Bishops does more clearly appear in H. the 2d's Time when all Historians agree it to be a general Custom both here and in France and seems founded on divers express Canons of the Primitive Church Insomuch as Mezeray in his History asserts That until that Time i. e. the Middle of the 12th Century The Voice of the People in electing Bishops was esteem'd the Voice of God The Successors of K. H. 1. K. Steven Mat. Par. 51. took their Coronation Oaths in a Form much more enlarged for the Ease of the Commons than those of King Henry 1. or his two Predecessors Thus K. Steven swore Coram Regni Magnatibus i. e. the Lords and Commons convoked at London Ad meliorationem Legum juxta voluntatem Arbitrium singulorum which must mean That he would reform the Laws according to their common Consent in Parliament and afterwards going to Oxford i. e. to hold his Parliament Ibi confirmavit Pacta quae Deo Populo in Die Coronationis suae concesserat This I take to be meant of Danegelt Hydage Cornage c See there some Particulars of his Oath whereof the 3d is Tallagia Quae autecessores ejus accipere consueverant in aeternum condonaret And in the following Year on the Arrival of Rob. Earl of Glocester Ibid. 51. this King was again sworn to observe the Good Laws of the Realm and thereof granted his Charter and see there the conditional Homage paid to the King by that Earl I might here pursue this Thread of Coronation Oaths in those of H. 2. R. 1. K. John Vide Ib. 42. in pede 51. and the Praef. to Privilegia Londini Rights of the Kingdom p. 88. c. but my Intention is not to trace the Practices of Kings in taking Coronation Oaths an unlucky Blot remains in History as to those Princes I have already named it being generally observed Impudenter fregerunt c. An Author who seems to be very conversant in Matters of this Nature and observes thus The King's Oath is to confirm the just Laws which the Commons not the Lords shall elect or choose in Latin Quas vulgus elegerit and in the old French Oaths of Edw. 2. and Edw. 3. tis Les quels la Communaute aux Eslue And in the English Oaths of H. 8. and other Princes See Sir R. Atkyns ut supra p 28 29. tis Which the Commons of the Realm shall choose And that the antient Writs for summoning the Commons are Nobiscum tractur consilium impensur de arduis Negotiis Regni And the same Author The King dom's Rights ut supra a little before says thus The Mirror as well as Tacitus shews how our Lords were originally raised out of and by the Commons and with Bracton Fleta c. gives them a judicial Power over the Rest c. Nay the Modus Parliamenti will not only tell us That the Commons have better and stronger Votes than the Lords but that there may be a Parliament without the Prelates c. For there was a Time wherein there was neither Bishop nor Earl and yet there were Parliaments without them but never without the Commons and concludes with the Impossibility of holding a Parliament without them thus Parliamentum sine Communitate tenebitur pro nullo quamvis omnes alii status plenarie ibidem intersuerint Lastly Sir R. Atkyn's Power of Parliament p. 32. The Freeholders of England had originally the Election of the Conservators of the Peace who are become out of Date by introducing Justices of Peace who have their Power not by any Election of the Freeholders as of Right they ought nor are they nominated by them but by the King and have their Power by his special Commission c. i. e. contrary to the Common-Law And how and by what Means and in what tempered Times this came about may be read in Lambards Eirenarcha Lambards Justice f. 16.19.20.147 c. It was done by Act of Parliament in the Beginning of K. Edw. the 3d's Reign and in his Minority when the Queen and Mortimer ruled all The Freeholders did also originally Sir R. Atkyns supra and from all Antiquity at their Folkmotes or County Courts chuse their Heretochii and what were these You may call them Lords Lieutenants Deputy Lieutenants or it may be Lieutenants Generals For the Saxon Laws tell you their Duty and Office LL. Ed. Conf. 35. Vide ante and that they were to be Ductores Exercitus c. All these great Officers were chosen by the Freeholders as our Knights of the Shires now are and as Conservators or Justices of Peace formerly were and as Coroners and Verdredors formerly Men of great Power still are by Writ at the County Courts These were mighty Powers and Freedoms Sir R. Atkyns supra See 4 Inst 174.558 and were enjoy'd by the People as antiently as any of our Records do reach which are more authentic Proofs of our Constitution than the Writings of Modern Historians c. And do best shew the native Freedom which the People had by the antient Constitution of our Government contrary to all the new Doctrines of our late Writers and prove That the Privileges and Freedoms we yet enjoy are not meer Emanations of Royal Favour as our Novellists would impose upon us CHAP. II. Of the Dignity and Excellency of Parliaments THE Parliament is the Foundation and Basis of Government Rushw Coll. 3d Part Vol. 1. fo 739 and consequently of the Peace and Happiness of the Kingdom as it creates the Law by which we are ruled and governed in Peace and Quietness so it preserves the Law in Power and Authority It watches over our Religion that it be not supplanted and exchanged by suppositious Innovations or the Truth and Substance of it eaten up with Formality vain Pomp and unnecessary Ceremonies It is the Conservative of the Rights and Liberties of the Subject and the Corrective of Injustice and Oppression which by equal Right is distributed to all and every Man hath that Benefit and Protection of Justice which is due to him It is that by which alone common Necessities can be provided for and Publick Fears prevented so that I may say not only the Peace and Happiness and well Being but the very
Being of this Kingdom can have no other Bottom to stand upon but the Parliament it being the Foundation upon which the whole Frame of the Commonwealth is built The Parliament is the Cabinet Ib. 201. wherein the chiefest Jewels both of the Crown and Kingdom are deposited The great Prerogative of the King and the Liberty of the People are most effectually exercised and maintained by Parliaments c. Parliaments are the Ground and Pillar of the Subject's Liberty Ib. 587. and that which only maketh England a free Monarchy Parliaments are says the Earl of Warwick Ib. 752. Admiral of the Sea to John Pym Esq July 6 1742 That Great Council by whose Authority the King's of England have ever spoken to their People Both Houses of Parliament are the Eyes in the Body Politick Ib. 702. whereby His Majesty is ought by the Constitution of this Kingdom to discern the Differences of those Things which concern the Publick Peace and Safety thereof The Parliament is the Mouth of the King and Kingdom Vox Dei c. Parliaments says K. C. 1. in his Declaration to all his Loving Subjects Rushw Coll. 3d Part Vol. 2 p 40. after his Victory at Edgehill on the 23d of October 1642 are the only Sovereign Remedies for the growing Mischiefs which Time and Accidents have and will always beget in this Kingdom That without Parliaments the Happiness cannot be lasting to King or People The Parliament is to be considered in three several Respects first Ib. p. 45. As it is a Council to advise 2dly As it is a Court to judge 3dly As it is the Body Representative of the whole Kingdom to make repeal or alter Laws L'Assemblie de Troys Estates Cestascavoir Finch's Nemotecnia lib. 2. c. 1. fo 21. Roy Nobility Commons qui font le Corps del Realm est appel un Parliament lour Decree un Act de Parliament Car sans touts troys come si soit fait per Roy Seigneurs mes rien parle del Commons nest Ascun Act de Parliament i. e. The Assembly of the three Estates to wit the King the Nobility and the Commons which make the Body of the Realm is called a Parliament and their Decree an Act of Parliament for without all three as if it be done by the King and Lords but speaks nothing of the Commons there is not any Act of Parliament On the Restoration of King Charles the 2d the Commons resolved May 1. 1660. Journal Dom. Co. That this House doth agree with the Lords and do own and declare that according to the antient and fundamental Laws of this Kingdom the Government thereof is and ought to be By King Lords and Commons The Word Parliament is used in a double Sense 1. English Liberties p. 78. Strictly as it includes the Legislative Power of England as when we say an Act of Parliament add in this Acceptation it necessarily includes the King the Lords and the Commons each of which have a Negative Voice in making Laws and without their Joint Consent no new Laws can pass that be obligatory to the Subject 2. Vulgarly the Word is used for the Two Houses the Lords and Commons as when we say The King will call a Parliament His Majesty has dissolved his Parliament c. This Court is the highest Court in England Crompton's Juris p. 1. in which the Prince himself sits in Person and usually comes there at the Beginning of the Parliament and at the End and at any other Time when he pleaseth 4 Inst 3. during the Parliament The King is the Caput Principium and Finis of Parliaments It appears by Precedents That whenever a Parliament was sitting in the King's Absence Rushw Coll. Vol. 3. Part 1. p. 772. there was always a Custos Regni or a Locum Tenens Regis appointed This Court consists of the King's Majesty 4 Inst 1. sitting there as in his Royal Politic Capacity and of the three Estates of the Realm viz. the Lords Spiritual Arch-Bishops and Bishops who sit there by Succession in respect of their Counties Vide Dyfol 60. or Baronies parcel of their Bishopricks The Lords Temporal Dukes Marquesses Earls Viscounts and Barons who sit there by reason of their Dignities which they hold by Descent or Creation every one of which both Spiritual and Temporal ought to have a Writ of Summons ex debito Justitiae And the Commons of the Realm whereof there be Knights of Shires or Counties Citizens of Cities and Burgesses of Boroughs all which are respectively elected by the Shires or Counties Cities and Boroughs by Force of the King's Writ ex Debito Justitiae and none of them ought to be omitted And these represent all the Commons of the whole Realm and are trusted for them The King and these three Estates Ib. 2. are the great Corporation or Body Politic of the Kingdom and do sit in two Houses King and Lords in one House called The Lords House the Knights Citizens and Burgesses in another House called The House of Commons That which is done by this Consent Arc. Parl. 2. is called firm stable and sanctum and is taken for Law All the Judges of the Realm Towns Coll. 5.6 Vid. Cromp ton 1. Barons of the Exchequer of the Coif the King's Learned Council and the Civilians Masters of the Chancery are called to give their Assistance and Attendance in the Upper House of Parliament but they have no Voices in Parliament 4 Inst 4. but are made sometimes joynt Committees with the Lords Every Englishman is intended to be there present either in Person Arc. Parl. 3. Smyth's Common-wealth 74 or by Procuration and Attorney of what Preeminence State Dignity or Quality soever he be from the Prince be it King or Queen to the lowest Person in England And the Consent of the Parliament is taken to be every Man's Consent In antient Time the Lords and Commons of Parliament did sit together 2 Bulstro 173. See Cotton's Records 12.13.348 Post 60. in one and the same Room but afterwards they were divided to sit in several Rooms and this was at the Request of the Commons but yet still they remain but one Court And of all this I have seen the Records one in the Time of H. 1. where all of them did sit together and mention is there made of the Degrees of their Seats so in the Time of E. 3.39 No Man ought to sit in the High Court of Parliament 4 Inst 45. but he that hath Right to sit there For it is not only a personal Offence in him that sitteth there without Authority but a publick Offence to the Court of Parliament and consequently to the whole Realm It is to be observed 4 Inst 2. That when there is best Appearance there is the best Success in Parliament At a Parliament 7 Hen. 5. of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal there appeared but Thirty and there was but one Act pass'd of no great Weight In 50 Ed. 3. all the Lords appeared in Person and not one by
Proxy and so many excellent Things were done that it was called Bonum Parliamentum At the Return of the Writs Ib. 6. the Parliament cannot begin but by the Royal Presence of the King either in Person or Representation The King's Person may be represented by Commission under the Great Seal to certain Lords in Parliament authorizing them to begin the Parliament or to prorogue it c. When a Parliament is call'd Ib. 28. and doth sit and is dissolved without any Act of Parliament passed or Judgment given it is no Session of Parliament but a Convention It is an Observation proved by a great Number of Precedents Ib. 32. that never any good Bill was preferred or good Motion made in Parliament whereof any Memorial was made in the Journal-Book or otherwise Tho sometimes it succeeded not at the first yet it hath never dy'd but at one Time or other hath taken effect Matters of Parliament are not to be ruled by the Common-Law Ib. 17. If Offences done in Parliament might have been punish'd elsewhere Ibid. Vide 1 Inst Sect. 108. it shall be intended that at some Time it would have been put in Ure It doth not belong to the Judges Ib 50. to judge of any Law Custom or Priviledge of Parliament The Judges in Parliament are the King or Queen Sir Tho. Smith's Common-wealth 74 the Lords Temporal and Spiritual the Commons represented by the Knights and Burgesses of every Shire Borough-Town These all or the greater Part of them and that with the Consent of the Prince for the Time being must agree to the making of Laws It is the just and constant Course of Parliament Seld. Judic 95. to bring the Party accused to his Answer Yea tho he fly Justice yet to send out Proclamation into the Countries that he appear at a Day or else such and such Judgments shall be given against him What is done by either House Sir R. Atkyns Argument c. 14. according to the Law and Usage of Parliament is properly and in the Judgment of the Law the Act of the whole Parliament And what concerns the one must of Necessity concern the whole not meerly by Consequence but by an immediate Concernment as being one and entire The three Estates of Parliament are one entire Body and Corporation Ib. 34 41 51 55. Vide Rast St. 2. 3. E. 6. c. 36. Pref. All their Powers and Priviledges in the Right of them and in the Title to them are entire per my per tout and belonging to the whole Body of the Parliament tho in the Exercise of those Powers and sometime in the Claim of them they are distinguish'd and in the Practise of their Powers they are in many Things distributed into Parts All the Estates in Parliament are call'd by one common Name Ibid. as Commune Concilium Regni Magna Curia they are one Body Politic. It is said by Fineux Chief Justice That the Parliament at the Common-Law consists of the King Lords and Commons and they are but one Body corporate The Liberties and Franchises of the Parliament in the Right of them Ib. 55. are entire and due to both Houses for both make up the Parliament Knighton one of our best Historians doth notably disclose the antient Ends of calling Parliaments Knyghton de Eventibus Augliae l. 5. f. 2681. col 1.2 Pettyt's Rights c. in Pref. p. 43. 44. Hollings f. 1055. col 1. in saying Quod ex Antiquo Statuto Consuetudine landabili approbata c. That by an antient Statute and Custom laudable and approved which no Man could deny the King was once in the Year to convene his Lords and Commons to his Court of Parliament as to the highest Court in the whole Realm In qua omnis Aequitas relucere deberet absque qualibet Scrupulositate vel nota tanquam Sol in Ascensu Meridiei ubi Pauperes Divites pro Refrigerio Tranquilitatis Pacis Repulsione Injuriarum Refugium Infallibile quaerere possent ac etiam Errata Regni reformare de Statu Gubernatione Regis Regni cum Sapientiori Concilio tractare ut Inimici Regis Regni Intrinseci Hostes Extrinseci destruantur repellantur qualiterquoque Onera incumbentia Regi Regno levius ad Ediam Communitatis Supportari potuerunt i. e. In which Court all Equity ought to shine forth without the least Cloud or Shadow like the Sun in its Meridian Glory where Poor and Rich refreshed with Peace and Ease of their Oppressions may always find infallible and sure Refuge and Succour the Grievances of the Kingdom redressed and the State of the King and Government of the Realm debated with wiser Councels the Domestick and Foreign Enemies of the King and Kingdom destroy'd and repelled and to consider how the Charges and Burthens of both may be sustained with more Ease to the People Minshieu But these six Degrees were never allowed to be six Estates of Parliament in his Etymological Dictionary tit Parliament says In a Monument of Antiquity meaning the antient Modus Tenendi Parliament shewing the Manner of holding the Parliament in the Time of K. Edward the Son of K. Etheldred which as the Note saith was delivered by the discreeter Sort of the Realm to William the Conqueror and allowed by him tis said That the Parliament consisted of six Ranks or Degrees it begins thus Rex est Caput Principium et Finis Parliamenti ita non habet Parem in suo Gradu Et sic a Rege solo primus Gradus est Secundus Gradus est ex Archiepiscopis Episcopis Abbatibus Prioribus per Baroniam Tertius Gradus est de Procuratoribus Cleri Quartus Gradus est de Comitibus Baronibus et aliis Magnatibus Quintus Gradus est de Militibus Comitatuum Sextus Gradus est de Civibus et Burgensibus Et ita est Parliamentum ex sex Gradibus En Antient temps tout le Parliament sea Insimul Rolls 1. Report fol. 18. ante 54. et le Separation fuit perle desire del Commons Mes nient obstant ils font forsque un Mese jen aie view un Record 30 H. 1. de lour degrees et seats 39 E. 3. per Choke ch Inst It is generally believed Reform'd vol. 2. p. 49. That the whole Parliament sate together in one House before E. 3. Time and then the inferior Clergy were a Part of that Body without Question But when the Lords and Commons were divided the Clergy likewise sate in two Houses and granted Subsidies as well as the Temporalities My Lord Chief Justice Coke says 1 Inst Sect. 164. fol. 109. The Parliament is the highest and most honourable and absolute Court of Justice of England consisting of the King the Lords of Parliament and the Commons And again the Lords are here divided into two Sorts viz. Spiritual and Temporal And the Commons are divided into three Parts viz. Into Knights of Shires or Counties Citizens out of Cities and Burgesses out of Boroughs In the High Court of Parliament all the whole Body
of the Realm and every particular Member thereof either in Person or by Representation upon their own Free Elections are by the Laws of this Realm deemed to be personally present 1 Jac. 1. c. 1. Sir Edward Cook in his Epistle to the 9th Report says There is a threefold End of this great and honourable Assembly of Estates First That the Subject might be kept from offending that is That Offences might be prevented both by good and provident Laws and by the due Execution thereof Secondly That Men might live safely in Quiet And thirdly That all Men might receive Justice by certain Laws and Holy Judgments that is to the End that Justice might be the better administred that Questions and Defects in Laws might be by this High Court of Parliament planed and reduced to a Certainty and that Claims of Right might be adjudged and determined This Court being the most supream Court of this Realm is a Part of the Frame of the Common Laws and in some Cases doth proceed legally according to the ordinary Course of the Common Law The House of Lords cannot exercise any Power as an House of Parliament Sir R. Atkin's Argument f 51. or as a Court for Error without the House of Commons be in Being at the same Time Both Houses must be prorogued together and dissolved together By the Law Ib. 59. Parliaments ought to be very frequent Before the Conquest as it is untruly call'd by the Law Parliaments were to be held twice a Year as appears by King Edgar's Laws So it was ordained by King Alfred By the Stat. of 4 Ed. 3. c. 14. Parliaments ought to be once a Year and oftner if need be And in 36 Ed. 3. c. 10. to be once a Year without Restriction if need be By 16 Car. 2. c. 1. these Acts are declared to be in Force And further it is declared and enacted That the holding of Parliaments shall not be discontinued above three Years at the most The Parliament is a Court of very great Honour and Justice Plow Com. 398. 11 Col. 14 The Parliament can do no Wrong 6 Col. 27. Sir R. Atkyne Arg. 60. of which no Man ought to imagine a Thing dishonourable An Offence committed in Parliament is a very very high Offence but the higher it is the more proper it is for their Judicature and that Court is arm'd with a Power to punish the highest Offences and the highest Offenders Yet a Parliament may err Plow Com. 397. 9 Col. 106. Ibid. for they are not infallible but the Law hath provided a Remedy against those Errors and a way to reform them A subsequent Parliament may reform the Errors of a preceeding Parliament But to say that they will be partial Ibid. or unjust or corrupt or do any Thing out of Malice is to raise a Scandal upon the whole Nation Ibid whose Representative they are If any Offence whatever be committed in the Parliament by any particular Member See Husband's Collections ante p. 1. p. 67. it is an high Infringment of the Right and Privilege of Parliament for any Person or Court to take the least Notice of it till the House it self either has punish'd the Offender or referred them to a due or proper Course of Punishment To do otherwise would be to make the Highest Court an Offender and to charge them with Injustice Their Right and Priviledge so far extends Ib. 61. that not only what is done in the very House sitting the Parliament but whatever is done relating to them or in pursuance of their Order during the Parliament is no where else to be punish'd but by Themselves or a succeeding Parliament tho done out of the House Either House doth ever for the most part shew it self so careful to keep firm Correspondence with the other Sir Simon d'Ewes Journal 186. as that when a Bill hath pass'd either of the said Houses and is sent to the other it doth for the most part pass and is neither dash'd nor alter'd without very great Cause upon mature deliberation and usually also not without Conference desir'd and had thereupon that so full Satisfaction may be given to that House from which the Bill so rejected or alter'd was sent Pessima Gens humani Generis always abhorr'd a Parliament Preface to Petyt's Miscel Parlementar And the Reason thereof is demonstrative because they all knew they shou'd then be call'd to an impartial and strict Account and be punish'd according to their Demerits It was said by the Lord Bacon to Sir Lionel Cranfeild Ibid. newly made Lord Treasurer That he would recommend to his Lordship and in him to all other great Officers of the Crown one considerable Rule to be carefully observ'd which was Remember a Parliament will come The King at no Time stands so highly in his Estate Royal Petyt 's Miscel Parliament 6. Vide Cromp. Jur. 10. as in the Time of Parliament wherein the King as Head and they as Members are conjoyn'd and knit together in one Body Politic So as whatsoever Injury during that Time is offer'd to the meanest Member of the House is to be judged as done against the King's Person and the whole Court of Parliament The Prerogative of Parliament is so great Ibid. That all Acts and Processes coming out of any inferior Courts must cease and give place to that the highest Statutes in England are made not only by the Princes Pleasure Fortescue 42. but also by Assent of the whole Realm So that of Necessity they must procure the Wealth of the People and in no wise tend to their hindrance It cannot otherwise be thought Ibid. but that they are replenish'd with much Wit and Wisdom seeing they are ordain'd not by the Device of one Man alone or of a hundred wise Counsellors only but of more than three hundred learned Men now 558 that ought to be freely Elected by the People Acts of Parliament are made with such Gravity Wisdom 11. Co. 63. Fortesc c. 18. c. 40. and Universal consent of all the Realm and for advantage of the publick Wealth that they are not from the General and ambiguous Words of a Subsequent Act to be abrogated Acts of Parliament have been tender of racking the King's Subjects for Words 1. Mod. Rep. 234 and the Scripture Discountenances Mens being made Transgressors for a Word Every Proviso in an Act 1. Siderf 155. is not a determination what the Law was before for they are often added for the Satisfaction of those that are ignorant of the Law The King of England can neither by himself or his Ministers Fortescu p. 84. impose any Tallages or other Burdens on his Subjects or alter their Laws or make new Laws without Assent of the whole Kingdom in Parliament CHAP. III. Of the Power and Authority of Parliaments THE Parliamentary Power Hollinsh Vol. 1. p. 173. as it is in the Legislative Capacity consisting of the Agreement and Act of all the three Estates King Lords and Commons to make it Binding it imports no
less than the united Consent of all and every Person of the Kingdom and under this Notion its Power is Unlimited and Universal its Authority is the most unerring and firm support of Monarchy and Government and has been ever used as the only Expedient to accommodate the differences of Pretenders and Competitors to arbitrate and decree not only the Right and Possession but even the Inheritance and Reversion of the Regal Power to succour and defend the King and Kingdom against all possibility of Injury or Incroachment that might be Intended against or Usurped upon it or its Authority to decree the Nations Liberties ascertain Property and to establish an unquestionable Peace and Security to all the People both from the danger of Grievances at Home or the Assaults of foreign Power In this capacity it hath Power above the Law itself Hollinshead c. 1. vol. 1. p. 173. having Power to alter the common Law of England to declare the meaning of any doubtful Laws to repeal old Patents Grants or Charters and Judgments whatsoever of the King or any other Court of Justice if erroneous or illegal and extends so far as finally to oblige both King and People to punish Offenders of all Sorts to examine into the corruptions of Religion and either to disanul or reform it Anno 1626. 2. Rushw Coll. vol. 1. p. 245. Car. the Commons in their Remonstrances declare that it hath been the antient constant and undoubted Right and Usage of Parliaments to question and complain of all Persons of what degree soever found grievous to the Common-Wealth in abusing the Power and Trust committed to them by the Sovereigns a Course approved of by frequent Presidents in the best and most glorious Reigns appearing both in Records and Histories c. In 30. E. 3. 7. H. 4. Rot. Parl. N o 31 32. the Parliament accused John de Gaunt the King's Son and Lord Latimer and Lord Nevil for misadvising the King and they went to the Tower for it In 11. Rushw Ib. p. 627. H. 4. N o 13. the Council are complained of and are removed from the King for that they mewed-up the King and disuaded him from the common Good In 4. H. 3. 27. E. 3. 13. R. 2. the Parliament moderateth the King's Prerogative and nothing grows to an Abuse says Sir Edward Coke but the Parliament hath Power to treat of and Correct it And King James the 1st Idem p. 62● put the Commons assembled in Parliament in mind that it would be the greatest unsaithfulness and breach of Duty to his Majesty and of the Trust committed to them by the Country that could be if in setting forth the Grievances of the People and the Condition of all the Petitions of this Kingdom from whence they come they did not deal clearly with him without sparing any Persons how near and dear soever they were unto him if they were hurtful or dangerous to the Common-Wealth The most High and Absolute Power of the Realm of England Sir Tho. Smith's Common-wealth l. 2. c. 2. p. 72. Arcana Parl. 1. consisteth in the Parliament For as in War where the King himself in Person the Nobility the rest of the Gentility and the Yeomanry are is the Force and Power of England So in Peace and Consultation where the Prince is to give Life and the last and highest Commandment the Barony or Nobility for the higher the Knights Esquires Gentlemen and Commons for the lower part of the Common-wealth the Bishops for the Clergy be present to advertise consult and shew what is good and necessary for the Common-wealth and to consult together and upon mature deliberation every Bill or Law being thrice read and disputed in either House the other two parts first each a part Ibid p. 73. and after the Prince himself in presence of both the Parties doth consent unto and alloweth that it is the Prince's and whole Realm's Deed whereupon justly no Man can complain but must accommodate himself to find it good and obey it Thus the concurrent Consent of these three Estates when reduced to writing Inst Leg. p. 34. and pass'd in Parliament is as it were a Tripartite Indenture between King Lords and Commons and that which is so done by this Consent is called firm stable and sanctum and is taken for Law As to the Power of Parliaments Sir Tho. Smith ibid. Arc. Parl. 2. Vide Crompt Jur. 3. 1. It abrogateth old Laws 2. Maketh new Laws 3. Giveth order for things past 4. Directs things hereafter to be followed 5. Changeth Right and Possessions of private Men. 6. Legitimateth Bastards 7. Establisheth Forms of Religion 8. Altereth Weights and Measures 9. Giveth Form of Succession to the Crown 10. Defineth of doubtful Rights whereof is no Law already made 11. Appointeth Subsidies Tallies Taxes and Impositions 12. Giveth most free Pardons and Absolutions 13. Restoreth in Blood and Name 14. And as the highest Court condemneth or absolveth them who are put upon their Trial. In short Ibid. all that ever the People of Rome might do either Centuriatis Comitiis or Tributis the same may be done by the Parliament of England which representeth and hath the Power of the whole Realm both the Head and Body For every Englishman is intended to be there present either in Person or by Procuration and Attorny of what preheminence state dignity or quality soever he be from the Prince be he King or Queen to the lowest Person of England And the Consent of the Parliament is taken to be every Man's consent As to its Power over both the Statute and Common Law of this Realm Rastal's Statutes fol. 546. 25 H. 8. c. 21. you will be best informed of it from the memorable words of an Act of Parliament itself viz. Whereas this Realm recognizing no Superiour under God but only the King hath been and is free from Subjection to any Man's Laws but to such as have been devised made and ordained within this Realm for the Wealth of the same or to such other as by Sufferance of the King and his Progenitors the People of this Realm have taken at their free Liberty by their own Consent to be used amongst them and have bound themselves by long Use and Custom to the Observance of the same not as to the Observance of the Laws of any Foreign Prince Potentate or Prelate but as to the Custom and antient Laws of this Realm originally established as Laws of the same by the said Sufferance Consents and Custom and none otherwise It standeth therefore with Natural Equity and Good Reason that all and every such Laws Humane made within this Realm by the said Sufferance Consents and Custom that the King and the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons representing the whole State of this Realm in the most High Court of Parliament have full Power and Authority not only to dispence but also to authorize some Elect Person or Persons to dispence with those and all other Human Laws of
this Realm and with every one of them as the Quality of the Persons and Matter shall require And also the said Laws and every of them to abrogate adnul amplifie or diminish as it shall be seem to the King and the Nobles and Commons of this Realm present in Parliament meet and convenient for the Wealth of this Realm The Power and Jurisdiction of the Parliament for making of Laws in proceeding by Bill 4 Inst 36. is so transcendent and absolute as it cannot be confined either for Causes or Persons within any Bounds Si Antiquitatem spectes est vetustissima si Dignitatem est honoratissima si Jurisdictionem est capacissima The whole Parliament which should best know its own Power affirms Speed's Hist f. 914 Rot. Parl. 1 R. 3. In Cotton's Abridgment f. 713 714 that the Court of Parliament is of such Authority and the People of this Land of such a Nature and Disposition as Experience teacheth that the Manifestation and Declaration of any Truth or Right made by the Three Estates of this Realm assembled in Parliament and by Authority of the same maketh before all other things most Faith and certain quieting of Mens Minds and removeth the Occasion of Doubts Parliamentum omnia Potest says the 4 Inst 74.76 The Parliament is of an absolute and unlimited Power in things Temporal Sir Rob. Atkyns's Argument c. 50. Ibid. within this Nation The Parliament hath the highest and most sacred Authority of any Court it hath an absolute Power It is the highest Court in the Realm as is acknowledged by our most learned and gravest Writers and Historians A Man gives Land to one and to his Heirs Males Crompton 20. b. Dr. and Student in that Case his Heirs Females shall also inherit and this was adjudged in Parliament One of the fundamental and principal Ends of Parliaments was Petit's Preface to Ancient Rights c. p. 41. for the Redress of Grievances and easing the Oppressions of the People And the Mirror of Justices says 6.1 p. 4. and 5. That Parliaments were instituted to hear and determine the Complaints of the wrongful Acts of the King the Queen and their Children and especially of those Persons against whom the Subjects otherwise could not have common Justice for wrongs so by them done Covient per droit que le Roy ust Companions pur oyer et terminer aux Parliaments trestouts les breues et plaints de Torts de le Roy de la Roigne Horn's Mirror p. 9. et de lour Enfants et de Eux specialment de que Torts len ne poit aver autrement Common droit i. e. The King ought by Law to have Companions or associates to hear and determine in Parliament of all Writs and Plaints of all Torts or Wrongs as well of the King as of the Queen and their Children and especially of those Great Ones where one cannot otherwise have Common right for those wrongs The greater the Persons are Sir Rob. Atkyns Argument p. 45. if they are in the Rank of Subjects they must be subject to the King's Laws and they are the more proper for the Undertaking and Encounter of this High Court It will not be impar congressus King John had resign'd up the Crown of England to the Pope Id. 37. by the Hand of Pandulphus his Legat Mat. Paris and sordidly submitted to take the Crown at his Hand again Rot. Parl. 40. E. 3. No 7. 8. at a yearly Tribute In the Reign of our Noble King Edward the Third the Pope demanded this Rent and all the Arrears But the Prelates Dukes Counts Barons and Commons resolved that neither the King nor any other could put the Realm nor the People thereof into Subjection sans l'assent de eux without their Assent This intimates Sir R. Atkyn's Arg. p. 50. that with their joynt Consent the Crown may be disposed of And it was the highest Resolution in Law in one of the highest Points in Law concerning the King's claim of an Absolute Power and in a Time when the Pope was in his Meridian Height It is the proper Work of this Supreme Court to deal with such Delinquents Ibid. as are too high for the Court of King's Bench or other ordinary Courts Daughters and Heirs apparent of a Man or Woman 4 Inst 36. may by Act of Parliament inherit during the Life of the Ancestor Ante 69. It may adjudge an Infant or Minor to be of full Age. Ibid. It may Attaint a Man of Treason after his Death Ibid. It may Naturalize a meer Alien Ibid. and make him a Subject born It may bastard a Child Ibid. that by Law is Legitimate viz. begotten by an Adulterer the Husband being within the four Seas It may Legitimate one that is Illegitimate Ibid. and born before Marriage absolutely It may Legitimate secundum quid etiamque simpliciter 21 Rich. 2. The Lords Appellants accused the Duke of Gloucester of Treason Selden's Judicature 91. and tho' they knew he was dead they pray'd the King that he might be brought to his Answer The King sent his Writ c. they desired Judgment and had it So Robert Possington was impeached at the Parliament at Westminster Id. 95. and found Guilty long Time after he was dead and so forfeited his Estate John of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster had by Catherine Swinford 4 Inst 36. Cotten's Record p. 363. before Marriage four illegitimate Children Henry John Thomas and Joan. At the Parliament holden 20 Rich. 2. the King by Act of Parliament in Form of a Charter doth Legitimate the three Sons and Joan the Daughter Thomas Cromwel Vide post 4 Inst 36. Earl of Essex was attainted by Parliament and forth-coming to be heard and yet never call'd to answer in any of the Houses of Parliament and resolved by the Judges that if one be Attainted by Parliament it can never come in question after whether he were call'd or not call'd to answer for the Act of Attainder being pass'd by Parliament did bind Where by Order of Law a Man cannot be Attainted of High-Treason Id. 39. unless the Offence be in Law High-Treason he ought not to be Attainted by general Words of High-Treason by Authority of Parliament as sometimes hath been used but the High-Treason ought to be especially exprest seeing that the Court of Parliament is the highest and most honourable Court of Justice and ought to give example to inferior Courts Acts against the Power of the Parliament subsequent bind not Id. 42. It is against the Power and Jurisdiction of the Parliament the Liberty of the Subject and unreasonable i. e. Illegal The Stat. 11. Rich. 2. c. 5. Id. 42. That no Person should attempt to revoke any Ordinance then made was repealed for that such Restraint is unreasonable c. An Act 11 Rich. 2 c. 3. Ibid. That no Man against whom any Judgment or Forfeiture was given shou'd sue for Pardon or Grace c. was holden to be unreasonable without Example and against the Law and
Custom of Parliament and therefore void The Authority of the High Court of Parliament to be committed to a few as in 21 Rich. 2. c. 16. Ibid. is holden to be against the Dignity of a Parliament and that no such Commission ought to be granted Tho' it be apparent what transcendent Power and Authority the Parliament hath Id. 43 and tho' divers Parliaments have attempted to bar restrain suspend qualify or make void the Power of subsequent Parliaments yet could they never effect it for the latter Parliament hath ever Power to abrogate suspend qualify explain or make void the former in the Whole or in any Part thereof notwithstanding any Words of Restraint Prohibition or Penalty in the former For it is a Maxim in the Law of Parliament Quod Leges posteriores priores contrarias abrogant An Act of Parliament doth include every Man's Consent Hobart 256. as well to come and unborn Persons as those present The Sovereign Power of this High Court of Parliament is such Hakewel 86. that altho' the King's Majesty hath many great Priviledges and Prerogatives yet many Things are not effectual in Law to pass under the great Seal by the King's Charter without the consent of Parliament as was resolv'd by all the Judges in the Princes case The King by his Letters Patents may make a Denizen Id. 87. Bro. Denizen N o 9. 36. H. 8. but cannot Naturalize him to all purposes as an Act of Parliament may do If a Man be Attainted of Felony Hakewel 89. or Treason by Verdict Outlawry Confession c. his Blood is corrupted which is a perpetual and absolute Disability for him or his Posterity to claim any Hereditament in Fee-simple either as Heir to him or any Ancestor paramount him and he shall not be restored to his Blood without Parliament And yet the King may give to any attainted Person his Life by this Charter of Parliament The King cannot alter the Common Law Id. 90. or the general Customs of the Realm as Gavelkind Borough-English or the like without consent of Parliament Altho' a King have a Kingdom by Discent Ibid. yet seeing by the Law of that Kingdom he doth inherit that Kingdom he cannot change those Laws of himself without Consent of Parliament By the Laws of this Kingdom Ibid. the King cannot by his Proclamation alter the Law but the King may make Proclamtion that he shall incur the Indignation of his Majesty that withstands it But the Penalty of not obeying his Proclamation may not be upon Forfeiture of his Goods his Lands or his Life without Parliament Le Parliament d'Engleterre ne lia Ireland quoad Terras suas Brook 123. 91. Vide 20 H. 6.9 Crompton 22. b. quar ils ont Parliament la mes il poient eux lier quant al Choses transitory come eskipper de Lane ou Merchandize al intent de ceo carrier al auter Lieu ultra Mare The Parliament of England cannot bind Ireland Quere infra as to their Lands for they have a Parliament there but they may bind them as to Things transitory as the shipping of Wool or Merchandize to the intent to carry it to another Place beyond the Sea 4 Inst 350. Sometimes the King of England call'd his Nobles of Ireland to come to his Parliament of England c. And by special Words the Parliament of England may bind the Subjects of Ireland The Lords in their House have Power of Judicature Id. 23. and the Commons in their House have Power of Judicature and both Houses together have Power of Judicature This Power is best understood by reading the Judgments and Records of Parliament at large Ibid. and the Journals of the House of Lords and 6 H. 8. c. 16. Rast 429 430. Vaughan 285. the Book of the Clerk of the House of Commons which is sometimes also styled a Record If Inconveniencies necessarily follow out of the Law only the Parliament can cure them If a Marriage be declared by Act of Parliament to be against God's Law Id. 327. we must admit it to be so for by a Law that is by an Act of Parliament it is so declared In many Cases Multitudes are bound by Acts of Parliament Id. 14. which are not Parties to the Elections of Knights Citizens and Burgesses as all they that have no Free-hold or have Free-hold in ancient Demesne and all Women having Free-hold or no Free-hold and Men within the Age of One and twenty Years Hob. 256. c. and we may add Persons unborn It is declared by the Lords and Commons in full Parliament upon Demand made of them on the Behalf of the King That they could not assent to any Thing in Parliament that tended to the disherison of the King and his Crown whereunto they were sworn The Expounding of the Laws doth ordinarily belong to the Reverend Judges Hakewel 94. and in Case of greatest Difficulty or Importence to the High Court of Parliament Errors by the Law in the Common-Pleas are to be corrected in the King's-Bench 4 Inst 22. Vid. Stat. 1 Jac. 1 c. 1. and of the King's-Bench in the Parliament and not otherwise i. e. where the Proceedings are by original Writ Instit Leg. 171.172 For if they are by Bill they may be corrected in the Exchequer Chamber by St. 27 Eliz. c. 8. from whence a Writ of Error lyes to the Parliament Actions at Common Law are not determined in this High Court of Parliament Selden's Judicature 2. yet Complaints have ever been receiv'd in Parliaments as well of private Wrongs as publick Offences And according to the Quality of the Person and Nature of the Offence they have been retained or referred to the Common Law There be divers Precedents of the Trial of Bishops by their Peers in Parliament Id. 4.5 as well for Capital Offences as Misdemeanors whereof they have been accused in Parliament And so there have been of Commoners As the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury 15 Ed. 3. n. 6 7 8. ibid. postea 44. 39. ibid 17 E. 3.22 And the Bishop of Norwich 7 Ric. 2. for Misdemeanors So were the Bishops of York and Chichester tried for Treason by their Peers in Parliament upon the Appeal of the Lords Appellants 11 R. 2. And Anno 21 R. 2. The Commons Accused the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury of Treason by their Peers in Parliament upon the Appeal of the Lords Appellants 11 R. 2. And Anno 21 R. 2. The Commons accused the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury of Treason and the Temporal Lords judged him a Traitor and banished him But if a Bishop be accused out of Parliament he is to be tried by an ordinary Jury of Free-holders for his Honour is not inheritable as is the Temporal Peers out of Parliament yet in all other Matters save that only of their Trial they have Priviledge as no Day of Grace to be granted against them in any Suit A Knight to be returned upon the Pannel where a Bishop is Party and no Process in a Civil Action to be awarded
against his Body and the like And by this it appeareth what Persons are de Jure triable by the Lords in Parliament viz. their Peers only which Bishops are not Judgments in Parliaments for Death have generally been strictly guided per Legem Terrae i.e. Lex Parliamenti d. 168. The Parliament hath three Powers Sir Rob. Atkyns Argument c. 36. a Legislative in Respect of which they are call'd the three Estates of the Realm a Judicial in respect of this it is call'd Magna Curia or the High Court of Parliament a Counselling Power hence it is call'd Commune Concilium Regni The Parliament gives Law to the Court of King's-Bench Id. 49. and to all other Courts of the Kingdom and therefore it is absurd and preposterous that it shou'd receive Law from it and be subject to it The greater is not judged of the less All the Courts of Common Law are guided by the Rule of the Common Law Id. 50 but the Proceedings of Parliament are by quite another Rule The Matters in Parliament are to be discussed and determined by the Custom and Usage of Parliament and the Course of Parliament and neither by the Civil nor the Common Law used in other Courts Ibid. The Judges of all the Courts of Common Law in Westminster are but Assistants and Attendants to the High Court of Parliament And shall the Assistants judge of their Superiors The High Court of Parliament is the dernier Refort Ibid. and this is generally affirm'd and held but it is not the last if what they do may yet again be examin'd and controlled Because the High Court of Parliament proceeds by a Law peculiar to that High Court Id 52. which is call'd Lex Consuetudo Parliamenti and not by the Rules of the Common Law and consists in the Customs Usages and Course of Parliament no Inferior Court can for this very Reason judge or determine of what is done in Parliament or by the Parliament A Statute Arc. Parl. 85. or Act of Parliament need not be proclaim'd for the Parliament represents the Body of the whole Realm for there are Knights and Burgesses of every County and Town But otherwise where it is ordained by the Act that it shall be proclaimed A Man Attainted of Felony Id. 100. or Treason shall not be restored in Blood without Parliament 28 Ed. 1. Petyt's Appendix to Miscel Parliam n. 38. A Truce being concluded between the English and French by King Edward's Ambassadors who therein had dishonourably agreed to include the Scots the Ambassadors at the ensuing Parliament were sharply rebuked and corrected not only by the King himself the Prelates and Nobles but by the Commons The Court of Parliament was the Sanctuary Turner's Case of Bankers 36. whether the distressed Subject in his Exigence fled for Shelter and Refuge and alway found it Into the Sacred Bosom of Parliaments it was Ibid Vide Several Precedent and Records that they poured out their Sighs and Groans with constant Success and when in Cases of high Nature the Common Law was arrested and stopt in her proceedings Parliaments evermore ran into ther Rescue and in dutiful ways discharged those Locks and Bars which had been unjustly fastned on the Exchequer The Right of the Crown of England Stat. Prov. 25 Ed. 3. Rast Stat. 99. and the Law of the said Realm is such that upon the Mischiefs and Damages which happen to the Realm the King ought and is bound by his Oath of the Accord of his People in Parliament thereof to make Remedy c. To conclude this Chapter Le Parliament ad Absolute poiar en touts Cases come a faire Leys d'adjuger Matters en Ley a trier vie del home a reverser Errors en Bank le Roy especialment lou est ascun Commune Mischief que l'ordinary Course del Ley n'ad ascun means a remedier en tiel Case ceo est le proper Court Et tonts choses que ils font sont come Judgments Et si le Parliament mesme erre Finche's Nomotecnia l. 2. c. 1. f. 21. 22. come il poet ceo ne poet estre reverse en ascun Lieu forsque en le Parliament Which because it is omitted as several other things are in the Book translated into English I will thus give it the Reader that does not understand French The Parliament hath Absolute Power in all Cases as to make Laws to adjudge Matters in Law to try Men upon their Lives to reverse Errors in the King's Bench especially where there is any Common Mischief which the ordinary Course of the Law hath not any means to remedy in such Case this is the proper Court And all things which they do are as Judgments And if the Parliament it self errs as it may that cannot be reversed in any place but in Parliament Sir Robert Cotton See Sir Robert Cot. Treatise of Parliaments p. 44 45 c in his Discourse of the Privilege and Practice of Parliaments says thus by Parliaments all the wholesom Fundamental Laws of this Land were and are Establish'd and Confirmed By Act of Parliament the Pope's Power and Supremacy in this Kingdom and the Romish Superstition and Idolatry were abrogated and abolished By Act of Parliament God's true Religion Worship and Service are or may be establish'd and maintain'd By Act of Parliament the two Universities of Oxford and Cambridge with other Cities and Towns have had many Privileges and Immunities granted em By Parliament one Pierce Gaveston a great Favourite and Misleader of King Ed. 2. was remov'd and Banished and afterwards by the Lords Executed Also by Parliament the Spencer's Favourites and Misguiders of the same King were Condemned c. and so was Delapool in H. 6. Time and others since By Parliament Empson and Dudley two notable Polers of the Common-wealth by exacting Penal Laws on the Subjects were Discover'd and afterwards Executed By Parliament the Damnable Gunpowder Treason hatch'd in Hell is recorded to be had in Eternal Infamy By Parliament one Sir Giles Mompesson a Caterpiller and Poler of the Common-wealth by exacting upon In-holders c. was discover'd degraded and Banished by Proclamation By Parliament Sir Francis Bacon Note the Censure on the late E. of Macclesfield Quere made by K. James 1. Baron of Verulam Viscount of St. Albans and Lord Chancellor of England was for Bribery c. discover'd and displac'd By Parliament Sir John Bennet one of the Judges of the Prerogative Court being Pernitious to the Common-wealth in his Place was discover'd and displac'd By Parliament Lyonel Cranfield sometime a Merchant of London and made by K. James 1. Earl of Middlesex and Lord Treasurer of England being hurfull in his Place to the Common-wealth was discover'd and displaced By Parliament Note Sir Francis Mitchell a jolly Middlesex Justice of Peace in the Suburbs of London another Canker-worm of the Common-wealth by Corruption in exacting an Execution of the Laws upon poor Alchouse-keepers Victuallers c. was discover'd and degraded from his Knighthood and
utterly disabled from being a Justice of Peace By Parliament Ib. p. 46. the Spanish Frauds were discovered and by an Act of Parliament the two Treaties i. e. touching the Spanish Match and for restoring the Palatinate both which had cost the King and his Subjects much Money and much Blood were Dissolved and Annihilated And we may remember says the same Author That that sage Councellor of State Sir William Cecil Lord Burley and Lord Treasurer of England was oft Times heard to say He knew not what a Parliament might not do which saying was approved by K. James 1. and is cited by him in one of his publick Speeches The Parliament says one is of an absolute and unlimited Power in all Things Temporal within this Nation Sir Robers Atkins's Argument p. 50. Bract. fo 34. Fleta p. 2. 17. Another says Parliamentum omnia potest Bracton and Fleta both affirm Rex habet Superiorem in Regno Scilicet Curiam suam i. e. Comites Barones doubtless the Lords and Commons qui apponuntur Regi ut si Rex sine Fraeno i. e. sine Lege fuerit Debent ei Fraenum apponere c. Nay some great Authors have asserted Quod Concilium hoc i. e. Parliamentum Facultatem habet Deponendi Regem Malum Substituendi Novum See Mat. Paris per Watts pag. 498. Knighton de Eventibus Angliae p. 2683. in the Decem. Scriptores and that this Power is claimed ex antiquo Statuto c. Knighton has a remarkable Passage concerning the Execution of that antient Statute in the Cases of E. II. and R. II. which at this Time I forbear to Transcribe or Translate Note It appears by Mat. Paris p. 99. c. That the Commons were then i. e. 15 H. II. summoned to the Parliament held at Clerkenwell and that they also were a Part of the Parliament in the Time of K. H. I. See before p. 34. 35. c. CHAP. IV. Of the House of Lords in general THE House of Peers Rushw eol vol. 3. part 1. p. 777. are the hereditary Counsellors of the King and Kingdom as the House of Commons are the representative Body of the whole Commons of the Kingdom There certainly cannot in the whole World be seen a more illustrious Court Nalson 566. than this high and honourable Assembly of Peers in Parliament nor any Thing of greater Benefit and Advantage to the Subjects of this Monarchy No Lord of Parliament can sit there Sir Simon d'Ewes's Jour 11. Col. 1. till he be full One and twenty Years unless by special Grace of the Prince and that very rarely unless they be near upon the Age of Twenty one Years at least A Bishop elect may sit in Parliament Ibid. ante 3 4 43 44. as a Lord thereof i. e. if called thereto by Writ Q. For he is not properly a Peer or even a Bishop till his Temporalties are granted to him If the King by his Writ calleth any Knight or Esquire to be a Lord of the Parliament 4 Inst 44. he cannot refuse to serve the King there in communi illo Consilio for the Good of his Country It lies in the Favour of the Prince Sir Simon d'Ewes Journal 2.4 Col. 2. to make Heirs of Earldoms Members of the upper House by summoning them thither by Writ but then they take not their Place there as the Sons of Earls but according to the Antiquity of their Fathers Baronies The Archbishop of Canterbury is the first Peer of the Realm Id. 140. Col. 1. The Earl-Marshal's Place in Parliament is betwixt the Lord Chamberlain Id. 535. Col. 2. and the Lord Steward See the Statute No Man ought to sit in that high Court of Parliament 4 Inst 45. but he that hath Right to sit there If a Lord depart from Parliament Id. 44. without License it is an Offence done out of the Parliament and is finable by the Law 4 June 1642 Rushw Col. Vol. 3. part 1.737 Post upon an Order of the House of Lords to those Lords that had left the Parliament and repaired to the King at York requiring their Appearance as Delinquents in the Answer they returned to it there are these Words We do conceive that it is the apparent usual and inherent Right belonging to the Peerage of England that in the highest Misdemeanors whatsoever no Peer is to answer to the first Charge but in his own Person and not upon the first Charge to come to the Bar. Any Lord of the Parliament 4 Inst 12. by License of the King upon just Cause to be absent may make a Proxy 43 Eliz. 1601 Towns Col. 135. Vide Sir Simon d'Ewes Journal 605. agreed by the Lords That the antient Course of the House is That the Excuses of such Lords as shou'd happen to be absent from the House upon reasonable Occasions ought to be done by some of the Peers and not by other Information Anno Domini 1626 Rushw Col. Vol. 1. p. 365. 2 Car. 1. resolved upon the Question by the whole House Nemine dissentiente That the Priviledge of this House is That no Lord of Parliament the Parliament sitting or within the usual Time of Priviledges of Parliament is to be imprisoned or restrained without Sentence or Decree of the House unless it be for Treason or Felony or refusing to give Surety of the Peace N. B. This was upon the King's having committed the Earl of Arundel to the Tower without expressing the Cause of his Commitment All the Priviledges which do belong to those of the Commons House of Parliament Hakewell 82. a fortiori do appertain to all the Lords of the upper House for their Persons are not only free from Arrests during the Parliament but during their Lives Nevertheless the original Cause is by Reason they have Place and Voice in Parliament And this is manifest by express Authorities grounded upon excellent Reasons in the Books of Law A Proxy is no more than the constituting of some one or more by an absent Lord Sir Simon d'Ewes Journals 5. Col. 2. to give his Voice in the upper House when any Difference of Opinion and Division of the House shall happen for otherwise if no such Division fall out it never cometh to be question'd or known to whom such Proxies are directed nor is there any the least Use of them save only to shew prove and continue the Right which the Lords of the upper House have both to be summon'd and to give their Voices in the same House either in their Persons or by their Proxies As many Proxies as any Peer hath Ibid. Col. 2. so many Voices he hath beside his own and if there be two or three Proxies constituted by one absent Lord as is frequent then always the first named in the same is to give the Voice if he be present and if absent then the second sic de reliquis It is plain by the antient Treatise Ibid. 6. Col. 1. Modus tenendi Parliamentum That if a Peer neither came to the Parliament nor sent
Duke of Somerset in the Time of Ed. 6. was tried for Felony and Treason by his Peers upon an Indictment Id. 71. for it is the Suit of the King When a Lord of Parliament is tried by his Peers 1 Hen. 4.1 Id. 72. they shall not be Sworn to say their Verdict but they shall give their Verdict upon their Honour and are not charged but upon their Honours And 6 Maij 1628. Sir Wm. Jones's Rep. 154 155. It was ordered on the Question Nem. Dissen That the Nobility of this Kingdom and Lords of the upper House of Parliament are of antient Right to Answer in all Courts as Defendants upon Protestation of Honour only and not upon the common Oath An order of the House of Lords was in 1640. Cursus Cancel 112. That the Nobility of this Kingdom and Lords of the upper House of Parliament and the Widows and Dowagers of the Temporal Lords shall Answer in Chancery c. upon Protestation of Honour only but altho their Honour may bind their Conscience in Equity yet Evidence upon their Honour ought not to be admitted in any Court of Law And we must here Note That even Lords of Parliament or Peers of the Realm in giving Evidence to a Jury or in their Depositions in Chancery c. are to be Examined on Oath A Lord of Parliament shall have Knights upon his Trial in every Action 27 Hen. 8. f. 27. A Lord of Parliament may be Outlawed for Murder 27 Hen. 8. f. 17. If a Lord of Parliament makes a Rescous 27 H. 8.27 a Capias shall be taken out against him if the Sheriff return the Rescous otherwise it is in Case of Debt A Capias ad Satisfaciendum does not lyc against a Lord of Parliament 11 H. 4.15 27 Hen. 8.27 for the Law presumes that he has Assets An Attachment is not grantable by the Common Law Dyer 316. Statue Law Custom or Precedent against a Lord of Parliament and the Lord Cromwel by Order in the Parliament-Chamber was discharged of such Process In a Praemunire against a Lord of Parliament Arc. Parl. he ought to appear in his proper Person and not by Attorney unless he has a special Writ of Chancery De attornato faciendo CHAP. V. The Power of the House of Lords A Peer of the Realm being Indicted of Treason or Felony 4 Inst 23. or Misprision of Treason may be Arraigned thereof in Parliament a Lord Steward being appointed and then the Lords Spiritual shall make a Procurator for them and the Lords as Peers of the Realm during the Parliament are Judges whether the Offence be Treason c. that is supposed to be committed by any Peer of the Realm and not the Justices Vide a Letter sent by nine Lords Rush Col. 3. Stat. vol. 1. f. 737. Ant. 42. to the Parliament June 4 1642 who had gone from their House and repaired to the King at York wherein they say We do conceive that it is the apparent usual and inherent Right belonging to the Peerage of England that in the highest Misdemeanour whatsoever no Peer is to Answer to the first Charge but in his Place in his own Person and not upon the first Charge to come to the Barr. In 1553. primo Mariae Burn. His Ref. vol. 2. p. 253. The Bill of Tonnage and Poundage was sent up to the Lords who sent it down to the Commons to be reformed in two Provisoes that were not according to former Precedents How far this was contrary to the Rights of the Commons who now say that the Lords cannot alter a Bill of Money I am not able to determine Die Mercurij 25 Novembris 1692. It is Resolved upon the Question by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal that for the future when there shall be a Devision in the House upon any Question the Contents shall goe below the Barr and the Not Contents stay within the Barr And it is Ordered that this Resolution be added to the Roll of standing Orders of this House Die Lune 7. Decembris 1691. It is Ordered by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament Assembled that for the future upon giving Judgment in any Cases of Appeals or Writs of Error in this House the Question shall be put for Reversing and not for Affirming And that this be added to the Roll of standing Orders 30. Jan. 1640. Rush Col. 3. part vol. 1 p. 165. Upon a Debate in the Lord's House touching the Power of conveying away of Honour it was Nemine contradicente Resolved upon the Question that no Person that hath any Honour in him as a Peer of this Realm may alien and transfer the same to any other Person See Sir B. Shower's Cases in Parliament 1.2 c. See many notable Judgments by the Lords at the Prosecution of the Commons Rush Col. passim Nalson and in later Times Error serra sue in Parliament Vid. Crom. 18. Error Vid. infra Parliament poet prendre Recognizance Brook 137. Error Error shall be sued in Parliament and the Parliament may take a Recognizance If a Judgment be given in the King's Bench 4. Inst 21. either upon a Writ of Error or otherwise the Party grieved may upon a Petition of Right made to the King in English or in French and his Answer thereto Fiat Jusstitia let Justice be done have a Writ of Error directed to the Chief Justice of the King's Bench for removing of the Record in praesens Parliamentum c. And hence it may be presum'd that Writs of Error in Parliament were originally Returnable before the Commons as well as the Lords See Yelverton's Rights of the Commons and Hales of Parliaments p. 18. to 23. When one sueth in Parliament to Reverse a Judgment in the King's Bench he sheweth in his Bill which he exhibiteth to the Parliament some Error or Errors whereupon he prayeth a Scire Facias Id. 22. The Proceeding upon the Writ of Error is only before the Lords in the Upper House Secundum Legem Consuetudinem Parliamenti The Case between Smith and Busby in a Writ or Error Resolved 2 Nalson 716. 'twas decidable in no other Court but in Parliament If any Question be moved in Parliament for Priviledge 4 Inst 363 or Precedency of any Lord of Parliament it is to be decided by the Lords of Parliament in the House of Lords as all Priviledges and other Matters concerning the Lords House of Parliament are November 1641. 2 Nalson 625. Resolved by the House Nemine contradicente that it belongs to the House of Peers by the antient Laws and Constitutions of this Kingdom to interpret Acts of Parliament in Time of Parliament in any Cause that shall be brought before them Julij 12. 1641. 2. Nalson 381. An order of the Lords for Relief of a Feme-Covert and her Children against a Husband refusing to Cohabit The Sentence pronounced by the Lords upon Sir Giles Mompesson Rushw Col. 27.28 and Sir Fracis Michel for Projectors Upon Complaints and Accusations of the Commons Selden's Judicature
or if a Quaker Declare That the Lands and Estates of for which I claim to give my Vote in this Election are not conveyed to me in Trust or for the behoof of any Person whatsoever And I do Swear declare before God that neither I nor any Person to my Knowledge in my Name or by my allowance hath given or intends to give any Promise Obligation Bond Back-Bond or other Security for re-disposing or re-conveying the said Lands and Estate any manner of way whatsoever and this is the Truth as I shall Answer to God The Freeholders Oath appointed to be taken By St. 2. Geo. 2. c. 24. Sect. 1. by Statute 2 Geo. 2. if Demanded by either of the Candidates or any two of the Electors I. A. B. Doe Swear or being one called a Quaker doe solemnly affirm That I have not received or had by my self or any Person whatsoever in Trust for me or for my Use and or Benefit directly or indirectly any Sum or Sums of Money Office Place or Imployment Gift or Reward or any Promise or Security for any Money Office Imployment or Gift in order to give my Vote at the Election and that I have not before been Polled at this Election But note Ibid. Sect. 2. This Oath seems intended for other Voters besides Freeholders for by Sect. 2. of the same Stat. 'Tis Ennacted That such Votes c. Ante. p. 132. Citizens and Burgesses within Cities and Burroughs St. 23. H. 6. c. 15. to Elect Citizens and Burgesses of the same and the Sheriff is to direct his Precept accordingly That the Nomination St. 2. W. M. c. 7. See 1 W. M. Sess 2. c. 2. Supra or Recommendation to the Electors of one of the Barons of each Cinque Port the two antient Towns and their Members claimed by the Lord Warden is contrary to Law and Void By the claim of Right made on the Abdication of King James the II. Claim of Right All Elections of Members of Parliament ought to be Free and it was Enacted accordingly See the Stat. Et vide post No Collector St. 5. W. M. c. 20. Officers of the Excise Supervisor Gauger or other Officer or Person whatsoever Concerned or Imployed in the Charging Collecting Levying or Manageing the Duties of Excise or any Branch or Part thereof shall by Word Message or Writeing or in any other manner persuade any Elector to give or disuade any Elector from giving his Vote for the Choice of any Person to be a Knight of the Shire Citizen Burgess or Baron of any County City Burrough or Cinque-Port and every Officer or other Person offending herein Penalty to forfeit 100 l. one Moiety to the Informer and the other to the Poor where the Offence is committed to be recoverd by him that Sues for it by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any Court of Record at Westminster And no Essoign Protection Privilege or Wager of Law or more than one Imparlance Incapacity and the Party Convicted to be for ever Incapacitated to bear any Office or Place of Trust under the Crown No Commissioner Collecter Comptroller St. 12.13 W. 3. c. 10 Officers of the Customs Searcher or other Officer or Person concerned or imployed in Discharging chargeing Collecting Levying or Managing the Customs or any Branch or thereof shall by Word Message or Writing c as above for the Excise Officers with the like Penalty Incapacity c. In many Cases Multitudes are bound by Acts of Parliament 4 Inst p. 5. which are not Parties to the Elections of Knights Citizens and Burgesses as all they that have no Freehold or who have Freehold in ancient Demesne and all Women having Freeholds or no Freehold and Men within the Age of One and twenty Years c. Every Inhabitant choosing or electing in any other manner than is prescribed by the Statute to forfeit an hundred Shillings half to the King St. 33. H. 8. c. 1. Ireland and half to him that will Sue for it If any Man keeps a Houshold in one County Arc. Parl. 25. and remains in Service with another Family in another County yet he may be at the choosing of Knights of the Shire where he keeps his Family Crempton's Juris 3. b. for it shall be said in Law a Dwelling in either of those Counties If the Mayor and Bailiffs or other Officer St. 23 H. 6. c. 15. Vid Cromp. Jur. 3. b. 4.2 where no Mayor is shall return other than those which be chosen by the Citizens and Burgesses of the Cities or Boroughs where such Elections be shall incur and forfeit to the King forty Pounds and moreover shall forfeit to every Person hereafter chosen Citizen or Burgess to come to Parliament and not by the same Mayor or Bailiff c. Return'd or to any other Person that will Sue for it forty Pounds That such Votes shall be deemed legal St 2. G. 2. c. 24. ibid. Sect. 2. What Votes shall be deemed legal which have been so declared by the last Determination in the House of Commons which last Determination concerning any County Shire City Borough Cinque-Port or Place shall be sinal to all Intents and Purposes any Usage to the contrary That no Person convicted of wilful and corrupt Perjury Sect. 4. Persons convicted of perjury never capable to vote or Subornation of Perjury shall after such Conviction be capable of Voting in any Election of any Member or Members to serve in Parliament That if any Elector shall ask receive Sect. 4. Persons taking Money or Reward for their Vote c. or take any Money or other Reward by way of Gift Loan or other Device or agree or contract for any Money Gift Office Imployment or other Reward whatsoever to give his Vote or to refuse or forbear to give his Vote or if any Person by himself or any imployed by him shall by any Gift or Reward or by any Promise Agreement or Security for any Gift or Reward corrupt or procure any Person to give his Vote or to forbear to give his Vote in any such Election such Person shall for every such Offence forfeit the Sum of five hundred Pounds On Conviction Forfeits 500 l with full Costs of Suit and every such Person after Judgment obtained against him in any Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information or summary Action or Prosecution or being any otherwise lawfully Convicted thereof shall for ever be disabled to Vote in any Election to Parliament and also to hold exercise And disabled to Vote or to enjoy any Office or Franchise or enjoy any Office or Franchise to which he and they then shall or at any time afterwards may be intitled as a Member of any City Borough Town Corporate or Cinque-Port as if such Person was naturally Dead And that if any Person offending against this Act Sect. 5. Offenders in 12. Months after the Election discovering others in femnified shall within twelve Months after such Election discover any other Person offending against this Act so
Person or Persons so Infeost to Vote at that Election and that it shall be lawful for any of the Electors present suspecting any Person or Persons to have his or their Estates in Trust and for the Behoof of another to require the Praeses of the Meeting to tender the Oath in this Act contained to any Elector and the said Praeses is hereby impowered and required to administer the same In case such Elector refuse to Swear and also to subscribe the said Oath such Person or Persons shall not be capable of Voting at such Election Notwithstanding such Oath taken it shall be lawful to make such other Objections as are allowed by the Laws of Scotland against such Electors No Infeoffment taken upon any redeemable Right except proper Wadsetts Adjudications or Apprisings allowed by the Act of Parliament relateing to Elections in One thousand six hundred eighty one shall entitle the Persons so Infeoft to Vote at any Election in any Shire or Stewartry And no Person or Persons who have not been Enrolled and Voted at former Elections shall upon any Pretence whatsoever be Enrolled or admitted to Vote at any Election Scotland except he or they first produce a sufficient Right or Title to qualifie him or them to Vote at that Election to the satisfaction of the Freeholders formerly Enrolled or the Majority of them present and the returning Officers are hereby ordained to make their Returns of the Persons Elected by the Majority of the Freeholders enrolled and those admitted by them reserving always the Liberty of objecting against the Persons admitted to or excluded from the Roll as formerl The Right of Apparent Heirs in Voting at Elections by Virtue of their Predecessors Infeoffments and of Husbands by Virtue of their Wives Infeoffments reserved Any Conveyance or Right which by the Laws of Scotland is sufficient to qualify any Person to Vote in the Elections of Members of Parliament for Shires or Stewartries and whereupon Infeoffment is taken on or before the first Day of June in the Year of our Lord One thousand seven hundred and thirteen shall intitle the Person or Persons so Infeoft to Vote at the Elections of Members to serve in the next ensuing Parliament No Husband shall Vote at any ensuing Election by Virtue of their Wives Infeoffments Wales who are not Heiresses or have not Right to the Property of the Lands on account whereof such Vote shall be Claimed Ordained St. 23. H. 6. c. 15. Vide post c. That every Sheriff after the Delivery of any Writ of Election to him made shall make and deliver without Fraud a sufficient Precept under his Seal to every Mayor and Bailiff c. of the Cities and Boroughs within his County commanding them by his Precept if it be a City to choose by Citizens of the same City Citizens and in the same manner and form if it be a Borough to choose a Burgess by the Burgesses of the same to come to the Parliament Enacted St. 23 H. 8. c. 26. Wales c. That the Dominion of Wales shall be stand and continue for ever from henceforth Incorporated United and Annexed to and with the Realm of England and that all and singular Person and Persons born and to be born in the said Principality Country or Dominion of Wales shall have enjoy and inherit all and singular Freedoms Liberties Rights Privileges and Laws within this Realm and other the King's Dominions as other the King's Subjects naturally Born within the same have enjoy and inherit For all Parliaments to be holden and kept for this Realm Wales two Knights to be elected to the same Parliament for the Shire of Monmouth in the like Manner Form and Order as Knights and Burgesses be elected and chosen in all other Shires And that one Knight shall be Elect-for every of the Shires of Brecknock Radnor Montgomery and Denbigh and for every other Shire within Wales and for every Borough being a Shire-Town within Wales except the Shire Town of the County of Merioneth one Burgess and the Election to be in like Manner as Knights and Burgesses of the Parliament be Elected in other Shires That the Burgesses of all and every Cities Boroughs St. 35. H. 8 c. 11. and Towns in the twelve Shires within Wales and County of Monmouth not finding Burgesses for the Parliament themselves and contributary to Wages of Burgesses of such Shire-Towns shall be lawfully admonished by Proclamation or otherwise by the Mayors Bailiffs and other Head Officers of the said Towns or by one of them to come and give their Elections for the Electing of the said Burgesses at such Time and Place Lawful and Reasonable as shall be assigned for the same intent by the said Mayors Chester Bailiffs and other Head Officers of the said Shire-Towns or by one of them in which Elections the Burgesses shall have the like Voice and Authority to elect the Burgesses of every the said Shire-Towns in such Manner as the Burgesses of the said Shire-Towns have and use That the County Palatine of Chester shall have two Knights for the said County Palatine St. 34 35 H. 8. c. 13. Chester and likewise two Citizens to be Burgesses for the City of Chester the same Election to be made under like Manner and Form to all Intents Constructions and Purposes as is used within the County Palatine of Lancaster or any other County or City within this Realm That the County Palatine of Durham may have two Knights for the same County St. 25. c. 2. c. 9. Durham and the City of Durham two Citizens to be Burgesses for the same City for ever hereafter to serve in Parliament the same Election from time to time to be made in Manner following viz. The Elections of the Knights to serve for the said County Palatine to be made by the greater Number of the Freeholders of the said County Palatine that shall be present at such Elections as is used in other Counties and that the Election of the said Burgesses from Time to Time Vid. Post 190.191 shall be made by the Major part of the Mayor Aldermen and Freemen of the City which shall be present at such Election See also the Stat. 34 35 H. 8. c. 24. Cambridge concerning the Payment of the Wages of the Knights of the Shire for Cambridge The Form of the Abjuration as altered by Stat. 4 Ann. c. 8. and as the same is now to be taken I A. B. do truly and sincerely acknowledge profess testify and declare in my Conscience before God and the World That our Sovereign Lord King George the Second is lawful and rightful King of this Realm and all other His Majesty's Dominions and Countries thereunto belonging And I do solemnly and sincerely declare That I do believe in my Conscience that the Person pretended to be Prince of Wales during the Life of the late King James and since his Decease pretending to be and taking upon himself the Stile and Title of King of England by the Name
of James the Third or of Scotland by the Name of James the Eighth or the Stile and Title of King of Great Britain hath not any Right or Title whatsoever to the Crown of this Realm or any other the Dominions thereto belonging And I do renounce refuse and abjure any Allegiance or Obedience to him And I do swear That I will bear Faith and true Allegiance to His Majesty King George the Second and Him will desend to the utmost of my Power against all Traiterous Conspiracies and Attempts whatsoever which shall be made against his Person Crown or Dignity And I will do my utmost Endeavour to disclose and make known to His Majesty and his Successors all Treasons and Traiterous Conspiracies which I shall know to be against Him or any of Them And I do faithfully Promise to the utmost of my Power to support maintain and defend the Succession of the Crown against him the said James and all other Persons whatsoever As the same Succession by an Act entitled An Act for the further Limitation of the Crown and better Securing the Rights and Liberties of the Subject is and stands limited to the Princess Sophia Electress and Dutchess Dowager of Hanover and the Heirs of Her Body being Protestants And all these Things I do plainly and sincerely acknowledge and swear according to these express Words by me spoken and according to the plain and common Sense and Understanding of the same Words without any Equivocation mental Evasion or secret Reservation whatsoever And I do make this Recognition Acknowledgement Abjuration Renunciation and Promise heartily willingly and truly and upon the true Faith of a Christian So Help me God CHAP. XI Who may be Elected to Parliament BY Stat. 5. 4 Inst 48. Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour 39 40. Eliz. c. 1. no Knight Citizen or Burgess can sit in Parliament before he hath taken the Oath of Allegiance and Supremacy but Note other Oaths are now appointed Vide ante Because the Words of the Writ for Election of Knights 4 Inst 10. c. were duos Milites gladiis cinctos c. it required an Act of Parliament that notable Esquires might be eligible Therefore the Statute says St. 23. H. 6. c. 15. the Knights of the Shires for the Parliament must be notable Knights or such Esquires or Gentlemen born of the same County as be able to be Knights Any Man may be chosen Knight St. 18. Ed. 4. c. 2. in Ireland Citizen or Burgess tho' he be not dwelling within the same Every Knight Citizen and Burgess shall be resiant and dwelling within the Counties Cities and Towns Every Knight Citizen or Burgess taking it upon him and not chosen in the manner prescribed by the Act of Parliament to forfeit an hundred Pounds St. 33 H. 8. c. 1. in Ireland Si home n'esteaut Inhabitant Meor so 551. n. 741 ne free de un Borough il poit Eslier s'il voit server a lour Election ou nemy pur le Borough If a Man be not an Inhabitant nor free of a Borough he may choose if he will serve at their Election or not for the Borough By the Statute none ought to be chosen a Burgess of a Town Rush Col. Vol. 1.689 in which he doth not inhabit but the usage of Parliament is contrary But if Information be brought upon the said Statute against such a Burgess I think that the Statute is a good Warrant for us to give Judgment against him by Whitlock The King cannot grant a Charter of Exemption to any Man to be freed from Election of Knight Citizen 4 Inst 49. or Burgess of the Parliament A Person Outlawed in a Personal Cause may be a Burgess Towns Col. 63.64 Vide John Smiths Ca. Si Simon d'Ewes Jour 48. Col. 2.480 Col. 1 Vide Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour 481. Col. 2. 482. Col. 1. See Bohun's Collection p. 278. 279. If exception be taken to such an Election and an Outlawry alledged to disinable him the Stat. 23 Hen. 6. c. 15. will disinable most of this House for they ought to be Burgesses resident Tho' the Common Law doth disinable the Party yet the Priviledge of the House being urged that prevaileth over the Law A Man Attainted Ibid. Outlawed or Excommunicated or not lawfully elected if he be returned out of all doubt is a lawful Burgess A Knight Banneret 4 Inst 46. being no Lord of Parliament is eligible to be Knight Citizen or Burgess of the House of Commons being under the Degree of a Baron which is the lowest Degree of the Lord's House An Earl's Son may be a Member of the House of Commons Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour 244. Col. 2. 4 Inst 47. One under the Age of one and twenty years is not eligible Neither can any Lord of Parliament sit there till he be full one and twenty Years An Alien cannot be elected of the Parliament Ibid. because he is not the King's Liege Subject and so it is albeit he be made Denizon by Letters Patents c. But if an Alien be naturaliz'd by Parliament then he is eligible to this or any other Place of Judicature No Alien denizated ought to sit here Petyt 's Miscell Parl. 175. Ibid. per Sir Edward Coke Note also the St. 4 An. c. 8. for settling the Succession c. excludes Aliens Resolved upon the Question that the Election of Mr. Walter Steward being no natural born Subject 4 Inst 47. is void and a Warrant to go for a new Writ None of the Judges of the King's Bench or Common Pleas or Barons of the Exchequer that have Judicial Places can be chosen Knight Citizen or Burgess of Parliament as it is now holden because they are Assistants in the Lord's House Yet read Parl. Roll. 31 H. 6. But any that have Judician Places in other Courts Ecclesiastical or Civil Ibid. being no Lords of Parliament are eligible None of the Clergy tho' he be of the lowest Order is eligible to be Knight Moor so 783. n. 1083. 4 Inst 47. Citizen or Burgess of Parliament because they are of another Body viz. of the Convocation The Clergy of the Convocation-House are no Part or Member of the Parliament Hakewel 59. Vide Fox's Book of Martyrs f. 1639. 4 Inst 48. A Man Attainted of Treason or Felony c. is not eligible For he ought to be magis idoneus discretus sufficiens Mayors and Bailiffs of Towns Corporate are eligible 4 Inst 48. Vide contra Brook Abridg. tit Parl. 7. At a Parliament holden 38. H. 8. it was admitted and accepted that if a Burgess of Parliament be made a Mayor of a Town or have Judicial Jurisdiction Crompt 16. or is Sick c. that these are Causes sufficient to choose others Any of the Profession of the Common Law and which is in Practice of the same 4 Inst 48. is eligible By special Order of the House of Commons Ibid. the Attorney General is not eligible to be a Member of the House of Commons Vide infra At the
Burgesses of the said High Court have had used c. Vide ante 176. That every Person which hereafter shall be elected a Knight Stat. 5. Eliz. c. 1. Knights Citizens c. before their sitting in Parliament to take the Oath of Supremacy before the Lord Steward or his Deputies and for the contrary to lose their Memberships and incur such Penalties as if they had sat without Election Return c. Citizen or Burgess or Baron for any of the Five Ports for any Parliament or Parliaments hereafter to be holden shall before he enter the Parliament House or have any Voice there openly receive and pronounce the Oath The Oath of Supremacy mentioned in this Act is abrogated by the Stat. 1 W. M. ch 1. and a new one appointed which see ante p. 177. expressed in the Stat. 1 Eliz. ch 1. England commonly called the Oath of Supremacy before the Lord Steward of the Queen's Houshold or his Deputy or Deputies for that Time to be appointed and that he which shall enter into the Parliament House without taking the said Oath shall be deemed no Knight Citizen Burgess nor Baron for that Parliament nor shall have any Voice but shall be to all Intents Constructions and Purposes as if he had never been returned nor elected Knight Citizen Burgess or Baron for that Parliament and shall suffer such Pains and Penalties as if he had presumed to sit in the same without Election Return or Authority That all and every the Knights Citizens Stat. 7. Jac 1. c. 6. Knights Citizens c. at any Parliament or Sessions to take the Oath of Allegiance before the Lord Steward c. ere they be permitted to sit Burgesses and Barons of the Five Ports of the Commons House of Parliament at any Parliament or Session of Parliament before he or they shall be permitted to enter into the said House shall make take and receive the Oath of Obedience mentioned in the Statute of 3 Jac. 1. ch 4. commonly called the Oath of Allegiance The Oath of Allegiance mentioned in this Act is abrogated by the Stat. of 1 W. M. c. 1. as aforesaid post 198. before the Lord Steward of the King's Houshold his Deputy or Deputies That none which shall be a Member of the House of Commons England shall vote in the said House St. 30 C. 2. c. 1. Members of the House of Commons shall not vote or sit there during any Debate after their Speaker chosen until they have taken the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and subscribed the Test between Hours of 9 and 4 in a full House or sit there during any Debate in the said House after their Speaker is chosen until such Member shall first take the several These Oaths are abrogated by Stat. 1 W. M. c. 1. Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and make subscribe and audibly repeat the Declaration in this Act contained commonly called the Test which said Oaths and Declaration shall be in this and every succeeding Parliament solemnly and publickly made and subscribed betwixt the Hours of Nine in the Morning and Four in the Afternoon by every such Member at the Table in the Middle of the said House and whilst a full House of House is there duly sitting with their Speaker in his Chair and that the same be done in the House in such-like Order or Method as the House is called over by If any Member of the House of Commons shall presume to do any thing contrary to this Act Members acting contrary shall be adjudged Popish Recusants convict and suffer as such and be disabled to hold any Office or Place of Profit or Trust in England or is Dominions to sit or vote in Parlia ment bring any Action or Information at Law or Suit in Equity be Guardian of any Child Executor or Administrator of any Person or capable of any Legacy or Deed of G●● and forfeit 500 l for every Offence to any that will sue by Action of Debt c. where no Essoign c. every Member so offending shall from thenceforth be deemed and adjudged a Popish Recusant Convict to all Intents and Purposes and shall forfeit and suffer as a Popish Recusant Convict and shall be disabled to hold or execute any Office or Place of Profit or Trust England Civil or Military in any of His Majesty's Realms of England or Ireland Dominion of Wales or Town of Berwick upon Tweed or in any of His Majesty's Realms Islands or Foreign Plantations to the said Realms belonging and shall be disabled to sit or vote in Parliament or to sue or use any Action Bill Plaint or Information in course of Law or to prosecute any Suit in any Court of Equity or to be Guardian of any Child or Executor or Administrator of any Person or capable of any Legacy or Deed of Gift and shall forfeit for every wilful Offence against this Act the Sum of 500 l. to be recovered or received by him or them that will sue for the same and to be prosecuted by any Action of Debt Suit Bill Plaint or Information in any of His Majesty's Courts at Westminster where no Essoign Protection or Wager of Law shall lie It shall be lawful to and for the House of Commons as often as they shall see Occasion Members obliged to take the said Oaths and subscribe the Test in the House as often as the House shall think fit and Members acting contrary and presuming to sit incapacitated during that Parliament to order or cause all or any of the Members of Parliament openly in their House to take the said Oaths England and to make and subscribe the said Declaration at such Times and in such Manner as they shall appoint And if any Member of the House of Commons shall contrary to such Order made by their House wilfully presume to sit therein without taking the said Oaths and making and subscribing the said Declaration every such Member so presuming to sit shall be adjudged and is declared to be uncapable and disabled in Law to all Intents and Purposes to sit in the said House or give any Voice therein during that Parliament And in Case any Member of the House Such Members Election declared void and the Speaker by Order of the House to issue his Warrant for a new Election shall by virtue of this Act be disabled to sit or vote in the House then without any further Conviction or other Proceedings against such Member the Place for which he was elected is hereby declared void and a new Writ shall issue out of Chancery by Warrant from the Speaker and by Order of the said House for the Election of a new Member in the Place of such Member so disabled to all Intents and Purposes as if such Member or Members were naturally dead c. During the taking the Oaths and subscribing the Test all other Proceedings in Parliament to cease and the Oath Declaration and Subscription with a Schedule of the Names of the Persons taking and
subscribing them England to be entred and filed in Parchment Rolls provided by the Clerk of the House and each Member to pay only 12 d. for every such Entry That the said Act 30 Car. 2. Stat. 1 W. M. c. 1. Members of the House of Commons qualified to sit and vote by taking the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy appionted by this Act instead of the old ones now repealed and by subscribing the Test according to the Limitations c. of the preceding Statute 30 Car. 2 and all other Acts of Parliament as to so much of the said Act or Acts only as concerns the taking the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance or either of them in the said Acts respectively mentioned by any Member or Members of the House with relation to their sitting and voting in Parliament are hereby repealed to all Intents and Purposes any Thing in the said recited Act or Acts to the contrary And In all future Parliaments the Oaths in this Act mentioned and the Declaration in the Act 30 Car. 2. mentioned shall be taken made subscribed and repeated by every Member of the House within the Time and in the same Manner and Form and under the Penalties and Disabilities as the said Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and the said Declaration by the said Act of Car. 2. are limited ordained and appointed and not at any other Time England or in any other Manner to enable them to sit and vote in Parliament any Thing in the said Act or Acts to the contrary That Elections of Members of Parliament ought to be Free Stat. 1 W. M. c. 2. The claim of Right That the Freedom of Speech and Debates on Proceedings in Parliament ought not to be impeached or questioned in any Court or Place out of Parliament Enacted accordingly That no Member of the House of Commons shall at any Time be concerned directly or indirectly Sta. 5 6 W. M. ch 7. Members of the House of Commons to be no ways concerned in Duties or Aids to be granted by Parliament except Commissioners of the Treasury Customs Excise and Land Tax or any other in Trust for him in the farming collecting or managing any of the Duties or other Aids that hereafter shall be granted by Act of Parliament except the Commissioners of the Treasury and the Officers and Commissioners for managing the Customs and Excise not exceeding the present Number in each Office and Commissioners of the Land Tax Quere the Novelty of this Exception That any Member or Members of the House of Commons Stat. 5 6 W. and M. c. 20. Members of the House of Commons may be Members of the Bank may be a Member or Members of the Corporation of the Governor and Company of the Bank of England England That o Collector Supervisor Gauger or other Officer or Person whatsoever concerned or imployed in the charging levying or managing the Duties of Excise or any Branch or Part thereof shall by Word Officers of the Excise not to intermedle c. Message or Writing or in any other Manner endeavour to persuade any Elector to give or dissuade any Elector from giving his Vote for the Choice of any Person to be a Knight of the Shire Citizen Burgess or Baron of any County City Borough or Cinque-Port and every Officer or other Person offending therein shall forfeit the Sum of 100 l. one Moiety thereof to the Informer the other Moiety to the Poor of the Parish where such Offence shall be committed to be recovered by any Person that shall sue for the same by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any of their Majesties Courts of Record at Westminster in which no Essoign Protection Privilege or more than one Imparlance shall be allowed and every Person convict on Suit of the said Offence shall be for ever incapacitated to bear any Office or Place of Trust under the Crown That no Persons hereafter to be elected to serve in Parliament for any County City Town England Borough St. 7. W. 3. c. 4. No Persons to be elected after the Teste of the Writ shall by themselves or any other at their charge before the Election give promise or oblige themselves to give any thing to any Person having a Vote in particular or to any County or Place in general in order to be elected Port or Place within the Kingdom of England Dominion of Wales or Town of Berwick upon Tweed after the Teste of the Writ of Summons or after the Teste or issuing out or ordering of the Writ or Writs of Election upon the calling or summoning of any Parliament or after any such Place becomes vacant shall or do hereafter by himself or themselves or by any other Ways or Means on his or their Behalf or at his or their Charge before his or their Election in England Wales or Berwick directly or indirectly give present or allow to any Person having Voice or Vote in such Election any Money Meat Drink Entertainment or Provision or make any Present Gift Reward or Entertainment or shall make any Promise Agreement Obligation or Engagement to give or allow any Money Meat Drink Provision Present Reward or Entertainment to or for any such Person in Particular or to any such County City Town Borough Port or Place in general or to or for the Use Advantage Benefit Imployment Profit or Preferment of any such Person or Place in Order to be elected England or for being elected to serve in Parliament for such County City Town Borough Port or Place And that every Person so giving presenting or allowing Such Persons so giving promising c. disabled to serve as never elected or returned making promising or engaging doing acting or proceeding shall be and are hereby disabled and incapacitated upon such Election to serve in Parliament for such County City Town Borough Port or Place and shall be deemed and taken no Member in Parliament and shall not act sit or have any Vote or Place in Parliament but shall be and are to all Intents Constructions and Purposes as if they had been never returned or elected c. That all false Returns willfully made of any Knight of the Shire Stat. 7 and S. W. 3. c. 7. continued by St. 12. 13. W. 3. c. 5. False Returns of Knights Citizens c. illegal and prohibited Citizen Burgess Baron of the Cinque-Ports or other Member to serve in Parliament are against Law and are hereby prohibited The Party grieved by any false return An Action given to any duly elected against the Officer and Procurer of a false Return or Return contrary to the last determination of the Kight of Election in any Court at Westminster with double Damages and full Costs and contrary to the last Determination of the Right of Election of the House of Commons which is also adjudg'd a false Return to wit every Person that shall be duly Elected to Parliament for any County City Borough Cinque-Port or Place England by such false Return may Sue
No Candidate who shall have in his own Name or in trust for him or his Benefit any new Officers or Place of Profit hereafter to be created or be a Commissioner or Sub-Commissioner Secretary or Receiver of Prizes Commissioner of the Armies Accounts Commissioner of the Sick and wounded Agent for any Regiment Commissioner for Wine Licences Governor or Deputy-Governor of any of the Plantations Commissioner in any out-Port or have a Pension from the Crown during Pleasure shall be capable of being elected or sitting c. as a Member who shall have in his own Name or in the Name of any Person or Persons in Trust for him or for his Benefit any new Office or Place of Profit whatsoever under the Crown which at any time hereafter shall be created or erected nor any Person who shall be a Commissioner or Sub-Commissioner of the Prizes Secretary or Receiver of the Prizes nor any Comptroller of the Accompts of the Army nor any Commissioner of Transports nor any Commissioner of the Sick and Wounded nor any Agent to any Regiment nor any Commissioner for Wine Licences nor any Governor nor Deputy-Governor of any of the Plantations nor any Commissioner of the Navy employed in any of the Out-Ports nor any Person having any Pension from the Crown during Pleasure shall be capeable of being Elected or of sitting or voting as a Member of the House of Commons If any Person being chosen a Member of the House of Commons shall accept of any Office of Profit from the Crown during such time as he shall continue a Member his Election shall be Members chosen accepting any Office of Profit from the Crown while they continue Members their Election void and a new Writ to issue but capable of being again Elected and is hereby declared to be Void and a new Writ shall issue for a new Election as if such Person so accepting was naturally Dead Nevertheless such Person shall be capable of being again Elected as if his Place had not become Void as aforesaid No greater Number of Commissioners shall be made for the Execution of any Office than have been employed in the Execution of any such Office from the first Day of the Session Nothing herein contained shall extend to any Member of the House of Commons being an Officer in Her Majesty's Navy or Army Members being Officers in the Navy or Army receiving any New Commission in either not incapacitated who shall receive any new or other Commission in the Navy or Army respectively If any Person hereby disabled or declared to be incapable to Sit or Vote in Parliament Members hereby incapacitated if returned their Election void and presuming to sit and vote forfeit 500 l. to any that will sue by Action of Debt c. wherin no Essoin c and but one Imparlance shall nevertheless be returned as a Member to serve for any County City Town or Cinque-Port in any such Parliament such Election and Return are declared to be Void to all Intents and Purposes and if any Person disabled or declared incapable by this Act to be Elected shall presume to sit or vote as a Member of the House of Commons in any Parliament such Person so sitting or voting shall forfeit 500 l. to be recovered by such Person as shall Sue by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information wherein no Essoign Protection or Wager of Law shall be allowed and only one Imparlance Forty five shall be the Number of the Representatives of Scotland in the House of Commons of the Parliament of Great-Britain G. Britain Stat. 5 Annae c. 8. Every Member of the House of Commons of the Parliament of Great-Britain until the Parliament of Great-Britain shall otherwise direct shall take the respective Oaths appointed to be taken instead of the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy The Union Act. by an Act of Parliament made in England in the First Year of the Reign of the late King William and Queen Mary The new Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy And make subscribe and audibly repeat the Declaration mentioned in an Act of Parliament made in England in the Thirtieth Year of the Reign of King Charles the Second The Test and shall take and subscribe the Oath mentioned in an Act of Parliament made in England in the First Year of Her Majesty's Reign The Abjuration At such time and in such manner as the Members of both Houses of Parliament of England are by the said respective Acts directed to take make and subscribe the same upon the Penalties and Disabilities in the said respective Acts contained And it is declared and agreed that these Words This Realm The Crown of this Realm and the Queen of this Realm mentioned in the Oaths and Declaration contained in the aforesaid Acts which were intended to signify the Crown and Realm of England shall be understood of the Crown and Realm of Great-Britain and that in that Sense the said Oaths and Declaration be taken and subscribed by the Members of the Parliament of Great Britain None shall be capable to be elected a Representative for any Shire or Borough of Scotland but such as are twenty one Years of Age complete None capable to be elected for any Shire or Borough of Scotland under 21 Years nor unless a Protestant Papists and such as refuse the Formula excluded Like Incapacity on Candidates not at this Time capable by the Laws of Scotland Stat. 6. An. c. 7. and Protestant excluding all Papists or such who being suspect of Popery refuse to swear and subscribe the Formula contained in the third Act made in the 8th and 9th Sessions of King William's Parliament in Scotland nor shall be capable to be elected to represent a Shire or Burgh in the Parliament of Great Britain for Scotland except such as were at the Time of passing this Act capable by the Laws of Scotland to be elected as Commissioners for Shires or Boroughs to the Parliament of Scotland A like Clause for incapacitating Persons to be elected c. Members of Parliament and likewise for incapacitating Members of Parliament with like Restrictions Exceptions and Penalties throughout the united Kingdom as are contained in the Statute 4 5 Annae c. 8. relating to Candidates and Members for the Parliament of England And further Candidates disabled to be elected or Members to sit c. in the Parliament of England under like Disabilities as to any Parliament of Great Britain That every Person disabled to be elected or to sit or vote in the House of Commons of any Parliament of England shall be disabled to be elected or to sit or vote in the House of Commons of any Parliament of Great Britain Except the present Commissioners for disposing the Equivalent by the present or any other Commission That every Person who shall refuse to take the Oath of Abjuration St. 6 Ann. c. 23. Candidates or others may require the Sheriff President of the Meeting c. on the Poll at any Election of Members in
sit there during any Debate in the said House of Commons After 29 Sept. 1715 No Member to vote before taking the Oaths after the Speaker is chosen until such Peer or Member shall from Time to Time respectively take the Abjuration Oath which Oath see instead of the Oath of Abjuration which before by Law ought to have been taken in such Manner and together with such other Oaths and Declaration against Transubstantiation as the said former Oath of Abjuration ought to have been taken And further That if any Person that now is or hereafter shall be a Member of the House of Commons Penalty in this or any succeeding Parliament Vid. ante and after the said 29th of September presume to vote not having taken the said Oath and subscribed the same as aforesaid every such Member so offending shall be disabled to sue or use any Action Bill Plaint or Information in any Court of Law or to prosecute any Suit in any Court of Equity or to be Guardian of any Child or Executor or Administrator of any Person or be capable of any Legacy or Deed of Gift or to be in any Office within this Realm of Great Britain or to vote at any Election for Members to serve in Parliament and shall forfeit the Sum of five hundred Pounds to be recovered by him or them that shall sue for the same to be prosecuted by Action of Debt Suit Bill Plaint or Information in any of His Majesty's Courts at Westminster wherein no Essoign Protection or Wager of Law shall lie or any more than one Imparlance Note and by Way of summar Complaint before the Court of Justiciary in Scotland Enacted St. 1 G. 1. c. 56. Persons having Pensions from the Crown incapacitated That no Person having any Pension from the Crown for any Term or Number of Years either in his own Name or in the Name or Names of any other Person or Persons in Trust for him or for his Benefit shall be capable of being elected or chosen a Member of or for sitting or voting as a Member of this present or any future House of Commons which shall be hereafter summoned Enacted Penalty 20 l. per Day That if any Person who shall have such Pension as aforesaid at the Time of his being so elected or at any Time after during such Time as he shall continue or be a Member of the House of Commons shall presume to sit or vote in that House then and in such Case he shall forfeit twenty Pounds for every Day in which he shall sit or vote in the said House to such as shall Sue for the same in any Court in Westminster-Hall with full Costs by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in which no Essoign Privilege Protection or Wager of Law shall be allowed and only one Imparlance Enacted Stat. 3 G. 1. c. 18. No Member of the Bank disabled St. 3 G. 1. c. 9. Nor of the South-Sea Company That no Member of the Bank of England shall be disabled from being a Member of Parliament See Stat. 5.6 W. M. c. 20. ad idem Enacted That no Member of the South-Sea Company shall be disabled from being a Member of Parliament Enacted That no Governor Director or other Officer of the Corporations for Assurance of Ships St. 6 G. 1. c. 18. Nor Governor c. of Corporations for Assurance of Ships shall be disabled from being a Member of Parliament Enacted That the late Governor St. 7 G. 1. c. 28. The late Governor and Director of the South-Sea Company disabled Deputy-Governor Directors Cashire and Accomptant of the South-Sea Company and John Aislaibe Esq be disabled for ever to sit or vote in either House of Parliament I. A. B. do swear That I truly and bona fide The form of the Candidate's Oath to be taken if required by Stat. 9. Annae have such an Estate in Law or Equity to and for my own Use and Benefit of or in Lands Tenements or Hereditaments over and above what will satisfy and clear all Incumbrances that may affect the same of the annual Value of Six hundred Pounds above Reprizes as doth qualify me to be elected and returned to serve as a Member for the County of according to the Tenor and true Meaning of the Act of Parliament in that Behalf and that my said Lands Tenements or Hereditaments are lying or being within the Parish Township or Precinct of Or in the several Parishes Townships or Precincts of in the County of Or in the several Counties of as the Case may be The like Oath Mutatis Mutandis as to the Value of 300 l. per Annum to be taken by Candidates for a City Borough c. CHAP. XII Of Returns of Sheriffs c. And Amendments of Returns COncerning the Punishment of Sheriffs for their Negligence in returning of Writs 5 R. 2. St. 2. c. 4. or for leaving out of their Returns any City or Borough which ought to send Citizens and Burgesses See the Stat. hereafter p. 229. Every Sheriff who doth not make true Return of Elections of Knights St 8 H. 6. c. 7. 23 H. 6 c. 15. Vide Crom●ton's Juris 3. Hakewel 48. Citizens and Burgesses to come to Parliament shall forfeit an hundred Pounds to the King and an hundred Pounds to the Party injured and be imprison'd for a Year without Bail or Mainprize And every Mayor or Magistrate of a Town so offending shall pay forty Pounds to the King and forty Pounds to the Party See the Stat. hereafter p. 236. Note This Action to be by the Party within three Months after the Parliament commenced or after by any other Man who will If the Party do not Hakewel 49. Vide Crompton's Juris 3. and prosecute his Suit with Effect and without Fraud any other Man who will may have the said Suit for the said hundred Pounds as the Knight had and Costs of Suit also shall be awarded to the said Knight or any other who will Sue in his behalf The Sheriff shall make a good Return of his Writ Hakewel 51. and of every Return of the Mayor and Bailiff or Bailiffs where no Mayor is to him made The Burgesses of Leskard in Cornwal being Elected Towns Col. 63. the Town refused to deliver up their Indenture to the Sheriff but the Party Elected made his Indenture and deliver'd it to the Clerk of the Crown who filed it with the rest of the Indentures returned by the Sheriff having endorsed it upon his Writ but this Indenture was never executed by the Sheriff nor returned and yet this Return was held by the Committees to be good Jan. 1641. Ordered Nalson 870. That the High-Sheriff of the County of Sussex who has return'd two Indentures for the Town of Arundel shall be summon'd to appear here at the Bar to amend his Return Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour 490. Col. 2. 35 Eliz. 1592. It was said by the Speaker No Return can be amended in this House For the Writ and the Return are in Chancery
and Time to Time without any further or other Adjournment without the Consent of the Candidates until all the Free-holders then and there present shall be polled England Every Sheriff Under-Sheriff Mayor Sheriffs Mayors c. to deliver to any Person desiring it a Copy of the Poll paying reasonably for writing it Sheriffs Mayors c. for every wilful Offence contrary to this Act forfeits to each Party grieved 500 l. to be recovered by him his Executors c. with full Costs by Action of Debt c wherein Essoign c. to be allowed Bailiff and other Officer to whom the Execution of any Writ or Precept shall belong for the electing Members to serve in Parliament shall forthwith deliver to such Person or Persons as shall desire the same a Copy of the Poll taken at such Election paying only a reasonable Charge for writing the same and every Sheriff Under-Sheriff Mayor Bailiff and other Officer to whom the Execution of any Writ or Precept for electing of Members doth belong for every wilful Offence contrary to this Act shall forseit to every Party so aggrieved the Sum of five hundred Pounds to be recovered by him or them his or their Executors or Administrators together with full Costs for which he or they may sue by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any Court at Westminster wherein no Essoign Protection Wager of Law Privilege or Imparlance shall be allowed Every Return of any Person under the Age of twenty one Years The Return of any Person chosen under 21 Years void is hereby declared to be null and void All County Courts for the County of York or any other County Courts England which heretosore used to be held on a Monday County Courts for Yorkshire and others used to be held on a Menday to be called and held on a Wednesday shall be called and begun upon a Wednesday and not otherwise any Custom or Usage to the contrary The Sheriff of the County of Southampton Sheriff c. of Hampshire at the Request of any Candidate to adjourn after the End of the Poll at Winchester to Newgate in the Isle of Wight or his Deputy at the Request of one or more of the Candidates for Election of a Knight or Knights of that County shall adjourn the Poll from Winchester after every Frecholder then and there present is polled to Newport in the Isle of Wight for the Ease of the Inhabitants of the said Island any thing in this Act to the contrary That no Person which shall refuse to take the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy directed by an Act made in the first Year of His present Majesty and the late Queen Mary St. 7 8. W. 3. c. 27. Sheriffs c. on the Poll at any Election to administer the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy to Electors and if Quakers the Declaration of Fidelity at the Request of any Candidate and on Refusal not to admit them to vote or being Quakers shall refuse to subscribe the Declaration of Fidelity directed by one other Act of Parliament made in the said first Year of the Reign of His present Majesty and the late Queen which Oaths and Subscription respectively the Sheriff or chief Officer taking the Poll England at the Request of any one of the Candidates are required to administer shall not be admitted to give any Vote for the Election of any Knight of the Shire Citizen Burgess or Baron of the Cinque-Ports to serve in Parliament That the Sheriff or other Officer having the Execution and Return of any Writ to Parliament St. 10 11 W. 3. c. 7. Sheriffs c. by themselves or Deputies on or before the Day any Parliament shall called to meet and not exceeding fourteen Days after any Election made to make his Return to the Clerk of the Crown c. shall on or before the Day that any suture Parliament shall be called to meet and with all convenient Expedition not exceeding fourteen Days after any Election made by virtue of any new Writ either in Person or by his Deputy make Returns of the same to the Clerk of the Crown in Chancery to be by him filed c. and pay to the Clerk of the Crown 4 s. for every Knight of the Shire and 2 s. for every Citizen Burgess c. which the Sheriff c. shall charge to the King and have allowed upon his Account See the Stat. c. 7 8. W. c. 25. p. 107. The proper Officer of the Cinque-Ports shall be allowed six Days from the Receipt of such Writ for the Delivery very of the Precept according to the Purport of the Act 7 and 8 W. III. G. Britain c. 25. any thing in the said Act or any other Law Statute or Usage to the contrary Every Sheriff or other Officer aforesaid who shall not make the Returns according to the true Intent and Meaning of this Act Sheriffs c. not making Returns accordingly to forfeit for each Offence 500 l. one Moiety to the King the other to him that will sue by Action of Debt c. wherein no Essoign c. to be allowed and but one Imparlance shall forfeit for every such Offence the Sum of 500 l. one Moiety to His Majesty and the other Moiety to him or them that will sue for the same to be recovered by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any Court at Westminster wherein no Essoign Protection or Wager of Law allowed nor more than one Imparlance That when any Parliament shall hereafter be summoned or called St. 6. Annae c. 6. Writs to issue to the respective Sheriffs or Stewarts for choosing the 45 Representatives of Scotland to Parliament Sheriffs c. thereon forthwith to give Notice of the Time of Election for the Shires Clerks of the Meetings forthwith to return the Names of the elected to the Sheriff who is to annex and return it with his Writ the Forty five Representatives of Scotland in the House of Commons in the Parliament of Great Britain shall be elected and chosen by Authority of the Queen's Writs under the great Seal of Great Britain directed to the several Sheriffs and Stewarts of the respective Shires and Stewartries and the said several Sheriffs and Stewarts shall on Receipt of such Writs forthwith give notice of the Time of Election for the Knights or Commissioners for their respective Shires or Stewartries G. Britain And the Clerks of the said Meetings immediately after the said Elections are over shall respectively return the Names of the Persons elected to the Sheriff or Stewart of the Shire or Stewartry who shall annex it to his Writ and return it with the same into the Court out of which the Writ is issued And as to the Manner of Election of the fifteen Representatives of the Royal Boroughs Sheriff of Edinburgh on Receipt of his Writ forthwith to direct his Precept to the Lord Provost for electing the Burgess for that City Common Clerk of Edinburgh to certify the
Name of the elected to the Sheriff who is to annex and return it with the Writ the Sheriff of the Shire of Edinburgh shall on Receipt of the Writ directed to him forthwith direct his Precept to the Lord Provost of Edinburgh to cause a Burgess to be elected for that City and their Common Clerk shall certify the Name of the Member elected to the Sheriff of Edinburgh who shall annex it to his Writ and return it with the same into the Court from which the Writ issued And as to the other Royal Burghs divided into fourteen Classes or Districts Sheriffs c. in like Manner to direct their Precepts to the Royal Burghs for the electing a Commissioner for each and the Commissioners of each District to meet at the presiding Borough by name for each District on the thirtieth Day after the Teste of the Writ unless Sunday and then Menday to their Burgess Common Clerk of such presiding Borough forthwith to return the Name of the elected to the Sheriff c. in whose Shire such Borough is who is to annex and return it with his Writ Like Method to be taken by Sheriffs c. in Case of Vacancy in Parliament Time by Decease or Incapacity of a Member and if for a Burgh the presiding Burgh at the first to preside at the new Election the Sheriffs or Stewarts of the several Shires and Stewarties shall G. Britain on the Receipt of their several Writs forthwith direct their several Precepts to every Royal Burgh within their respective Shires or Stewartries reciting therein the Contents of the Writ and the Date thereof and commanding them forthwith to elect each of them a Commissioner as they used formerly to elect Commissioners to the Parliament of Scotland and to order the said respective Commissioners to meet at the presiding Borough of their respective District naming the said presiding Borough upon the thirtieth Day after the Day of the Teste of the Writ unless it be upon the Lord's Day and then the next Day after and then to choose their Burgess for the Parliament And the Common-Clerk of the then presiding Borough shall immediately after the Election return the Name of the Person so elected to the Sheriff or Stewart of the Shire or Stewartry wherein such presiding Borough is who shall annex it to his Writ and return it with the same into the Court from whence the Writ issued And in case a Vacancy shall happen in Time of Parliament by the Decease or legal Incapacity of any Member a new Member shall be elected in his Room G. Britain conformable to the Method herein before appointed and in Case such a Vacancy be of a Representative for any one of the said fourteen Classes or Districts of the said Royal Boroughs that Borough which presided at the Election of the deceased or disabled Member shall be the presiding Borough at such new Election Provided always that upon the issuing of the Writs of Summons for the electing of a Parliament if any Shire or Stewartry where a Royal Borough is In Writs to Sheriffs the Election of a Knight to be omitted if the Shires where a Royal Burgh is have not then a Turn to elect hath not then a Turn or Right to elect a Commissioner or Knight of the Shire or Stewartry for that Parliament that then it shall be omitted out of the Writ c. That every Person who shall refuse to take the Oath of Abjuration or being a Quaker St. 6 An. ch 23. Sheriffs Presidents of Meetings c. on the Poll at any Election of Members of Parliament for Great Britain or of Commissioners for choosing Burgesses for Scotland at the Request of any Candidate or others to administer the Abjuration Oath or Affirmation to Quakers and Electors refusing it disabled to vote shall refuse to declare the Effect thereof upon his solemn Affirmation as directed by an Act made 7. W. 3. which Oath or Declaration the Sheriff President of the Meeting or chief Officer taking the Poll at any Election of Members for any Place in Great Britain G. Britain or Commissioners for choosing Burgesses for any Place in Scotland at the Request of any Candidate or other Person present at such Election which they are to administer shall not be capable of giving any Vote for the Election of any such Member for any Place in Great Britain or Commissioner to choose a Burgess for any Place in Scotland Enacted St. 9 An. ch 5. Candidate to be sworn to his Estate if required by any other Candidate or two Electors That every Person except the eldest Son or Heir Apparent of a Peer or of a Person qualified by this Act to serve as Knight of a Shire or such as shall be elected for each of the Universities of England shall upon Request at the time of the Election or before the Day to be prefixed in the Writ of Summons for the Meeting of any Subsequent Parliament by any other Person who shall stand Candidate at such Election or by any two or more Persons having a Right to Vote at such Election take a Corporal Oath in the Form in this Act contained Vide aute The respective Oaths aforesaid shall be administred by the Sheriff or Under-Sheriff for any County G. Britain or by the Mayor Bailiff The Oaths to be administred by the Sheriff or other Officer by whom the Poll is to be taken and Return made or two or more Justices of the Peace Who are to certify the same into the Chancery or Queen's Bench within 3 Months under 100 l. Forfeiture to be recovered by Action of Debt c. half to the Queen and half to him that sues with full Costs or other Officer or Officers for any City Borough c. to whom it shall appertain to take the Poll or make the Return at such Election or by any two or more Justices of the Peace within England c. and the said Sheriff Mayor Bailiff or other Officers and the said Justices of the Peace respectively are hereby required to certify the taking thereof into Chancery or the Queen's Bench within three Months after the taking the same under the Penalty of forfeiting one hundred Pounds one Moiety to the Queen and the other to such Person or Persons as will sue for the same to be recovered with full Costs by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any Court of Record at Westminster No Fee or Reward shall be taken for administring any Oath or making 1 s. only to be paid for the Oath 2 s. for making and 2 s. for filing the Certificate under 20 l. Forfeiture to be recovered and divided as above receiving or filing the Certificate thereof except one Shilling for administring the Oath and two Shillings for making the Certificate and two Shillings for receiving and filing the same under the Penalty of twenty Pounds to be forfeited by the Offender G. Britain and to be recovered and divided as aforesaid That upon every Election to
disturb the House shall pay the like Forfeiture And it is further ordered that the Business then in Agitation being ended no new Motion of any new Matters shall be made without leave of the House 5 Dec. 1640. Id. 84. Ordered that no Bills have their second Reading but between Nine and Twelve 10 Dec. 1640. Id. 92. Declared for a constant Rule that those that give their Votes for the Preservation of the Orders of the House shou'd stay in and those that give their Votes otherwise to the introducing of any new Matter or any Alteration should go out 8 Sept. 1641. Id. 392. See how far an Order of this House is binding In March 1627. Rush Coll. vol. 1.513 Resolved that is the ancient and undubitable Right of every Freeman that he hath a full and absolute Property in his Goods and Estate that no Tax Tallage Loan Benevolences or other like Charge ought to be commanded or levied by the King or any of his Ministers without common Consent by Act of Parliament March 1627. Id. 513. Resolved that no Freeman ought to be detained or kept in Prison or otherwise restrained by the Command of the King or Privy-Council or any other unless some Cause of the Commitment Detainer or Restraint be expressed for which by Law he ought to be committed detained or restrained Resolv'd Id. 513. that the Writ of HabeasCorpus may not be Detain'd Deny'd but ought to be granted to every Man that is committed or detained in Prison or otherwise restrained tho' it be by the Command of the King the Privy-Council or any other he praying the same Resolved that if a Freeman be committed or detained in Prison or otherwise restrained by Command of the King the Privy-Council or any other no Cause of such Commitment Detainer or Restraint being expressed for which by Law he ought to be committed detained or restrained and the same be returned upon a Habeas Corpus granted for the said Party then he ought to be delivered or bailed 2 April 1628. Resolved Id. 523. that no Freeman ought to be confined by any Command from the King or Privy-Council or any other unless it be by Act of Parliament or by other due Course or Warrant of Law King James I. having in 1621. Rapin Vol. 2. No. 54. p. 208.209 for some Words spoken by him in the House it occasioned a Remonstrance of the Commons to the King therein complaining of Breach of Privilege and asserting their Liberty of Speech and Debate to be their antient and undoubted Right and Inheritance receiv'd from their Ancestors c. This they sent to the King by twelve Members at the Head of whom they affectedly set Sir R. Weston a Privy-Counsellor one whom they conceiv'd had incens'd the K. against them who were receiv'd very roughly and their Remonstrance rejected But some Days after the K. sends 'em a long Answer in Writing wherein towards the Conclusion he objects against the stiling their Privileges Id. p. 211. their antient and undoubted Right and Inheritance and wishes they had said i. e. commands 'em to acknowledge that their Privileges were derived from the Grace and Permission of him and his Ancestors The House on reading this Answer plainly perceiv'd the King's Aims The Commons Protestation in Vindication of their Privileges Ibid. p. 211. 212. c. and knowing the Parl. was going to be prorogued or dissolv'd drew up a Protestation in Order to vindicate their Privileges viz. The Commons now assembled in Parl. being justly occasion'd thereunto concerning sundry Liberties Franchises and Privileges of Parliament amongst others here mentioned do make this Protestation following That the Liberties Franchises Privileges and Jurisdiction of Parliament are the antient and undoubted Birth-right and Inheritance of the Subjects of England and that the arduous and urgent Affairs concerning the King the State and the Defence of the Realm and of the Church of England and the Maintenance and making of Laws and Redress of Mischiefs and Grievances which happen daily within this Realm are proper Subjects and Matter of Counsel and Debate in Parliament And that in the handling debating and proceeding in those Businesses every Member of the House of Parliament hath and of Right ought to have Freedom of Speech to propound treat reason and bring to Conclusion the same and that the Commons in Parliament have like Liberty and Freedom to treat of these Matters in such Order as in their Judgment shall seem fittest See of the Terms Parliament and Prerogative Id. p. 213. and that every Member of the said House hath like Freedom from all Impeachment Imprisonment and Molestation other than by Censure of the House it self for or concerning any speaking reasoning or declaring of any Matter or Matters touching the Parliament or Parliament-Business and that if any of the Members be complained of and questioned for any Thing said or done in Parliament the same is to be shewed to the King by the Advice and Assent of the Commons assembled in Parliament before the King give Credence to any private Information But the K. being inform'd of this Protestation call'd a Council and sending for the Commons Journal in Presence of the Judges c. with his own Hands tore it out of the Journal and in a few Days after dissolved the Parliament but this did not deter the Commons from insisting on their Claim And in his Son's Reign it was asserted with a Witness and is now confirm'd by the Claim of Right and other Statutes Mar. 12. 1700. the House Journal Dom. Com. on a Report of that Part of the K's Speech which related to the Hanover Succession agreed with the Committee in these Resolves viz. 1. That all Things relating to the well governing of this Kingdom which are properly cognizable in the P. Council shall be transacted there and all Resolutions taken thereupon shall be sign'd by the P. C. 2. That no Person whatsoever that is not a Native of England Scotland or Ireland or of the Dominions thereunto belonging or who is not born of English Parents beyond the Seas altho such Person be naturaliz'd or made a Denizen shall be capable to be of the P. C. or a Member of either H. of P. or to enjoy any Office of Place or Trust either Civil or Military P. Council 3. That no such Person c. shall be capable of any Grant of Lands Tenements or Hereditaments from the Crown to himself or any other in Trust for him 4. That upon the further Limitation of the Crown in Case the same shall come to any Person not being a Native of this Kingdom of England this Nation be not oblig'd to engage in any War for the Defence of any Dominions or Territories not belonging to the Crown of England without the Consent of Parliament 5. That whoever shall hereafter come to the Possession of this Crown shall join in Communion with the Church by Law establish'd 6. That no Pardon shall be pleaded to any Impeachment in Parliament 7. That
Bills are sent down by Serjants at Law or by two Doctors of the Civil Law being Masters of the Chancery and Attendants in the Vpper House accompanied sometimes with the Clerk of the Crown an Attendant there Bills of greater Moment are usually sent down by some of the Judges Assistants there Id. 178. accompanied with some of the Masters of the Chancery who being admitted Entrance do come up close to the Table where the Clerk sits making three Congies and there acquainting the Speaker That the Lords have sent unto the House certain Bills doth read the Titles and deliver the Bills to the Speaker and so departeth with three Congies When they are out of the House the Speaker holds the Bills in his Hands and acquaints the House That the Lords by their Messengers have sent to the House certain Bills and then reading the Title of every Bill delivereth them to the Clerk to be safely kept and to be read when they shall be called for When Bills are thus passed by both Houses Id. 179. upon three several Readings in either House they ought for their last Approbation to have the Royal Assent which is usually deferred till the last Day of the Session The Royal Assent is given in this sort Id. 181. Vid. Towns Coll. 12 49. Vide Sir S. d'Ewe's Jour 467. After some Solemnities ended the Clerk of the Crown readeth the Title of the Bills in such Order as they are in Consequence After the Title of every Bill is read the Clerk of the Parliament pronounceth the Royal Assent according to certain Instructions given him from his Majesty in that Behalf To the Subsidy Bill Towns Coll. 49. because it is the meer Gift of the Subject the Queen's Consent is not required for the passing of it but as it is implied in her thankful Acceptance Nor to the Bill of Pardon because it is originally her free Gift no other Circumstance is required than that the thankful Acceptance thereof by the Lords and Commons be likewise expressed it being but once read in either House before it comes at last to be thus expedited To all other Bills either Private or Publick the Queen's express Consent though in different Words is always requisite February 9. Id. 127. 1597. 39. Eliz. Her Majesty gave her Royal Assent to twenty four publick Acts and nineteen private and refused forty eight which had passed both Houses If it be a publick Bill Towns 13. to which the King assenteth the Answer is Le Roy le veult in English The King wills it If a private Bill allowed by the King the Answer is Soit fait come il est desire i. e. Be it done as is desired If a publick Bill which the King forbears to allow Le Roy se avisera i. e. The King will consider To the Subsidy Bill Id. 12. Le Roy remercie ses loyaux Subjets accept lour Benevolence ainsi le veult i. e. The King thanks his loyal Subjects accepts their Benevolence and so wills it To the General Pardon Towns Col. 13.49 Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 467. Gol. 2. The Assent is thus Les Prelates Seigneurs Commons encest Parliament assembles an nom de toutes vous autres Subjets remercient tres humblement vostre Majestie prient à Dieu que il vous donne en sante bon vie longue The Prelates Lords and Commons in this Parliament assembled in the Name of all other your Subjects do most humbly thank your Majesty and do pray God to give you Health and a good and long Life A private or particular Act is always field Sir R. Atkin's Argument 57. Arc. Parl. 45. but never enrolled Every Bill that passeth the Parliament shall have Relation to the first Day of the Parliament though it come in at the End of the Parliament unless a Time be specially appointed by the Statute when it shall commence If a Bill be admitted to be read Scobel 41. it is to be presented fairly written without any Razure or Interlineation together with a Breviat of the Heads of the Bill and unless it be so tendered the Speaker may refuse it Until the Bill be open'd Id. 42. no Man may speak to it An Act was read Towns c. 187. to which no Man offered to speak Whereupon Mr. Speaker stood up and said That if no Man speak it must be ingrossed i. e. Silence gives Consent It is the usual Rule of the Law Towns Col. 134. That where the Numbers of the Affirmative and Negative are equal Semper presumetur pro negante The Negatives by Custom are to carry it i. e. That the former Law is not to be changed When Votes are digested into a Bill Scobel 45. and that comes to be read or passed it is lawful to debate or argue against all or any Part thereof to alter or reject it Because Votes in order to a Bill are no further binding but that the Bill is to be presented containing those Votes and because the Bill gives Occasion of a more large Debate before it can pass into a Law every Member hath Liberty to offer his Reasons against it as well as give his Vote as often as it comes to a Question Ibid. When a Bill has been read the second Time and opened any Member may move to have it amended but must speak but once to it and therefore must take all his Exceptions to it and every Part of it at one Time for in the Debate of a Bill no Man may speak but once the same Day except the Bill be read any more than once that Day and then he may speak as often as it is read Id. 58. 23 Junii 1604. It was agreed for a Rule If a Bill be continue in Speech from Day to Day one may not speak twice to the Matter of the same Bill Note His. Refor Vol. I. p. 144. A Bill was read in the House of Lords four Times Quere if in one Day CHAP. XVIII Concerning Committees A Committee of either House ought not by Law to publish their own Refults Rush Part. 3. Vol. 2. p. 74. neither are their Conclusions of any Force without the Confirmation of the House which hath the same Power of controuling them as if the Matter had never been debated Committees are such as either the Lords in the Higher House Sir Tho. Smyth 's Common-Wealth 75. or Commons in the Lower House do choose to frame the Laws upon such Bills as are agreed upon and afterward to be ratified by the same Houses The Proceeding in a Committee is more honourable and advantageous to the King and the House Rush Col. 557. for that Way leads most to the Truth And it is a more free and open Way where every Man may add his Reason and make Answer upon the hearing of other Mens Reasons and Arguments For Referring a Bill to Committees Sir Simon d'Ewe 's Jour 186. it is chiefly for Amendment or Alteration thereof after it hath been penned and put into the House by some one or
Sir Francis Popham being returned a Burgess for Chippenham by one Indenture Id. 14. and another Person returned for the same Place by another Indenture it was moved he might be admitted into the House till the Matter were determined But he was not so admitted and it was referred to the Committee for Privileges 21 Jac. 1. Id. 15. Two Indentures were return'd for Southwark the one returned Yarrow and Mingy the other Yarrow and Bromfeild Upon a Report from the Committee of Elections it was resolved That the Election and Return for Yarrow should stand good and that he should sit in the House 22 Martii Ibid. 21 Jac. 1. Sir John Jackson and Sir Thomas Beaumont were both returned for one Burgess's Place for Pontefract Ordered That the Committee take the Election into Consideration to Morrow and that in the mean Time the Parties forbear to come into the House CHAP. XXI A Session of Parliament and of Prorogations and Adjournments WHAT shall make a Session of Parliament See 1 Rol. R. 29. Hutton 61. 4 Inst 27. 1 Siderf 457. 1 Mod. Rep. 151 155. If several Bills are passed at one and the same Parliament none of them shall have Priority of the other for they are made all in one Day and Instant and each of them have relation to the first Day of the Parliament though in several Chapters and shall so be construed as if they had been all comprehended in one and the same Act of Parliament Sir W. Jones Rep. 22. Hob. 111. Bro. tit Parl. 86. and Relat. 35. Plowd 79.6 Levintz 9. Crooke says That though in Fiction of Law a Statute shall have relation to the first Day of the Parlaiment yet revera nothing is settled nor is it a perfect Statute till the Parliament is ended Jones ut sup 370. Vide cont ibid. 371. Hales Justice said That if the Parliament has several Prorogations and in the second or third Session an Act is made this shall not have relation to the Day of the Beginning of the Parliament that is to say to to the first Day of the first Session but only to the first Day of the same Session in which it is made Plowd 79.6 In a Session of Parliament though it continue never so many Weeks yet there is nothing prius aut posterius but all Things are held and taken as done at one and the same Time Rush Vol. I. Page 581. Jones in the Case of Sir John Elliot Ibid. p. 687. says We are Judges what shall be said a Session of Parliament Sed Quere de hoc The Passing of any Bill or Bills 4 Inst 27. by giving the Royal Assent thereto or the giving any Judgment in Parliament doth not make a Session but the Session doth continue till that Session be prorogued or dissolved And this is evident by many Presidents in Parliament ancient and modern 14 Ed. 3. Ibid. On the first Monday a Grant of c. being given to the King was made a Statute and pass'd both Houses and had the Royal Assent thereunto yet after this the Parliament continued and divers Acts made and Petitions granted 3 Rich. 2 Declared by Act of Parliament Ibid. That the killing of John Imperial Ambassador of Genoa was High Treason yet the Parliament continued long after and divers Acts made c. 7 Hen. 4. Ibid. An Act made for certain Strangers departing the Realm c. yet the Parliament continued till Dec. 8. Hen. 4. 1 Hen. 7. Ibid. The Attainders of such as were returned Knights Citizens and Burgesses were revers'd by Act Parliament before they could sit in the House of Commons and the Parliament continued and divers Acts made 33 Hen. 8. Ibid. At the Beginning of the Parliament the Bill of Attainder against Queen Catherine Howard passed both Houses yet the Parliament continued and divers Acts passed Though Bills passed both Houses Ibid. and the Royal Assent be given thereto there is no Session until a Prorogation or a Dissolution The Diversity between a Prorogation and an Adjournment Ibid. or Continuance of the Parliament is That by the Prorogation in open Court there is a Session and then such Bills as passed either or both Houses and had no Royal Assent to to them must at the next Assembly begin again Every several Session of Parliament is in Law a several Parliament Ibid. Hutton 61. Brook tit Parl. 86. But if it be but adjourned or continued then there is no Session and consequently all Things continue in the same State they were in before the Adjournment or Continuance The Titles of divers Acts of Parliament be 4 Inst 27. At the Session holden by Prorogation or by Adjournment and Prorogation but never by Continuance or Adjournment tantùm And the usual Form of Pleading is ad Sessionem tentam c. per Prorogationem The Adjournment or Continuance is much more beneficial for the Common-wealth 4 Inst 28. for expediting of Causes than a Prorogation The King desired the House of Commons not to make a Recess in the Easter Holidays Rush Col. 537 This Message for Non-recess was not well pleasing to the House Sir Robert Philips first resented it and took Notice That in 12 18 Jac. 1. upon the like Intimation the House resolved It was in their Power to adjourn or sit Hereafter said he this may be put upon us by Princes of less Piety Let a Committee consider hereof and of our Right herein and to make a Declaration Sir Edward Coke said The King makes a Prorogation but this House Adjourns itself The Commission of Adjournment we never read but say This House adjourns it self If the King writes to an Abbot for a Corody for a Vallet if it be ex rogatu though the Abbot yeilds to it it binds not Therefore I desire that it be entered That this be done ex Rogatu Regis And this Matter touching his Majesty's Pleasure about the Recess Rush Col. 537. was referred to a Committee and to consider the Power of the House to adjourn itself The Sovereign may adjourn the Parliament Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 318. Col. 2. as well as the Parliament adjourns itself When a Parliament is called 4 Inst 28. Hutton 61. Vid. Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 407. Col. 1. and doth sit and is dissolved without any Act of Parliament passed or Judgment given it is no Session of Parliament but a Convention 18 Rich. 2. The Petitions of the Commons were answered 4 Inst 28. and a Judgment given in the King's Bench reversed but no Act passed Yet without Question it was a Session else the Judgment should not be of Force Many Times Judgments given in Parliament have been executed Ibid. the Parliament continuing before any Bill passed If divers Statutes be continued till the next Parliament Hutton 61. or next Session and there is a Parliament or Session and nothing done therein as to Continuance all the said Statutes are discontinued and gone 8 April Hakewel 180. 1604. In the last Session of the first Parliment of K.
James the First the House being desirous to have a Bill forth with passed declared That the Royal Assent to one Bill or more did not dissolve the Session without some special Declaration of his Majesty's Pleasure to that Purpose 1 2 Phil. Mar. The King and Queen came of Purpose into the Parliament House Ibid. to give their Assent to Cardinal Pool's Bill and resolved upon the Question by the whole House That the Session was not thereby concluded but they might proceed in their Business notwithstanding the Royal Assent given But for more Security it is usual to insert a Proviso to that Purpose If there be divers Sessions in one Parliament Arc. Parl. 93. 〈◊〉 Jour 7.12 ●b and the King signs not a Bill till the last there all is but one and the same Day and all shall have relation to the first Day of the first Session Post 336. and the first Day and the last are but one Parliament and one and the same Day unless special Mention be made in the Act when it shall take its Force See Touching the Commencement Prorogation and Dissolution of several Parliaments from the Beginning of Edward III. to the End of Richard III. in Cotton's Records per Totum and from the Beginning of Edward VI. in Hale's Parliaments pag. 107 to 110. and pag. 142 143 c. Upon a Prorogation of the Parliament On a Prorogation Bills to continue in Statu quo Burnet 's Reformation Vol. I. pag. 276. Journal Dom. Com. 15 May 1540. 32 Hen. 8. to the 25th a Vote passed That their Bills should remain in the State they were in and upon their next Meeting they went on accordingly On the 18th of February 1666 the Parliament was prorogued till the 10th of October 1667. the King present Memorandum That his Majesty by Proclamation 1 Siderf 338. dated 26 June 1667. Ann. 19. of his Reign summon'd his Parliament to meet on the 25th of July following by Reason of the War against the Dutch then in Being On which Day they met and adjourned at his Majesty's Appointment to the 29th of the same Month on which Day a Peace being then concluded the Parliament was by his Majesty's Appointment prorogued to the 10th of October as aforesaid A Parliament may be summon'd by Proclamation to meet before the Day to which they are prorogued Anno Dom. 1628. Rush Vol. I. pag 537. 4 Car. 10 April Mr. Secretary Cook delivered this Message from the King That his Majesty desired this House not to make any Recess these Easter-Holidays that the World may take Notice how earnest his Majesty and we are for the publick Affairs of Christendom the which by such a Recess would receive Interruption But This Message for Non-recess was not well pleasing to the House Sir Robert Phillips first resented it Post 366. and too Notice that in 12 18 Jac. upon the like Intimation the House resolved it was in their Power to adjourn itself or sit Hereafter said he this may be put upon us by Princes of less Piety Let a Committee consider hereof and of our Right herein and make a Declaration And accordingly this Matter touching his Majesty's Pleasure about the Recess was referred to a Committee and to consider the Power of the House to adjourn itself to the End that it being now yeilded unto in Obedience to his Majesty it might not turn to Prejudice in Time to come Sir Edward Coke spoke to the same Purpose and said I am as tender of the Privileges of this House as of my Life They are the Heart-Strings of the Commonwealth The King makes a Prorogation but this House adjourns itself The Commission of Adjournment we never read but say this House adjourns itself If the King write to an Abbot for a Corody for a Valet if it be ex rogatu though the Abbot yeilds to it it binds not Therefore I desire that it be entered that this is done ex rogatu Regis Hereupon a Message was sent to the King That the House would give all Expedition to his Majesty's Service notwithstanding their Purpose of Recess To which Message his Majesty returned this Answer That the Motion proceeded from himself in regard of his Engagement in the Affairs of Christendom wished them all Alacrity in their Proceedings and that there be no Recess at all A Message from the King by the Speaker Ibid. pag. 608. same Year That his Majesty commands for the present they adjourn the House till To-morrow Morning and that all Committees cease in the mean Time And the House was accordingly adjourned On Wednesday February 25. the same Year both Houses by his Majesty's Command adjourned themselves until Monday Morning the 2d of March. Monday Ibid. pag. 660. and Appendix pag. 9. 2d of March the Commons meet and urged the Speaker to put the Question who said I have a Command from the King to adjourn till the 10th of March and put no Question endeavouring to go out of the Chair was notwithstanding held by some Members the House foreseeing a Dissolution till a Protestation was published in the House Hereupon the King sent for the Serjeant of the House but he was detained the Door being locked Then he sent the Gentleman-Usher of the Lords House with a Message and he was refused Admittance till the said Votes were read And then in much Confusion the House was adjourned till the 10th of March according as it was intimated from his Majesty In Mr. Mason of Lincoln's Inn his Argument for Sir John Elliot he said the second Charge in the Information against him was the Contempt to the Command of the King's Adjournment Jac. 18. It was questioned in Parliament whether the King can adjourn the Parliament although it be without doubt that the King can prorogue it And the Judges resolved That the King may adjourn the House by Commission and 27 Eliz. it was resolved accordingly But it is to be observed and wondered Rush Vol. I. in Appendix pag. 48. that none was then impeached for moving that Question And it is to be noted that they resolved that the Adjournment may be by Commission but did not resolve that it may be by a verbal Command signified by another and it derogates not from the King's Prerogative that he cannot so do no more than in the Case of 26 H. 8. c. 8. that he cannot grant one Acre of Land by Parol The King himself may adjourn the House in Person or under the Great Seal but not by verbal Message for none is bound to give Credit to such Message but when it is under the Great Seal it is Teste meipso And if there was no legal Command then there can be no Contempt in the Disobedience of that Command In this Case no Contempt appears by the Information for the Information is that the King had Power to adjourn Parliaments Then put the Case the Command be that they should adjourn themselves this is no Pursuance of the Power which he is supposed to have
The House may be adjourned two Ways to wit by the King i. e. by Writ or by the House itself the last is their own voluntary Act which the King cannot compel for Voluntas non cogitur Note Rush 3 Part Vol. I. pag. 385. Vnder the Number of forty Members the House of Commons is not reputed a House so as to make an Adjournment CHAP. XXII The proper Laws and Customs of Parliament THE Laws 4 Inst 50. Customs Liberties and Privileges of Parliament are better to be learned out of the Rolls of Parliament and other Records and by Precedents and continual Experience then can be expressed by any one Man's Pen. If an Ordinance only be entered in the Parliament Roll Sir William Jones pag. 104. and it hath the Reputation and Use of an Act of Parliament that makes it an Act of Parliament If any doubt be conceived upon the Words or Meaning of an Act of Parliament Rush Vol. 3. pag. 77 78. it is good to construe it according to the Reason of the Common Law When Laws shall be altered by any other Authority Ibid. pag. 653. than that by which they were made says King Charles the First in his Speech at Newark to the Inhabitants of Nottingham 1642. your Foundations are destroyed As every Court of Justice hath Laws and Customs for its Directions 4 Inst 15. some by the Common Law some by the Civil and Canon Law some by peculiar Laws and Customs c. so the High Court of Parliament suis propriis Legibus Consuetudinibus subsistit It is Lex Consuetudo Parliamenti Ibid. that all weighty Matters in any Parliament moved concerning the Peers of the Realm or Commons in Parliament assembled ought to be determined adjudged and discussed by the Course of Parliament and not by the Civil Law nor yet by the Commons Laws of this Realm used in more inferior Courts which was so declared to be secundùm Legem C●nsuetudinem Parliamenti concerning Peers of the Realm by the King and all the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the like pari Ratione is for the Commons for any Thing moved or done in the House of Commons and the rather for that by another Law and Customof Parliament the King cannot take Notice of any Thing said or done in the House of Commons but by the Report of the House of Commons and every Member of Parliament hath a judicial Place and can be no Witness And this is the Reason that Judges ought not to give any Opinion of a Matter of Parliament because it is not to be decided by the Common Laws but secundùm Legem Consuetudinem Parliamenti and so the Judges in divers Parliaments have confessed And some hold That every Offence committed in any Court punishable by that Court must be punished proceeding criminally in the same Court or in some higher and not in any inferior Court and the Court of Parliament hath no higher By the ancient Law and Custom of Parliament Id. 14. a Proclamation ought to be made against being armed against Games Plays and strange Shews c. during the Parliament that the Parliament may not be disturbed or the Members thereof who are to attend arduous and urgent Business be not withdrawn Dec. 15. 1597. Resolved Towns Col. 116. Vide. Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 505. Col. 1. according to the ancient Custom of the House That all the Members of the same which did speak against passing of the Bill should go forth of the House to bring the Bill into the House again together with the Residue of the Members which went out before with the passing of the said Bill All the Members of the House being gone forth except Mr. Speaker and the Clerk Mr. Controller brought in the Bill in his Hand accomanied with all the Members of the House and delivered the said Bill to Mr. Speaker 17 Dec. 1597. The same Ceremony on the like Occasion omitted Id. 117. Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 574. Col. 2. upon a Motion of the Speaker and ordered accordingly upon the Question 18 Dec. 1601. Towns 332. As the Speaker was coming to the House in the Morning the Pardon was delivered unto him which he took and deliver'd it to the House which they sent baek again because it was not brought according to Course The Subsidy of the Clergy was sent in a Roll according to the usual Acts Id. 333. To which Sir Edward Hobby took Exceptions because it was not sent in a long Skin of Parchment under the Queen's Hand and Seal so it was sent back and then the other was sent Si les Commons grant Poundage pur quatre Ans Brook 119.4 Crompt 8. les Seigneurs grant nisi pur deux Ans le Bill ne serra re-bayl al Commons mes si les Commons grant nisi pur deux Ans les Seigneurs pur 4 Ans la ceo serra redeliver al Commons Et in cest case les Seigneurs doient fair un Scedule de lour Entent ou d'endorcer le Bill en cest Form Les Seigneurs ceo assentont pur durer pur quatuor Ans Et quant les Commons ount le Bill arere ne volent assenter a ceo ceo ne poet estre un Act mes si les Commons volent assenter donques ils endorce lour Respons sur le Margent de bass deins le Bill en tiel Form les Commons sont assentuz al Scedule les Seigneurs a mesme cestuy Bill annex donques serra bayl al Clerk del Parliament If the Commons grant Poundage for four Years and the Lords grant it but for two Years the Bill shall not be sent back to the Commons but if the Commons grant but for two Years and the Lords for four Years there it shall be redelivered to the Commons And in that Case the Lords may make a Schedule of their Intent or Endorse the Bill in this Form The Lords do assent to the continuing for four Years And when the Commons have the Bill again and will not assent to it that cannot be an Act But if the Commons will assent then they endorse their Answer on the Margin below within the Bill in this Form The Commons do assent to the Schedule of the Lords annexed to this Bill and then it shall be sent to the Clerk of the Parliament The Custom and Privilege of this House hath always been first Vide Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jour 483. Col. 2. to make Offer of the Subsidies from hence then to the Upper House except it were that they present a Bill unto this House with Desire of their Assent thereto and then to send it up again And Reason it is that we should stand upon our Privilege seeing the Burden resteth upon us as the greatest Number per Francis Bacon 35 Eliz. 1592. The Lord Chancellor in Parliament offered the Commons a Writ to deliver their Burgess but they refused it Petyt 's Miscel Parl. 4. in Margin as being clear of Opinion That all their Commandments and Acts were to be done and executed by
their Serjeant without Writ It is the Law and Custom of Parliament 4 Inst 14 34. Rot. Parl. ●3 E. 3. n. Cot. Records f. 17. n. 6 9. That when any new Device is moved on the King's behalf in Parliament for his Aid or the like the Commons may answer That they tender the King's Estate and are ready to aid the same only in this Device they dare not agree without Conference with their Countries Whereby it appeareth That such Conference is warrantable by the Law and Custom of Parliament Mar. 19. Journal Dom. Com. 1677. It was conceived by the Commons that according to the antient Course and Method of Transactions between the two Houses when a Bill with Amendments is sent from either House to the other by Messengers of their own the House that sends them gives no Reasons of their Amendments but the House to whom it is sent if they find Cause to disagree do use to give Reasons for their Dissent to every particular Amendment every one of them is supposed to carry the Weight of its own Reason with it until it be objected against May 28. Ibid. 1678. A Paper of Reasons against a Bill viz. for wearing Woollen being printed and delivered at the Door was committed it being irregular for Reasons to be printed and published against a publick Bill before a Petition be exhibited to the House against the Bill It is to be observed 4 Inst 14. though one be chosen for one particular County or Borough yet when he is return'd and sits in Parliamment he serveth for the whole Realm for the End of his coming thither as in the Writ of his Election appeareth is general ad faciendum consentiendum c. If Offences done in Parliament might have been punished elsewhere 4 Inst 17. it shall be intended that at some Time it would have been put in Ure As Usage is a good Interpreter of Laws Coke Lit. 81. b. so Non-usage where there is no Example is a great Intendment that the Law will not bear it Not that an Act of Parliament by Non-user can be antiquated or lose his Force Coke Lit. 81. b. but that it may be expounded or declared how the Act is to be understood There is no Act of Parliament but must have the Consent of the Lords 4 Inst 25. the Commons and the Royal Assent of the King and whatsoever passeth in Parliament by this threefold Consent hath the Force of of an Act of Parliament The Difference between an Act of Parliament Ibid. and an Ordinance in Parliament is for that the Ordinance wanteth the threefold Consent and is ordained by one or two of them Some Acts of Parliament are introductory of a new Law Ibid. and some be declaratory of the ancient Law and some be of both kinds by addition of greater Penalties or the like Ibid. Some Acts are general and some private or particular All Acts of Parliament relate to the first Day of Parliament 33 H. 6. f. 18. a. 33 H. 8. Brook Parl 86 Relation 35. 4. Inst 28. Vide Sir Simon d'Ewe 's Jour 550. Col. 1 2. if it be not otherwise provided by the Act. The House of Commons is to many Purposes a distinct Court and therefore is not prorogued or adjourned by the Prorogation or Adjournment of the Lords House but the Speaker upon the Signification of the King's Pleasure by the Assent of the House of Commons doth say This Court doth Prorogue or Adjourn itself And then it is prorogued or adjourn and not before 39 Eliz. 1597. Towns Col. 101.102 Vide Sir Simon d'Ewe 's Jour 550. Col. 1 2. Nov. 5. Through a meer Mistake and Error of the Speaker and themselves the House conceived themselves to have been Adjourned by the Lord Keeper the first Day of this Parliament to this present Day When it is dissolved Ibid. the House of Commons are sent for up to the Higher House and there the Lord Keeper by the King's Commandment dissolveth the Parliament and not before A Parliament cannot be discontinued or dissolved but by Matter of Record Hutton 62. and that by the King alone The King at the Time of the Dissolution ought to be there in Person 4 Inst 28. or by Representation for as it cannot begin without the Presence of the King either in Person or by Representation so it cannot end or be dissolved without his Presence either in Person or by Representation Nihil enim tam Conveniens est naturali aequitati Bracton unumquodque dissolvi eo ligamine quo ligatum est By the Statute of 33 H. 8. c. 21. Ibid. it is declared by Act of Parliament That the King's Letters Patents under his Great Seal and signed with his Hand and declared and notified in his Absence to the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons assembled in the House of Parliament is and ever was as good Strength and Force as if the King's Person had been there personally present and had assented openly and publickly to the same In the Lords House the Lords give their Voices from the puisne Lord seriatim 4 Inst 34.35 by the Word of Content or Not Content The Commons give their Voices upon the Question by Yea or No. Every Lord Spiritual and Temporal 4 Inst 43. Crompton 4. b. and every Knight Citizen and Burgess shall upon Summons come to the Parliament except he can reasonably and honestly excuse himself or else he shall be amerced c. that is respectively a Lord by the Lords and one of the Commons by the Commons By the Statute of 6 Hen. 8. c. 16. no Knight Ibid. Crompton 4. b. Citizen or Burgess of the House of Commons shall depart from the Parliament without Licence of the Speaker and Commons the same to be entered of Record in the Book of the Parliament upon Pain to lose their Wages Sickness is no Cause to remove any Knight 4 Inst 8. Citizen or Burgess of the House of Commons 18 Eliz. 1575. Sir Simon d'Ewe 's Jour 244. Col. 2. Resolved by the House That any Person being a Member of the same and being either in Service of Ambassage or else in Execution or visited with Sickness shall not in any Ways be amoved from their Place in this House nor any other to be during such Time of Service Execution or Sickness elected 31 Eliz. 1588. Id. 439. It was assented to by the whole House That none after the House is set do depart before the rising of the same House unless he do first ask Leave of Mr. Speaker on pain of paying Six Pence to the Vse of the Poor If a Lord depart from Parliament without Licence 4 Inst 44. it is an Offence done out of the Parliament and is finable by the Lords And so it is of a Member of the House of Commons he may be fined by the House of Commons It doth not belong to the Judges to judge of any Law Custom 4 Inst 50. Rot. Parl. 31 H. 6. n. 27. or Priviledge of Parliament Cardinal Wolsey
coming to the Lower House of Parliament told them Hebert's Hen. 8.136 That he desired to reason with them who opposed his Demands But being answered That it was the Order of that House to hear and not to reason but among themselves the Cardinal departed If any sit in the House Scobel 84. who are not returned by the Clerk of the Crown in Chancery it is accounted a great Crime and severely punished 5 Mar. 1557. 4 5 Ph. Mar. For that Christopher Pern affirmed Ibid. That he is returned a Burgess for Plimpton in Devon and hath brought no Warrant thereof to the House nor is returned hither by the Clerk of the Crown by Book or Warrant he is awarded to be in the Custody of the Serjeant till the House have further considered 13 Eliz. 1571. The House was called Sir Simon d'Ewe 's Jour 156. Col. 1 2. and thereupon Edward Lewknor John Bullock Nicholas Plumtree Edward Goodwyn and John Garnons were commanded to attend the Order of this House To-morrow for that the House being this Day called they had entered into the House and had not as then been returned by the Clerk of the Crown except Garnons whose Case is for that he is said to be excommunicated 9 Jan. 1562. Scobel 85. For that it seemed to the House being very full that there were a greater Number than was returned therefore the Names were immediately called over and as they were called departed out of the House 7 Feb. 1588. Ibid. The House was called and every one answered to his Name and departed out of the House as they were called Chiefly the Calling of the House is Ibid. to discover what Members are absent without Leave of the House or just Cause in which Case Fines have been imposed If the House be called Ibid. the Manner has been to call over the Names and each Member to stand up at the Mention of his Name uncovering his Head Such as are present are marked and the Defaulters called over again the same Day sometimes the Day after sometimes summon'd sometimes sent for by the Serjeant Upon calling the House Ibid. if the Person be present he riseth up bare-headed and answereth if absent he is either excused and so entered Licentiatur per speciale Servitium excusatur ex gratiâ or aegrotat or if none excuse him he is entered Deficit That no Man may sit in the House Id. 86. Vide Sir Simon d'Ewe's Jeur. passim till he be legally returned appears by several Instances of Persons who were not Members and for coming into the House were brought to the Bar and some committed and some sworn before they departed to keep secret what they had heard there 5 April 1571. Sir Simon d'Ewe 's Jour 156. Col. 1. 13 Eliz. Thomas Clerk and Anthony Bull of the Inner Temple London Gent. were by this House committed to the Serjeant's Ward until further Order should be taken with them for that they presumed to enter into this House and were no Members of the same as themselves at the Bar confessed 18 Eliz. 1575. Charles Johuson Id. 248. Col. 1. of the Inner Temple Gent. committed to the Serjeant's Ward till surther Order be taken by this House for coming into this House this present Day the House sitting confessing himself to be no Member of this House 27 Eliz. 1584. Charles Morgan Gent. Id. 334. Col. 1. Servant to Sir George Cary Knight of a Shire being himself no Member of this House was found to be standing within the House next to the Door and as it was thought of meer Ignorance and Simplicity without any evil Purpose or Meaning and yet was committed by Order of the House to the Serjeant's Ward 30 Nov. Eodem An. Richard Robinson being found to be sitting in the House by the space of two Hours Ibid. Col. 1. while several Speeches were made was stripp'd to his Shirt and his Pockets searched and being brought to the Bar was censured by the House after taking the Oaths to suffer Imprisonment in the Serjeant's Ward till Saturday next and then having sworn to keep secret what he had heard to be released 28 Eliz. 1586. Id. 394. Col. 2. Edmund Moor and John Turner presumed to come into the House being no Members and upon their Submission discharged because it was done of Simplicity and meer Ignorance Id. 394. Col. 2. So John Legg Vide Id. 486. Col. 2. So Matthew Jones Id. 511. Col. 1. So William Hanner Id. 288. Col. 2 Petitions are usually presented by Members of the same County Scobel 87. If they be concerning private Persons they are to be subscribed and the Persons presenting them called in to the Bar to avow the Substance of the Petition especially if it be a Complaint against any 18 Nov. 1640. Ibid. One Vivers presenting a Petition in the Name of the Mayor Aldermen Burgesses and other Inhabitants of Banbury was called in and did acknowledge the Hand to the Petition to be his and that he did deliver it by Order and on Behalf of the Town of Banbury and thereupon it was committed The like in the same Parliament Ibid. upon reading the Petition of one Ward of Salop and likewise on reading the Petition of Henry Hogan Though Freedom of Speech and Debates Scobel 72. be an undoubted Privilege of the House yet whatsoever is spoken in the House is subject to the Censure of the House Though the Committee examine not upon Oath Id. 17. yet they may punish any that shall testify untruly In the Parliament Hakewel 93. if the greatest Part of the Knights of the Shire do assent to the making of an Act of Praliament and the lesser Part will not agree to it yet this is a good Act or Statute to last in perpetuum and that the Law of Majoris partis is so in all Councils Elections c. both by the Rules of the Common Law and the Civil Tenants d'ancient Baronies sont discharge de Contribution al Gages de Chivaliers del Parliament Moor fol. 768. quia lour Seigneurs servent pur eux in Parliament i. e. Tenants in antient Demeasn Tenants of ancient Baronies are discharged from Contribution to the Wages of Knights of Parliament because their Lords serve for them in Parliament April Scobel 14. 1640. It was ordered by the Commons That if any sit in that House that are returned by more Indentures then usual they should withdraw till the Committee for Privileges had sarther ordered In the Beginning of every Parliament Id. 40. some Persons have been appointed to consider of such Laws as had Continuance to the present Session whether they were fit to be coutinued or determined as also of former Statutes repealed or discontinued whether fit to be revived and what are fit to be repealed Any Member of the House may offer a Bill for publick good Ibid. except it be for imposing a Tax which is not to be done but by Order of the House first had A private Bill that concerns a particular Person Id. 41. is not to be
offered to the House till the Leave of the House be desired and the Substance of such Bill made known either by Motion or Petition It hath at some Times been ordered Hakewel 135. That every one that preferreth a private Bill should pay five Pounds to the Poor as in 43 Eliz. towards the End of the Parliament when they were troubled with much Business but it holdeth not in other Parliaments Scobel 41. Nevertheless the Speaker had Liberty to call for a private Bill to be read every Morning and usually the Morning is spent in the first Reading of Bills untill the House grow full If any publick Bill be tendered Ibid. the Person who tenders the Bill must first open the Matter of the Bill to the House and offer the Reasons for admitting thereof and thereupon the House will either admit or deny it 7 Martii 1606. Mr. Id. 46. Hadley being assigned of a Committee to confer with the Lords desired to be spared he being in Opinion against the Matter itself And it was conceived for a Rule That no Man was to be imployed in any Matter that had declared himself against it and the Question being put it was resolved Mr. Hadley was not to be employed Presidents reported by Mr. Pryn 28 Jan. 1666. about the Method of Proceeding upon the Impeachment of the Lord Mordant 28 May 1624. In the Lords Journal Council to be allowed Impeachment which is entered in haec verba and allows Council in all Cases 1 2 Car. 1. A great Dispute if the Earl of Bristol impeached for High Treason should be allowed Council The Lords then stood on the Order above recited The King objected to that Order that the Judges and his Council had not assented thereto yet the King consented to avoid being thought rigorous that the Earl of Bristol should be allowed Council so it were not drawn into Precedent Council was allowed to Sir George Bynion Council allowed to Garney Lord Mayor of London impeached for High Crimes and Misdemeanors 5 11 July 1642. and 1 2 August Sept. 30. 1645. An Impeachment of of the Earl of Strafford H. Poulton c. for striking Sir Arthur Haselrig Upon all which the House did acquiesce in the Lord Mordant's having Council As to his sitting within the Bar The Lords insisted on it on the Precedents of 18 Jac. the Bishop of Landass and 1645. the Lord Stamford Seignor Coke Litt. Rep. 330. Elect. 1 Car. 1. Viscount de Bucks Chivaler de Norsolk Comment que ill abstein de la maison uncore il avoit privilege versus la Dame Cleer The Privileges of Parliament consist in Three Things May 's Hist Parl. l. 3. p. 27 Sir Robert Atkin's Power of Parliaments 36. Rush Col. Vol. 1.663 First as they are a Council to advise Secondly a Court to judge Thirdly a Representative Body of the Realm to make repeal or alter Laws Upon some Questions propounded to the Judges Anno 1629. 5 Car. 1. all the Judges agreed That regularly a Parliament-Man cannot be compelled out of Parliament to answer Things done in Parliament in a parliamentary Course Their Rights and Privileges are the Birth-right and Inheritance not only of themselves Rush Col. Vol. 3. p. 1. 458. but of the whole Kingdom wherein every Subject is interested The Violating of the Privileges of Parliament Rush Col. Vol. 3. p. 1. 475. Rush Col. Vol. 1. p. 537. is the Overthrow of Parliament The Privileges of the House says Sir Edward Cook are the Heart-Strings of the Commonwealth and therefore if the King desires a Nonrecess I desire that this may be enter'd That it is done ex rogatu Regis The King viz. Charles II. Journ of House of Commons in his Letter to the King of Spain declares That the Murder of his Father was not the Act of the Parliament or Kingdom of England but of a little Company in the Kingdom 23 Aug. 1660. Expulsion from the House for Words Thursday in the Morning 27 May Diurnal Occurrences of Parliament from Nov. 3. 1640. to Nov. 3. 1641. p. 11● 1641. Mr. Tayler a Barrister and Burgess for Old Windsor was brought upon his Knees in the House of Commons for speaking some Words in Disparagement of the whole House about the Earl of Strafford's Death saying They had committed Murder with the Sword of Justice and that he would not for a World have so much Blood lie on his Couscience as did on theirs for that Sentence Which Words being proved against him by the Mayor of Windsor to whom he spoke them and some others he was thereupon expelled the House and voted uncapable of ever being a Parliament Man committed to the Tower during Pleasure to be carried down to Windsor there to make Recantation for those Words and to return back to the House of Commons to receive further Sentence And it was ordered That a Writ should presently issue out for a new Election is his room The 2d of June he petitioned to be restored upon his Submission Id. p. 116. Id. the where Rush Col. part 3. vol. 1. fo 278 280. But his Petition would not be hearkened unto A Member sent to the Tower for discovering what was said in the House in a former Parliament Mr. Francis Nevill Rush Col. part 3. vol. 1. fo 169. of Yorkshire a Member of the House was February 4. 1640. 16 Car. 1. questioned for Breach of Privileges in the precedent Parliament which met 13 Apr. 1640. by discovering to the King and Council what Words some Members did let fall in their Debate in that House Whereupon Mr. Bellasis Knight for Yorkshire and Sir John Hotham were committed by the Council-Board And Mr. Nevill being brought to the Bar was by the House committed to the Tower of London and Sir William Savill touching the same Matter was ordered to be sent for in Custody CHAP. XXIII Privilege of Parliament THE Privilege of Tenants in Ancient Demense Sir R. Atkin's Argument 18. Vide Coke 9 Rep. in Pref. must be as ancient as their Tenure and Service for their Privilege comes by Reason of their Service and their Service is known by all to be before the Conquest in the Time of Edward the Confessor and in the Time of the Conqueror Every Man must take Notice of all the Members of the House returned of Record 4 Inst 23.24 at his Peril Otherwise it is of the Servant of any of the Members of the House Id. 24. A Member of Parliament shall have Privilege of Parliament Id. 42. Hakewel 62. not only for his Servants but for his Horses c. or other Goods distrainable The Privilege is due eundo Scobel 88. morando redeundo for the Persons of Members and their necessary Servants and in some Cases for their Goods and Estates also during the Time For their own Persons they have been privileged from Suits Ibid. Arrests Imprisonments Attendance on Trials Serving on Juries and the like yea from being summoned or called to attend upon any Suit in other Courts by Subpoena
agreed That regularly he cannot be compelled out of Parliament to answer Things done in Parliament in a Parliamentary Course but it is otherwise where Things are done exorbitantly for those are not the Acts of the Court. No Privilege is allowable in Case of the Peace betwixt private Men 2 Nalson 450. much more in Case of the Peace of the Kingdom Privilege cannot be pleaded against an Indictment for any Thing done out of Parliament Ibid. because all Indictments are contra Pacem Domini Regis Privilege of Parliament is granted in regard of the Service of the Commonwealth Ibid. and is not to be used to the Danger of the Commonwealth All Privilege of Parliament is in the Power of Parliament Ibid. and is a Restraint to the Proceedings of other inferior Courts but is no Restraint to the Proceedings of Parliament 16 Car. 1 Resolved Rush 2 vol. 2d Part. 1147. That the Lords voting the propounding and declaring Matter of Supply before it was moved in the House of Commons was a Breach of Privilege of the House Dec. 1641. Resolved 2 Nalson 729. That the setting of any Guards about this House without the Consent of the House is a Breach of the Privilege of this House and that therefore such Guards ought to be dismissed Resolved upon the Question Id. 743. Nemine Contradicente That the Privileges of Parliament were broken by his Majesty's taking Notice of the Bill for suppressing of Soldiers being in agitation in both Houses and not agreed on Resolved upon the Question Ibid. Nemine Contradicente That his Majesty in propounding a Limitation and provisional Clause to be added to the Bill before it was presented to him by the Consent of both Houses was a Breach of the Privilege of Parliament Resolved upon the Question Ibid. Nem. Con. That his Majesty expressing his Displeasure against some Persons for Matters moved in the Parliament during the Debate and Preparation of that Bill was a Breach of the Privilege of Parliament Whereas his Majesty 2 Nalson 823. in his Royal Person the 4th of Jan. 1641. did come to the House of Commons with a great Multitude of Men armed in a warlike Manner with Halberts Swords and Pistols who came up to the very Door of the House and placed themselves there and in other Places and Passages near to the House to the great Terror and Disturbance of the Members then there sitting and according to their Duty in a peaceable and orderly Manner treating of the great Affairs of both Kingdoms of England and Ireland and his Majesty having placed himself in the Speaker's Chair did demand the Persons of divers Members of the House to be delivered unto him It was thereupon declared by the House of Commons Ibid. That the same is a high Breach of the Rights and Privileges of Parliament and inconsistent with the Liberty and Freedom thereof and therefore the House doth conceive they could not with Safety of their own Presons or the Indemnities of the Rights and Privileges of Parliament sit there any longer without a full Vindication of so high a Breach of Privilege and a sufficient Guard wherein they might confide The Lords cannot proceed against a Commoner Sleden's Jud. p. 84. but upon a Complaint of the Commons But Note as to Freedom from Suits and Arrests Stat. 12 13. Wil. 111. that in the Parliament of 12 13 William the Third an Act passed entitled An Act for preventing any Inconveniencies that may happen by Privilege of Parliament Which enacts Sect. I. That any Person may prosecute any Peer of this Realm or Lord of Parliament or any of the Knights Citizens and Burgess of the House of Commons for the Time being or their or any of their menial or other Servants or any other Person entitled to the Privilege of Parliament in any of the Courts of Record at Westminster or high Court of Chancery or Court of Exchequer or the Dutchy Court of Lancaster and in the Court of Admiralty and in all Causes Matrimonal and Testamentary in the Court of Arches the Prerogative Courts of Canterbury and York and the Delegates and in all Courts of Appeal from and after the Dissolution or Prorogation of any Parliament until a new Parliament shall meet or the same be reassembled And from and after any Adjournment of both Houses for above fourteen Days until both Houses shall meet or reassemble And that the said Courts respectively shall and may after such Dissolution Prorogation or Adjournment proceed to give Judgment and make final Orders Decrees and Sentences and award Execution thereon any Privilege of Parliament to the contrary notwithstanding Sect. II. Provides against subjecting the Person of any Knight Citizen or Burgess or any other intitled to the Privilege of Parliament to be arrested during the Time of Privilege Nevertheless allowing the Liberty that any Person having Cause Action or Complaint against any Peer of the Realm or Lord of Parliament so that after any Dissolution Prorogation or Adjournment as aforesaid or and before any Session of Parliament or Meeting of both Houses as aforesaid shall and may have such Process out of the Courts of King's Bench Common Pleas and Exchequer against such Peer or Lord of Parliament as he might have had against him out of the Time of Privilege And if any Person having Cause of Action against any of the said Knights Citizens or Burgesses or any other intitled to Privilege after any such Dissolution Prorogation or Adjournment or before any such Sessions or Meeting of both Houses ut supra he shall and may prosecute such Knight Citizen or Burgess or other such privileged Person in the said Courts of King's Bench Common Pleas or Exchequer by original Bill and Summons Attachment and Distress infinite out of the same Courts who are respectively impower'd to issue the same against him or them until the Defendant shall enter a Common Appearance or file Common Bail to the Action according to the Course of each Court. And that any Person having Cause of Suit or Complaint may in the Time aforesaid exhibit any Bill of Complaint against any Peer of the Realm or Lord of Parliament or against any Knight Citizen or Burgess or other Person so intitled to Privilege in the Chancery Exchequer or Dutchy Court and proceed thereon by Letter or Subpoena as usual And upon leaving a Copy of the Bill with the Defendant or at his House or Lodging or last Place of Abode may proceed thereon and for Want of an Appearance or Answer or for Non-Performance of any Order or Decree or for Breach thereof may sequester the real or personal Estate of the Party as is used and practised where the Defendant is a Peer of the Realm but shall not arrest or imprison the Body of any of the said Knights Citizens or Burgesses or other privileged Person during the Continuance of Privilege of Parliament Sect. III. That where any Person by reason of Privilege of Parliament is stayed or prevented from prosecuting any Suit
the King might refuse the Return of him and for that Cause he was removable out of the House And therefore the Lord Chief Justice said That in the 35th of Henry the Sixth it was so adjudged in Parliament which answers the Precedents vouched by the Commons of that Time And also he said That in the first Year of Henry the Seventh it was adjudged in Parliament That Persons outlawed or attainted could not sit in Parliament without Restitution by Act of Parliament And he said That though the Books do not warrant his Saying yet the Parliament Roll which he had seen does warrant it which any Man might see 3. They resolved at the Instance of the King himself That the Party could not be discharged from the Outlawry without a Scire Facias sued against the Party Creditor Plantiff in Debt and Justice Windam for that Purpose recanting his former Opinion said That he upon perusing of his Books and by Reasons of the Law was of Opinion with his Companions 4. As for the Statute of the 31st of the Queen concerning Proclamation to be made in the County c. they all resolved as before Times it had been resolved That no Outlawry by that Statute was void until a Judgment declaring That there was no Proclamation issued forth to the County where the Party was Resiant at the Time of the awarding of the Exigent 5. As for the Statute of 7 Hen. 4. which enacts That the Indenture shall be only the Return of the Sheriff the Judges said That was true that such was the Statute and that that was his Return for so much but that Statute doth not restrain the Sheriff from returning any other Thing material which disables the Parties chosen 6. It was held That the Indorsement of the Writ comprehending the Matter of the Outlawry was material and not a Nugation 7. And lastly they resolved That by the Return of the Sheriff it apeared that Sir Francis Goodwyn was the same Person who was outlawed 31 Eliz. by the Name of Francis Goodwyn Esquire and 39 Eliz. by the Name of Francis Goodwyn Gentleman and that by the Words of the Return scilicet Idem Franciscus Goodwyn Miles Vtlagatus existit c. And they also agreed That no Person outlawed ought to have his Privilege of the Parliament-House and that all the Precedents vouched by the Commons were after the Parties were Members of the House and not before they were returned But notwithstanding these Resolutions scilicet the Resolution of the Judges the Commons House hold clearly That Sir Francis Goodwyn was well received into Parliament and the King commanded them to confer together and resolve if they could of themselves and if they could not resolve to confer with the Judges and then to resolve and when they were resolved then to deliver their Resolution to his Council not as Parliament-Men but as his Privy Council by whose Hands he would receive the Resolution and for that Purpose he left them behind him he himself being to ride to Royston a hunting And to pursue the Commandment of the King the Commons House clearly resolved That what they had done was well and duly done and they were of Opinion clearly against the Judges as to the Matter of the Outlawry and that Ratione of the Precedents And also that the Parliament only had to do with the Sheriff's Returns of Members of Parliament and that the Returns ought not to be made till the first Day of the Parliament and therefore They would not confer with the Judges But they appointed a Committee to consider of the Reasons to be delivered to the Council for the Satisfaction of the King which Committee by the Assent of all the House of Commons sent to the Lords this Resolution following videlicet As to what the King taxed the House for That they meddled with the Sheriff's Return of Members of Parliament being but one half of the Body the Lords being one and the principal Part of the Parliament's Body Note This Resolution was writen in Parchment and so delivered to the Council of the King not as Parliament-Men but representing the King's Person and a Copy thereof was kept in the House As to that they answered That all Writs for the Election of Members of Parliament were returned into the Parliament-House before 7 Hen. 4. at which Time it was enacted That all such Returns ought to be made in Chancery and that appeared by the Records from the Time of Edward the First until the said Year of the Seventh of Henry the Fourth And therefore the Parliament must of Necessity have only meddled with the Returns till the making of the said Statute of the Seventh of Henry the Fourth at which Time the Place of the Return was altered and enacted to be in Chancery but yet that did not take away the Jurisdiction of the Parliament to meddle with the Returns of the Members of Parliament but that remained as it was before And this was manifest as well by Reason as by Use For that Court is to meddle with Returns where the Appearance and Service of Members is to be made and used but in the Parliament only the Appearance and Service are to be made and used and therefore in the Parliament only are the Returns to be examined and censured Likewise ever since the making of the said Statute of the Seventh of Henry the Fourth the Clerk of the Crown attends the Parliament every Day till the End of it with all the Writs and Returns and at the End of the Parliament he brings them into the Petty-Bag The Precedents also do warrant this intermeddling with Returns for the Parliament as in the Twenty-ninth of the Queen a Writ issued forth to the Sheriff of who made a Return before the Day into Chancery and the Chancellor upon that Return containing such Matter as this Writ now contains sent a second Writ to the said Sheriff who thereupon made a new Election and that second Writ was also returned and both the Writs and Returns brought into Parliament and there censured by the Parliament That the first should stand and that the second Election was void and that the Chancellor hath no Power to award a second Writ nor to meddle with the Return of it and divers other Precedents were shewn by the Commons to the same Effect videlicet In the Nine and twentieth of Queen Elizabeth one And in the Three and fortieth of Queen Elizabeth another And in the Thirty fifth of the Queen two Whereof one was upon the Return of the Sheriff that the Party first elected was Lunatick and thereupon the Parliament examined it and upon Examination thereof they found the Return true and gave a Warrant for another Writ As to the Matter That they were but one half of the Body to that they said That though in the making of Laws they were but an half Body yet as to Censuring of Privileges Customs Orders and Returns of their House they were an entire
Liberty of the Subject and when obstructed or denyed to either made the Kingdom deformed and leprous I may with good Reason and Warranty conclude Id. 125. that our Ancestors the Commons of England the Knights Gentlemen Freeholders Citizens and Burgesses of a great and mighty Nation were very far from being in former Times such Vassals and Slaves or so abject poor and inconsiderable as the absurd and malicious Ignorance and Falsities of late Writers have been pleased to make and represent them especially the Author of the Grand Freeholders Inquest and Mr. James Howel c. as if they were only Beasts of Carriage and Burthen ordain'd to be tax'd and talliated and have their Lives Estates and Liberties given away and disposed of without their own Assents If the Commons do only Accuse by any way of Complaint whatsoever Selden's Judicature c. 14. and do not declare in Special against the Party accused then the Suit is the King's and the Party is to be Arraigned or otherwise proceeded against by Commandment Ex parte Domini Regis In the Lower House sit the Speaker Crompton 2.4 Inst 1. and the Knights Citizens Burgesses and Barons of the Cinque-Ports who represent the Body of the whole Commonalty of England All Persons St. 5 Rich. 2 c. 4. Rast 140. and Commonalties which shall be summon'd to Parliament shall come as they have been used and accustom'd of antient Time and he that shall not come having no reasonable Excuse shall be amerced and otherwise punish'd as of antient Time hath been used Vide ante p. 17. Algernon Sidney c. 3. Sect. 38 An Eminent and Noble Author has in his Discourses on Government asserted that the Power of calling and dissolving Parliaments is not simply in our Kings alone And in support of this Assertion gives us the following Reasons viz. First says he the King can have no such Power unless it be given him by Law for every Man is naturally Free and the same Power that makes him King gives him all that belongs to his being King and no more 'Tis not therefore an Inherent but only a Delegated Power and whoever Receives it is accountable to those who gave it for they who give Authority by Commission do always retain more than they Grant Secondly The Law for Annual Parliaments expresly Declares it not to be in the King's Power as to their Meeting nor consequently as to their Continuance for they meet to no Purpose if they may not continue to do the Work for which they meet and it were absur'd to give them a Power of Meeting if they might not continue till the End for which they met were attained Qui Dat Finem Dat Media ad Finem Necessaria the only Reason End why Parliaments do Meet is to provide for the publick Good and they ought to Meet and continue for that End they ought not therefore to be Dissolved till it be accomplished and 'twas for this Reason that the Opinion given by Tresilian that Kings might Dissolve Parliaments at their Pleasure Note was adjudg'd to be a principal part of his Treason See other Reasons there Assign'd and on the whole he concludes that Parliaments have in themselves a Power of Meeting Sitting and Acting for the Publick Good After which Ibid p. 432. he further Prosecutes the same Point and then proceeds to shew That as the Peoples Delegatees or Representatives in Parliament do not meet there by a Power derived from Kings but from those that chuse them so they who Delegate Powers do always retein to themselves more than they give and therefore the People do not give their Delegates an absolute Power of doing what they please but do always retein to themselves more than they confer on their Deputies who must therefore be accountable to their Principalls Vide plura ibid. CHAP. VII The Power of the House of Commons in particular Cases THE House of Commons is a House of Information and Presentment Rush Coll. 217. vol 1. but not a House of Definitive Judgment The House of Commons is a considerable Grand Jury Trials of the Regicides p. 53. 'tis a good Billa vera they return their Orders are Records and that appears also by 6. H. 8. c. 16. where the Words are viz. And the same Licence shall be entred on Record in the Book of the Clerk of the Parliament appointed or to be appointed for the Common's House c. Sir Audley Mervyn's Speech to the Duke of Ormond 13. Heb. 1662. containing their Sum of Affairs in Ireland p. 17. And more directly in their point upon the Trial of Harrison the Regicide Mr. Jessop was produc'd to attest several Orders of the Common's House Mr. Jessop being Clerk of the House Note the said Stat. 6. H. 8. c. 16. says Rast Stat. p. 429. 4. Inst 23. Hales of Parl. 213. 215. That no Member should depart from the Parliament nor absent themselves from the same without the Licence of the Speaker and Commons in Parliament Assembled to be entred upon Record in the Book of the Clerk of the Parliament And yet some Judges have been of Opinion Hob. Rep. 110.111 that the Journals of the House of Commons are no Records but only Remembrances Before the Year 1550. 3. E. 6. Bur. Hist Ref. vol. 2. p. 143. it seems that no Eldest Sons of Peers were Members of the House of Commons and Sir Francis Russel becoming by the Death of his Elder Brother Heir Apparent to the Lord Russel it was on the 21st of January carried upon a Debate that he should abide in the House as he was before But this was by a special Order so it is entered in the Original Journal of the House of Commons and is the first Journal that ever was taken in that House 1. Car. 1. 1625. Resolved Rush ib. that common Fame is a good Ground of Proceeding for this House either by Enquiry or Presenting the Complaint if the House find Cause to the King or Lords 26 Jan. 28 Hen. 6. Selden's Judicat p. 29. Vid. id 38 The Commons required the Duke of Suffolk might be committed to Ward for that the General Fame went of him c. The Lords on Consultation with the Justices thought the same to be no good Cause of Commitment unless some special Matters were objected against him It is certain Pettyt's Miscell Pref. c. p. 5. and not to be deny'd That in elder Time the People or Free-men had a great Share in the Publick Council or Government For Dion Cassius or Xiphiline out of him in the Life of Severus assures us Apud hos i. e. Britannos Populus magna ex Parte Principatum tenet It was not in the Power of all the Tenants in Capite in England Id. 47 48. tho' with the King's Consent to bind and oblige others or to make or alter a Law sine Assensu Communitatis Regni who had Votum consultivum decisivum an Act of Authority and Jurisdiction as well in assenting to Spiritual Laws as Temporal
as may appear for an Instance in their Declaration or Protestation to Edward the Third in Parliament which concludes thus For they will not be obliged by any Statute or Ordinance made without their Assent In a MS. M. S. Penes W. Bohun p. 5 6. Treatise written by Mr. Rymer entitled an Inquiry into the antient Method of passing Bills in Parliament I find it to have been the usual Practice Temp. Ed. 3ij c. See Annis Edw. 3. 14 15 16 20 21 22. 36. 33 c. For the Commons to have first their Petitions and Bills answered i. e. their Grievances Redress'd and then to Grant their Aids and Supplies But note These Matters often proceeded pari Passu And sometimes Aids were granted by the Commons on express Condition That the King Grant the Petitions Exhibited to him c. But in 47 E. 3. The Subsidy or Aid Ibid. p. 7. is commanded to be first Treated on or Debated which says my Author I remember not to have been in any other Parliament whatsoever save that of 7 R. 2. And Note 11 R. 2. The Commons Demand it as of Right not to Grant Subsidies till the End of the Parliament To give Subsidies upon Subsidies is not usual In the 18 H. 3. Rush vol. 1. p. 190. There was one Punished for pressing for more Subsidies when Subsidies had been Granted before in that Parliament And note See Cottons Records p. 17. 198. If any new Project was proposed in Parliament for raising Subsidies or Supplies the Commons usually reply'd thereto That they were not Instructed by their Principals in that Matter or that they durst not consent to such Tax c. without Conference with their Countries A Member of Parliament may charge any great Officer of State with any particular Offence Rush Col. 690. If any Lord of Parliament Spiritual or Temporal 4 Inst 24. have committed any Oppression Bribery Extortion or the like the House of Commons being the general Inquisitors of the Realm coming out of all Parts thereof may examine the same and if they find by the Vote of the House the Charge to be true then they transmit the same to the Lords with the Witnesses and the Proofs 1 Jac. 1. 1603. Petyt's Miscel Parl. 64. The Bishop of Bristol publishing a Book tending to make Division and Strife Wrong and Dishonour both to the lower House and the Lords themselves was complain'd of by the Commons to the Lords and he made his Recantation 1. That he had erred 2. That he was sorry for it 3. If it were to do again he would not do it 4. But protested it was done of Ignorance and not of Malice 7 Jac. 1. 1609. Vide Rvsh Hist Col. 4 Car. Dr. Cowel writ a Book perniciously asserting certain Heads to the Destruction of Parliaments and the Fundamental Laws and Government of the Kingdom and was complained of by the Commons to the Lords who resolved to Censure his Errors and Boldness Ibid. And afterwards the Book was burnt by Proclamation Vide Dr. Manwaring's Case Rush Col. Nalson Vide Petyt's Miscel Part 74. Vide Dr. Montague's Case in Rushworth Nalson Petyt's Miscell Part 82. Note The Case of Dr. Burnet Bishop of Salisbury who for writing and publishing a Book Entitled King William and Queen Mary Conquerors was Censured in Parliament and as I think on the Commons Address Removed from being Preceptor to the Duke of Gloucester c. Note also Bishop Fleetwood's Preface censured and burnt by Order of the House of Commons And see Nalson's Col. p. 9. and 43. ten Bishops at once sent to the Tower by the Lords c. 4 Junij 19 Jac. Petyt's Miscel Parl. 120. The Commons House of Parliament this Day adjudged Randolph Davenport Esq for his Offence in Mis-informing the House in a Cause wherein he was produced as a Witness to be committed Prisoner to the Tower for the space of one whole Month and then to be Discharged paying his Fees 19 Jac. 1. Id. 160. Ordered by the Commons House of Parliament That the Serjeant of Arms attending this House shall attach the Body of John Churchill one of the Deputy-Registers of the Chancery and him shall take into his Custody and bring him to this House on Monday Morning next at Eight of the Clock and the said Serjeant is in the mean time to keep him so as none be suffer'd to speak with him but in the hearing of the Serjeant Vide ad hoc Rush Collect. passim Vide Nalson's 2 Volumes Vide Selden's Judicature c. Vide Sir Robert Atkyns's Argument c. Vide Petyt's Preface to Mis Parliamentaria Thomas Long gave the Mayor of Westbury four Pounds to be elected Burgess 4 Inst 23. Vide Sir d'Ewes Jour 182. who thereupon was elected This Matter was examin'd and adjudged in the House of Commons secundum Legem Consuetudinem Parliamenti and the Mayor fined and imprisoned and Mr. Long removed i. e. expelled the House for this corrupt Dealing was to poison the very Fountain it self See several Orders and Resolutions of the House of Commons against Bribery and Corruption in electing Members c. in Bohun's Collection of Debates c. pa. 28. 55. 275. 281. 340. c. particularly the Journal of the Commons for 1701. viz. Mar. 6.7.13.17.18.20.30 April 29. c. Arthur Hall Ibid. Vid. Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour 212. Post 89 c. a Member of the House of Commons for publishing and discovering the Conferences of the House and writing a Book to the Dishonour of the House was upon due Examination secundum Legem Consuetudinem Parliamenti adjudged by the House of Commons to be committed to the Tower for six Months Post 87. fined at five hundred Marks and expelled the House 23 Apr. 1. Mariae Ibid. Call'd Marington by Scobel 113. Muncton struck William Johnson a Burgess of B. return'd into the Chancery of Record for which upon due Examination in the House of Commons it was resolved That secundum Legem Consuetudinem Parliamenti every Man must take Notice of all the Members of the House returned of Record at his Peril And the House adjudged Muncton to the Tower Injuries offer'd to the Members Scobel 113. and their Servants during the Session have been usually punished by the House upon Complaint 29 Febr. 1575 one Williams Ibid. Vid. Sir Simon d'Ewes Jour 251. Col. 2. for assaulting a Burgess of this House was upon Complaint sent for by the Serjeant and brought to the Bar and committed to the Serjeant's Ward 28 Nov. Ibid. 1601 complaint being made by Mr. Fleetwood a Member of the House that one Holland a Scrivener and one Brooks his Servant had evil entreated and beaten the Servant of the said Mr. Fleetwood in his Presence they were both sent for by the Serjeant and brought to the Bar and for the said Offence committed for five Days to the Serjeant 12 Febr. 18. Jac. 1 Mr. Lovel Ib. 114. a Member of the House informed That one Darryel threatned his Person that for