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A50697 Observations on the acts of Parliament, made by King James the First, King James the Second, King James the Third, King James the Fourth, King James the Fifth, Queen Mary, King James the Sixth, King Charles the First, King Charles the Second wherein 1. It is observ'd if they be in desuetude, abrogated, limited, or enlarged, 2. The decisions relating to these acts are mention'd, 3. Some new doubts not yet decided are hinted at, 4. Parallel citations from the civil, canon, feudal and municipal laws, and the laws of other nations are adduc'd for clearing these statutes / by Sir George Mackenzie ... Mackenzie, George, Sir, 1636-1691. 1686 (1686) Wing M184; ESTC R32044 446,867 482

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Members the advantage they had over others is taken away and which advantage was the reason inductive of this Act nor should the punishment be extended beyond the Cause which is also conform to the opinion of the Civilians vid. vin select Quest. jur cap. 1. But it may be doubted if he who takes such Assignations should not be lyable to resound the damnages which are occasion'd by taking such an Assignation since it is a principle that Damnage is still due where the injury is done to any man against a positive Law though that Law ordain not Damnage and Interest to be repay'd and in this case the taking such Assignations is declar'd unlawful and so an injury is done against a positive Law 2. Without this the party injur'd is not repair'd for though the publick Interest vel vindicta publica be repair'd by the Deprivation yet the interest of the person les'd which is chiefly to be considered is not 3. Deprivation is oft-times no punishment and seldom a Commensurable Punishment for many Members of the Colledge of Justice lose nothing by Deprivation and a Plea may be worth a great sum and their Imployment worth nothing whereas Damnage as it is a natural so it is a most Commensurable Punishment Because this Act Discharges only Members of the Colledge of Justice to buy Plea's Therefore it is still lawful for them to take Assignations to Plea's gratis as a Donation July 30. 1678. for as this falls not under the express prohibition of the Act so it is no● presumable that they will be as keen in pursuing such Processes as these for which they have pay'd out Money nor were it just to make the Members of the Colledge of Justice incapable of their Friends and Relations Liberality By this Act Advocats Servants do pretend they are Members of the Colledge of Justice because this Act says their Servants and other Members Though this Act and the Rubrick Discharges only the buying Debateable Lands Teinds or Possessions and speaks nothing of Moveables nor even Heretable Bonds mobilia being ordinarly accounted vilioris naturae yet the Lords do now ob paritatem rationis extend this Act to such as take Assignations to Moveable Debts or any other debateable Rights This Act uses to be so Interpreted as to be extended only to the Members of the respective Courts who take Assignation to Plead before the Court where they serve and thus if an Advocat should take an assignation to a Plea depending before an Inferiour Court it may be urg'd that this Act should not reach them because he has not influence before that Court but if he should go and Plead before that Court as an Advocat may before any Court then the Act would reach him also Item Though this Act does not speak of Procurators before Inferiour Courts yet the word Advocats seems to comprehend them BY this Act Caution is to be found in actions of Ejections for the violent profits and though cautio juratoria be ordinarly sustain'd where persons cannot find other Cautioners yet it is not sustain'd in this case July 17. 1630. Because this Act says that by the proponing of these Defences against Ejections delays are granted therefore the Defender either in Removings or Ejections is not oblig'd to find Caution where the Defence can be instantly verifi'd and although it has been doubted whether this Caution is to be found at the proponing of the Defence or at the first Term assign'd by the Act yet it is clear that the Caution should be found at the first Term assigned by the Act both because this Act says that the Caution shall be found at the first Dyet of ●itis contestation and because there must be some time given to find Caution Nota That in the Brieves of Dissasine which was the same thing of old that Ejection is now Caution was to be found as here by the Defender Quon Attach cap. 53. num 2. For clearing some mistake in the Printing of my Criminals pag. 294. my meaning was that there may be Perjury in cautione juratoria as for instance if a person should Depone that he could not find Caution for the violent Profits and yet it could be prov'd that such a person who was very responsal offer'd to be Caution this I think would infer Perjury BY this Act it is appointed that twenty dayes after the Parliament is proclaim'd and before it meet four of every Estate should meet to receive Articles to be presented to the Parliament but this is now in Desuetude for no State can now meet except the Burrows and yet sometimes the King writs down to call whom He pleases to name to meet and consult previously what Laws are fit to be made in the future Parliament By this Act also it seems that nothing can be presented in plain Parliament by any of the Members of Parliament but that every thing must be first presented in the Articles for eviting confusion and this Act was made use of to that purpose in the Parliament 1674. against a proposal made then for having a Commitee of grivances To which it was then answered that the Articles being but a Committee of Parliament they could not restrict their own Constituents and this Act was rather directive than restrictive THis Act is fully Explain'd crim pract tit Jurisdiction of the Lords num 7. THis Act is explain'd crim pract tit Paricide THis Act is formerly Explain'd 15 Act 4 Par. Ja. 5. where Liferenters are to find Caution By this Act also a power is granted to the Magistrats of Burghs to cause repair Burnt and Waste Lands but yet ordinarly the Magistrats of Burrows use to give in Petitions to the Council craving liberty to force the Heretors of such Burnt Lands to repair their Burnt Lands themselves or else to sell their part and when there are many small Heretors concern'd the Council grants Warrand to the Magistrats to regulat their Venditions though I know it hath been alleadg'd that the Council could not do this because it was an Inversion of Property and that this was only competent to the Parliament and yet the Council have still been in use to do so for the common good of the people nor is any man a loser since he may repair by himself and if he will not he gets his just price This was granted to the Magistrats of Edinburgh in anno 1678. publice enim interest ne civitatis aspectus deformetur ideo constitutum est l. 4. C. de jur reipub aream collapsam posse a fisco distrahi si proprietarius monitus eam reficere non curaverit vid. l. 46. ff de dam. insect I have seen a Decreet in anno 1636. at the Town of Edinburghs instance against several Heretors before the Lords of Session for ordaining the Heretors of these Houses upon which the Trone-Church now stands to denude themselves of their Right in favours of the Town ob utilitatem publicam and to
puniendi ratio si Dominum se pro Caesaris expeditione instruentem non suerit Comitatus feudum enim eo casu amittet dimidium fructuum illius anni ex feudo domino pendet non enim hic tantum contra dominum sed contra imperium Remp peccatur so that it seems in his time the Vassal who h●ld of another Superior then the King forfaulted his Feu for not going to the Host but the immediat Superior had Right to half a years Rent and the reason of this seems to have been because by all our old Laws the Vassal was obliged to attend his immediat Superior in going to the Kings Host and the Proclamation then commanded every man to come with his Vassals and therefore as the King had Right to the Forfaulture for not attending his Host so the immediat Superior had right to this half years Duty for his not attending him and sometimes by the Journal Books it appears that when Vassals were Fined and not Forfaulted the immediat Superior craved the half of the Fine THe punishment of such as ride with moe than their ordinary Houshold is Arbitrary and this Act must only be interpret against such as ride ordinarly with great Trains and which may look like an unpeaceable design nor is any man punished for riding at solemn Occasions with his Friends and Followers and I also think that this Act would only extend to such against whom there lies a presumption that they gather or keep men together upon some sinistrous design either against the Government or their Neighbours for if this were allowed great men might keep Troups together and for this same reason are Convocations discharg'd by other Acts and betwixt these Acts and this there is this difference that by these the Convocating for a time irregularly those in whom the Convocater pretends no interest is discharg'd but by this Act the conveening men upon pretext of a Retinue is discharged and though it may seem that every man may keep as great a Retinue as he pleases yet quilibet tantum in suo facere pot●st illud quod fieri potest sine aemulatione vicini but multo majus sine aemulatione Re●publicae THough by this Law it is only appointed that there be Officers and Ministers of the Law made through all the Realm indefinitly without telling by whom they are to be made yet by the 2. Act Par. 1. Ch. 2. The power of choosing Judges is declar'd to be one of His Majesties Prerogatives It is observable from this Act that none can be Judges who have not sufficiently of their own where-through they may be punished if they transgress which is very just for a Judge who Decerns unjustly by palpable unjustice litem suam facit and therefore it may be well argu'd that when any who is a Judge or has an heretable Office becomes insolvent he may be forc'd to find a Depute who is solvent or else he may be discharged to sit Obs. Though it may seem That if any Heretable Officer be incapable to exerce the King should name Deputs jure devoluto yet by this Act it is ordained That if the Heretable Officer be incapable he shall ordain others for whom he shall be answerable The Design of this Act is to empower the Sheriff to arrest Oppressors and Vagabonds By these words to sojourn Horse is meant to quarter Horse from the French word sejour By Husbands of the Land is still meant Husband-men in our Acts of Parliament By taxing the Kings Skaith is meant to cause modifie what is due to the King and by Assything the King is meant the causing the Malefactors pay what is modified Obs. That the Legislative Words in our Statutes are very various for in this and many other Statutes of this King the formula is the Parliament Statutes and the King forbids which words shew that the Legislative Power is in the King for to forbid is the chief and most vigorous part of a Statute In the 17 th Act it is said It is Statute and the King forbids In the 14 th It is Statute by the whole Parliament and the King forbids In the 13 th It is Statute by the whole Parliament and by the King forbidden In the 30 Act 2 Par. Jac. 1. It is Decreeted by the whole Parliament In the Act 37 It is Decreeted and Statute In the Act 47 Par. 3 d. It is ordained by the King and Parliament Act 50. It is ordained and forbidden Act 60 Par. 3. Jac. 1 Our Soveraign Lord through the whole Ordinance of the Parliament Statutes Act 125 Par 9 Jac 1 Through the consent of the whole Parliament it is ordain'd Act 62 Par 3 Jac 1. It is seen speedful Act 76 Par 5 Jac 1. It is Statute and Ordain'd and Act 78 and 79 It is Ordain'd Act 83 Par 6 Jac 1. Rex per modum statuti ordinavit Act 85 Rex mandavit In the old Statutes of King Robert and King Alexander c. It is said Dominus Rex vult or statuit Rex or desinivit Rex or prohibet Rex or decrevit deliberavit Rex without speaking one word of the Parliament or Estates Act 105 Par 7 Jac 1. The King with the consent of the Council Act 104. The King with the consent of the Parliament and Council Act 108. The King of deliverance of Council But the formula now is Our Soveraign Lord with advice and consent or Our Soveraign Lord and Estates of Parliament which last is not so proper and though in most of the Acts of the 14 th Parliament K. Ja. 3 d It be said That it is Statute and Ordained by the whole three Estates yet it may be easily seen that these Acts were but in effect Overtures propos'd by the three Estates to be Ratified in Parliament and so in effect are conceiv'd rather as Overtures than Acts As also where any thing is to be put in execution by the King there the Act runs in name of the Parliament and not of the King as in the 23 d Act Par. 1 Jac 1. It is said that the Parliament has Determined and Ordain'd that Our Lord the King gar●mend his Money and in the 6 Act Par 3 Jac 2. The three Estates has concluded that Our Soveraign Lord Ride throw all the Realm c. THere are many wayes whereby the Superior may crave Production of his Vassals Evid●nts for the King sometimes gets an Act of Parliament ordaining all the Vassals of such a Countrey to produce their Evidents as 262. Act. Parl. 15 Jac. 6. whereby all the Heritors in the Highlands are ordain'd to produce their Evidents with certification of losing their Rights The Superior may also crave exhibition of these Rights But the ordina● way is by an Impr●bation wherein certification is granted against the Papers that are not produced which is deriv'd to us also from the Feudalists who affirm that Vassallus imperari potest sub poena
passes in the Exchequer King JAMES the first Parl 3. IS in Desuetude THis Act was made to exclude all pretentions of the Emperour or Pope and all Laws made or Priviledges granted by them but was not design'd to exclude the Civil and Canon Laws which by many of our Statutes are call'd the Common Law and are followed in this Kingdom and to exclude the Danish Laws in the Isles Jac. 4 Par. 6 c. 79. THis Act against Transporting of Money is after many Innovations severly renew'd and the Merchants ordained to swear thereupon allowing only sixty Pounds to Passengers for their Charges by the 11 Act Par 1. Sess 3 d Ch 2 d. But many think it more reasonable to allow Exportation as in Holland since the hindering Exportation prejudges much all manner of commerce THe first part of the Act discharging Officers in the Countrey wherein any man is Indyted to be upon his Assize seems to be founded upon the suspition that arises from an Interest they may have in having the Pannel Convict since a part of his Escheat belongs to them and therefore I think this should not be extended to exclude any such Officers within the Shire as may expect no share such as Commissars c. The second part of the Act which discharges those who Indyte a man to be upon his Assyze extends also against Informers and these who gave advice for raising the Libel but from this part of the Act it clearly appears that it is not generally true that when a penalty is adjected to an Act the deed is not null though the penalty be due for it is here forbidden that any Officiar or other who Indyts a man shall be on his Assyze under the penalty of ten pounds and yet certainly this Act would sett the informer from being on the Assyze and though to this it may be answered that this is unlawful by the Law of Nations prior to all Law and so this Law is only declaratory yet that cannot be alleadged as to discharging Officers within the Shire to be upon assyzes it may be also alleadg'd that this Penalty is only irrogated in case any should pass on such Assyzes without being known to be such But I do really believe that we in our Parliaments considered not the subtile distinction betwixt Acts which proceed paenam irrogando and these which proceed actum irritando vide Obs on the the 216 Act Par 14 Jac 6. It may be likewise concluded from this Act that the Kings Advocat is oblig'd to condescend who is his informer for else the Informer may be upon the Pannels Assyze and yet because that would discourage men from informing interest Reipublicae ne crimina maneant impunita Therefore the Council has several times found that the Advocat is not oblig'd to condescend upon his Informer further than that if it be referred to the Advocats oath of Calumny that some of the Assyzers or Witnesses were his Informers as to which he will be oblig'd to give his Oath of Calumny THe difference betwixt Forethought-fellony and Chaudmella is only observed as to Murder though this Act seems to extend it to all Transgressions and even as to murder the Murderer is to be imprison'd whether it be committed upon Forethought-fellony or Chaudmella for Chaudmella or homicidium in rixa commissum is Capital by our present Law THis Act appointing all Barons to appear in Parliament may seem abrogated by the 102 Act Par 7 Jac 1. Whereby the Barons of each Shire are allowed to choose two wise Men to Re-present them which is the Custom at this day But it is observable that though by that Act they may for their conveniency choose two yet they are by no expresse Law discharg'd to come in greater numbers Nota It seems by that Act that a Prelat or Earl may send their Procurator to Vote for them if they have themselves a lawful excuse but yet de praxi that is not allow'd but this Act is more fully Explain'd in the Observations on the 7 Act Par 22 Jac 6. OBserve that this Act proves the Books of Regiam Majestatem and Quoniam Attachiamenta to be our Law for they are called the Books of Law ARe Explain'd in the 96 th Act Par 6 Jac 4. THis Act appointing all Ferriers to have Bridges in places where Horses are to be Ferried is renewed by the 20 Act Par 4 Jac 3. Wherein all passages on each side of the Water are ordained to have Bridges whereupon Brunt-Island and Kinghorn rais'd a Process against Kirkaldy to have their Passage-Boats discharg'd as not being able to have such Bridges and for the good of the Kingdom since if all places were allow'd to have Boats Kinghorn and Brunt-Island which in the old Evidents is called Wester Kinghorn could not have sufficient Boats against Storms as now but this being thought by the Council matter of Property was remitted to the Session it being dangerous upon pretext of publict good to discharge Property for else many Innovations might be pretended BEfore this Act the Kings Council were the Supream Judges in civil Causes but by this Act some Commissioners of Parliament are to be chosen by turns who with the Chancellor are to be the Session and are to be pay'd out of the Unlaws so that the Session was then a Committee of Parliament their power is further settled and declared by the Acts 61 62 63 Parl 14 Jam 2 d. By which it is clear that they were to Sit but fourty days at a time and that the Session was then ambulatory and their sitting was Proclaim'd in each Shire where they were to Sit three Moneths before and they were by that 63 Act to bear their own Expenses after which the Sessions were by K James 4 Par. 6 Act 58. turn'd in a dayly Council which was to be chosen by the King and was to Sit at Edinburgh continually and wherever the King Resided they had the same power that the Session had and their Sitting was to be notified to the People by open Proclamation at the Kings pleasure In place of all which The Colledge of Justice and The Lords as they now are were Instituted by King James 5 th Parl. 5 th Act 36. Nota There is power granted by this Act to determine Causes finally which may import an excluding of Appeals but thereafter Appeals are discharged expresly Jac. 2 Par. 13 Act 62. THe Sheriff are not now oblig'd to publish the Acts of Parliament but they are to be published at the Mercat Cross of Edinburgh only and bind not the Leidges till fourty dayes after Publication K. James 6 Par. 7 Act 128. King JAMES the first Parliament 4. ARe Explained in the 96 th Act 6 Par Jac 4. BY this Act wilful Fire-raising is Treason 2. Fire-raising by Mis-governance is punishable in Servants 3. Reckless Fire-raising is punishable either in the Owner or the Mealer or Tennent
Parl. 2. THE only Act in this Parliament Warrands the Kings Lieutenent to force such as ly under violent presumptions of Spilling and Troubling the Countrey to find Caution that the Countrey and the Kings Subjects shall be unharm'd which shews clearly that the King may upon Presumptions of which He is sole Judge oblige any of His Subjects to give Bond to live Peaceably without which the Government could not Subsist This Act was occasion'd by the great Outrages committed by Archibald Earl of Dowglas in the South during the Kings Minority King IAMES the Second Parliament 3. VID Stat. Dav. 2 d cap. 42. Concerning the Liberties of the Haly-Kirk TWo Justice Courts were to be held Yearly by the Justices at Edinburgh and Peebles c. 79. Quon Attach and two Justice-airs are to be held yearly the one upon the North-side of Forth and the other upon the South-side of Forth c. 30. Stat. Rob. 3 d. And by The Scottis Sea is mean'd here The Water of Forth Secundo That part of this Act which appoints Lords of Regality to hold Justice Courts twice a year is now in Desuetude BY this Act after word is sent to the Council that there is any Rebellion Burning c. The King is to call the Sheriff and see it Re-drest and all the Barons oblige them to assist the King with their Persons and Goods as oft as it shall be seen needful by Advice of His Council From which it is observable That the King needs not call a Parliament to assist Him in a War but that the King and His Council may call for Men and Maintainance in case of War and this was very reasonable for Rebellion may be Invincible before a Parliament be assembled and Parliaments do often give little help in case of Combination if the occasions of it be popular as was too clearly discover'd in our late Rebellion The reason why in the former Act and this the Advice of the King's Council is still exprest as necessary was because the King was then Minor and His Person had been several times surpriz'd In all this Parliament there is no mention made of the Authority of the Regent as uses to be when the King is Minor but only the hail three Estates have Ordain'd which I think proceeded from the Hatred the Nobility had at that time to Alexander Livingstoun who was then Regent I find that in the Ratification of the Acts of Parliament called the black Acts Folio 149. The Duke of Chattelrault then Governour is plac'd before the Queen-Mother then Regent King IAMES the Second Parliament 4. OBserve that Excommunication takes away personam standi in judicio So that Excommunicate persons cannot pursue nor defend for the Act sayes That they shall not be heared nor answered in the Law of Judgement and though the Word answered would import only that they cannot pursue yet the Word Heared Imports both Pursuing and Defending and the Words Heared nor Answered had been superfluous if they had been to express only the Pursuing This Act and the 4 th Act 3 d Par. Ja. 2 d. Were made upon the Earl of Crawfords Cruelty to Kennedy Bishop of Aberdene King IAMES the Second Parliament 5. THis is the first time I find Art and Part mentioned in our Law Nota The time forbidden by Law for killing of Salmond is from the Feast of the Assumption viz. the 13 of August to St. Andrews which is the 30 of Nov. Act 34 Par. 2 Ja. 1. And though the third Fault was death by the 10 Act Par. 1 Ja. 1. Yet by this Act the third Fault is only punishable by loss of Office vid. Act 224 Par. 14 Ja. 6. THe form of causing restore Goods Spuilȝied now is That the Sheriff or any Judge discern and upon this Decreet Letters of Horning are rais'd and the Defenders Denunced We find by this Act that old Rule of the Canon Law Spoliatus ante omnia restituendus here Confirm'd and the meaning of it is That though the Spuilzier have a sufficient and valid Right to what he has Spuilȝied yet being pursu'd his Right will not defend him but he must first restore the Person Spuilȝied to his Possession for the Law will not allow any man to be his own Judge and to Intromet at his own hand Obs. secundo That of old all Decreets were under the Kings Wax that is to say His Seal and till of late and the last Institution of the Session all Decreets even of the Session were under the Quarter-Seal OBserve That all Scotland is divided in Royalty and Regality The Royalty is that which was Judged by the Kings immediat Judges as Sheriffs and they are here and else-where call'd the Lords of the Royal. THese who were Excommunicated were denunced Rebels and Letters of Caption raised against them and this Act as to this point is founded upon cap. 6 th Stat. Rob. 3 d. and is morefully explained Act 53. Parl. 3. Ja. 6. Where these Letters are appointed to be raised by the Authority of the Council after 40. days are expired from the date of the Excommunication Nota. This is the first Act that speaks of Appryzing of Lands and it was done then at the Mercat Cross in the same way that Moveables were then and are yet poyndable Nota. THe punishment of such as break the Peace is left Arbitrary by this Act and by this Act Justices of the Peace are ordained Irenarchae by the Civil Law of which there are whole Titles in that Law VId. Sup. Act 3 d. Parl. 1. Ja. 1. As also by this Act it is clear that Forfaultors for Rebellion were only to be led before the Parliament for it is here said that they shall be punished by the advice of the Three Estates but now open Rebels rysing in Armes may be Tryed and Forfaulted by the Justices by the Act. 11 th Parl. 2 d. Ch. 2 d. THis was Statuted before as to Murder C. 17. l. 3 d. R. M. by a Trespassour justified in this Act is mean't a Person condemned by Law or Justice and it is oft so mean't in all old Laws THere are now no Wardens in the Borders but these affaires are manadged by Commissions from the King cal'd Commissioners for the Borders ALL Officers offending wilfully are to lose their Offices for a Year by this Act but this Act is not the only punishment for if a Judge execut a man wilfully he will die for it and a Judge being partial or refusing to do Justice is to be punished Rigorously Ja. 1. Parl. 2 d. Act 45. and if he be Faulty or Negligent he loses his Office if it be Temporal for a Year or is to be Suspended from it if it be Heretable Ja. 2 d. Parl. 14. Act. 76. vid. Ja. 3 d. Par. 5. Act 27. Ja. 3 d. Parl. 14. Act. 105. And the punishment of Judges offending in their Offices is now Arbitrary suitable to the nature of
many of the old Acts yet to be seen in the Records of Parliament are left out Observ. That the Acts of Parliament are call'd the Kings Laws and not the Acts of Parliament for the King has only the Legislative power and the Estates of Parliament only consent The Books of Regiam Majestatem are likewise numbred amongst our Laws but what is mean'd by the words Acts and Statutes added in this Act to the Kings Laws and Reg. Maj. I do not understand except by these be mean'd the Burrow-Laws and the Statutes of the Gildry and these other Books that are bound in with Reg. Maj. K. JAMES IV. Parliament I. BY the twelfth Articl Iter. Just. The Burrows had liberty to repledge their own Burgesses from being upon assizes which priviledge is here regulated but now the priviledge it self is in Desuetude for all Burgesses are oblig'd to pass upon assizes except the Chirurgeons of Edinburgh who have a special priviledge because of their necessary attendence upon sick persons BY this Statute all Ships must come first to free Burghs and no Strangers can fraught Ships but now by the 5 Act 3 Sess. 2 Par. Ch. 2. all ●urghs of Barony and Regality may Traffick in the product of Scotland as freely as Royal Burghs Vid. That Act and the observ thereon That part of the Act discharging strangers to buy Fish that is not salted is now in Desuetude It was argued from this Act in the case of the Town of Linlithgow against Borrowstounness that the Burrows Royal had the only priviledge of having all Goods Liver'd and Loadned at their Ports and which is likewise clear by Act 88 Par. 6 Ja. 4. and by Act 152 Par. 12 Ja. 6. 2 o. Without this priviledge the Burrows were not able to pay the sixth part of the burdens laid upon them in contemplation of their Trade since a Clandestine Trade without this might be carry'd on by the Burghs of Barony and Regality who since they may retail publickly might have the same priviledge as they if they had likewise power to import publickly 3 o. This was most convenient for securing the Kings Customs because where ever there is Livering allow'd the King must have Waiters and upon which consideration the Magistrats of Burghs Royal are by the Acts of Parliament appointed to assist the Kings Customers and whereas it was pretended that the priviledge of Commerce was inter regalia and consequently the King might grant a free Port to any Burgh he pleas'd 2 o. The priviledge of a free Port was different from that of Livering and Loadning 3 o. The Acts of Parliament cited did only discharge Strangers to Load and Liver which is yet more clear by the Act 120 Par. 7 Ja. 6. To which it was reply'd that the King and Parliament having formerly granted the sole power of Loadning and Livering to free Burrows it was no diminution of his power to assert that he could not give a new grant of that to any whereof he was formerly divested To the 2 d it was reply'd that the sole priviledge of a free Port granted by a King to a Burgh of Regality or Barony can extend no further than that thereby they may have the priviledge of bringing into their Port the Goods proper only to be sold by them To the 3 d it was reply'd that this Act discharges Strangers and others to Liver at any place except at the Ports of Burghs Royal and though in that 120 Act Par. 7 Ja. 6. This Act is repeated as relating only to strangers yet in the next line Strangers and others are in that 120 again discharged Likeas by the Acts of Parliament the sole priviledge of losing and loosing is declar'd to belong only to Burghs Royal which in Sea-faring Terms signifies loadning and un-loadning BY the Act 85 Par. 11 Ja. 3. The Rents of Churches or Benefices whereof the King is Patron are declar'd to belong to him sede vacante by the priviledge of his Crown and this was so formerly declar'd by the 7 cap. Stat. 2 Rob. 1. And Skeen there observes that cum alicujus beneficii Ecclesiastici patronatus pertinet ad Regem terra si quae sunt ei annexa pertinent quodammodo ad Regem and therefore by this Act it is appointed that it being declar'd by the best and worthiest Clerks of the Realm that if any Church-man received and purchast such a Benefice at Rome they should be punish'd and these who supplyed them This Declaration from Clerks was requir'd because the Secular would not meddle with Church-men in these days till Church-men had some way declar'd them guilty King JAMES the fourth Parliament 2. THat part of the Act appointing the intromission with the Kirk Rents to be a point of Dittay that is to say to be a Crime is now in Desuetude for they have no other priviledge here more than Laicks but to intromet with their Rents either by Arms or open Force is the Crime of oppression with us and was punish'd by the Romans lege Julià de vi per deportationem in liberos homines ultimum supplicium in servos Observ. That by this Act Parsons and Vicars are founded in jure as to Teinds for it is declar'd a Crime to intromet without a right from them I Understand not how it is said here that the King could not discharge any part of the Taxation granted to him though it was granted for a particular or publick use for it is ordinary and lawful to Kings with us to discharge privat parties their particular proportions except the contrary be expresly provided and the offer be so qualifi'd by the Parliament but here the King was minor as appears by the subsequent Act or rather this Taxation being granted originally for maintaining an Ambassador for the Kings Marriage as is clear by the Act and so ad particularem effectum it could not be diverted from that particular use lest else the Embassie should have fail'd And from this we may observe that what is granted for a general and publick use cannot be otherwise apply'd or taken away IT is observable from this Act that the King was Minor and that is the reason why he could not discharge something here exprest which falls not under his annex'd Property THe Parliament here recommends only to the King that his Majesty shall cause his Wardens observe the days appointed for Truce and they meddle not with it because what concerns Peace and War belongs to the King and not to the Parliament THe restrictions here put upon the King proceeded from his minority Nota Councellours are made accusable to the King and Parliament of their Council till the next Parliament for the words are and shall be responsal and accusable to the King for their Counsel but this was in the Kings minority and therefore there were greater reason that they should have been lyable for their Counsel than when a King is major for then he may judge of
of their own Sheriff-doms which is here restricted only to Justice-airs and Sheriff-courts by which I think is mean'd taking of Dittay but now both these Acts are in Desuetude for every place answers to Justice-airs according to the Division of their own Shires IT is most observable from this Act that it was made in a Scotish Parliament or Council holden within England which Refutes that Opinion that our Kings cannot hold Parliaments nor Councils without their own Territories upon the mistaken principle that Judex extra territorium jus non dicit It is likewise observable that this Act is made only by the King with the advice of his Lords And it is probable that this Act like a testamentum militare in procinctu must have some allowance given to it against the Common Rules and that it imported only a Discharge of the Wards and Marriages of such as died in this Host and was only valid because the King and Lords remitted only therein a Casuality due to themselves so that this Act was but a general Discharge by the King and his Subjects then present who were Superiours but why then is it inserted amongst the Acts of Parliament Or how could it have oblig'd absents And the Rubrick calls it an Act made by our Soveraign Lord King James the 4. and yet this is not properly an Act of Parliament for this Parliament is held in Anno 1509. whereas this Act is made in Anno 1513. and it may seem only an Act of Council made by the advice of the Lords that is to say the Lords of Council which Judicature then Govern'd the Kings Property by its Acts and it has been thereafter inserted amongst the Acts of Parliament for the greater security of those who had hazarded their lives at this time and therefore by the 3. Act p. 2. I. 5. This Favour is extended to the Vassals holding of Subjects K. JAMES V. Parliament I. THE Master by this Act is bound to deliver up his Servant who is attach'd or challeng'd as a Thief or Robber vid. Stat. Alex. 2. c. 21. Stat. Will. c. 15. Stat. Da. 2. c. 1. and Act 6. Par. 3. Ja. 5. And in the Registers of the Council there are many Bonds given by Masters in those terms vid. obs on the said 6 Act. King JAMES the fifth Parliament 2. THese two Acts discharging the Wards of those who were killed in the Kings Host or prorogating for 5 years the Tacks of Tennents were very reasonable but being temporary are not now in observance for the Wards of these who died in the Kings Host at Worcester or else where fell without any priviledge That the 3 d Act is Temporary only appears from these words That are now killed in pursuing or defending in time of Weir against our auld enemies of England for that enmity ceas'd by the Union Observ. From both these Acts that the receiving a deadly wound is equiparated to the being killed King IAMES the fifth Parliament 3. BY this Act the Porteous Roll was to be deliver'd to the Crowner but now it is deliver'd to the Sheriff when Justice-Airs are to be held though these who are Crowners do still protest against this Innovation When the Crowner got the Porteous Roll containing the names of those who were to be cited to the Justice-Airs he was obliged to cite them at their dwelling houses and Paroch Kirks by this Act for by the word Arrestment in this Act and many of our old Laws is meant Citation but if they can be apprehended personally this manner of citation is unnecessary though that be not here exprest By the present Practique if they cannot be apprehended personally they are to be cited at their dwelling houses and at the Mercat Cross of the Head Burgh of the Shire where they live 2. By this Act if the persons to be cited can be found the Crowner is to take Surety of them for their appearance which the Sheriff yet does but if they be not Streinȝieable that is to say if they cannot be apprehended then the Crowner was to arrest their Goods like to the annotatio bonorum in the Civil Law 3. If they have no Goods to be arrested they were to be put in the Kings Castles that is to say the Kings Prisons 4. If the King has no Castles within that Shire they were to be deliver'd to the Sheriffs who are bound to keep them securely By this Act the Crowner is to be answerable for the Caution he takes for the Act says That they shall take sicker Surety sik as they will stand for to the Kings Grace and it is pretended that the Clerk of the Justiciary is not bound for the Surety he accepts though the Crowner and Sheriff be because the Crowner is oblig'd to know who are Solvendo in the Shire which the Clerk of the Criminal Court cannot know through all Scotland but I think that both are equally oblig'd viz. to do exact diligence to know the solvency of these they take and since the punishment of taking insufficient Caution is not here exprest it seems to be Arbitrary and in effect to take Surety that is notorly insufficient seems the same guilt with letting a Malefactor escape THe Master here is only oblig'd to present such Tennents as dwell within the Shire with him but by the Act 2. Par. 1. Ja. 5. If the Complainer would attach the Tennent the Master be required to deliver him up whether he liv'd in the Shire with the Tennent or not he was to be punish'd as Art and Part in case he refused to deliver him up and by this Act he is only to pay the Unlaw But this last Act is not well observ'd for now no man is lyable for his Tennent except Highland Heretors and Chiefs of Clanns who are to find Caution to the Council for that effect vid. Acts 92 93 94 c. Par. 11. Ja. 6. But by this Act it is clear that the King may make Masters still lyable for their Tennents who live upon their Ground and that in any Court though this Act appoints them to be presented to Justice Airs since eadem est ratio and this Act was adduc'd for justifying the Proclamation that appointed Masters to be lyable for their Tennents vid. Act 2. Par. 1. Ja. 5. And the Acts there cited where Masters are lyable for Servants vid. tit 55. lib. 2. Feud where Vassals are oblig'd to present their servants to their Superiors if they have offended them But since by this Act Masters are only to be lyable for the Tennents unlaw if he present them not It may be doubted what this unlaw is since in Justice Airs if the Tennent was absent he was ordinarly denunced Fugitive for the Justice Court does not unlaw an absent Defender and therefore by this unlaw may be mean't what the Tennent would be unlaw'd in if he had been present vid. Stat. Will. Regis cap. 7 8. BY this Act these who are Surety
and four Witnesses are requisit where the Party cannot Write By the 4 Act Par. 9. Ja. 6. Writs that are to be Registrated need not be Sealed but there is no express Law dispensing with Sealing as to other Papers which need no Registration so that the not Sealing is in these warranted only by uncontroverted Custom FIre-rising and ravishing of Women are to be put under surety as Mutilation and Slaughter by this Act From which some concluded that Mutilation was punishable as these Crimes were but the Act appoint not the punishment to be the same but the way of finding Caution to be the same and by the old Law Stat. Rob. 2 Cap. 11. Mutilation is to be proceeded against as Murder but yet licet redimere vitam and it is not declar'd there punishable by Death and in all the Journal Books no man was ever punish'd with Death for Mutilation the punishment being ordinarly confiscation of Moveables and Assythment to the party nor see I any warrand for Confiscation of Moveables since the Crime is not punishable by death nor any express Statute to warrand Confiscation I find that Mutilation is infer'd upon the cutting of a Thumb or Finger though digitus was alleadg'd not to be membrum but pars membri June 27. 1677. and it was formerly found July 15. 1642. Ch●in contra Mowat but though this may infer Mutilation Yet I conceive it would not infer Dis-membration Vid. observ on 28 Act 3 Par. Ja. 4. BY this Act all the Lieges may sell Fleshes on Sunday Munday and Thursday but thereafter all Mercats being discharg'd on Holy-days there is an Act of Town Council ordaining these Landward Fleshers to bring in their Fleshes only on Tuesday Thursday and Saturnday and not to sell in pieces but in Quarters which is confirm'd by a Decreet of the Session July 7. 1595. and ratifi'd in the Parliament 1681. FRom this Act it is clear that the Acts of Parliament cannot be Re-printed without the Kings special approbation even though the Lord Register consent for else why needed the Register get a Warrand by this Act and the Custom alwise is that the Register gets a special Warrand for that effect and the Council the 17 of November 1681. found that the Kings Printer having Re-printed the Acts of Parliament without such a special Warrand the Copies were Confiscable and should be burnt and the reason of this is because of the great danger that may arise from the wrong Printing of Acts of Parliament the difference of a word altering the sense to a contrariety but yet it seems the Register should have liberty to Re-print them since he is answerable for all the Errors and therefore we see that the Register used still to subjoin his Subscription to the Acts he Re-prints as is to be seen at the end of the 15 Par. Ja. 6. where Sir John Skeen's ordinary Subscription is set down at the end of the Acts which he Reprinted and Sir John Hay's at the end of the first Parliament Ch. 1. Q. MARY Parliament III. ALL the Acts of this Parliament except the first are Temporary for encouraging of such as were to hazard their Lives in that Army and are renewed fully by three equipollent Acts viz. Acts 41 42 43 Par. 2 Ja. 6. BY this Act Church-men are to have Right to the Fruits on the Ground the year they die and to the Annat thereafter and from this it is to be observ'd that the Annat was a Casualty that befel by and attour the Fruits that were on the Ground which belonged to the Church-men jure proprio and formerly the Church-men had right to all the Fruits of the year if he surviv'd the first of January for in beneficiis annus inceptus habetur pro completo but if he survived Michaelmas he had right to that whole year jure proprio and the half of the subsequent year jure annatae But now by the 13 Act 3 Sess. Par. 2 Ch. 2. If the Incumbents survive Whitsunday they have right to the preceeding half year by their own right and to the next half year by their Ann but if they survive Michaelmas they have right to the whole year viz. from January to January by their own Right and to the half of the other year as Ann and though it may seem incongruous that a Minister living till the last day before Michaelmas gets no more than he who lives till the day after Whitsunday Yet this is regulated in this case as it is in all Liferents and this is allow'd them for the support of their poor Families for that Act declares that the same shall belong to their Executors without necessity of a Confirmation and though this Act declares that the Ann is to belong to their Executors yet in effect that is not well exprest for it belongs to their nearest of Kin and Wife though they be not nominated nor Confirmed Executors If there be Bairns the Ann is equally divided betwixt them and the Wife but if there be no Bairns it is divided equally betwixt the Wife and nearest of Kin she having right in that case to a half and not to the whole because the Ann was of old introduc'd in favours of the nearest of Kin as appears by this Act for Church-men had no Wives under Popery when this Ann was introduced June 24. 1663. Elizabeth Scremgeor con the Executors of her Husband Though this Ann falls to Bishops and Ministers who die Incumbents yet it belongs not to such as renunce voluntarly their Benefices as was found in Bishop Lightoun's case and neither Manse nor Gleib fall under the Ann for the last Incumbents Executors have no right to the Gleib except the same was Sown before his Decease July 6. 1665. Colvil contra the Lord Balmerino The reason why Michaelmas and not Martinmas is made the Term in this case is because Ministers Stipends are payable out of the Teinds or by somewhat which is come in place of them and therefore Michaelmas should have been the ordinary Term and generally in payment of all Stipends the Terms of Whitsunday because the Sowing is then ended and Michaelmas because the Corns are then separated from the Ground are the legal Terms for payment of Stipends The foresaid Act allows an Ann to Bishops though the Act of the General Assembly and the Kings Letter in anno by which Anns were first establish'd as they now are did not mention them and under the Bishops Ann falls only the Quots of such Testaments as were actually Confirm'd in his Lifetime or during his Ann July 6. 1676. Captain Wisheart contra the Bishop of Edinburgh By the Canon Law the Annat was a quota payable to the Pope and Colledge of Cardinals by every Intrant out of his Benefice Vid. Tush concl 329. But a Casualty like ours is payable in the Protestant Churches of Germany Vide Carpzov jus consistoriale tit de decimis It may be doubted whether that Maxim annus inceptus
habetur pro completo does yet hold good in other Beneficiary cases for though it be altered by Act of Parliament quoad Annats yet where there is no Act of Parliament why should not the old Rule hold But I rather think that the Act extends to all Benefic'd Persons albeit the Rubrick mentions only Bishops and Ministers and so there are two Errors in the Rubrick of the said 13 Act one in that it mentions only Bishops and Ministers another in that it mentions only their Executors and not their Relict or nearest of Kin and the Rubrick should have born Act Regulating the Ann of Benefic'd Persons which shews also how weak the argument is a rubro ad nigrum The ancient Bishops allow'd sometimes the uplifting of the first years Rents of Benefices for assisting Christian Princes against Infidels but the Popes thereafter reserv'd them to the use of the Roman See upon pretext to supply the general necessities of the Church Pope John 22. extravag suscepti de elect was in this follow'd by Boniface the 9. who stated them in an ordinary Revenue till the Council of Basil oppos'd the same and still many Learn'd Doctors of the Romish Church it self condemn'd them as Simoniacal whereupon the French Kings did by Concordats force the Pope to pass from the same in France They were call'd Annats Anns or Annals because they were fructus primi anni and it seems with us they were not at the Popes disposal absolutely else this Act of Parliament could not have dispos'd upon them But it seems our Kings have in Parliament assum'd to themselves what others settled by Concordats with the Popes as may appear in all the Regalia throughout the whole old Acts of Parliament The whole Doctrine of Annats is excellently Treated by Antonius Nassa de materia annatarum But I conceive our Ann which is a half Years Stipend comes from the Saxon reform'd Church wherein ultra Salarium quod defunctus Aecclesiae minister promeruit ex singulari beneficio viduae ac liberis dimidius gratiae annus assignetur Carpzov Jurisp. Consistor lib. 1. tit 12. It was introduc'd there in anno 1580. a little before King James introduc'd it here by the Letter to the General-Assembly in Montrose BY this Act such as did dy in that Army were to have their Ward Non-entress Relief and Marriage freely from the Queen It is observable that though usually such Acts are made when our Armies are in procinctu going to Battel and though the King nor his Exchequer seek no advantage by Casualties in such Cases yet regularly it is no Defence in Law against a Ward or Marriage that he by whose Death they were sought were killed in the Kings Service THough where there is a Governour the style of Acts of Parliament made by him is The Governour with the advice of the three Estates Yet this Act says by the consent of the Governour and the consent of the Noblemen both Spiritual and Temporal By which words also it is clear that the Lords of the Clergy are to be accounted as Noblemen and so are to find Caution under the same pains as Noblemen and to pay publick Burdens as Noblemen c. Queen MARY Parliament 4. BY this Act these who are Excommunicated and continues so for a Year for any cause lose their Moveables Creditors being first paid and by the 3 Act 20 Par. Ja. 6. They are to lose their Liferent-Escheats if they be Excommunicated for Religion Vid. supra observ on 9 Act 4 Par. Ja. 5. VId. My Criminal Tract tit Treason THis Act inflicting the pain of Death and Confiscation of Moveables upon such as shoot at Deer Wild-fowl or Wild-beasts is deservedly in Desuetude Vid. infra observ on Act 51 Par. 6 Q. Mary THis Act and the Instructions subsequent to it were but Temporary Remedies for repairing Lands burnt at that time by the English Invasion But though only Parliaments can regularly invert Property yet the Privy Council do force Heretors to sell burnt Tenements if they will not repair them themselves to the end other Heretors and the publick advantage of the Burgh may not be prejudg'd and this the Council did in anno 1675. when all the Houses near the Parliament Closs were burnt and this is conform to a power granted by the 6 Act 3 Sess. Par. 1 Ch. 2. by which it is appointed that the Provost and Baillies may Charge all persons who have the property of such ruinous Lands to repair them within Year and Day and if they refuse the Magistrats may value and sell Vid. observations on the 226 Act Par. 14. Ja. 6. Queen MARY Parl. 5. THis Act as to the prices of Wine is in Desuetude but not in so far as concerns the mixing of Wines which by the opinion of the Civilians is a species of Falshood and is punishable as such Carpz de falso THis Act against abominable Oaths is enlarg'd Act 103. Par. 7. Ja. 6. Vide my Crim. observ Tit. Blasphemy § 6. THis Act against perturbers of the Kirk is enlarg'd Act 27. Par. 11. Ja. 6. For that Act reaches all tumults in Kirk-yards and the punishment in that Act extends to confiscation of all the offenders Moveables It is observable from this Act that Children are only to be scourged for such Crimes minority lessening the punishment and all within 14 years are accounted Children VId. Crim. obs Tit. Bigamie VId. Crim. obs Tit. Adultery VId. Crim. Tit. Falshood NOtars are still according to this Act examined and admitted by the Lords but are not presented by the Sheriffs for now they are presented by the Clerk to the Notars who gives in a Bill for them to the Lords By this Act the Instruments of such as exerce the Office of Notar not being lawfully admitted are null but yet if the pretended Notar was habite and repute a Notar his Instruments will be sustained Such as usurp the Office of Notars are punishable by this Act as Falsaries or Forgers yet I never observ'd that for this Crime death was inflicted upon them Nota It is observable from this and many other Acts that the Acts are call'd the Kings Laws and not Laws made by the Parliament and the Act related to made by King James the 5. but not condescended upon here is the 81 Act Par. 6. Ja. 5. IT is observable from this Act that the Secret Council used by their own Authority to make Sumptuary Laws both as to Meat and Cloathing and by the Act of Council here related to the contemners of the said Act of Council are to be punished in their persons and goods at the Lord Governours will and yet one of the accusations against the Earl of Middleton was that the Lord Lorn being found guilty of Treason the time of the Execution was referr'd to him as being then the King's Commissioner which it became no Subject to accept PRinting is Inter Regalia and so the
2d of France exeeming the Scots Nation from Customs in Normandy and containing on the back thereof the consent of the Cour du Parlement at Rouen as also an approbation of the Cour des aides dated 1554. Item Charter by the said King exeeming the Scots Nation from paying any Custome through the whole Towns in France and Normandy containing an approbation of the Cour du Parlement at Rouen as also approbation of the Chambre des comptes of Rouen also approbation of the Cour des aides in Rouen all in Anno 1554. Item Extract forth of the Register of Cour des aides for the Scots Merchants transporting wares from Normandy to find Caution that the saids Goods shall be sold in Scotland dated the said year Item Charter by the said King Henry discharging the Act foresaid of finding Caution but to give their Oath if they be required dated 1554. Item Copy of a Confirmation by King Henry the 4. of the Scots priviledges granted by his Predecessors dated 1594. Item Supplication James Colvil to the Burrows of Scotland craving recompence for obtaining the said Charter Item Copy of a warrand by King Henry the 4. to his Cours des Parlements and other Judges for restoring to Scots Merchants whatever has been taken from them and granting them free Trade through his whole Kingdom dated 1594. Item Confirmation by the said King Henry the 4. exeeming the Scots Nation from paying Customs in Normandy containing approbation of the Cour du Parlement of Rouen and Registrated in the Chambre des comptes with consent of the Kings Advocat and also Registrat in the Cour des aides with consent of the Kings Advocat there as also Registrat in Rouen in Anno 1599. Item Charter by the said King direct to the Cour des aides in Normandy discharging the famine Act of finding Caution that the Goods transported from Normandy shall be sold in Scotland Item Extract forth of the Cours des aides of Rouen for Registration of the former Letters Item Extract of the Register of the Cour de Chambre des Comptes of Rouen for Registration of the saids Letters Item Extract of the Register of the Chambre des Comptes of Normandy for Registration of the former Letters Item Extract forth of the Domain Books in Rouen consenting to the Registration of the saids Letters in their Books as also extract of the Books of Diep consenting to the Registration thereof in their Books Item Two warrands of the Thesaurers of the Finances in Normandy for the Registrating of the foresaids Letters all the saids Writs are dated in anno 1599. Item Extract of the Domain in Rouen for Customing the Scots mens Goods there in respect the Scots priviledges were not confirmed by King Lewis 13. dated 1611. Item Charter by Lewis 13. confirming the Scots priviledges and exemption of Customs in Normandy and Registrat in four several Courts in France dated in July 1613. Item Extract of the approbation of the said Charter at Rouen the famine year Item Extract of the said Chambre des Comptes the famine year Item Charter be the said King of the saids priviledges direct to the Chambre des Comptes in Rouen dated in August 1613. Item Extract of the Cour des aides of Rouen of the former Letters Item Extract of the Domain of Rouen approving the saids Letters Item Warrand of the Thesaurer of Finances approving the Registration of the saids Letters Item Warrand of the Burrow of New-haven consenting to the Registration of the foresaids Letters in anno 1613. Item Extract in form of Arrest of the great Council of France declaring that the Scots Merchants shall pay but for every 100 weight of Wool 25 Sols of Custome and for every piece of Scots Hydes 2 Sols 6 Deniers and that notwithstanding of the new Taxt of Customs raised in the Dutchie of Normandy upon such Merchandice and this to evite all Process that might fall thereupon dated 1635. Item Warrand by the said King Lewis to the Chambre des aides and M r. Desportes in Normandy to proceed to the approbation of the said Arrest of the great Council which is Registrat in the Books des aides of Normandy in the foresaid year Item Extract of the Cour des aides approving the Registration of the saids Letters Item Extract of Domain of Rouen approving the saids Letters Item Extract of the Intimation made to the Customers of New-haven of the foresaids Letters and approbation thereof in the Cour des aides Item Extract of the Burrow of Diep consenting to the Registration of the saids Letters in the great Council all dated in anno 1635. Conform to these priviledges the Parliament of Paris did in anno 1586. discern the Scottish Nation to have right to all the Priviledges and to be capable of Employments and free from all Customs whereupon the learned Mr. Servin that famous Advocat has written a learned Book maintaining the saids Priviledges to which he has annexed the said Decree and Sentence Likeas the saids Priviledges are acknowledged by le Bret in his Book concerning the Prerogatives of the Kings of France cap. Naturalization and many other French Lawyers and by Favin in his above-cited Theatre By vertue of which Rights and Priviledges the Scots have been alwayes esteem'd as Naturaliz'd in France and have enjoy'd all the Priviledges due to the Natives until of late that there being 50 Sols per Tun imposed upon forraign Bottoms some of the Scots in Rouen were charg'd for payment thereof whereupon M cmath Blackburn and Pringle having been pursu'd in the Cour des aides they were not only in July 1649. absolv'd from paying any part of the said Taxation but the Collectors were ordain'd to restore unto them what they had exacted upon that head As also there being a Scots Vessel consign'd to Mr. Pringle in anno 1663. and he being charg'd for the said 50 Sols per Tun he was freed from the said Taxation by the Parliament of Rouen after full debate upon 16 June 1663. On our part likewise the French enjoy all the Priviledges of Natives and possess Lands and Heretages and are as capable of Succession as the Natives are nor pay they any Taxes being declared free conform to the said Treaties by several Acts of Exchequer in Scotland though the English have impos'd a Crown per Tun to compense that 50 Sols From all which it appears most just and reasonable that the Scots should have all the Priviledges of the Natives of France because 1. The same have been granted to them by solemn Charters and Concessions which though it had been free to the French King to have at first granted yet being granted he was not thereafter by the principles of Justice free to have recalled the same 2. Though meer gratuitous priviledges might be recalled as they cannot yet renumeratory priviledges granted for Services done as these Charters can never be recall'd without an open violation of Justice and it is undeniable that Scotland
thereto and de facto the Justices only or such as have Commissions from the Council use to judge this Crime Vide. crim observ Tit. Witch-craft NOtour Adultery is by this Act declar'd punishable by Death and by the 105 Act 7 Par. Ja. 6. That is only declar'd to be notour Adultery Where 1 o. There are Bairns one or more procreated betwixt the Adulterers 2 o. When they keep company or bed together notoriously known 3 o. When they are suspected of Adultery and thereby gives Slander to the Kirk whereupon being admonish'd to satisfie the Kirk they contemptuously refuse and for their refusal they are Excommunicate if either of which three degrees be prov'd before the Justices the Committers are punishable by death From which Act it is to be observed 1 o. That by the first Act premonition to abstain was still to be made in all cases yet in neither of the two first cases here related it is declar'd necessary but since it is not lawful to kill him who was premonished and thereafter conversed except they conversed in suspect places Gribald de Homicid num 11. It seems that in neither of these Statutes Conversation should be Criminal even after prohibition except it be in suspect places 2 o. The Justices are only declared to be Judges to the notoriety of Adultery and therefore it may be controverted if Lords of Regalitie be Judges competent to the Cognition of it and this seems to be restricted to the Justices because it is an arbitrary Inquiry in a capital case 3. This Act does not exclude capital punishments in other cases of Adultery but only ordains that these three degrees shall be punish'd by Death and since there are other cases more grievous to the party injur'd and more scandalous to the Common-wealth It may be argued that the punishment of Death should likewise be extended to them as for instance to commit frequent Adulteries THis Act declaring that the raising of Bonds of Men of War and the rising in that manner is punishable by Death is formerly explain'd Act 2 Par. 1. Ja. 1 Vid. crim observ pag. 44 45. and this Act is ratified by the 12 Act 10 Par. Ja. 6. BY this Act the building of Kirk-Yard-Dikes is refer'd to the Lords of Secret Council who are to take such course therein as they shall think fit but by the 232 Act 15 Par. Ja. 6. The Parochioners are ordain'd to build them to the hight of two Ells. And the Lords of Session are ordain'd to grant Letters of Horning for that effect which they use now to do THis is fully Explain'd at the 7 Act 9 Par. Ja. 6. and the first part of it was enacted formerly by Act of Secret Council December 21 1561. and that begins It is Statute and ordained by the Queen which seems strange seing to Statute is only proper to Parliaments but Acts of Council do oft-times bear Statute and ordain Vid. Costal de Imperator Quest. 73. num 25. This Act mentions three kinds of Bishops the Bishop Elect the Bishop Postulat and the Bishop Consecrat a Bishop Elect is he who is Elected by the Chapter upon a congé d'és●ire from the King but is not yet Consecrat A Bishop Postulat is he who was only call'd but not Elected and cannot be Elected as a Minor a Bastard c. Vid. cap. innotuit § habile de elect and it is observable from this Act that both these us'd to Dispone Kirk-lands or set the same in Tacks else they needed not to have been Discharg'd by this Act But though we have now Bishops Elect yet we have no Bishops Postulat and these Elects exercent solum ea quae sunt jurisdictionis sed non ea quae sunt ordinis BY this Act Notars are to be admitted only by the Lords of Council that is to say the Lords of Session as de facto they now are and by the Act of Sederunt 1595. The Lords ordain'd that yearly in November one of their Number should be Named by them to receive Notars who shall only receive such as are past twenty five can write an Evident in Latin or English and be Prentice five years to a Notar though now they are admitted before twenty five and without having been Prentice at all By this Act such as exerce the Office without being admitted by the Lords or after they are Discha●g'd by them may be punish'd arbitrarly and even to Death But it has been found that Evidents subscribed by Notars once admitted though thereafter discharg'd are valid they having still been habite and repute to be Notars THough this Act appoints that all Notars shall be admitted by the King yet now they need no Letters from the King but do depend upon the Clerk of Register and his Depute the Clerk to the Notars The Clerks of Session are by their admission as such Notars though they be not admitted in manner mention'd in this Act and Instruments under their hands in judicial Acts makes as much Faith as the Instrument of any Notar. THe Act here dispensed with is the 46 Act Par. 6 Q. Mary and it is observable by this Act that when former Laws have not been universally observed no advantage is taken upon them and this is one of these Cases in quibus communis error sacit jus THe observation in the former Act holds also in this and the Act here dispensed 〈◊〉 is the 38 Act Par. 6 Queen Mary BY this Act it is declar'd that five or six of the principal Burrows shall be call'd to the concluding Peace and War and to the laying on Taxations It may be doubted whether by the Council to which they are to be call'd be mean'd here the Parliament or Privy Council and though ordinarly the Parliament be call'd the Kings Council and that it may seem they only should impose Taxations yet it m●y be urg'd that by Council is here mean'd the Privy Council because all the Burrows must be cited to Parliaments and the King and his Council us'd before to lay on such general Taxations and de facto His Majesty did so in many cases without either Parliament or General Convention of Estates as in laying on the Taxation for defraying the expence of the Baptism of King James the 6. December 6. 1562. which Taxation was laid on by eight Earls five Bishops and four Burrows not mentioning Barons because it seems the Earls were accounted Barons the Taxation was 12000. pounds whereof 6000. pounds by the Spiritual Estate four thousand pounds by the Barons and Free-holders and two thousand pounds by the Burrows and another Taxation for defraying King James the sixth's expence in his Journey to Denmark and many other such Taxations and this was then necessary because Taxations behov'd to be impos'd His Majesties Revenue being then very mean and to have call'd a Parliament or Convention would have put the people to more expence than these necessary Taxations were worth
Act relates though it be not expresly cited THis Act appointing Licences to be null except they be subscrived by the Comptroller is so far innovated that they must now be subscrived by the Thesaurer and Thesaurer-Depute who are come in place of the Comptroller BY this Act Sheriffs Stewards Magistrats of Burghs and others are ordain'd to apprehend notorious Thieves and if they refuse they may be pursued Criminally as partakers of their guilt or Civilly for the payment of their Debt and generally all these are lyable if they refuse to apprehend any Rebel for Civil Debts But it may be doubted 1. If any Judge be oblig'd to apprehend a man at the desire of any person who cannot instruct the person whom he takes to be a Rebel by producing Letters of Caption as he must do in Civil cas●s and what makes a Thief a notorious Thief to this effect 2. If meer negligence in not apprehending these notorious Thieves be sufficient to found a Criminal pursuit against the refuser as partaker nor have I seen this sustain'd but if any person shall contribute actively to a Thiefs escape he is punishable as Art and Part but with a lesser punishment vid. Clar. Quaest. 9. num 7. Bart· ad l. furti ff de furto ait spem datam ad evadendum dici auxilium ad committendum Nota By this Act all who are present and able to apprehend are oblig'd to assist in taking Thieves or if they refuse they are to be repute partakers with them and though they may be punish'd with some small Mulct yet the certification here set down is in Desuetude as to them vid. tit Duels Crim. Observ. num 8. Idem est facere non prohibere cum possis and as the Law presumes every man guilty who wil not concur to punish what all men hate so much and that they would concur if they favour'd not the guilt so this assistance is so profitable for the Common-wealth that such as deny it are Criminal but that which is considerable in this Act is that if any Clann'd man rob any peaceable Subject and if the Sheriff or Steward c. refuse to assist him not only is the Sheriff c. lyable but further it is declared lawful to them who have their goods stollen and rest to apprehend and intromet with the Goods of the Offender or any other of the said Clann and retain them till compt and reckoning and though it would seem that this taking or retaining by privat authority is not allowable till the Sheriff be required to give satisfaction and refuse yet in the case Moor contra Mefadrick 29 Novemb 1678. It was found that these were separate Clauses and that a person pursued for a Spuilȝie might propone relevantly that the Pursuer being a notorious Robber or holden and repute so had rob'd him of as much and so he might justly have seiz'd upon the like quantity of the Pursuers Goods though he had not first required the Sheriff to repair him nor was this Act found to be innovat by the 100 Act Par. 11. Ja. 6. which appoints a new method for Goods taken away by Clann'd Men. HEre is a Revocation of the King's Property in general but I find in the Registers of Council that upon the 22 of March 1684. The King revocks all Rights made by him of the Abbacie of Dumfermling which Revocation is made with the consent of the Privy Council though ordinarly Revocations are made by the consent of the Parliament BY this Act the nearest Agnat that is to say the nearest of the Fathers side should be Curator to Fools Idiots and Furious Persons Observ. 1. That this Act is extended to Deaf and Dumb Persons to whom likewise the nearest Agnat is to be Tutor and though their Tutors and Curators are to be served by this Act yet if the nearest Agnat omit or is uncapable to serve there is place for a Dative nor doth this Act exclude the Father from leaving Tutors in his Testament to such Idiots and Furious Persons as are within the years of Tutory as he may do to other Children and Craig observes that if the Furious Person or Idiot have Lands the Superior will be preferr'd to the nearest Agnat but in this I differ from Craig for the Agnat will be preferr'd to the Tutory of these as he will be to the Tutory of Minors and Superiors have by this Act dispens'd with their Feudal interest if they had any Observ. 2. This Act relates to the Common Law by which the Curators are called Curatores Legitimi but by that Law as by ours if there be no Agnats extant the Judge gives a Dative who is preferr'd to all other nearest of Kin Vid. Tit. ff de curat Furios And the Agnats by that Law as by ours are preferr'd according to the same degree as they would succeed which is most just since the Law does prefer them to the custody of the Estate because of their hope of Succession and therefore it may be doubted where there are three Brothers whereof one is furious if his Estate be conquest whether the elder Brother will be preferr'd to be his Tutor because Conquest ascends but I incline to think that the Heir of Line is still to be Tutor of Law Observ. 3. That this Law appointing the nearest Agnat to be Tutor holds only where there is not a Legal Administrator and therefore if a Wife who is an Heretrix become Furious the Husband and not the nearest Agnat will be her Tutor and though Papinian thought the Husband should not be Tutor l. 14. ff de Curat Furios Yet the customs of other Nations agree with ours Perez num 10. h. t. vid. Act 67. Par. 8. Jam. 3. Observ. 4. Though this Act equiparats the Tutors of Fools Idiots and Furious persons to other Tutors of Law allow'd to Minors yet there seems this difference betwixt them that Tutors of Law to Minors must serve within year and day from the time they are in capacity to serve but the nearest Agnat may serve himself Tutor of Law to an Idiot or Furious Person at any time and when he is so serv'd he will be preferr'd to a Tutor Dative though the Lords will authorize that Tutor Dative to exerce till a Tutor of Law be served the Exchequer being in use in the interim to grant Datives as the Lords of Session are to grant Curators ad lites 21 January 1663. Stuart contra Spreul and though in that case the Pupil was not then declared Idiot or Furious by an Inquest and so there could not be a Tutor of Law yet it seems that albeit there had been a previous Declarator and so the Tutor of Law had been negligent the Decision had been the same and the reason is because this Act prefers the Agnats and yet it decides not quid juris if they enter not and what if the next Agnat require the nearest Agnat to enter and he refuse
had not been secur'd by this Act. THough this Act Discharges all continuation of Justice-Courts and Ordains the Justices to proceed notwithstanding of such precepts yet both King and Council use to Command the Justices to continue their Diets though this Act was objected in the Process for William Halyburton's Murder June 1676. But it is necessary that in such Cases the King should be inform'd by the Justices what is to be said on both sides before they continue such Diets in Process at the instance of privat parties for the King and the party having different Interests and it being declar'd by Act of Parliament that the party may pursue without the King It seems very reasonable that the parties Process should not be stopt upon surreptitious Warrands without acquainting the King I find in the Council Register July 1582 That because His Majesty had been troubled by the importunity of such as desir'd not to be Try'd before the Justice-airs but at particular Diets whereby they eschewed ordinarly all punishment that therefore His Majesty does in Council Statute and Ordain this is oftimes the Stile in Acts of Council as well as in Acts of Parliament That the Justices shall proceed without respect to such Warrands and it seems that that Act of Council has given occasion to this Act of Parliament and generally many Acts of Parliament have been at first Acts of Council which shews likewise what power the King has in His Council of this Nation THis Act appointing that Sheriffs should yearly give in the Names of their Deputs and Clerks to the Lords of Session and find Caution in the Books of Council is in Desuetude as to both the parts for they neither find Caution nor give in the Names of their Deputs But de jure I think Letters of Horning may be direct upon this Act for both effects it being most reasonable that the Lords of Session should know whether the Deputs be able and this Caution would keep them in awe and secure the people if they do injustice The Caution requir'd by this Act is Burgesses Indwellers in Edinburgh Caution Burgeoise as the French call the best Caution BY this Act the form of holding Justice-airs is set down but it is to be found more fully in the Iter justiciarii and upon the word Justice-air de verb. signif and so needs not be repeated but there are some things fit to be observ'd because innovated Observ. 1. That Commissions of Justiciary are to be under the Testimonial of the Great-Seal by this Act but now they are always under the Great-Seal when granted by the King but seldom or never under the Quarter-Seal which is call'd the Testimonial of the Great-Seat and when they are granted by the Council they are only Sign'd by a Quorum but under no Seal Observ. 2. That albeit the Steuartries or Bailliries be here appointed to come to the head Burrows of the Shire where Dittay is to be taken up yet it has been found that the Council may ordain them to come to other places for the publick conveniency when the Diets are so short that the Justice Clerk cannot stay at every Shire and thus the Constabulary of Hadingtoun was ordain'd to give up Dittay at Edinburgh Obser● 3. That albeit by the old Form Pannels were to be Cited to Justice-airs upon fourty dayes Iter. Just. num 6. Yet now they use to Cite upon fifteen or more dayes and then as now they are not Cited peremptorly to one day as in ordinary Justice-Courts but to any one of the days in which the Court is to sit in that place to which they are cited and all the Pannels are called every day at that place and if they compear at any one of the dayes they are not declar'd Fugitives At the first day of Justice-airs all who are call'd must find Caution to appear at all the Diets of the Justice-airs which some complain of Albeit by the form of our old Bri●ve and the constant Practique only Millers Brewers Smiths and Officers of Courts were cited to give up Dittay upon Oath because it was presum'd that the best intelligence is to be had from such publick persons yet the Cou●cil did lately ordain that Noblemen and Gentlemen should likewise be oblig'd to give up Dittay because the Crime being Treason and art and part thereof It was presum'd that they should understand the same better than mean people and for detecting of so great a Crime persons of all qualities should concur and the former Custom was not exclusive of calling persons of quality Likeas by the 94. Act Par. 13 Ja. 3. The King is to call the Lords and Head-men of the parts of His Realm and to take Dittay of them id est by them of notour Trespassers BY this Act Hoghers or Slayers of Horse destroyers of Plough-Graith Growing Corns c. are punish'd as Thieves to the Death Vid. crim pract Tit. Theft Observ. 1. That this Act proves Theft to be Capital by our Law though we have no express Law for making Theft Capital generally Observ. 2. That it may well be doubted whether cutting of Corn c. in Landed-men is Treason since it would seem to be so for by this Act it is declar'd punishable as Theft and Theft in Landed-men is by the 50 Act of this Parliament declar'd to be Treason but yet I conceive that these Statutory Thefts are not punishable as Treason since that were but fictio fictionis duae fictiones non cadunt in idem subjectum Likeas the punishment is dedetermin'd here to be the punishment of simple Theft viz. Death whereas if the Law had design'd Forfalture it would have nam'd Forfalture here as in the former Act. It has been doubted upon this Act whether the cutting of Corns Sowen by a Strang●● who had no right was a Crime in the Heretor who may pretend that satum cedit solo and it is thought that if the Heretor suffer'd a Stranger to possess for any considerable time he could not have cut them down summarly no more than he could have removed that Stranger summarly from his Possession though unjust THese Acts are Explain'd crim pract Tit. Deforcement Vid. Act 150 Par. 12 Ja. 6. and Statut. Will. cap. 4. v. 5. IT appears by this Act that Letters of Lawburrows were of old granted by several Clerks and by this all Caution for Law-burrows is ordain'd to be found to the Justice-Clerk which was indeed most reasonable because bodily harm is there dreaded and the preventing of that should belong to the Justice-Court but now the Council Session and Criminal Court have the power of causing parties find Caution for Lawburrows but the Act in so far as it discharges Lawburrows to be granted against Complices in the general is yet in observance and very justly for it was not fit to leave it arbitrary to the parties to charge any they pleased THough this Act appoints all Courts to be Fenc'd
these Laws by the same reason that in England the Paroch is lyable for the Robberies committed therein betwixt Sun and Sun and thus these who have power of Jurisdiction from the Emperour are lyable vias publicas a latronibus purgare Gail observ 64. lib. 2. vid. etiam l. 3. l. congruit ult ff de officio Praesidis It has been doubted whether the Council could in other cases not warranted by express Acts of Parliament oblige the Subjects to give Bond to live peaceably conform to Law and particulary that their Tennents should not keep Conventicles but should go to Church and pay 50 pound Sterling for every Conventicle kept upon their Ground or should present their Delinquents and it was alleadg'd that the Council cannot because regularly one man is not lyable for another mans Crime nor can this inversion of Property and Natural Liberty be introduced by a lesse power than a Parliament nor had Acts of Parliament in this case been necessary if the King and Council could have done the same by their own authority but yet since the King has by express Act of Parliament the same power here that any Prince or Potentat has in any other Kingdoms and that Government belongs to him as Property does to us nor can the peace be secured otherwayes than by allowing him to take all courses for securing the peace and preventing disorders that therefore this joyned with the practice of the Council is a sufficient warrand for exacting such Bonds the practice of our King and Council being the best interpreter of the prerogative especially where the things for which Band is to be taken are not contrary to express Law and it is implyed in the nature of alledgiance that Land-lords should entertain none but such as will live regularly and if they transgressed the Master could not in common Law thereafter recept them without being lyable as we see in Spuilȝies or if the King pleased he might denounce the transgressors Rebels and so might put the Master in mala fide and though there be no such particular Laws warranding the taking of such Bonds yet it will appear by many instances in this Book that Laws are extended de casu in casum and thus this power seems inherent in the Crown likeas the matter of Property is sufficiently secured by the alternative foresaid of either presenting or paying the damnage which alternative seems to be founded upon the same principle of justice with actiones noxales mentioned in the Civil Law Domino damnato permittitur aut litis aestimationem sufferre aut ipsum servum noxae dedere vid. Tit. 8. lib. 4. Institut I find many instances in the Registers of Council wherein the Subjects are charg'd to secure the peace under the pain of Treason as in the case of the Lord Yester BOnd 's given by Cautioners for broken men do oblige the Heirs and Successors of the Cautioners though they be not mentioned in the Band. Observ. 1. In Law he who obligeth himself to pay a Sum obligeth his Heirs for as in Law qui sibi providet haeredibus providet sic qui se obligat haeredes obligat and therefore a man having bound himself and his Heirs Male it was found that the Creditor was not thereby excluded from pursuing the Heirs Female or any other Heirs but that he was only bound to discuss first the Heirs who were specially named in the Obligation 18 February 1663. Blair contra Anderson but yet Obligations for performing a deed such as to present a Thief are of their own nature personal and therefore this Act was necessary THe taking of Surety from Chief of Clanns doth not loose the Obligation taken from Land-lords e contra and the reason why this Act seemed necessary was because this seemed to be an Innovation and it seemed not just that both the Chiefs and Land-lords should be lyable since they could not both have absolute command over the person to be presented but yet this Act was most suitable to Law since novatio non praesumitur nisi ubi hoc expresse actum est l. ult Cod. de Nov. And the Tennents in the High-lands are influenced both by Chiefs and Land-lords but to make this Law more just the Council gives action of a relief against the Lands-lord if the Lands-lord harbour or to the Lands-lord against the Chief if the Chief recept him BY this Act if Goods be taken away by any Clann'd man and recept in the Country of their Chief for the space of 12 hours to his knowledge the Chief shall be lyable in solidum for all the Goods taken away though there were but very few of his men present as was found in a case pursued by Francis Irwing against Glenurchie before the Council all such Chiefs being lyable in solidum and not pro ratâ only for the wrongs committed by their Clanns BY this Act no Magistrat may keep a Thief or Malefactor in Arms with him albeit he pretend he is his Prisoner but he must de●ain him in a closs house both because squalor carceris is a part of the punishment due to Malefactors and because if this were allow'd Magistrats might by collusion suffer Malefactors to enjoy their liberty IS explained Crim. pr. tit Theft THis Act ordaining Masters to present their Tennents upon the Kings closs Valentines or Orders in little Papers like Valentines is observ'd in the whole Registers of Council THese two Acts discharging the Borderers of Scotland to marry with the Borderers of England or to labour their Lands are abrogated by the Union BY this Act the Land-lord doing diligence by obtaining Decreet of removing using Horning and doing all other things that was in his power after the fact comes to his knowledge is no further lyable Nota By this Act the Land-lord must be put in mala fide by intimation of his Tennents Crime 2. Dubitatur whether this priviledge should not likewise extend to Chiefs of Clanns since they have less interest in the Delinquents then the Land-lords BY the 100 Act of this Parliament such as committed Slaughter Mutilation or other hurt upon Thieves are not lyable But by this Act an Indemnity is likewise granted to such as raise fire against them that being there forgot THis Act is explained in the Observations upon the 29 Act of this same Parliament BY this Act the Burrows pay the sixth part of the Impositions of Scotland which is yet in observance and because of this burden they have the only priviledge of Trading and therefore they justly pretended that their priviledge of Trading could not be communicable to the Burghs of Barony and Regality who bore no part in this burden Nota That though by this Act the Taxation of the Burrows is not to be altered that is only mean't of the 6 part which is to be born by the Burrows in general for notwithstanding of this Act the Convention of Burrows do
alter the Taxation of any particular Burgh according as the number of Burghs increaseth or according as any particular Burgh grows unable and they divide this sixth part amongst themselves according to the total of 100 pound Scots which is the imaginary Standard or Assis and each Burgh pay accordingly some being valu'd at 6 ss some at 12 ss c. And if any Burgh resign its priviledges they must also resign in favours of the Burghs Royal their common Good after which Resignation and not otherwayes their proportion is divided amongst the rest for it were unjust that they should retain their common Good which was to pay the proportion of publick burden and yet be free from the burden it self BY this Act a Burgh selling any part of their freedom without consent of his Highness and his three Estates loses their whole freedome Observ. 1. That the reason given by this Act is because they as Vassals cannot sell without consent of the King their Superiour and so this seems to be a kind of recognition and it would have appeared reasonable that therefore the King's consent might have seem'd sufficient because he is only Superior but the reason why by this Act the Parliaments consent is declared necessary seems to be because Burghs-Royal bears a part of the Taxation of the Kingdom and so alienating any part of their freedom they seem to lessen the subject-matter out of which the Taxation is payed Obseev 2. It may be doubted whether a posterior Confirmation or Ratification by the Parliament will be a sufficient consent Obsrrv. 3. That Magistrats and Council cannot alienat the priviledges of a Burgh and therefore Alienations made by them would not infer this forfaulture or recognition and therefore all the Inhabitants behoved to be cited by Touck of Drum to such Alienations as they were per sonitum Campanae in the Civil Law tit Cod. de venditione Bon. Civit. BY this Act the Parliament having referred to the King to determine who should represent the Barons which shews what great deference our Predecessors had to their King His Majesty determines that none but such free Barons as are Free-holders holding of the King and residing within the Shire shall represent the Shire but by an Act of Parliamant 1669. It was declared that such as are free Barons might elect or be elected though they were not actual Residenters and that notwithstanding of this Act which is thereby abrogated as to that point and most reasonably for their interest in the Shire ceases not by their not residence and conform to this Act the Convention decided in all Elections June 1678. Nota All Elections are to be subscrived by six Barons at least and though in controverted Elections these who have six will be preferr'd to these who have five and if neither of the Competitions have six a new Election will be order'd because both are unlawful yet if all the Barons were cited and fewer than five were only present a Commission by these five may seem sufficient because the absence of Barons should not prejudge the Shire yet in the Convention 1678. many inclin'd to think that a new Election should be order'd in that case because of this Act and that that Shire ought not to have a Vote who would not send legal Commissions Though by this Act the Missives for calling Parliaments or Conventions which are here called General Councils should be directed to such as were the last Commissioners in place of the Sheriffs yet now they are ordinarly directed to the Sheriffs and sometimes to any the King pleases as in the Parliament 1661. By this Act the Commissioners are to be choos'd at Michaelmass Head Court and failing thereof at any other time the Free-holders meet or when his Majesty requires them and therefore it may be doubted if every Shire are obliged to choose at Michaelmass since that seems to be ordered here and the other dyets are only ordered to be failing of that Head Court But yet many Shires in Scotland use not to choose at Michaelmass but delay Elections till they be required Though by this Act the names of such as are elected are ordained to be notified in Writ to the Director of the Chancery by the Commissioners of the last year yet that is not now in observance since his Majesty uses no more to call Parliaments and Conventions by Precepts out of the Chancery but by general Proclamations It is to be remembred that where there are Elections at Michaelmass the Shire cannot choose of new as was found in the Convention 1678. in the case of the Shire of Perth and ordinarly the Proclamations bear as it did there that the Shire should choose where they had not formerly chosen at Michaelmass and so these Elections were made without warrand but it may be doubted whether such Elections would be invalid if the Proclamations mention'd nothing as to this point it was there alledged that the Shire might make a new Election because the Commissioners then chosen were denuded and were become no Barons to which it was answered that this should have been represented to the Council who would have ordered a new Election but the Shire could not proceed to elect by their own Authority contrary to the Proclamation THough this Act has adjusted the Weights and Measures of the whole Nation and ordain'd the Linlithgow Furlot to be the Standart as to that measure yet it is expresly provided by this Act that if any persons be founded by Infestment Tack or Contract in a different Measure that Measure contain'd in their private Right should stand but should be proportioned to the Linlithgow Measure without prejudice to either Party that is to say they should have right to the old Measure fully but it should be payed according to the new Measures as for instance the Boll of Galloway being six Furlots the Master should have six Furlots payed in to him which exception was most just because of the intrins●ck value of the Lands to which the old Tacks c. were proportion'd but yet the Lords sustain'd in Milns a Moulter though much greater than the ordinary fourth part of a Peek because of constant possession and found that this Act did not extend to Milns since therein different Measures are used according to the proportion of the service nor was this Act ever observ'd in any part of Scotland as to Milns In Conjunct-fees and Life-rents also the Husband being oblig'd to provide the Wife to particular Lands which he obliges himself to make worth so many Chalders of Victual it has been found that he is oblig'd to make them worth so many Chalders according to the measure of the Countrey where the Land lyes because his own Rent is so payed and Ministers in Galloway and other places where great Measures are used will get their Stipends according to these Measures the reason of all which I conceive to be that these measures were made greater at first because of
appoint four for them and four for the Town for valuing the Lands that the price may be pay'd accordingly But to prevent all such Debates it is appointed by the 6 Act 3 Sess. Par. 1 Ch. 2. That the Magistrats of Burghs Royal shall cause cite all such as pretend Right to any such Waste or Ruinous Lands as have not been inhabited for three years or shall be waste and not inhabited for other three years to Repair the saids Lands with Certification to them that if they do not the Magistrats will cause value the same by certain persons to be chosen for that effect and to sell the same which sale shall never thereafter be quarrelled So that it appears that after this Act the Privy Council can grant no Warrand to sell except in the Terms of this Act at the least they cannot grant any such warrand to build or sell upon any privat account or even for beautifying the Town but the Privy Council has since this Act granted a Warrand to force privat Heretors to sell and accept their price for making the Entry to the Parliament-House more large and convenient though it it was alleadg'd that this could not otherwise be done than after three years and in the way prescriv'd by the Act of Parliament which has made no exception of any such case as this and if the Council could do this they might as well have made the Act of Parliament it self for the power granted to Magistrats by Act of Parliament proceeds upon the same motive of publick Good It might likewise have been alleadged that whatever the Council might have done in cases of absolute necessity as if the Parliament-House had wanted an Entry altogether yet they could not invert Property meerly for the conveniency of enlarging the Entry beyond what formerly serv'd in our Predecessors time BY this Act Chiefs of Clans are not made lyable but all Land-lords and Bailies are oblig'd to make their Men-tennents and Servants answerable to Justice and to redress the party skaithed which Obligation is not alternative and therefore the Council in the case of Leith and Grant August 1680. did find that the Land-lord was lyable for the Skaith though he should present his men King JAMES the sixth Parliament 15. BY this Act Bishops are in effect restored to sit in Parliament though the Act is cautiously conceived in favours of Ministers who shall be provided to Bishopricks by the King but yet the Bishops themselves were not restored to their Jurisdictions in spiritualibus till the 2 Act 18 Par. Ja. 6. in anno 1606. This Act gave occasion of calling a General Assembly at Dundee to whom the King proposed several Overtures and it was condescended on that fifteen Ministers should sit in Parliament because so many Re-presented the Church in time of Popery but remitted to a Committee to consider what Revenue each Church-man should have for defraying that expence and who should be elected In this Act likewise it is declar'd That this Restitution shall be without prejudice to the General and Provincial Assemblies and Presbyteries and the Act of Parliament here related to Establishing these is the 114 Act 12 Par Ja. 6. IT is observable that Kirk-yeards have in many things in our Law the same priviledge as Kirks and therefore the killing or wounding of men within Kirks and Kirk-yeards are punishable in the same way 118 Act 12 Par. Ja. 6. and the Raisers of Frays in Kirks and Kirk-yards are punished in the same way 27 Act 11 Par. Ja. 6. and by the 83 Act 6 Par. Ja. 4. Fairs and Mercats are prohibited to be kept within Kirk-yards as well as within the Kirk as also by the 86 Act Quon Attach Courts Civil or Criminal within Kirks or Kirk-yards are forbidden all which is conform to the Canon Law cap. 5. de immunitate ecclesiarum cap. 2 h. t. in sexto decretal By this Act Letters of Horning are to be directed by the Lords of the Session for bigging of Kirk-yard-dykes and for making Stiles and Entries to Kirks and Kirk-yards By which last Clause it would seem also that Heretors would get Letters of Horning against any Heretor who lyes betwixt him and the Kirk to give him a sufficient way to the Kirk through his Land albeit the words bear only That there shall be sufficient Stiles and Entries in the saids Kirk-yard-dykes But when any thing is allowed in Law all is understood to be allowed without which that which is expresly allow'd cannot be useful Yet I find by a Decision June 27. 1623. betwixt Neils●n of Carcassi● and the Sheriff of Gall●w●y that the Lords refus'd to grant a Servitude through a privat Mans Lands even for a way to the Church except the Pursuer could prove immemorial Possession and to reconcile this Difference it seems that every man must have some way to the Church but that he will not have Right to any special way if he seek the same upon the account of nearness except he can prove immemorial Possession Mornatius ad l. penult ss de just jur shews that this Law is observ'd in France Quaeritur to whom a Coal found in a Church-yard or Trees growing there will belong whether to the Heretor the Poor or the Patron or if the Trees will belong to the Minister THis Act declares all Alienations of the annexed Property to be null except where they are set with augmentation of the Rental and therefore to this day there is still some small augmentation made but it has been doubted whether if the Charter bear an augmentation but yet it can be proven by the Exchequer Rolls that the Lands pay'd more formerly than is exprest in the new Charter if in that case the alienation will be null and I conceive it should for though the Feuer may alleadge that he was in bona fide because of the former Charters yet seeing the hazard by this Act of Parliament he ought to have looked to the Exchequer Rolls I find the 233 and the following Acts till 240. of this 15 Parliament of King Ja. 6 were at first Statutes of Session inserted in the Books of Sederunt upon the 14 of March 1594. and here in 1597. they are turn'd in Acts of Parliament without mentioning that they had been Acts of Sederunt formerly as uses to be done when the Parliament Ratifies such Acts it seems that it was rather the Exchequers part than the Sessions to have Regulated the Kings Revenue and Property whereunto all the above cited Acts relate but about this time I find in the Sederunt Book several Acts ingrossed bearing to have been made by the Lords of Secret Council Session and Exchequer met together which is like the several Chambers whereof the Parliaments of France consist who conveen all together when any solemn arrest or Decision is to be pronunced in purpuris as they call it and these Acts being Declarations of what was Law in relation to the Kings
run if that offer will hinder the incurring the irritancy for these years seing a Debitor may in Law pay before his day come and what if it be such a Prestation as must be performed yearly 8. If the Vassal will amit his Feu for not offering where he had a pretext to doubt who was his true Superiour and what he is to do in that case So much use the Lords to favour the Vassal against such severe irritancies that a Retour bearing in the first part of it an irritancy for not payment of the Feu-duty si petatur tantum they allowed the Vassal to purge though in the posterior part of the Retour these words were omitted in the Clause irritant it self February 18. 1680. Earl of Mar contra his Vassals Like to this irritancy was that of the Civil Law whereby non solutio pensionis per biennium in civill Emphiteusi per triennium in Emphiteusi Ecclesiastica efficiebat ut Emphiteuta a jure suo caderet by the Civil Law the irritancy mora in not payment was not purgeable but by the Canon Law it was In Tacks also with us the not payment of a Tack-duty for two years or terms infers an irritancy November 23. 1609. Murray contra Nisbit March 9. 1611. Seton of Baro contra Seton of Pitmedden which is also conform to the Civil Law l. 56. ff locati THis Act is Explain'd crim pract tit Usury BY the 18 Act 1 Par. Ja. 6. The bearing and shooting with Culverings or Daggs without the Kings Licence is forbidden under the pain of losing the Right Hand and that Act is here Ratifi'd and thereto is added Confiscation of Moveables and by the Act 6 Par. 16 Ja. 6. It is appointed that the Contraveeners of these Acts may be pursu'd either before the Council or the Criminal Court and when they are pursu'd before the Council it is provided that they shall not lose the Right Hand It may be argu'd from this Act that where there are two punishments appointed by two different Laws the last is not added to the first but either it antiquats the first or else either of the two can be only regularly inflicted for else this Act needed not say s●●a that the ane pain shall not stop nor stay the other From that 6 Act 16 Par. It may likewise be observ'd that the Secret Council are not Judges competent to Life and Limb such as the amputation of the Right Hand By the Lex Julia It was lawful to carry Arms without Rome but not in the Town but they were every where thereafter Discharg'd Tit. 46. lib. 11. C. ut armorum usus inscio principe interdictus sit BY this Act is Ratifi'd an Act made at Dundee by the King His Nobility Council and Estates which was an Act of the Convention of Estates for the Convention of Estates ordinarly considered the matter of Coinage nor needed that a Parliament because Coinage is a part of the Prerogative and by the Estates there were mean'd some of every Estate taken by the King for advice From this Act it was urg'd in the Lord Hattons case That 1. By this Act it is clear that we had a different Standard from England which is to be eleven pennie fine 2. That it was lawful to melt down current forraign Coyn because this Act allows it to be us'd as Bullion Nota This is the first Act that mentions the General of the Mints Office as different from the rest BY this Act it is clear that the Convention of Estates made Acts also discharging the Transportation of Wool and the like and this Act as to Wool is again Ratifi'd but a power is allow'd to the Exchequer to Transport Wool contrary to this Act Act 40 Par. 1 Sess. 1 Ch. 2. But even this Act discharges only bypast Licences but not Licence for the future for these are allow'd even for Wool by the 254 Act of this same Parliament BY this Act Customs are declar'd to be due to His Majesty of all that is brought in from forraign Nations and by the 27 Act Sess. 3 Par. 1 Ch. 2. The ordering and disposal of Trade with forraigners is declared to be His Majesties sole Prerogative and therefore some think His Majesty may impose upon forraign Commodities what he thinks convenient for since he may discharge the Trade if He pleases it seems to follow that He may burden it as He pleases By this Act an a b c. of the Customs is to be put upon all Commodities that is to say a particular index of the several Customs imposed upon every several Commodity is ordain'd to be made according to the Letters of the Alphabet and this has varied in several ages the present a b c. being made by order of the Parliament 1661. vid. statut David 2. cap. 12. num 3. where this priviledge as to paying of Customs is formerly declar'd and by the Canon Law this was likewise declar'd lawful to Princes vid. perez ad lib. 10. C. tit 18. num 13. l 5. C. de jure fisci where it is said officialibus v●lentibus ea capere debet acquiescere From these words of this Act Albeit it cannot be deny'd that His Majesty is a free Prince of a Soveraign power havand al 's great Liberties and Prerogatives be the Laws of this Realm and priviledge of His Crown and Diadem as any other King Prince or Potentat whatsoever It is observable that our Kings are here acknowledged to be absolute and Soveraign Monarchs as is likewise more fully declar'd by the 1 Act Par. 18 Ja. 6. In which it is said Whom the hail Estates of their bounden duty with maist hearty and faithful affection humbly and truly acknowledges to be Soveraign Monarch absolute Prince Judge and Governor over all Persons Estates and Causes both Spiritual and Temporal within His said Realm By neither of which Acts I conceive our Kings are so absolute as that they have a Tyrrannick or Despotick power but that they are so absolute as that they have power to do every thing that is just and reasonable though they be not thereto empowered by particular Acts of Parliament and therefore they are ill Subjects and worse Lawyers who allow the King to do nothing but that for which he can shew an Act of Parliament since his being an absolute Monarch implyes this innate Power and therefore it follows by a better consequence when any thing is contraverted that the King may do the thing in controversie being reasonable if his power be not as to that point restrained by a particular Act of Parliament It is likwise very observable that this power of absolute Monarchy does not flow from the people but is his own Right for no Act of Parliament grants the King any Prerogative but only declares by way of humble acknowledgement what his Prerogatives were principibus says Tacitus summum rerum judicium dii dederunt subditis obsequii gloria relicta est lib.
the 5 Act Par. 18 Ja. 6. THis Act declaring the Provocker and Provocked in Duels to be punishable by Death is Explain'd Crim. pract tit Duels and since fighting Duels is only declared Death by this Act it appears that naked Provocation is not Capital but yet even the sending of Cartals may be arbitrarly punished by the Privy Council but Fighting is Capital though no killing follow and fighting by Rencounter may be punished as a Duel though there was no formal Cartal for by this Law all single Combats are declared punishable by Death vid. crim pract tit Duels This Act was renewed by a strict Act of Secret Council in anno 1674. THis Act is Explained in the Act 265. Par. 15 Ja. 6. BY this Act it is Declared that the negligence of the Kings Officers in Pursuing or Defending a Cause shall not prejudge the King and therefor competent and omitted is never received against the King though it be against private parties and by this Act it would appear that the King may propone a Nullity of a Decreet obtained against him even in foro before the Lords of Session by way of Exception or Suspension without a formal Reduction but yet Prescription runs against the King notwithstanding that it may be alleadged that by this Act he cannot be prejudged by the negligence of His Officers in not pursuing since Prescription is a general Remedy introduced for the final quiet both of King and People and as to Heretage it is introduced by an Act posteriour to this Act wherein there is no exception made in favours of the King but the Act introducing Prescription of Moveables is prior to this Act and so it may be the more doubted whether Prescription of Moveables runs against the King since by this posteriour Act it is Declared that the negligence of His Officers in not pursuing shall not prejudge him nor is there so great hazard to the Lieges in their Moveables as in their Heritage THe Transporting or In-bringing of forbidden or Un customed Goods that is to say Goods that should pay Custom without paying Custom is punishable not only by Forefaulture of the Goods but by Confiscation of the In-bringers whole Goods moveable albeit by the Civil Law ea res tantum in commissum cadit quam quis non est professus by which Law the naked Entry or sola possessio was sufficient to Defend against the Forefaulture imputandum est publicano qui non exegerit Perez tit C. de vect num 10. both by that Law and ours the Customers may recover the Goods un-entered even from singular Successors who have bought the same bona fide for a competent price and in that Law Error excus'd from Confiscation but in that case it exacted double Custom Perez ibid. I have not observed any mans Moveables Escheated upon this Act. THis Act fining such as will not Communicat once a Year when he is thereto desired by his Pastor is ill observed but not in Desuetude and therefore was renewed by Proclamation in January 1679. Observ. That the having Rancour against their Neighbour is Declar'd no relevant excuse and justly because it is a fault and so should be no Defence argumento hujus legis a Fanatick having prejudice at his Minister even though reasonable is no legal Defence for he should still hear Observ. 2. Though this Act say That no other excuse whatsoever shall Defend yet certainly inability to Travel madness c. will Defend and general words are still to be understood in subjecto capaci THis Act is Explain'd crim pract tit Heresie THis Act is Explained crim pract tit Beggars and Vagabonds THis Act is Explained crim pract tit Adultery THis Act is but a Temporary Commission THis Act against slaughter of Wild-fowl is renewed by an Act of Privy Council June 9. 1682. years whereby Masters of the Game are appointed for putting these Acts in Execution though by this Act the Sheriffs Stewarts and the Kings ordinary Magistrats have a particular Commission of Justiciary for this effect and it was questioned in the time how the Council could take away a Right establisht in them by the Parliament By this Act the killing of Mure Pouts is Discharg'd before the third of July and Partridge Pouts before the eight of September and by that Proclamation Mure Pouts are allow'd to be kill'd after the first of July and Heath Pouts after the first of August and Partridge and Quail after the first of September and whereas by the 109 Act Par. 7 Ja. 1. No Partridges Plovers Black-cocks c. are to be kill'd till August this Proclamation allows them to be killed from the first of July THis Act ordaining all English Cloath to be Seal'd by a Seal the Form whereof is here condescended on was thought to have been in Desuetude but now found not to be so in anno 1666. at which time it was found that the Customers might enter the Shops and Seal or Confiscat what was not so Seal'd This Sealing was formerly appointed by the 129 Act Par. 12 Ja. 6. THis Act appoints that no Letters of Horning shall be Direct against persons Dwelling on the other side of Dee upon shorter space than fifteen Dayes which Act was found only to be extended to Actions before the Privy Council but not to Charges before any other Court because the Narrative of this Act sayes That severals of the Lieges were drawn in inconveniencies by Charges before His Majesty and His Council though the Rubrick and Statutory part be General and though the reason whereupon this is inferred extends to all Charges as well as Charges before the Council SUch as Invade any of His Majesties Subjects within a Mile to the place of His Highness Residence or whoever resort thereto Armed with Jacks or Corslets under their Coats are to be Imprisoned for a Year and punishable by an arbitrary fine Observ. That the attrocity of the Crime is much hightned from the circumstance of place as well as time as is likewise clear by the 173 Act Par. 13 Ja. 6. It may be doubted whether this Act can be extended against such as Invade Strangers since the Act sayes only such as invade Subjects since the Invading of Strangers is more attrocious in it self than the Invading of Subjects the Crime being there aggredged by the breach of Hospitality It may be likewise doubted how long a time of Residence by the King makes the Invaders punishable and it would appear that if the Invasion be not within a mile of that which is known to be the place of the Kings ordinary Residence that then it must be proven that the Invader did reside there for the time BY this Act Sheriff-Courts should be kept in the middle of the Shire for the ease of the people but this is not observ'd OF old Pledges were taken in the Borders that is to say one man entered himself Prisoner for
Warrands but this is not in observance but consents by Advocats must be subscribed by Advocats else Decreets given thereupon are null July 20. 1664. And Executions are sufficient by a Sheriff in that part July 10. 1643. and thereupon the Defender will be holden pro confesso The Commissioners did of old appoint Sub-commissioners in every Presbytry who were to be chosen by the Presbytry it self and five to be a quorum for trying the Valuation of every mans Teinds and before them Process were intented at the instance of the Procurator-fiscal or the Heretors and their Reports being return'd to the Commission were allow'd The Injunctions given to them then were That none should be Witnesses before them who were not worth an hundred Pounds of free Gear that such as dwell within the Presbytry should be Cited upon ten days and such as were without it upon twenty that the Depositions should be Subscriv'd by the most part of the Sub-commissioners and the Clerk and when any man would make use of anothers Servant as a Witness that the Master should produce him upon his hazard that where both used Probation not the greatest number but the clearest Deponers should be prefer'd and no Witnesses to be receiv'd but only ten for each Party which was thereafter Expon'd to be ten for each Room July 18. 1634. The Probation is oft-times allow'd to both Parties in this Court and where it is single it is call'd The Prerogative of Probation and is much contended for Wherefore it is thus regulated viz. either the Teinds are drawn ipsa corpora by Titular or Tacks-man and then they have the sole Probation allow'd them to prove what the Teinds were worth they proving that they led seven years of fifteen before the year 1628. And though after so long a time this cannot be proven Yet the proving immemorial Possession is found equivalent or else they have Rental-bolls pay'd them eo casu they have the sole probation likewise they proving twenty years possession of uplifting Rental-bolls condescending upon the quantity and quality Or in the third case the Heretor has Tacks of their own Teinds for payment of Silver-Duty and then there is joynt Probation allow'd both to Heretor and Titular albeit the Heretor have the benefit of a Conjunct Probation Yet he may refer the worth to the Titulars Oath before Witnesses be receiv'd but not after February 21. 1623. but where the Titular has the sole Probation the Heretor cannot eo casu lead any Probation of the Stock except it be for certification id est except where the Heretor summons the Titular who was in possession of Drawing of the Teind to prove the worth thereof with Certification to him if he appear not the Heretor will prove the worth of the Stock quo casu the fourth part is Declar'd to be Teind February 19. 1634. and February 24. 1643. Where the Stock and Teind are valu'd joyntly the Teinds are made the fifth part but where the Titular and Tacks-man has the sole Probation the Heretor has the fifth part down as the Kings Ease and therefore where the Titular takes a Dyet for proving of the Teind by it self the Heretor may take the same Dyet to prove the Stock that in case the Heretor fail he may have the Kings Ease July 8 1642. Where there is joynt probation of Stock and Teind the present Rent should be proven as well as the Rent in all time coming else the same is null January 19. 1631. There are two Dyets granted for probation in this Court and if the first be not made use of the Term may be circumduc'd and the second will not be granted February 2. 1643. and though Diligence be Extracted after the Dyet yet if it be Extracted before the other party crave the Term to be circumduc'd the same will be sustain'd November 22. 1634. By this Act also it is Declar'd That where Valuations are lawfully led against all Parties having interest and allow'd they shall not be call'd in question at the Instance of the Minister not being Titular nor at the instance of His Majesties Advocat for His Annuity except the Collusion be proven to have been to the Diminution of the third of the just Rent presently pay'd and therefore all Reductions upon this head are at the instance of His Majesties Advocat but it may be doubted whether His Majesty has any interest where the party has bought his own Annuity though it may be alleadg'd that even in that case the Decreet is Reduceable together with the Alienation founded thereupon if subsequent to the Decreet because the Exchequer has sold upon a mistake occasioned by the Collusion albeit regulariter with us Venditions are not quarrellable as in the Civil Law though made infra dimidium By this Clause it is likewise Declar'd that this Collusion shall be probable by the parties Oaths and thereupon it has been doubted whether this Clause be Exclusive of other probation and in Meldrums case against Tolquhon before the Commission in January 1672. It was found that a Decreet of Valuation might be Reduced upon this Clause if it were proven by Witnesses that the valuation was led far within the third of what the Teinds were then worth THese Acts are but Temporary BY this Act the Liberties of the Colledge of Justice are restricted to the Senators of the Colledge of Justice and this is the first time that the Senators of the Colledge of Justice were divided from the other Members but thereafter the priviledges of the Senators are Communicated to Advocats Writers and others by the 23 Act Par. 1 Ch. 2. vid. observ on that Act. THis Act anent the priviledges of Royal Burrows is innovated by and therefore shall be Explain'd in the 5 Act 3 Sess. 2 Par. Ch. 2. THis Act gives a very large Commission to the Lords of Secret Council to grant to the Justices of Peace and Constables whatever power the Parliament could have granted them but this being in effect but a Commission may be alleadg'd to expire with the King and Parliament who gave it as all Mandats last no longer than the Mandator and the power being given to the Privy Council indefinitly without adding for the time being it may be urg'd that it could last no longer than that Commission of Council and from this many new doubts may be started which shall be elsewhere considered but however the Council does still grant Instructions by vertue of this Act. THis Act impowering the Lords of Session to exact 12 pennies of the pound of all sums decern'd by them is now obsolet THis Act concerning the priviledges of Baronets is fully Explain'd in my Treatise of Precedency but from this Act it is observable that the Convention of Estates have been in use to Ratifie and approve general Orders granted concerning Honours though it be generally believ'd that the Convention of Estates can only grant voluntary Taxations and nothing else and I
though the person against whom the Comprising was led was dead and the sixty dayes were expir'd and found that notwithstanding thereof it should be prefer'd to a Comprising whereof the allowance was Registrated after its Registration Observ. 2. That by this Act a Comprysing is not declar'd null for not being allow'd and so was not excluded by a posterior apprysing first allow'd but both were brought in pari passu which last part of the Decision may seem strange since it is expresly declar'd by this Act that the not allowance shall be with Certification that a posterior Comprising first allow'd shall be prefer'd according to the date of the allowance November 29. 1672. Maxton contra Cunninghame and so they could not come in pari passu But the reason of this Decision must be that by the posterior Act 62. of this same Parliament all Comprysings led within year and day of others are ordain'd to be brought in pari passu and these Comprisings have been led within year and day though the Decision mention not this And this I find decided July 17. 1668. Stuart contra Murray Observ. 3. That if the Appryser has obtain'd Infeftment without allowance he will be prefer'd because as I think his Infeftment being Registrated in that case supplies the not Registration of his allowance and Certiorats singular Successors sufficiently Observ. 4 This Act Narrats that it was ordain'd formerly by Act of Secret Council that the whole Comprisings and not a Breviat should be Registrated Which not being authoriz'd by any Law or Act of Parliament is therefore Discharg'd from which it appears that the Secret Council use not only to make Acts relating to Government or to regular prices of Writs as appears by the 19 Act 23 Par. Ja. 6. Or to discharge Bakers and Candle-makers to keep their Broom-stacks or Melting-houses within Towns as in the 29 Act 23 Par. Ja. 6. But even to make Acts relating to Registration and Competition of Writs which though the Parliament does here openly condemn yet tacitly this Act declares their Act was no Law and they could less have made such an Act than the Lords could have made an Act of Sederunt ordaining Seasins within Burgh to be Registrated which they found only the Parliament could do and it is observable also that this Act of Council did therefore soon run in Desuetude and the Parliament confirms the contrary Custom Observ. 5. This Act Narrats that by a Custom allowances of Apprysings did contain and express the Names and Designations of the Apprysers the Names of the Defenders whereas it should have said Debitors though the Debitor be a Defender in the Comprysing which is a Decreet the Debts for which the Comprising is Deduc'd the Messengers and the Clerks names the Date of the Executions the Witnesses names thereto and the Superiours names which Custom being authoriz'd by this Act it may be doubted if the omiting any of these particulars in the Registrated allowance would annul the same since the Act does not subjoyn an irritancy THe difference concerning Heretable and Moveable Bonds is fully Explain'd in my Institut Part 2. tit 2. BY this Act these who Marry themselves Clandestinly or inorderly are to be imprison'd for three Moneths and beside to pay each Nobleman a Thousand Pounds each Baron and Landed Gentleman a Thousand Merks each Gentleman and Burges five hundred Pounds each other person an hundred merks Observ. 1. The want of the Parents consent or of the consent of others having interest seems by the Narrative to infer the Clandestinness of the Marriage But yet by our practique Children Marrying without the consent of their Parents if they be of age and the Marriage otherwise regular they are not punishable wherein we seem to agree rather with the Counsel of Trent than either with the Law of God Exod. 22. and 17. Numb 30 Deut. 7.3 Or the Civil Law Institut de nuptiis l. 2. ff de Ritu nupt Observ. 2. That it may be doubted whether since this Act appoints no punishment to Women if a Noble-woman being an Heretrix Marry a Gentleman Disorderly she may be punish'd as a Noble-woman or he only as a Gentleman and I think she should be punisht as a Noble-woman having precedency as such Observ. 3. That it has been doubted if an Expectant having power to Preach and being appointed a Presbyter but having no settled Kirk and Marrying persons the Marriage can be punished Or if such as Marry by a lawful Minister of another Paroch without Warrand either from the Bishop or the Minister of their own Paroch may be punished by this Act. Observ. 4. By the 9 Act Sess. 3 Par. 2. Ch. 2. Such as enter into these Disorderly Marriages lose their jus mariti or jus relictae by and attour the penalties here express'd Observ. 5. That the Marrying in England or Ireland without proclamation of Bonds in Scotland and against the Order observ'd in this Church infers the former Fines but the Marrying without proclamation of Bonds is not per se sufficient and therefore if there be a Dispensation from the Bishop Quaer if the Marriage is not Clandestine and it seems it is not for the Bishop may be mis-inform'd as if the Woman wanted parents And by the Narrative of this Act the want of the parents consent is made an impediment as well as the having granted a prior promise to another and therefore as the Bishops Warrand should not defend in the one case so neither should it in the other but it is still peri●ulo petentis else Bishops should innocently become the Instruments of Robbing us of our Children and Estates and of taking them away in such manner as that parents can neither see their Daughters provided to competent Jointures by the Husband nor the Husbands who Marry them sufficiently provided by the Father in Law Quaer 2. Whether is the consent of the Mother necessary when the Father is Dead and I conceive it is especially when she is intrusted by the Father and the Child stays with her for though the Daughter be not in potestate materna yet she is a Parent and this Act requires the consent of Parents and the Instituts tell us that naturalis civilis ratio requirit consensum parentum nor can it be deny'd but the Mother has an equal natural Relation and by this Interest Law incourages and rewards the Mothers pains Quaer 3. What if the parents refuse reasonable offers and yet the Child is Marriageable To which it is answer'd That the consent should be first askt and why they refuse that the Judge may when the parent thereafter complains consider if the parent was culpable in refusing his consent Quaer 4. If the being Married by their own Minister without proclamation or Dispensation from the Bishop be sufficient and though the Minister have a Warrand from the Bishop Yet by Act of Synod he is discharged to Marry in a privat House except the Warrand dispense therewith
Parliament was Adjourned by Proclamation was elapsed a new Parliament behoved to be called Or if the current Parliament ought to be Adjourned by a new Proclamation notwithstanding the Day was elaps'd and it was found that it might be Adjourned since the power of Calling and Dissolving Parliaments is the Kings Prerogative and a Letter to this purpose from the King is Registrated in the Council Books in July 1683. King CHARLES 2. Parliament 1. Session 2. EPiscopacy having been Restor'd in anno 1606. Bishops were by the Rebellious Parliaments abolish'd and therefore are by this Act Restor'd to their undoubted Priviledge in Parliament that is to say to be a third Estate their Function Dignities and Estates but before this Act of Parliament the Secret Council by their Act in June 1662. Discharg'd any Person to meddle with their Estates or Revenues in Obedience to a Letter directed by His Majesty which gave the first rise both to that Act of Council and this Act of Parliament By the first Act Par. 12. Ja. 6. King James had permitted the Church to be Govern'd by General-assemblies Synods and Presbytries Which Act was not expresly abrogated by the 2 Act Par. 18. Ja. 6. and therefore it is by this Act expresly abrogated They are also Restor'd to their Commissariots and Quots of Testaments but the present Commissars Rights are reserv'd and albeit they be Restored to the Superiorities Yet Vassals having Entered by or having pay'd to the Superiors for the Interval are secur'd BY this Act taking up Arms though in Defence of Religion is Declar'd Treason and conform to this Clause all going to Field-conventicles in Arms was Declar'd Treasonable though it was alleadg'd that this was not a Rising in Arms since every man went without knowing of his Neighbour for the Council and Justices thought that at this rate a multitude of Arm'd men might easily assemble and the Levying War or taking up Arms being impersonally Discharg'd it reaches every single man and though there were only one single man in Arms yet he would be guilty of Treason especially after that Proclamation for he knew not but others might be there versabatur in illicito By this Act also all accession to the Suspending His Majesty or His Successors or to the Restraining their Persons or inviting Forraigners to Invade their Dominions is declar'd Treason There is one Branch of this Clause which may seem hard but was necessary viz. Or put limitations upon their due Obedience for the former age and this having invented new Treasons in asserting they would own the King in as far as He would keep the Covenant or own Jesus Christ But reserving still to themselves to judge how far the King did so they did by a necessary consequence conclude that they were no further oblig'd than they pleas'd and so made themselves in effect Judges above the King than both which nothing can be more Treasonable And I remember that Sir Francis Bacon in his History of King Henry 7. Tells us That the Judges of England found Sir Robert Clifford guilty of Treason because he said that if he knew Perkin Werbeck were King Edward 's Son he would never bear Arms against him though the Words were alleadg'd to be only conditional for they thought it a dangerous thing to admit ands and ifs to qualifie words of Treason whereby any man might express his malice and blanch his danger The denying His Majesties Supremacy as it was then Established is declar'd punishable by in-capacity and such other punishment as is thereto due by Law But it had been fitter to Determine that punishment and from the words as it is now Establisht It may be doubted whether the Impugning the Supremacy absolutely be punishable by this Act since the Supremacy is extended by a posterior Act viz. The 1 Act 2 Par. Ch. 2. But that Act being only an Explication of this all such as Impugn the Kings Supremacy absolutely are punishable From these words also That they shall be punishable by such other pains as are due by Law in such cases It may be doubted what punishment is due to such as Impugn the Kings Supremacy besides incapacity and it seems they may be pannal'd upon the 129 and 130 Acts 8 Par. Ja. 6. It has been urg'd That all speaking against the Kings Prerogative is only punishable by incapacity and arbitrary punishments because this Clause sayes That if they Speak Print c. against the Kings Supremacy in Causes Ecclesiastick or to justifie any of the actings or practices abovementioned they shall be so punished But so it is that all rising in Arms to Depose the King c. are above-mentioned Ergo say they The speaking or Preaching in Defence of these is only to be so punished and they urge this from the Principles of Reason and the practice of other Nations and that excellent Law si quis imperatori maledixerit lib 9. tit 7. C. but this were a most absur'd Gloss For certainly if this Objection prov'd any thing it would prove that no words could infer Treason which is expresly contrary to the very Act whereby all these Positions are Declar'd Treason and consequently all words whatsoever which express these Positions are punishable as ●reason and it is fit to know that it is not that very formula or words which are condemn'd but these Positions are condemn'd for else it were easie to make the Act elusory and to evade it by using other words than the words here set down and the Analysis of that part of the Act is that first the Positions are Declar'd Treasonable 2. The speaking against the Kings Supremacy and the Ecclesiastical Government as now Establish'd c. is forbidden 3. The Plotting or Contriving any thing against the King consequentially to these Positions is Declar'd punishable by Forefaulture 4. That the speaking c. against the Supremacy and the Establish'd Government of the Church is to be punish'd arbitrarly and the words Or to justifie any of the Deeds declar'd againstly this present Act are to be restricted to words relative to the Supremacy c. mention'd in that Clause only It is also observable That the Impugning the Government by Bishops or the Kings Supremacy are only punishable if they be pursu'd within eight Moneths and Sentenc'd within four Moneths thereafter and are only punishable by this Act if it was done by malicious and advis'd Speaking and therefore it appears that such as were Drunk when they spoke these words are not punishable by this Act nor such as are reputed fatuus and Fools though they be not declared Idiots or Furious and yet it seems that all Writing Preaching and Prayers and such malicious Expressions to stir up the people to a dislike of His Majesties Royal Prerogative and Supremacy in Causes Ecclesiastick are punishable indefinitly and that because either the Law presumes they are premeditated or because of the great danger arising therefrom and therefore it will have them punish'd as such
would discourage them both from Rebellion and Robbery if they knew they behov'd to be still lyable in Restitution and though the King did remit vindictam publicam privatam by this Proclamation yet that vindicta privata was not to be interpret damnage and interest but that Revenge and Criminal Action which any privat party might pursue without the King and vindicta is still contra-distinguished from damnum interesse 5. When the Law allows to the Prince a power to remit and discharge the Damnage done to privat parties in contemplation of a publick Peace Lawyers acknowledge that this can only be done if Peace cannot otherwise be procur'd for otherwise publick Peace is none of these just Causes for which Property can be inverted and therefore any such Indemnity after the Peace is Established cannot prejudge privat Subjects as to their Restitution as Gail expresly Declares observ 56. num 6. King CHARLES 2. Parliament 1. Sess. 3. BIshops being restored in the former Session of Parliament the King does in this Act Declare That He will maintain and preserve that Government in the Church and not give any Connivance to the prejudice thereof in the least and so all Indulgences are from this still urg'd to be contrary to the Royal Promise and the publick Faith By this Act Ministers absenting themselves without a lawful excuse from the Diocesian meeting or not concurring in the Church-discipline when required by the Arch-bishop are to be Suspended till the next Diocesian meeting and if they conform not then to be Depos'd and though this be design'd chiefly against the Non-conforming Ministers Yet it has been repin'd at by some of the Episcopal Clergy because the Bishops have by it a power to Suspend by themselves and by the present Discipline of the Church the Bishop may Depose by himself without the concourse of the Clergy even in the Diocesian meetings though he usually takes alongs with him the advice of the Ministry In this Act with-drawing from publick Worship as well as keeping of Conventicles is Declared to be Seditious and therefore each Heretor with-drawing loses the fourth part of his years Rent each Yeoman or Tennent may be fin'd not exceeding a fourth of his free Moveables every Burges is to lose his Freedom and may be fin'd in a fourth part of his Moveables and the Council have by this Act a very full and undetermin'd power to inflict Corporal beside the former punishments But it seems that 〈…〉 those Punishments can be inflicted upon With-drawers except where they have first been admonished by their Minister in presence of two Witnesses But since the Minister of the Paroch is not here specifi'd it was thought that persons might be fin'd after an Admonition given by any Minister appointed by the Privy Council or Presbytry This part of the Act is not expresly abrogated but the Fines are altered by the 7 Act of the 2 Sess. Par. 2 Ch. 2. By which every Protestant With-drawer whereas this Act extends both to Papists and Protestants is to be Fin'd thus viz. an Heritor in the eight part of his valu'd Rent a Tennent in six Pounds Scots a Cottar in fourty shilling Scots every person above the Degree of a Tennent but having no real Estate in twelve Pounds Every considerable Merchant in twelve Pounds Every inferiour Merchant and considerable Trades-man in six pounds and the other Inhabitants within Burgh in fourty shilling and His Majesties Privy Council is by this last Act allow'd to force all who shall with-draw from their Paroch Churches for a year together to give bond that they shall not rise against the King nor His Authority and to banish or secure them in case of refusal Whereas by this first Act there is a general power given to the Council by the Parliament to do every thing that they shall find necessary for procuring obedience to this Act and putting the same to punctual Execution upon which Clause was founded the Councils putting Heretors to give Bond for their Wives Tennents and Servants keeping the Church for since the Parliament might have exacted such a Bond for that effect it was thought the Council might since they have by this Clause a Parliamentary power By the other Act also it is appointed That the same shall continue for three years except His Majesty shall think fit it continue longer and it was thought that this power of Fining might be continued by the Council without any new express Order from the King since His Majesty did not Command the contrary as also upon this Clause was founded the Indulgence 1679. The Parliament having put it in His Majesties power to punish With-drawers or not as he thought fit after three years were elapsed THis Act is Explained in the 5 Act of the former Session THis Act against Protections is Explained fully in the Act 47 Par. 11 Ja. 6. THis Act declares the King to have the only Power of Calling or Dissolving Synods and that His Majesty has not only a Negative Voice in stopping Acts to be made in such Synods but even a Negative in not suffering any thing to be Treated or Debated there except what is contained in his Proclamation or Instructions This meeting of the Church is with us call'd a Convocation though it be here only call'd a Synod Nor can it be deny'd but that the Emperors did of old call the Synods and the formula was Visum est mihi jussi Thus Euzeb Speaking of Constantine sayes Cum per varia loca exorirentur inter Episcopos dissentiones ipse seu communis Episcopus a Deo constitutus Synodos ministrorum Dei indicebat And thus Leo writing to the Emperor Theodosius si pietas vestra suggestioni ac supplicationi digna●ur annuere ut intra Italiam haberi jubeatis Episcopale Concilium cito poterunt omnia scandala quae in perturbationem totius Ecclesia sunt commota resecari THis Act is Explain'd in the 10 Act Par. 4 Queen Mary and and in the Observations upon the 226 Act Par. 14 Ja. 6. BY this Act all Strong-waters are Discharg'd to be imported under the pain of Escheating thereof because it prejudged the Sale of Barley which is the great Native Commodity of this Kingdom But yet by the second Act of the 4 Session of the 2 Par. Ch. 2. All these Acts against strong-waters are Rescinded and an Imposition thereon is imposed but yet it was thought by the Council that notwithstanding of that last Act His Majesty might by His Pr●rogative in the Ordering and Disposal of Trade with Forraigners asserted by the 27 Act of this Session of Parliament Discharge again the Importation of Brandy and other strong-waters and accordingly a Proclamation was issued out Discharging them in March 1680. and it was urg'd that the Parliament thought that the King might Dispose upon these against an express Act of Parliament for though by this Act the Importation of them be absolutely Discharged Yet the King had
101. Act Parl. 7. Jam 5. all the Visiters are to be appointed by the King and by our present Practice All Actions intented for causing Patrons or others Compt for their Intromissions with the Rents of Hospitals are still intented at the instance of the Chancellor By the Canon Law Curis Hospitalitatis Hospitalium ad Episcopi solicitudinem pertinet sed ubi non aedificantur Hospitalia cum permissione Episcopi locus non est sacer nec est sub Episcopi cura HEreticks are by this Act to be punished as Law of hali● Kirk requires id est by Excommunication with us they were burnt and by Act 46. Parl. 3. Jam. 6. Church-men who are Hereticks are to be Excommunicated and Depos'd if they revock not their Heresie the punishment by the Common Law is Burning and Confiscation of Moveables Clar. Num. 13. This Act was made against the first of our Reformers called then Lollards for the Rubrick in the Black Impression bears of Hereticks and Lollards Obser. From this Act it is observable that the Kirk was Judge to Heresie in prima instantia and Clarus makes the Tryal so far Ecclesiastick that the Cognition belongs to the Church and the punishment to the secular Judge but with us the Justices are Judges in prima instantia IT may be alledged from this Act that all Transgressions of Law are not punishable as contempt of Authority where there is no express sanction in the Law since by this Act it is appointed that the Breakers of Acts of Parliament are to be punished after the Form and Ordinance thereof By which words also it seems that all Acts of Parliament are with us stricti juris and not to be extended de casu in casum but yet with us Laws are extended by Parity of Reason and by Analogie as in the case of making Men answerable for their Wives not going to Church c. And the meaning of this Act is that Judges shall not have liberty commutare paenam Lege definitam expresse for the best Lawyers acknowledge that though an Statute should say And it is ordained that this Statute shall be understood exactly according to the Letter yet it is capable of even an extensive Interpretation if no unjustice follow on that extension but much more if without this it would be unjust Bald. de stat num 3. Voet. de statut sect 7. cap. 1. And a declaratorie Interpretation is by all Lawyers acknowledg'd to be a Literal Interpretation Voet. ibid albeit in general it cannot be deny'd that these who have power to make Statutes must by a necessarie consequence have power to modifie and qualfie them as they please and as they may allow inferiour Judges a Power to Interpret Statutes in general so they may discharge them in a particular Statute to use that their Power and in that Case an inferiour Judge cannot Extend or Interpret otherways than in the terms foresaid LEagues and Bonds are by this Act only declared null but by the Act. 12 Parl. 10. Jam. 6. and Act 4. Parl. 1. Ch 2. they are declared punishable as Sedition and were punishable by Warding Act 43. Parl. 6. Q. Mary IF any carry Horses under three Years old to be sold out of the Country they E●cheat them by this Act and by the 22 Act Parl. 1. Jam. 6 If Horse without making difference as to their Age be carry'd beyond Sea the Horse and Ship and Goods of the Owner are Escheated and their Persons to be punished arbitrarly It is declared by that Act that there were several Acts before discharging the exportation of Horses whereas I see none save this and therefore these behov'd to have been Acts of Council or unprinted Acts of Parliament though generally all Acts inferring Escheat should be printed for Certioration These Acts are now in Desuetude carrying Horses out of the Country being an Improvement of Rent though that was then discharg'd upon the account of our Wars with England but it would appear that the carrying Horses out of the Kingdom till they be three Years old was not discharg'd upon the account of War but to the end the Horses should be kept till they gave a greater price and so should bring in more Money therefore this Prohibition it seems should still last BY this Act Tallow transported is escheated and the reason hereof is given by the 123. Act. Parl. 7. Ja. 5. because by the transportation thereof it became very dear at home and therefore the escheat of the transporters whole Moveables is added but the ill Increasing the Moveables of the Masters and Skippers of such Vessels in which it is transported are declar'd to fall under Confiscation Act. 40. Parl. 6. Q. M. And this Act extends the former to Strangers It is Observable that though this Act discharg'd all Persons to export yet all other Acts mentions Strangers when it is design'd that the Prohibition shall be extended to them as is also clear by the Act. 22. Parl 1 Ja. 6. and the 31. Act. Parl. 7. Ja. 2 d. So that it may be doubted if such penal Acts should be extended to Strangers where they are not mention'd and if the words all Persons are not in our Acts to be restricted to Natives Though by the Civil Law the owners be lyable for the Skippers fault in so far as concerns the prejudice done in the Ship yet it seems hard that an owners escheat shall fall for the Skippers taking in Tallow else Rich men would not be Owners and Skippers might Maliciously ruine their Owners and therefore it seems that by Masters here should only be mean'd Skippers and by the Civil Law the Skipper was call'd Magister Navis THough this Act punishes only Stealers or Cutters of Green Wood in the night time yet they are punishable for such Faults at all times the punishment is exprest Act. 84. Parl. 6. Ja. 6. but thereafter cutting of Green Wood is punisht as Thift with Death Act. 82. Parl. 11. Ja. 6. and yet I find none ever punished Capitaly for this Crime and the ordinary way of pursuing is by Process before the Sheriffs or the Lords for pecuniarie mulcts BY the Common Law no Judge can cite a Malefactor without his own Territorie and therefore if a man cut my Trees I could only pursue him within my Jurisdiction ratione criminis commissi if I find him within it but yet he●e it is enacted that if a man steal my Wood the same shall be punished in the Court within which t●e Lands lye out of which the Wood was stolne and none other but it seems that this being only introduced in favours of the Person injur'd he may renunce it and pursue before the Judge of the Jurisdiction in which the Offender dwels who cannot obtrude this Statute FOr clearing this Act Vid. infra Ja 1.9 Parl. Act 131. BY this Act Stalkers of Deer are to pay 40 shilling to the King and their Resetters ten pounds
By the Civil Law incendium casu fortuito is not punishable but conductor tenetur de levissima culpa incendium praesumitur culpa inhabitantium factum fuisse si intra domum originem habuerit ●o casu pater familias tenetur ex facto delicto familiae sed non tenetur si ortum habuerit incendium extra familiam vide Gail lib 2 Obser 21 22. Though by this Act the Magistrates of Towns are to enquire concerning the skaith suffered by Fire-raising so that this seems to be a matter of Government and consequently proper to be try'd also by the Privy Council yet where the case is intricat in point of Law the Council uses to remit the same to the Session as in Doctor Sibbalds case April 1684. King JAMES the first Parliament 5. FOr Explication of this Act Vid sup Act 39 Par 3 Ja 1. and Act 86 Par 6 Ja 1. THis Combination of Workmen was also punished by the Civil Law and it was found in the case of the Lord Hattoun against the Deacon of the Masons of Edinburgh that a Man might choose any Stranger Mason to build his House and if any Mason within the Town give over the Work any other Mason within the Town might undertake it notwithstanding of their own private Statute King JAMES the first Parliament 6. THe Act here related to is 24 th Act Par 1 Jac 1. DEacons are discharged by this Act as tending to Sedition and in place of them the King did introduce Wardens of Crafts who were to Supervise the Work of the respective Trades-men and were indeed Deacons but were called Wardens quasi Guardians Act 102. par 7. Jac. 1. But thereafter though Q Mary of new supprest Deacons and introduced in place of them Visiters yet thereafter about the time of the Reformation to strengthen the Popish party and to oblige all Trades-men thereto she restored Deacons by a special Gift and a Letter to the Council of Edinburgh since which time they remain still legal Corporations and each private Trade has their Deaconry Confirmed by Parliament Vid. Act 39 Par. 3 Ja. 1. THis Act Regulating the Expenses of unjust Pleas seems to have been first made in a Provincial Synod for it relates to the Official or Commissary Court and ends thus Et quod istud statuatur de authoritate Concilij provincialis But I find that in Voet. de stat that general Laws are call'd jura provincialia THough all Submissions with the Decreets following thereupon be declared null if the Submission be not made to an odd person yet this is now in Desuetude vide R. M. l. 2. c. 5. num 4 5 which sayes that it is ordinary to submit to two though it be difficult to make them agree and therefore the Law recommends to them to submit to an Odd Man THis Act relates only to Processes for by it the Causes of all Merchants dying abroad should be decided by their ordinary Judges within the Kingdom viz. in the respective Commissariots and Shires where they liv'd if they went not abroad animo remanendi but notwithstanding of this Act the Testaments of such as live abroad though animo remanendi must be confirm'd in Scotland by the Commissars of Edinburgh as communis patria else no Pursuite can be sustained for their Moveables that are in Scotland July 18. 1666. in the case betwixt Duff and Bisset ANd if it be Fore-thought-Fellony he shall die therefore This may seem to imply that men die not for Murder committed without Fore-thought-Fellony But this holds not in our Law for Murder though committed without Fore-thought-Fellony is punishable by Death except it was either Casual or in Self-Defence and then it is call'd properly Homicide or Man-slaughter It is observable that Crimes ought regularly to be punished in the place where they were committed that where the Scandal was given there the Reparation should be made vide act 34 par 2 Jac 1. act 148 par 12 Jac 1. and this same Act is renew'd act 98 par 6 Jac 1. THe way prescribed by this Act is now obsolet and in Desuetude but the juster way now used is That when a man is Denunced Fugitive for a Crime there are Letters of Intercommuning got out against him by authority of the Council and these are publish'd at the Mercat Crosses where he uses to reside and if any within these Shires where these Letters were publish'd do reset or speak with him they are pursu'd as Intercommuners Nota The Resetter of a Murderer is punish'd as a Murderer and this by the Civil Law is clear in Resetters as to all Crimes l. 1 ff de receptat l un C de crim pecul which is made our Law by the 144 act par 2 Jac 6. and yet some think some Resetters are only to be punish'd as severely as the principal Offenders who assist in the Crime and then reset for these contract a double guilt but that such as only reset them who are guilty should be more benignly punish'd and this answers d. l un C de crim paec in fine l ult § ult ff ab●g The Civil Law excuses Parents who reset and punishes less Friends and Allies who reset than others l 2 ff h t and though this Act be general yet it seems that it ought to be restricted by the Common Law OBserve first That though Barons do not use to judge Murderers yet by our old Law such as are Infeft with Pit and Gallows may punish Slaughter Q attach c 77. and this Act allows them if they be Infeft with such freedom Observe secondly That by this Act Judges who are negligent to arrest Malefactors if they escape the being warned in both these cases pays 20 pounds IT is fit for understanding this Act to know that Magistrates within Burghs have not power to judge Murders except they be Sheriffs within themselves as Edinburgh Pearth Innerness and some other Towns are A Lord of Regality and his Deputs have as much power in judging Murder as the Justices have though some contravert whether they can judge Murder under Trust because that is Treason and the Justices are only Judges competent to Treason Nota There is a Case exprest in this Act where moe Witnesses than two are required to prove a Crime The Word Croy here signifies an Assy●hment which the Judge should pay to the nearest of Kin if he be negligent in Ministring Justice against the Murderer but this is in Desuetude THe sense of this Act is that if a man has found Law-burrows which was called Assurance by our old Law the Friends of him who has found the Law-burrows are punishable if they wrong him to whom Law-burrows are found He who assaults with Edge and Ure is to be imprison'd that is to say with an Edg'd-tool or any thing made of Metal for Ure in Scots signifies Metal King IAMES the first Parliament 7. THe
removetur ab officio sed hoc non tenet in judice perpetuo Farin Q. 3. num 423. says that Majores Officiales non removentur sed minores facile removentur by th● cap. 14. Stat. Rob. 2. A negligent Judge viz. a Baillie of Regality is to be punish'd by escheating his Moveables and their life is to be in the Kings will A faulty Judge is also punishable by this Act in the same way as a negligent Judge which must not be mean'd of the meanest fault seing the punishment is so great but whereas by this Act the punishment is the loss of Office for ever if it be not Heretable yet by the 26 Act Parl. 5. Ja. 3. The Heretable Officer lose● his Office for three years whereas this Act bears this being lawfully prov'd and notorly kend we must not conclude that a Judge may be convict upon this notoriety without probation for these two are only exegetick of one another and the sense is they being convict upon notor probation Vid. supra observ on Act 16 Parl. 6 Ja. 2. THe Form now to be follow'd in case any man should masterfully possess another mans Lands is that if violence was us'd at the entering then the Council upon a Complaint will restore the party dispossess'd but if the Intrant entred in vacuam possessionem though without any Right he behov'd to be pursu'd before the Session by an action of Intrusion K. JAMES III. Parliament I. BY this Act the third of the KING'S Rents of Assyse that is to say the third of His Lands and Customes belong to the Queen as her Dowrie or Terce allenarly which is conform to the Common Law of this Kingdom by which the Wife has right to a Third of all the Lands in which a man dies Infest and that though she be otherwise provided if she be not expresly secluded from it by her Contract of Marriage so that it seems the Queen would have had right to a Terce of proper Lands belonging to the King though this Act had not been made But now by the 10 Act Parl. 3 Ch. 2. If a Wife be provided to a particular Provision though never so small either in her Contract of Marriage or in any other Write she will be secluded from a Terce except her Terce be expresly reserv'd to her by and attour the particular Provision Nota The Rents of Assize comprehends the Kings Customes and Lands as was found Decemb. 9. 1466. and March 11. 1500. Ogilvie contra Gray It may be doubted whether this Act was Temporary relating only to this Queen or if any Queen of Great-britain will have right as Queen of Scotland to a third of the Property conform to this Act since the Act seems to be reasonable in it self and that the Queen is founded in this right by the Common Law and if this had been only a Temporary Right relating only to this Queen it would not have been inserted amongst the general Laws or at least it would not have been generally conceiv'd as this Act is in these Terms The Dowrie of the Queen for terminus indefinitus aequi●ollet universali I find that in the 191 Act Parl. 13 Ja. 6. Queen Ann is provided to the third of the Property but not to the third of the Customes but that being by express paction derogats not from this Law SOmetimes Benefices Ecclesiastick were bestow'd upon secular persons who were call'd Commendators because the Benefice was commended and intrusted to their oversight and they were Procuratores in r●m s●am habebant tantum detentionem poss●ssionem but were not Proprietars and so could not Dispone Roman Concil 350. And because Commendators were but Trusties or Tutors Therefore Rights made by them though with consent of the Chapter are no longer binding in our Law than during the Commendators own Right And by this Act these Commendams are discharg'd and yet the Deeds done by them are not annull'd and therefore many Rights made by Commendators since this Act are sustain'd as valid though they were not Proprietars By the Canon Law only the Pope could grant commendam perpetuam and the Bishops could only grant Commends for six Moneths c. Nemo Elect. l. 6. THe pain of Lawburrows here exprest is hightned by the Act 166. Par. 13 Ja. 6. by which every Earl or Lords Penalty is made two thousand pounds every great Baron a thousand pounds every Free-holder a thousand merks every Fewar five hundred merks the un-landed Gentleman two hundred merks and the Yeoman one hundred merks which last Act is now observ'd and though Penalties be exprest here against breakers of Lawburrows found to Church-men and that there be no mention made of them in the last Act yet an Arch-bishop or Bishop can pursue now for the same penalty that is due to an Earl and Bishops and their Wives are allow'd the same Solemnities at their Funerals that are allow'd to Noblemen and their Wives by the 14 Act 3 Par. Ch. 2. And though there be no mention made here of Dukes and Marquesses yet the priviledge granted to Earls is extended to them 2 o By this Act the Penalty is to be apply'd to the King and is due by and attour the Reparation due to the person les'd but by the last Act and the present Custom the Penalty is to be divided betwixt the King and the Party and though by this Act the Master is free if he present his Servant who breaks the Law-burrows Less than the Law-burrows that is to say he who found the Lawburrows bring the Trespassors to the King or Sheriff within fourty days Dominus noxali judicio servi sui nomine conventus servum actori noxae dedendo liberatur yet by our present Custom the Master finds Caution that the Raiser of Law-burrows shall be skaithless from him against whom it is rais'd and his Men-Tennents and Servants and therefore the Master seems now lyable though he should present his Servants Albeit these be the ordinary Penalties allow'd where there is no other proof of the Danger then the Oath of the Complainer yet if the Complainer prove Threatnings the Council or Criminal Court may ordain surety of Law-burrows to be found upon such sums as they think proportional to the danger Vid. Not. on Act 129 Par. 9 Ja. 1. Supra THough by this Act all Summons are to be on twenty one days Warning yet all Summons that are priviledg'd by their own Nature or the Lords Deliverance come in upon six days vid. Hope Form of Process and by an Act of Sederunt July 21. 1672. It is declar'd that no Actions can be priviledg'd except Removings recent Spuilȝies recent Ejections Intrusions succeeding in the Vice Exhibitions Causes alimentary Summons for making forthcoming Transferrings Poyndings of the Ground Walkennings special Declarators Suspensions Prevento's and Transumpts all which and all second Summons in all Actions are to come in upon six days warnings except recent Spuilȝies because by the 65 Act Par.
and that France and Flanders were then entring into Wars STaple Goods are by this Act to remain in Staple and not to go to Mercats for clearing of which Act it is fit to know that Kings and Common-wealthes allow some Goods only to be sold at particular places and these are call'd Staple Goods and the place is call'd the Staple Port Jus stapuli est potestas sistendi in suo foro restringendique merces speciali emporii beneficio certis civitatibus competens Loccen de Jur. Marit lib. 1. c. 10. num 3. Potest enim Rex ob bonum publicum in hoc casu dispensare l. ult C. de leg But this priviledge of Staple is not competent except it be specially granted and Strangers as well as Natives may be forc'd to observe that priviledge for they are here tanquam subditi temporarii Grot. de jur Bell. Part 2. num 11 and 5. But yet this Act discharging the carrying of Staple Goods by Sea from Simon and Jude's Day till Candlemas is in Desuetude for our best Trade is now in Winter but the reason why Winter Trade was then discharg'd was because our Vessels were small and our Sea-men ignorant so that many perished by Winter Voyages ARe Explain'd in the Acts 67 and 68 8 Par. Ja. 3. and by the 36 Act Par. 8. Ja. 2. as is also the last Act of this Parliament VId. Annot. on Act 59 Par. 3 Ja. 1. Supra King JAMES the third Parliament 4. THis Act is conform to Iter Camer cap. 30. And the last Act ordain'd to be put to Execution by this Act is Act 73 Par. 14 Ja. 2. THis Act is in Desuetude for it is now lawful to carry any kind of Cattel out of the Countrey without hazard of Confiscation It is clear from this Act that the Warden might then have granted Licences for Goods prohibited but this the Commissioners of the Borders cannot now do King IAMES the third Parliament 5. VId. Act 76 Par. 14 Ja. 2. But it is to be observ'd from these words in this Act It shall be lawful to the Kings Highness to take the Decision of any Cause that comes before Him at His empleasance Likeas it was wont to be of before That the King Himself may be Judge as he pleases but though the King did call an Action to be judg'd before himself that was depending before the Lords yet His Majesty was thereafter pleased upon a Representation of the Inconveniences that would arise to refer it back to them and some interpret this of the Kings power when he is sitting in his Judicatures though I think the Act will not bear that gloss ●ut certain it is that at first all Masters were Judges in their own Families and that Kings themselves Judg'd in their own Kingdoms as we see in the instance of Solomon and others vid. ch 16. Stat. David 2. Where there is a Decision of the Kings insert amongst his Statutes and the Doctors are of opinion that princeps habens causam cum suo subdito potest ipse judicare si vult Peregr de jure sisci tit 2. num 7. and this seems founded on l. hoc Tiberius 41. ff de haer instit l. proxime ff de his qu● in test delent And though thereafter they did disburden themselves of that Charge by electing other Judges yet they did not debar themselves from that power and therefore we use to say that all Jurisdiction in Scotland is cumulative and not privative but if the King take the Cognition of any Cause He will try it according to the Forms of that Court where it should have been decided and therefore if He be to Try a Criminal the Pannel will be allow'd to hear the Witnesses Depone against him and the matter of Fact will be judg'd by an Assyze If it be alledg'd the meaning of this Act is only that the King may Try any Action He pleases in His Council that is to say His Session for of old the Session was call'd His Council and yet they are call'd His Council and Session To this it may be answered this A●t appoints that Causes should be first Try'd by the Judge ordinary and if he either refuse to Judge or Judge wrong the Council is to Judge not the Cause but him and this induc'd some to urge that the absence from the Host could not be pursu'd before the Council though the punishment was restricted to an arbitrary punishment for which they brought these Reasons 1 o. That this would confound the nature and limits of all the Judicatures which are the great foundations of our Law and which is contrary to this Act. 2 o. It is the great security of the People that when they are Try'd for Crimes they should be judg'd not only by the learn'd Judges as to Relevancy but by their Peers whom they may judge again as to the Probation 3 o. Advocats are to be heard before the Criminal Court but not before the Council and the Debate is to be there in Writ which obliges a Judge to do justly and the Probation is to be led in presence of the Pannel 4 o. Before the Council the Crime may be refer'd to Oath which is not suitable to the Criminal Law even where the punishment is arbitrary except the Party be by Act of Parliament oblig'd to Depone as in the case of Conventicles 5 o. There are no Exculpations before the Council which are necessary in Crimes 6 o. Several Acts of Parliament appoint that cases may be pursu'd before the Criminal Court or Council when that is intended and which were unnecessary if all Causes might naturally be pursu'd before either It being likewise Debated from this Act that a Judge for giving an unjust Decreet might be pursu'd before the Council in the first instance for oppression the Council did in January 1682. find that a Sheriff or other inferiour Judge could not be ●ursu'd before the Council until his Decreet were first reduc'd before the Judge ordinary and that because the 105 Act Par. 14 Ja. 3. Appoints all Actions to be first pursu'd before the Judge ordinary and the Lords of the Session are Judges Ordinary to Reductions and are there appointed to cognosce the wrongs done by inferiour Judges and if this were Sustain'd the Privy Council should become the Session nor would any man be a Sheriff since he might every day be pursu'd before the Council And whereas it was pretended that the Council were Judges to Oppression and there might be great Oppression committed by inferiour Judges sub sigurâ judicij It was answered That when the Decreet was Reduc'd they might then be punish●d as oppressours if there was no colour of Justice for their Decision as the said 105 Act provided Sheriff of Bamff contra Arthur Forbes Vid. Obs. on the 16 Act 6 Par. Ja. 2. and 16 Act 3 Par. Ch. 2. WE see that the granting Reversions by the Wodsetters were but new
favours of commerce and of poor Debitors but to ballance this speciality the Superiour is allow'd to retain the Land comprised to himself upon payment of the sums comprised for because he is also proprietar of the Lands having dominium directum as the Vassal who is Debitor has Dominium utile vid. 5. March 1634. Black contra Pitmedine But it was lately found that the Superiour could not redeem after seven or ten years no more than the Vassal for though the legal as to the Superiour be not limited yet he comes but in place of the Vassal and so ought to have no more priviledge and this general must be restricted by the other parts of the Act. 5 o. Though the Superiour be bound to receive the Comprisers and that without producing their Authors Right because it is not presumable that their Debitors from whom they comprised will produce their Rights to them yet where Adjudications are led for compleating Dispositions or other Rights the Superiour is not oblig'd to receive such Adjudgers until they instruct the last Vassals Right for such Adjudgers as these are not ordain'd by the Act of Parliament to be received June 24. 1663. M cneil contra M cdougal But it may be doubted what an Adjudger who has done ulti●at Diligence to recover his Debitors Writs shall do if he cannot obtain them it being very hard that he should ly out of his Right because of the contumacy of the person who is oblig'd to compleat the Right Vid. obs on the 19 Act Par. 2 Sess. 2 Ch. 2. THough it is said here that Justice-airs need not be continu'd yet Justice-courts are declar'd peremptor so that if Actions before them be not call'd the day to which the citation is given the citation is null perit instantiâ Act 79. Par. 11. Ja. 6. Vid. Observ. on that Act. BY this Act it is declar'd that the Rolls and Registers be put in Books and have the same strength that the Rolls had for understanding which it 's fit to know that both in Parliament and Exchequer there were no Registers but Rolls And by this Act the Rolls are ordain'd to be turn'd into Books and these Books are declar'd to be as authentick as their Originals and the Clerk is yet design'd Clerk of the Council Register and Rolls THis is the only Act by which counterfeiters of Money are punish'd by death and yet this Act properly stricks against the counterfeiters and coyners of Copper-money only which in our Law is call'd black Money It has been doubted whether the Officers of the Mint could coyn Copper-Money without express permission but it was lately found they could not because coyning is ex sua natura inter regalia 2 o. There have been several warrands expresly granted to the saids Officers themselves for coyning Copper-money and determining the quantity to be coyn'd and the rates to be follow'd which had been needless if this could have been done without a Warrand 3 o. There is so great profit to the Coyners and so great loss to the people by coyning Copper and black Money that it was necessary the coyning should have been determin'd 4 o. It had been unnecessary and absurd to have discharg'd the counterfiting and currency of Black-money by this Act if it had been lawful to have coin'd without a Warrand and whereas it was alleadg'd that black money was Coin'd in England without warrand To this it was answer'd that such farthings c. past only in the place where they were coin'd in England but what passes in one place of Scotland passes through all Vid. Annot. on Act 28 Par. 6 Ja. 2. Supra King JAMES the third Parliament 6. THe design of this Act is to shew that in Reductions of Decreets of inferiour Courts before the Parliament the Defender is not allow'd to propone Defences that were competent and omitted in the first instance and yet in Reductions of Decreets of inferiour Courts before the Session alleadgances though competent and omitted at the time of the first Decreet are receivable by the Lords especially if the Decreets be in absence Nota That Dilators might have been then propon'd separatim but now after a Dilator is repell'd all the other Dilators must be propon'd together Nota 2 o. It is clear by this Act that Decreets of inferiour Courts were reduc'd before the Parliament but these Lords were then not what our Session is now the Session being then a Committee of Parliament as is also clear by this Act. Nota 3 o. That Brieves of mort-ancestrie which are now call'd Brieves for Serving of Heirs were then led and expede in Justice-airs though it was still by an Inquest as this Act bears and if then Difficulties did occur in serving of Heirs it is clear that superiour Courts might give their opinion upon these though they cannot serve an Heir and thus two several persons having rais'd Brieves for serving themselves Heirs to Captain Ross they were Advocated from the Macers and it was Debated before the Lords what Probation was sufficient to exclude the King as ultimus Hares albeit it was alleadg'd that this was only proper to be Debated before the Inquest and yet though the Lords may determine how a thing may be proven ipsum modum probandi as in that case where the Debate did run whether the being habit and repute Cousins was sufficient in agnatione antiquâ yet the Lords in the case Forrester contra the Heirs of the Laird of Wrights-houses refused to consider the Probation it self and the Objections against the Writs produc'd but remitted the same to the Inquest though it was alleadg'd that it being objected here that the Writs produc'd for Probation were vitiated the Lords could only judge this as being species falsi but withal the Lords declared that if the Inquest desired to know whether the Papers were vitiated they would give them their opinion therein The Lords of the Session themselves have been sometimes the Inquest as in Serving King CHARLES the First Heir to Queen Ann his Mother and King CHARLES the Second to the Duke of Lenox though it was alleadg'd that this was inconvenient because no other Judge could reduce their Verdict but certainly either the Parliament might have reduc'd it and found them guilty of Error or the Lords of the Session might have reduc'd their own Verdict upon new Probation for in this case they proceeded not as Supream Judges but as Members of Inquest The Parliament have been sometimes the Inquest as in Serving the Earl of Mar Heir to his Mother BY this Act the Party put to the Horn for Slaughter is to find Caution before he be Relax'd not only to compear to underly the Law but to pay twenty pounds for his Escheat Goods and this is to this day exprest in all Relaxations VId. observ on Act 38 Par. 4 Ja. 4. BY this and by the first Act of this Parliament it is clear that that Parliament did
Criminal and such as were free should prove their innocence for else it should be impossible for the King to be able otherwise to prove the guilt which should hold much more now because the Assyzers had by the Regulations an easie remedie for preventing this sibi imputent who did not mark who assoilzied and who condemned and though these Regulations introduced that as a further remedie for clearing this matter yet that was not necessary for there were Assyzes of Error before Assyzers were ordained to be so marked 2 o. It was alleadged that this was not wilfull nor by partial means which partiality behoved necessarily to be proven by the words of the Act but this was repelled because the Error being clear the Error behoved necessarily to be wilfull and by partial means nor was it possible to prove these occult qualities otherwise than ab ef●●ctu 3 o. It was alleadged that there being fourscore upon the Pannel the difficultie of differencing the Probation might excuse from wilfull Error but this was repelled because the probation adduced was so clear 4 o. By this Act Assyzes of Error are only to be allowed where the Persons Indited are shown before the Assize in the assyze of Error but so it is the persons assoilȝed by the former assyze were Forfaulted in absence and were neither then nor now shown to the Assyze and the reason of this speciality is because if the Persons assoilȝed were present they might prove their own innocencie and so clear likewise these who assoilȝed them but this was repelled because by these words Shown before the Assyze is only meaned that their Designations and not their Persons should be shown to the Assyze of Error for else there could be no Assyze of Error in Forfaulters in absence and though the Persons were present they would not be admitted hoc ordine to clear their own innocence and the Assyzers should have assoilȝed or condemned according to the Probation then led FOr Explication of this Act vid Not one Act 143. Par. 13. Ja. 1. THis Act is explained in the Observ. on the 17. Act 1 Par. Ja. 6. BY this Act Deeds done and Rights made by Furious Persons or Idiots are reduceable not only from the date of the Brievs but from the time that these Persons were found to be Idiots or Furious for the Verdict of the Inquests upon such Brievs is declaratory and finds that these Persons were such from such a time Observ That albeit from the Stile of the Brieve of old a Furious or Idiots deed could only be reduced from the date of the Brieve and that by this Act such Deeds be only declared to be Reduceable from the time that the Inquest found that the granter was Furious or Idiot yet the granter himself being convalesced may reduce Deeds done by himself though there was neither Brievs nor Inquest finding him Furious the Furie being clearl● proven there being no reason that the negligence of Ag●ats or Friends in not raising Brievs should prejudge the Furious Person 21. Feb. 1632. and which seems yet harder the Heir of the Furious Person will be allow'd to reduce though there was no Brieve nor Inquest in his own lifetime and it is very hard to know his condition after Death July 26. 1638. for sententia aut decretum judicis non facit furiosum sed declarat but there is this difference that if the furious person was declar'd by an Inquest that Verdict proves per se as to all deeds done after but if this Idiotry or Furiosity was not found by an Inquest it must be prov'n by Witnesses and when the furious person is re-convalesc'd deeds done by him after that are valid though there be no Declarator and if there be only lucid Intervals the deed is presum'd to have been done in the fury or lucid Interval according as the deed itself is reasonable or unreasonable and for clearing of this the Lords in a case Steuart contra Steuart ordain'd Witnesses to be led before answer to clear what condition the Granter was in at the subscriving of the deed contraverted and it would seem that the presumption lyes for its being done during the ●ury and not during the lucid Interval if the Granter was found furious by an Inquest b●cause this Act of Parliament sayes That frae it may be known by the Inquest that the persons are Fools or Furious all Alienations made by them shall be null O●serv 2 o. This Act of Parliament stricks only against natural Fools and Idiots and therefore where men become Idiots by doting or old age though they cannot recover or by sickness where they may recover It was thought that they could not be found Idiots by an Inquest and indeed this were very dangerous for many who have been very famous and great men might have been thus affronted in their old age or sickness or at least the Exchequer will not grant Tutories Dative to the nearest Agnats until their condition be first try'd by an Inquest though the Cravers offer to prove the same by Witnesses beyond all Exception and thus it seems that though deeds done by Idiots or Furious Persons may be declar'd null by way of Action yet themselves cannot be declar'd Idiots otherwise than by an Inquest Observ. 3 o. That though all deeds done by furious Persons are here declar'd null yet sometimes they may oblige themselves validly is absents and Pupils may be oblig'd ● furiosus ff de act oblig l. si a furioso ff si cert Pet. vid. Act 18 Par. 10 Ja. 6. Observ. 4 o. From these words and though it be known by the Inquest that the Inquest may find a person Idiot or furious upon their proper knowledge for they are both Judges and Witnesses by our Law Vid. observ on the 18 Act 10 Par. Ja. 6. BY the Act 68 Money and Gold being cry'd up that is to say the value of Coyns being rais'd by the Parliament here which is now usually done by the Council both as to forraign Coyns and our own the Parliament did by the 69 Act ordain that all Debts should be paid with sick Money and of the same price as the money had course before this Proclamation and Act which was only to take place where the Terms of payment were by-past before the Act which makes me think that the reason of the Act was because the Parliament thought it just that no mans Breach of Obligation mora should be advantageous to him and if the Creditor had got his Money in specie he might have made other use of it by carrying it abroad c. But yet now all Debts may be paid according to the course that Money has the time of the payment for as the Money may be cry'd up so it may be cry'd down and to bring both to an equality the Debitor and Creditor run an equal hazard for whatever difference may be as to the taxing the price of other things si
men to make it publick and thus it seems the Parliament thought these equivalent to a Mercat day but this holds not in other cases where Proclamations are to be upon Mercat days nor even in Brieves is this now used Nota By this Act if persons refuse to pass upon the Inquest the Sheriff is authoris'd to compel them and this I think the Justices may do in Criminal cases also for the Justices ar● higher Judges than the Sheriffs and as the publick is more concern'd in these cases so men will be more unwilling to pass upon them except they be compell'd and though there be pecuniary Penalties appointed against absent Assyzers yet that is but an ordinary remedy and does not exclude this extraordinary one even as the penalties appointed against Witnesses does not exclude the taking them with Caption FAlsing of Dooms are now in Desuetude altogether and to them have succeeeded Reductions in our present practice Vid. ●bs on the 117 Act Par. 9 Ja. 1. BY this Act it is ordain'd that all Measures and Weights be made the same thorow all Scotland and the Standarts to remain at Edinburgh and to be ordain'd by the Chamberlain and his Council for then the Chamberlain or Camerarius Scotiae was Judge in all things that concerned the Burghs of Scotland and was in use to hold a Council who with him judg'd in Matters that concern'd all the Burghs in general as the Dean of Gild and his Council Judge in every particular Burgh and his Statutes of old concerning Weights and Measures are to be seen Iter. Camer cap. 30. but this Office and Jurisdiction over the Burrows is now obsolet and the rectification of Weights and Measures is only considered by the Parliament or by the Council in prosecution of the Acts of Parliament Though by this Act all the Standarts of Weights and Measures are ordain'd to remain at Edinburgh yet by Act of Burrows they have been divided thus The Standart of the Stone-weight remains at Lanerk because the chief Commodity of old that was weighed by the Stone-weight was Wool which was paid in to the King at Lanerk and was therefore call'd Lanae-Arca The Standart of the Pynt or Jugg was left at Stirling because the Kings Court recided there The Standart of the Furlot remains at Linlithgow because the King had no other Residence in the three Lothians which were the chief Countreys for Corns And Edinburgh had the Ell which is the chief Instrument for measuring Silks or other forraign Stuffs I find likewise that the Town of Wigtoun and other particular Burghs have an acknowledgment paid them for Measuring the Jaggs within particular Brewaries within their Territory and these who agree with them to pay this are said to have a free Stallage and the Imposition is call'd their Deaurie because it is taken up by their Dean when the Shire resolv'd to quarrel this Imposition It was answer'd that it was just because th●y inspected the Measures for the good of the Lieges and that it was confirm'd by immemorial Possession I have here set down the Foundations of all Measures and Weights for what was set down in the cap. 22. Stat. Robert 3. is not exact Of the Weights and Foundation thereof A Corn or pickle of Wheat taken out of the midst of an Ear of Wheat is the foundation of a Grains-weight Eighteen of these Grains make the half-Drop-weight Thirty six Grains make a Drop-weight Four Drop-weight is a quarter of an Ounce Four quarter make an Ounce-weight Eight Ounces is a Merk-weight Two Merk-weig●● 〈◊〉 a Pound-weight Sixteen Pound-weight makes the Stone-weight of Laner● There was also a Trone Stone-weight which did weigh nine●een pounds and eight ounces of Paris weight wherewith the Butter Cheese Wool Tallow and such other Countrey Commodities as carry refuse was weigh'd There are other quantities whereof the weight is here set down to give some contentment to the Reader as a Tun-weight of light Goods which is the Common fraughting of all Merchandise betwixt this Countrey and France England or Spain which Tunn is esteem'd to weigh 600 pounds weight A Sack of Goods which is the common fraughting of all Merchandise from this Countrey to the Low-countreys esteem'd to weigh 40 Stones or 640 pound weight The Sirplith of Goods which was the common Fraughting of Merchandise betwixt this Countrey and the Eastern Countreys is esteem'd to weigh eighty Stone-weight or 1280 pound weight The Last of Goods is esteem'd to weigh 120 stone-weight or 1920 pound weight of light Goods The Last of Metal and other heavy Goods is 2850 pound weight The Fodder of Lead is 126 stone or 2000 pound weight The VVeights follovving are us'd by Apothecaries in mixture of their Medecines vvherein the least is a Grain TWenty Grains make a Scruple Three Scruples maketh a Draghm Eight Draghms maketh an Ounce Sixteen Ounces maketh a Pound The Medicinal pound is twelve ounces A Sheckle-weight mentioned in the Bible is half an ounce A Talent is counted 120 pound weight A Talent of Money is 600 Crowns The weight of all quantity of wheat Bread at every price of Wheat is set down in a Table hereafter following In all our Nei●hbour Countreys the Flesh is sold by weight If the Meal were sold also by weight it might prove profitable to the Lieges The twelve ounces Troy weight 〈◊〉 England weigh twelve ounces three drop twenty one grains 〈◊〉 weight Now of these our weights are made other Measures both for Corns and liqu 〈…〉 ff The Foundation of the liquid Metts proceeding from the vveight THe Scottish Pint or Standart Jugg of Stirling is found to contain three pound seven ounce weight of the Water of Leith Every Pint is divided into two Chopins or four Mutchkins Two Pints maketh a Quart Four Quarts or eight Pints is a Gallon The Herring-barrels contains now eight Gallons and an half though by the 57 Act Par. 4 Ja. 6. it is to contain nine Gallons twelve of these go to a Last and eight to a Tunn The Salmond-barrel contains now ten Gallons and a Quart though by the 110 Act Par. 14 Ja. 3. it ought to contain fourteen Gallons and by the 57 Act Par. 4 Ja. 6. it should contain twelve Gallons but by an Act of Council July 15. 1619. it is to contain ten Gallons Two Barrels or seventeen Gallons is the full of Burdeaux-hogs-head The Puncheons of High-Countrey Wines are of thirteen or fourteen Gallons Three Paris Puncheons make a Tunn or four Hogs-heads makes a Tunn Two Pypes or two Butts is a Tunn Six Barr●kins or Ter●●s make a Tunn Six English Buns of Bear is a Tunn Six Salmond-barrels is a Tunn Eight Herring-barrels is a Tunn Twelve Barrels makes a Last Our Scottish Pint contains being fill'd to the top very near four Pints and an half of English Now if the Ground be true that the Pint doth weigh fifty five ounces then consequently the Tunn should weigh 116 Stone fourteen pound The Puncheon full twenty
Riots pursu'd before them King JAMES the fifth Parl. 5. AFter many Alterations observ'd by me in the Annot. on Act 65 Par. 3 Ja. 1. and Act 62 Par. 14 Ja. 2. at last the Session was establish'd in the way it now is by King James the fifth in this his fifth Parliament and is ordain'd to consist of fourteen Lords seven whereof were to be of the Clergy or Spiritual and seven Temporal with the President who was to be of the Clergy but since the abolition of Popery they are all Seculars or Laicks though sometimes Bishops were extraordinary Lords and though this Act of Parliament appoints the half to be Spiritual and the half Temporal with a President yet by the 93 A●t 6 Par. Ja. 6. It is declar'd it shall be lawful to the King to present any able Person whether he be of the Spiritual or Temporal State VId. observ on Act 7 Par. 3 Ch. 2. THe present Lords are ordain'd to have all the priviledges that the Lords of Session for so they were call'd in the Reign of King James the second had formerly and therefore it is alleaged that since Appeals could not be received from them that they cannot be received from the Lords of Council and Session as was formerly observed Act 62 Par. 14 Ja. 2. THe Chancellor when present is to preceed and because he preceeds therefore he gives his Vote last and because it was controverted whether he was to be President in the Parliament therefore by the 1 Act 1 Par. Ch. 2. He is declar'd to be President in all Courts and he did preceed by vertue of this Act in Exchequer till he was discharg'd by His Majesty by a Letter in anno 1663. These words And sicklike other Lords as shall please the King's Grace to subjoyn to them of his Great Council who shall have Vote to the number of 3 or 4. are all the warrand that there is for nominating the extraordinary Lords of Session who cannot exceed 4. They are still named by a Letter from the King as the ordinary Lords are but they are not examined like them and these extraordinary Lords are marked in the Books of Sederunt after all the ordinary Lords THese words And the Lords to subscrive all Deliverances and none other is all the warrand that was for the Lords subscriving all the Bills for raising Summonds before the Criminal Court but I think these general words should be restricted secundum subjectam materiam as all general words in Law ought to be for we see that notwithstanding of these general words the warrands for raising Summonds before the Privy Council are subscrived only by Privy Counsellors and now the Justices are only in use to subscrive their own Bills though the other Lords of Session are not excluded from that power THis Act is the warrand that the Lords have for making Acts of Sederunt which were so called because the Lords sitting are marked Sederunt such and such men but these Acts are to reach no further than the ordering of Forms of Process or the regulating their own House and therefore this Act sayes For advising and making of their Rules and Institutes for the order of Justice This same power is almost allow'd by all Nations to their Supream Judicatures Vin. Comment ad § 9. Inst. lib. 1. tit 2. Christin Vol. 2. Decis 51. num 8. THis division of the Kingdom in order to the calling Causes is now in Desuetude for all Causes are now Enrolled according to the order of the returns of the Process vid. Act. 16. Sess. 3. Par. 2. Ch. 2. Artic. 1. NO Session sits now on Munday and so this Act is in Desuetude Suspensions are called on Tuesday and Wednesday and ordinary Actions upon Thursday Friday and Saturnday The Friday was allotted for the Causes of the King and Queen and the Actions of Ministers and Strangers but by the Regulations the Kings Causes may be call'd on any day the Party Defender being advertis'd 14. dayes before of the particular day on which it is to be called It has been doubted before this Act whether the Queens Causes should enjoy the priviledge of the Kings Causes And the priviledge is by this Act extended to her ita Augusti privilegia ad Augustam sunt extendenda l. 31. ss de Legibus NOw the Lords sit from 9. to 12. and they sit down sometimes before 9. as occasion requires NOta By this Act Parties were allow'd to plead their own cause and they needed not have Advocats except they pleased but no other Party not contain'd in the Summonds can have liberty to speak But the Lords can now hinder Parties to Plead or force them to have Advocats to shun confusion and nonsence It seems also that though an Action be to a mans behove he cannot be allow'd to speak except his name be in the Summonds THe order of Tabulating Summonds is now much alter'd for no Summonds are Tabulated except Actions of Declarators Improbations Contraventions and other Actions at the King 's Advocats instance upon the back of which Summonds he Writes Tabuletur erga diem Veneris proximè sequentem and except this be written upon it the Action cannot be debated and some think that if the Action be called without this a Decreet thereupon pronounced would be null WItnesses are now examin'd by one of the ordinary Lords in the afternoon as here and that Lord who sat last Week in the Outer-house does the next Week Examine Witnesses THe Quorum of the Lords by this Act is ten either ordinary or extraordinary for either make up the Quorum but now eight Lords with the President make a Quorum which alteration proceeds from the 44. Act 11. Par. Ja. 6. Nota 1. By this Act that advising of Processes cannot be recommended to any particular Lord. Nota 2. That by this Act publication of Witnesses is allow'd else how is it ordain'd here that publication of Witnesses should be before the hail Auditor and Advocats were allow'd to see the Depositions and to debate against them till the year 1666. at which time this was discharg'd upon pretext that Advocats did spend too much time in debating against the Depositions and that Witnesses Depositions were more to be credited when no man was to see them or know them than when the persons interested were to see them because it was probable they would take pains to please them But we find great mistakes by not letting Advocats see the Depositions since they might clear many things that seem inconsistent and which depend upon other matters of Fact and it 's rather presumeable that Witnesses knowing that what they say is not to be seen will take liberty to Depone too liberally the not publication also of the Depositions tends much to make Judge Arbitrary since the warrands whereon they proceed is not known and publication of Testimonies i● a kind of confronting Witnesses with the Parties
which is oft-times very useful and this publication is for these reasons allow'd by the Civil Law and in most Nations vid. Marant de processus publicatione and in England in all cases and is even with us allow'd in some cases yet as in Falshood CLerks to the Signet are now called Writers to the Signet but their Fees specified by the next Act are innovated by the Regulations at first there was but one Clerk of Session who was called the Clerk of Council as is clear by the 53. Act of this Parliament and he was chosen per vices out of the Writers to the Signet but all the Writers to the Signet or Clerks of the Signet were at first admitted to be present at the decision of Causes whereof this Act is a Vestige Thereafter there were two Clerks of the Session and at last three but lest their number should increase by an unprinted Act of Parliament it was declar'd that they could not be moe than three notwithstanding whereof in Anno 1661. The Register appointed six whereupon the King by his Letter in Anno 1676. reduced them again to three and now again there are six Clerks as before the year 1675. IT is appointed by this Act that deliverance upon Bills presented to the Session be only Written by a Writer to the Council that it to say a Clerk of Session and not by a Writer to the Signet BY the last words of this Act it appears that an Advocat may be ●●mpelled to plead for any man except he can alledge that he 〈…〉 employed for the other Party or the like c. which is 〈…〉 the Civil Law l. 7. C. de postulando 〈…〉 present practice Advocats and all remove at the advising 〈◊〉 the Cause though in England and France Causes are openly advised which discourages very much all arbitrariness THat Advocats should propone all their Dilators together the second time is still ordered but never observed for where the Dilators are of importance or intricat the Lords will allow them to be proponed separatly BY this Act such as misrepresent the Lords or accuse them unjustly either by a formal Process or to the King are to be punish'd Arbitrarly by way of Action for they are here appointed to be called before the King but such as dishonour or lightlie them are to be punished by the Lords themselves and the Lords are in use to send such as contemn them or their orders to the Castle or Tolbooth or to ordain them to crave pardon upon their knees c. suitable to the offence The Lords are to this day free of Taxations conform to this Act but of late if there be no exception of them in the Acts imposing Taxations they are in use to get a Letter from the King declaring them free though this may seem needless because of 23. Act Par. 1. Ch. 1. and the 23. Act Par. 1. Ch. 2. Though the Precedency due to the Wives of Lords of the Session or Advocats be continued with them after their Husbands death which we derive from the Civil Law l faemina 8. ff de Senatoribus yet immunity from Taxes is not extended to their Wives Stockman Decis 65. King JAMES the fifth Parliament 6. THough regularly Crimes die with the Committers and cannot be punish'd after their death yet by this Act it is ordain'd that Treason may be pursu'd after the committers death which holds only in Treason committed against the Kings person and Common-wealth that is to say in perduellion where there is a design against the Kingdom such as raising War bringing in Forreiners c. but holds not in simple Treason or laese Majestie such as are the keeping out of a Castle or in offering to detain the King's Person Prisoner upon any private account for the words against the King's Person or Common-weal are copulative neither does this Act hold in Statutory Treason which are meerly Treasons by vertue of a Statute such as Stealing in Landed men or Murder under trust c. In all cases where Treason is to be pursued after the death of the Committer it is necessary to call the appearand Heir because his right as appear and Heir is to be forefaulted by the sentence but though it is ordinarly believ'd that the bones of the Committer must be raised and brought to the Bar yet this is not necessary Nota That the Common or Civil Law is a sufficient warrand to sustain Actions in this Kingdom because of its great equity except where the same is over-ruled by a contrary Law or Custom The Civil Law to which this Act relates is l. ult ff ad l. Jul. maj Extinguitur crimen mortalitate nisi sorte quis Majestatis reus suerit It has been much doubted amongst Lawyers how far the Delict or Crime of the Predecessor should infer Action against their Heirs which may be resolv'd in these conclusions 1. That all corporal punishment expires with the Committer nam noxa caput sequitur instit lib. 4. tit de nox Act. 8. per tot § 5. 2. As to any Civil conclusion quoad interesse pecuniarium the Civil Law did only sustain restitution against the Heir in two cases viz. If either Litis-contestation had past in the Defuncts own time or if the Heir had got advantage by the Crime or Delict of his Predecessor as if for instance the stollen Goods or the Money conceal'd by his Predecessor had remain'd with him § Non autem omnes 1. Instit. de perpet temporal Action 3. By the Canon Law the Heir was lyable to refound the damnage done by the Predecessor though there was neither Litis contestation past in his time nor did any advantage remain with his Heir cap ult ext de sepult cap. in literis ext de rapt And though the opinion of the Canonists seem to the Lawyers of this age more equitable they thinking Litis-contestation but a subtilty yet I conceive that there was very much reason for the Civil Law to require Litis-contestation since if the Defunct himself had been pursu'd he might have alleadg'd many things which might have defended him that were unknown to the Heir as for instance he might have alleadg'd that the Sheep alledg'd to be stollen were intrometted with by the Owners warrand and might have cited Witnesses who were present which the Heir could not know and yet our practice follows the Canon Law as more conscionable I find that in the 5. Council at Constantinople it was after debate found that Origin and Theodorus might be Anathematiz'd after their death though Vigilius then Pope of Rome maintain'd neminem post mortem condemnandum and this occasion'd a great Schism There is interpos'd betwixt this and the next Act a distinct Act in the Black Impression whereby the King and Parliament ordain several Acts past in the last Parliament to be now pronounc'd and authoriz'd by his Grace and the three Estates which has been left out because the way
be extreamly vex'd ordinarly the same day is appointed by the Judge for the proponer of the Falshood to consign and for the producer of the Writ to bide by the same like to these Consignations were the Sponsions mentioned in the Civil Law whereby Litigators sponsionem faciebant certae pecuniae quae ejus lucro cederet qui judicio vicisset l. paen ff de alcae toribus l. 17. § ult ff de praescript verb. Nota By this Act where Improbation is propon'd at the Kings instance the informer is to find Caution but if the Kings Advocat insist ad vindictam publicam I conceive he is oblig'd to find no Caution because he is never presum'd to pursue Calumniously WHen any thing is to be proven by Writ if the Writ be not produc'd this Act appoints that Protestation shall be given against the probation of that part of the exception but now the form is to call upon the Act and crave Circumduction of the Term which circumduction is here call'd Protestation but if the Writ be produc'd this Act appoints that the other party shall be heard against the same after Renunciation of probation and the form is that when any Writ is produc'd in modum probationis the other party protests to be heard against the same at the advising of the Cause and the producer puts up an Act renuncing further probation THis Act appoints the expences of Plea to be Tax'd and insert in Decreets which is conform to the Ch. 68 and 69. Quon Attach and though by the Civil Law expences of Plea ought not to exceed the principal sum pursu'd for Bart. in l. 8. Cod. de indiction Yet I have seen more expences allow'd than the sum pursu'd for extended to and it were very unjust that if a person of quality were pursu'd unjustly by a mean Rogue for a small matter that his expences should not be determined according to what he was really forc'd to expend for the necessity of expending is the only just rule in such cases Queen MARY Parliament 8. THis Act of Parliament doth enable French-men to bruik Lands and Estate in Scotland and Naturalizes them so as that they may enjoy all the priviledges here as any Scots-man may do but though quoad the point of Succession strangers have by many Nations been debarr'd and that by the Roman Law cum peregrinis Testamenti factio non erat l. 1. C. de hared instituend l. 1. § 2. ff de ● yet Craig pag. 96. observes that strangers were not debarr'd from Succession in Scotland and I find it so decided 13 January 1575. in the case of one Richardson These priviledges granted by this Act are likewise confirmed to the Frenches by an Act of Sederunt the 11 of June 1595. From these first words in this Act appointing Letters of Naturality or Naturalization to be given to such of the French Subjects as shall happen to be in the Kingdom of Scotland It may be doubted that French-men cannot pretend to this right except they live here but this is expresly contrary to the French priviledges there granted to us It may be also urg'd that Dutch-men or others cannot pretend to it though they be Naturalized in France for to Naturalize them because they are Naturaliz'd in France were to allow the French King to Naturalize any he pleas'd in Scotland though enemies to us 2. Only French-men are Naturaliz'd which is to be interpreted only of such as are properly so 3. This were fictio fictionis which is reprobated by Law It seems also just that except this priviledge be continu'd to us in France French-men ought not to have it in Scotland Quaer If Merchants though not naturaliz'd will not have right to heretable Rights granted for security of their Money for without this there could be no Commerce THis Act contains the French priviledges to us communicated by the French whereby the Scots may succeed in France in the same way that the French-men themselves did and they are by this Act Naturaliz'd to that and all other effects and which was very necessary for us since by the Law of France the Fisk excludes the true Heirs of strangers except as to Goods brought in by them which priviledge is call'd by the French droict d' anbeine beside this right of Succession the Scots likewise are free to be preferr'd to all Ecclesiastical Dignities The Gentlemen are free from Taxes and the Scottish Ships free from Imposts albeit of late the French exact from us 50 Sols per Tun as from other Strangers As to which I drew this Memorial as Assessor to the Royal Burrows A Memorial concerning the Priviledges due to the Scots in France THe French Nation finding themselves oblig'd to have forraign Recruits for maintaining their Wars pitch'd upon Scotland as a Nation very sit to furnish them Levies and so old was their Alliance that a League offensive and defensive was enter'd into betwixt Charles the Great King of France and Achaius King of Scotland in Anno 787. at which time Charles the Great bestow'd upon the King of Scotland the Double Tressure garnish'd with Flower de Luces or as the French call it Fleurie Contre fleury born by them at this day as all the French Historians and Heraulds do acknowledge After this the French being ingaged in constant Wars with the English they imploy'd the Scots on all occasions in which their great succours and services are set down by Favin a learned French Author in his Theatre of Honour and to ingage that Nation the more as well as to reward their services the guarding of the King's Person was bestowed upon them by Charles the 5 th and they were holden as Naturalized French-men and were exempted from payment of all Customs and though many of these Contracts and Leagues be lost yet these following Papers are still extant A Treaty containing these priviledges betwixt Alexander the 2d and Lewis of France called St. Lewis Another betwixt King Robert le Bruce and King John An Act of Parliament 1558. relative to the like Act in France wherein Q. Mary who was then Married to Francis Dolphine of France doth with the consent of Parliament Naturalize all the French in Scotland and enable them to succeed to Estates moveable and immoveable here and free them from all Taxes payable by strangers In which Act of Parliament the Copy of the priviledges granted by the French to the Scots is verbatim ingrossed Item A Patent by Francis King of France dated May 1510. exeeming the Scots Nation from paying Custome in Normandie Item An Act of Exchequer approving thereof dated the said year Item An Act of the Thesaurers in France consenting to the same Item Letters Patent from the said King to his Great Council for expeding the former Patent dated the said year Item Act of the Great Council consenting thereto Item An Act of the Cour des aides at Paris approving the said Patent Item Charter by King Henry the
but now by the foresaid 5 Act 1 Par. Ch. 2. all sums to be rais'd for maintainance of Forts or Armies must be first concluded in Parliament or Convention of Estates And now the King has a considerable Revenue by the Excise for defraying those small necessities for which the Council then impos'd and it is certain in the general that all Countreys should supply the Monarch with Means to defray the expence of the Government Vid. Arnis de jur Majestatis in bona privatorum Vid Act 85 Par. 6 Ja. 4. BY this Act the making privie Conventions or Assemblies within Burghs to put on Armour or display Banners c. without Licence from the Soveraign are punishable by Death Observ. 1 o. It seems that meer Convocations or Assemblies are not per se punishable by Death without putting on Armour or displaying Banners Observ. 2 o. That Naked-assistance at such Tumults with a Batton was not found by the Justices to infer Death in anno 1665. and I conceive that though a previous design were prov'd yet the assistance with a Batton would not be sufficient since the Act requires putting on Armour or Cloathing themselves with Weapons which imports hostile VVeapons for neither of these can be verifi'd in a Batton and penal Statutes are not to be extended but yet the appearing with a Batton is sufficient to punish arbitrarly such as assist at Tumults THis Act Confiscating Ship and Coals wherein Coals are Transported is in Desuetude but is not expresly abrogated by any Law and though at first Licences for Transporting Coals were necessary yet now even these Licences are in Desuetude we having now discovered more Coals than serves our Nation THis Act Confiscating Beeff and Mutton that comes to Mercat without Skin and Birn is still in observance and was made for discovery of Theft for the Skin being upon the Beast that is kill'd does bear all marks whereby it may be known and for the same reason in the Southern Shires the meaner sort who kill any Beasts are oblig'd to keep their Ears and if the Flesh be found where the Ears cannot be produc'd it is commonly look'd upon in these Countreys as a point of Dittay not only must the beasts be brought to the Mercat with their Skins according to this Act but by Acts of Burrows the Skins that are brought to the Mercat must not be scor'd nor holl'd which Fleshers did before negligently nor must the Haslock be pull'd that being the best part of the VVool and by the Acts of the Convention of Burrows made at the desire of the Conservator the Skins of Beasts within this Kingdom did rise in value a third more than when they were carried beyond Sea Qeen MARY Parliament 10. BY the second Act 1 Par. Ja. 2. which is the Act here related to the Kings lawful age was declar'd to be twenty one Years but it seems that because it was left dubious by that Act whether the Year twenty one was to be inceptus or completus when begun or ended therefore by this Act it is declar'd to be twenty one Years compleat and the word compleat is twice repeated And it seems that before this Act even the year it self was debateable for in the 93 Act 7 Par. Ja. 5. It is said that the King after his perfect age of twenty five years Ratifies c. By an Edict of Charl. the fifth of France anno 1375. Their Kings are declar'd Majors hors de tutelle at their age of fourteen IN this Act all Confirmations of Kirk-lands not Confirmed by King or Pope before the Year 1558. at which time the Reformation begun were declar'd null and by this Act Confirmations from Rome after that Year are discharg'd and the Queens Confirmations are declar'd equivalent to the Popes and I find that by Act of Secret Council September 10. 1561. the sending to Rome for such Confirmations is by Proclamation discharg'd under the pain of Barratry K. JAMES VI. Parliament I. QUeen Mary being Queen during her Life appoints the Earl of Murray to be Regent and his Election is Confirmed by this Act and it is Declared to last till the Kings age of seventeen at which time it is Declar'd that he shall enter to the exercise of the Government I find amongst the Un-printed Acts subjoyn'd to this Parliament a Resignation of the Crown made by her which it seems was necessary she being Soveraign during her Life as the King is during his Life Observ. She calls the Earl of Murray Brother though he was her natural brother which was conceal'd ob honorem but Ineptly and though the Earl of Murray is here call'd the Kings Cousine yet he should have been call'd his Uncle Nor are Uncles properly Cousines But I think this was because all Earls who are Counsellors are call'd Cousines and Counsellors but yet if he had been to have been call'd a Counseller for this cause he should have been call'd Cousin and Counseller I have also seen a Commission to one of the Kings Natural Sons in England wherein he was call'd our Cousin It is observable that sometimes the Acts of this Parliament bear to be by Our Soveraign Lord my Lord Regent and the three Estates as the 20 21 and 29. which is not well exprest for the Estates and Regent had no power to make Acts and therefore the rest bear better Our Soveraign Lord with the advice and consent of his clearest Regent and three Estates Nota The Parliaments saying my Lord Regent seems very ill Grammar for it should have been the Lord Regent THose Acts Confirm and relate to former Acts past in the Parliament holden by Queen Mary August 24. 1560. and yet we find no such Parliament but the true answer to this is as appears by Spotswoods History that the Lords of the Congregation having met in anno 1560. and having past those Acts abolishing the Popish Religion many of the Members of that pretended Parliament protested that this meeting was no Parliament because there was none there to re-present the Queen nor the King of France her Husband whereupon Sir James Sandilands was sent over to procure a Ratification of these Acts which being deny'd the same Acts are here Ratifi'd by the Earl of Murray when he came to be Regent as if they had been past in a lawful Parliament FOr understanding of this Act and the nature of Patronages it is fit to know that the Right of Patronage is a power of Nomination granted to him who either was Master of the ground whereupon a Kirk was built or who doted any thing to the Maintainance of it or who did build a Church to present one to serve the Cure thereat in all which cases he is accounted Patron and may present a person to be Minister or to any other Benefice and that only if he reserve such a power to himself in his Mortification for Hope in his Lesser Practiques is of opinion that
Oath Observ. 3. It may be doubted whether this Act ordaining Merchant Accompts to prescrive in 3 years doth reach to Compts owing to Strangers for they seem not oblig'd to know our Law and this would ruin all Commerce locus contractus semper attendendus But it was found that this Act does extend to all Merchant Goods as well when sold in gross as by retail It may be doubted whether these two last Acts run against Minors since it is provided expresly that Prescriptions against Spuilzies and Ejections shall not run against them which shows that if this had been design'd in the other Prescriptions the same Clause had been renew'd since it was under consideration and so seems not to have been forgot only and there seems to be some reason for this since Minors are prejudg'd by Spuilȝies and Ejections and so Prescriptions in these should not run against them but in removings the hazard is only that a new Warning must be used and in other the like debts the only loss is that the debt cannot be prov'd by Witnesses after three years and so since these prescriptions did little hurt to Minors it was not necessary to stop their course It is also observable that though all these Prescriptions run in 3 years yet if actions be once intented they stop the prescriptions and thereafter Spuilȝies Removings or Aliments c. do not prescrive in less time than 40 years as all other debts do and till then violent profits are due or the like debts may be prov'd as if the action had been pursu'd within 3 years 26 January 1622. Herring contra Ramsay As also by our late Decisions if the Pursuer has continued to employ a Merchant the currency of that Compt and trust will preclude the prescription so that many former years preceeding the three last may be craved though this Act ordains all Merchant Compts to prescrive within that time but if a Bond be taken for these posterior years it is thought that cannot be called a current Compt and it may be debated whether in Law one or two Articles will make a current Compt and if it do there may be many wayes taken to elude this Act vid. 16 December 1675. Somer●el contra the Executors of Muirhead This currency extends to Brewers Compts of furnishing 13 November 1677. Wilson contra Ferguson Vid. Sand. lib 5. Decis Tit. 6. Though it was alleadg'd that albeit it should hold in Merchant Compts where there are Discharges taken and where a Compt Book adminiculats the recept yet it ought not to be consider'd in furnishing of Ale where neither of these are observ'd and yet this currency was not respected in Servants Fee● for these same reasons and because a Servants Fee is alter'd at the Masters discretion 12 February 1680. Ross contra Mr. Salton VId. Crim. Obs. Tit. Forestallers and Tit. 32. IT may be doubted whether this Act that gives power to the Sheriffs and other Judges to throw down Cruives and Yairs ought to be extended to Dykes built over waters or a part of the water for making a Dam to a Miln 2 o. VVhether Sheriffs or Lords of Regality c. may execute this Commission for their own advantage and where they themselves are the parties grieved since that were sibi jus dic●re and they would probably be partial whereas they may get others to execute the same THis Act Discharging exportation of Coals is now in Desuetude THis Act Fining such as propone unjust exceptions or lose the Pley within Burgh for the use of the poor is conform to that Title in the Civil Law instit de panis temere litigantium For there can be nothing so absurd and unjust as that men should not at least have their true expenses upon Oath whereas we use to modifie little or nothing even where there is not the least colour for a pursuit or defence and this I think a great iniquity in all Judges who are guilty of it Vid. instit de paen temere litigantium BY this Act the Lords of Session are ordain'd to distribute Justice without respect to any privat writing impetrat from His Majesty and by this His Majesty is freed from importunity and his people from unjustice This was formerly statuted by King David 2. cap. 18. cap. 41. and by the 2. cap. Statut. 1. Rob. 1. Judges are ordain'd to Judge secundum leges antiquas and in the Civil Law per l. 1. 6. C. si contr jus vel util publ per novel 82. cap. 13. and in the Canon Law cap. 5. de Rescript This same Law is also in France and is Learnedly Treated by Rebuff ad constitut Reg. tit de rescript and Plutarch commends Antiochus for having made a Law in these same terms but though the former Statute of King David warrands the Judge not to respect that Command but to indorse and send back the warrand and not execute the unjust Command which is by the 41. cap. of the same Statutes extended so that they are not oblig'd to delay Justice upon any such privat warrand Yet I find by § 10. cap. 20. of these same Statutes that the King may Discharge or Prohibite a Judge to proceed in the case of Perambulation for certain Causes for reconciling which Statutes it must be answered that the King cannot either simpliciter discharge a Perambulation nor any other Process but that he may discharge it for weighty Causes relating to the publick to which all privat interests must cede even as he may remit Crimes for such causes though these be of greater consequence or rather that the King may discharge Perambulations because the publick Peace is oftimes concerned in these since there used to be ordinarly great Convocations at such Perambulations and therefore the Justice General was of old only Judge competent to Perambulations Upon March 4. 1553. The Queen Regent appears in the Session and declares that the Lords should proceed to do Justice notwithstanding of any Letter or Order from her which is marked in the Books of Sederunt Observ. 2. That before this Act the Council us'd frequently to discharge the Lords of Session to proceed in judging privat Causes whereof many Examples are to be seen in Hopes larger Practiques and an instance of it is to be found in the 94 Act of this Parliament but that Custom is here discharg'd and as yet the Council uses frequently to discharge the Justices to proceed And notwithstanding of this Act I find in the Registers of Council 1581. King James Revocks in two several Cases Gifts granted by himself and Discharges the Lords of Session to sustain Action upon them Observ. 3 o. That the Lords are also allowed to proceed not only to decide but also to cause Execute their Sentences notwithstanding of such privat writings Charge or Command so that the Privy Council cannot Suspend the Lords Sentences neither by an Act of Council nor yet by Letters under the Signet But yet
discharges the conducting and fraughting any strangers to the Isles under the pain of tinsel of Life Lands or Goods is in Desuetude BY this Act Lords of Regality and Magistrats of Burrows are appointed to set prices upon all Stuffs but that part of the Act appointing such Magistrats and Judges as are negligent herein to be punished at Justice Airs or Courts is not now observed and yet that would not defend such as might be pannel'd upon this account for the negligence of Judges should not defend them seeing that would invite them to be negligent THis Act appointing the shooters with Guns to be punished is not in Desuetude but is seldome put in execution and it was thought that Fowlers had prescrived an exemption against it shooting being their Trade and their design is not lyable to these suspitions for which the carrying Guns is discharged by this Act but yet since by a Proclamation 9 June 1682. Fowlers are discharged to use Guns and Setting Dogs it seems this favourable construction ceases and the bearing such prohibited Weapons is still sustained as the aggravation of other Crimes but is not so sustain'd as that it takes off the strength of a defence that would be otherwise relevant and thus Nicolson being Pannel'd for Murther 24 June 1673. alledg'd that whilst he was strugling his Gun went off without any accession of his which defence of his was sustain'd though it was reply'd that carrying of Guns was unlawful in a person of his quality and so versabatur in illicito exillicito nunquam exculpatio THough this Act prohibits the carrying Nolt and Sheep out of the Countrey yet it is now allowed and they pay Custome to his Majesty for though before the Countrey was fully laboured and plenished with these it was fit to keep them in the Countrey yet now the Countrey would be too much burden'd with them if they were not exported BY this Act whosoever renders the King's Castles for Money are made lyable to repetition and it is declared that their Heirs shall be lyable which last is the speciality for which this Act was necessary since the persons who received the Money were thereby lyable to restore and yet before this Act Heirs were not lyable by our Law since the Crime was extinguished by Death and thus in Crimine repetundarum repetitio ad Haeredes extendit l. 2. ff h. t. na● turpe lucrum ab Haeredibus extorqueri debet licet crimina morte extinguantur l. 5. ff de Calum THat mixing of Wines is justly by this Act made Criminal and declared a point of Dittay and this is by Carpzov Tit. Fals. and other Lawyers declared to be a species of Falshood and to be punishable as such King James the sixth Parliament 8. BY this Act as by all the Acts of this Parliament King James endeavoured to curb the insolence of such Ministers as being dissatisfied with Episcopacy became very seditious and turbulent for at this time Spotswood's History tells us that there being a Convention of Estates holden by King James the Ministers of Edinburgh and others desired that nothing might pass concerning the Church till they were heard and Mr. Pont protested against the Proclamation of these Acts and by this Act such as decline the Kings Council and refuse to be judged by them in any matter whatsoever of whatever degree or Function they be are declared guilty of Treason This Act was occasioned by their frequent declining of the Council upon pretext that the Council were not Judges competent in prima instantia to what was preached by Ministers and particularly by Mr. Andrew Meldrums Declinator and upon this Act Mr. James Gutherie was Convict of Treason for declining the King and his Council at Stirling in anno 1651. and was execute therefore in anno 1662. This Opinion the Presbyterians did borrow from the Romi●h Church who make Ecclesiastick persons only Judges in the first instance to what is spoke or written by Church-men and after they have found them guilty then they deliver them over brachio seculari For understanding these Exemptions that are claim'd by Church-men from the Civil Jurisdiction of Laicks it is fit to know that the King Deut. chap. 17. vers 18. is commanded to write the Law and that David Solomon Joash and others did Reform the Priests and others serving at the Altar and judg'd their misdemeanours in imitation of whom Constantin the Great Theodosiu and the first Christian Emperours did regulat the Clergy and judge Crimes till Arcudius and Honorius did by an express Law ordain quoties de religione agitur Episcopos judicare caeteras vero causas qua ad ordinarios cognitores vel ad usum publici juris pertinent legibus oporlet audiri which were just marches betwixt the Secular and Civil powers But Justinian at the instance of Menna Patriarch of Constantinople did in the thirteenth year of his Reign by his 123. Novel ordain that Church-men should be only conveenable in Civil Cases before their Bishops and as to Criminal Cases that they should be only conveenable before their Bishops in Ecclesiastick Crimes Civil Crimes being cognosced by the Judge as formerly From these beginnings did arise the vast pretensions of Church-men whereby they endeavoured to decline the Civil Judge in all Cases as well Civil as Criminal in the first Instance and to that hight that Panor in c. novit 13. Decret Greg. de Judiciis in c. causam 4. Decret Greg. qui filii sint legit asserts that both the Jurisdictions Spiritual and Temporal belongs to the Pope which was first check'd by Peter Cogniers the Learn'd Advocat of Philip 4. King of France 1329. It is Declar'd by the 114. Act 12 Par. Ja. 6. That this Act shall not prejudge the Spiritual Office-bearers as to the power of Excommunication Collation or other essential Church-Censures THis Act declaring that such as shall impugn the Authority of the three Estates or shall seek or procure the Innovations or Diminution of their Power or Authority to be Treason was occasioned by such as endeavoured at that time to exclude Bishops from the Parliament of which they were and are the third Estate and it is observable both by the Narrative and Statutory part of this Act that the designing to exclude one of the three Estates was the chief design of the Act though such as impugn the power of the Parliament in general so far as relates to Cases Spiritual do likewise commit Treason and as in the former Act the controverting of the power of the Council is declared Treason so in this Act the controverting the power of the Parliament is much more Treasonable and yet it is controverted whether the denying any Branch of the Parliaments power be Treasonable such as is the quarrelling the Power or Constitution of the Articles or whether the Subjects may appeal from the Session to the Parliament Or if the Parliament has power to Reduce their Sentences past
quo casu either it must be said that albeit the Exchequer make him Tutor Dative yet he is not properly Tutor or Curator but only a Curator ad lites or else if he be once properly Tutor the next Agnat cannot thereafter serve himself nam Tutorem habenti Tutor non datur vid. observ on the 67 Act 8 Par. I. 3. IT is to be observ'd from this Act that Laws ought not to be extended ad praeterita but only ad futura and as the Act sayes most reasonably Subjects cannot observe what is not yet made and not only so but Argumento hujus Legis it may be concluded that Processes are to be decided according to the Laws that were made before the Process was intented though the Law be made before the Decision in the Process which is very observable a notable instance may be seen in Act 94. Par. 6. Ja. 6. where the Parliament makes an Act upon occasion of a Process depending before the Session to be a rule in like cases for the future but leaves the case depending to be decided as they think just Vid. Observ. on 10 Act P. 3 Ch. 2. IT is by this Act appointed that no Signatures or other Writs shall be pr●sented to his Majesty but by his ordinary Officers to whose Office the same properly belongs And it appears by the Registers of Council that this Act was a part of the remedy of that complaint mentioned in the 13 Act of this Parliament Observ. 1. That by Officers here are mean't Officers of State for none else can present Signatures and though a General Major or a President be his Majesties Officers they cannot present Signatures and yet any Officer of State may present promiscuously any Signature though it would seem by these words By his Majesties ordinary Officers and to whose Office the same properly belongs that every Officer of State may not promiscuously offer but that the Thesaurer or Thesaurer-Depute can only present Papers relative to the Thesaury the Justice-Clerk to the Justice Court c. Observ. 2. That though any Officer of State may present Signatures yet by the 60 Act 1 Sess. 1 Par. Ch. 2. any Officer who presents such Papers is obliged to send the Registrat Docket to the Secretary to the end his Majesty be so informed as that he may not grant double Rights King James the sixth Parliament 11. BY this Act the King 's lawful Age is declared to be 21 years compleat which Act was made to prevent a debate that had fallen out in France a little before that time where the Parliament of Paris had declared that the French King was not Major till he had compleated the last year of his Minority whereas the Parliament of Rouen had declared him to be of lawful age when he had begun the last year of his Minority nam in favorabilibus annus inceptus habetur pro completo and though Minors may revocke deeds done at any time before the last moment of their Minority and that Minoritas computatur de momento in momentum yet it is advantagious for a King to enter upon the Government of his Kingdom as soon as can be And though this be the age for reducing of deeds done by them they have another Majority in relation to the Government for we find that Josias entered upon the Government at 8 years and Solomon at 11. Cicero Philip. 5. tells us that the Kings of Macedon entered very early and in Anno 1375. the Kings of France were declared to be Majors and capable of the Government at 14. but by the Commission of Regency set down in the Act 1. Par. 1. Ja. 6. The Regency is declared to continue till 17. at which time the King is to take upon him the Government but yet King James 6 took it upon him sooner nor do I find any particular time limiting the King as to this point and therefore there may be many doubts amongst us whether the King or the Governour should be obeyed betwixt the Kings ages of 14 and 21. but before 14 no Pupil is thought fit by Law for administration and it may be strongly urg'd that 17 is the Legal age for why was the Commissions insert it being only a temporary right and such use not to be insert amongst our Laws By our Law minority runs in all persons to the last moment of 21 years whereas by the Civil Law it runs till 25 years compleat and in this our King differs not from others but because by the 2 Act Par. 1 Ja. 2. Our Kings were declared to be in minority till 21 years therefore by the 87 Act Par. 10 Q. Mary 21 years of age compleat was declared to be the perfect age of our Queens and by this Act it is declar'd to be the perfect and lawful age of our Kings It were to be wished that for proving the age of all Minors there were authentick Registers appointed as in other Nations and in some parts of our own since for want of this true probation of their birth perisheth and false probation is adduced OBserv. 1. That by this Act the receipting persons of the Romish Religion is not simply made Criminal except they did reset them for three days together or at three several times knowing that they were such which may be urg'd in all cases of Intercommuning and resetting of Rebels and yet in other cases once and short Intercommuning is sufficient to infer a Crime Observ. 2. That by the 164 Act 13 Par. Ja. 6. The resetting excommunicat Papists or Traffecting Jesuits for three nights together or three nights at several times is made sufficient to infer that they knew they were such per presumptionem juris de jure nor could the knowledge of their being such be otherways proven and if it had been necessary to prove their knowledge the Law might have been easily eluded by industrious ignorance and by that Act likewise the third fault is declared punishable as ●reason and because the punishment was so great it was just the presumptions whereby it was to be infer'd should be strong THough by this Act only the Sellers and Dispersers of erroneous Books are to be punished at our Soveraign Lords will and such Books to be burnt yet by our practise the Bringers home of Crucifixes Popish-beads c. are to be used in the same way and though there is only warrand here given to a Minister and Magistrats of Burgh to seize and burn such Books yet Magistrats use frequently to seize without a Minister and Sheriffs and other Officers do likewise seize but since burning seems to be an extraordinary power and so not to be assum'd without a special Statute I think that no Officers save Magistrats of Burghs with the concourse of a Minister can burn· THe reason why Ministers Benefices under Prelacies are declared to be free of the first Fruits and fifth penny of their Benefices is because in time of Popery the first years
our Laicks with the consent of our Kings did think they could bestow the Teinds belonging to these Kirks whereof they were Patrons upon Religious Houses whereof I have seen very many Instances in our old Charters one whereof I shall set down for an Example Alexander Dei gratia Rex Scotorum c. Sciant tam posteri quam praesentes nos concessisse c. Deo Ecclesiae sanctae Mariae de Dryburgh Ecclesiam de Lanarch now Lanerk cum terris decimis omnibus rebus juste ad illam pertinentibus Item How the other Church-lands became first to belong to Monastries I shall God-willing clear in an express Treatise concerning Kirk-lands and Teinds THis Act is Explain'd in the former Revocations only here the Fees and Pensions granted to the Officers of the Crown are excepted from this Revocation and the Officers of the Crown are declar'd to be the Thesaurer Secretary the Collector which Office is since joyn'd to the Thesaurer the Justice that is to say the Justice-General Justice-Clerk Advocat Master of Requests Clerk of Register and the Director of the Chancellary the Director of the Rols is but his Deput The Order wherein they are set down makes the Advocat to preceed the Register and though the Justice Clerk be named before the Advocat yet that is only because in all this enumeration these of one Court are still set together and therefore the Justice Justice Clerk and their Deputs are still set together but it would appear that the Justice-General should by this preceed both the Register and Advocat But by Ch. 1. His Revocation which is the 9 Act of his first Parliament the Register and Advocat are rank'd before the Justice and Justice-Clerk posteriora derogant prioribus Nota The Privy-Seal and Thesaurer-Deput are not here marked though they be both Officers of the Crown The Precedency amongst the present Officers of State was by Act of Council February 20. 1623. thus determined Lord Chancellor Lord Thesaurer Lord Privy-Seal Lord Secretary Lord Register Lord Advocat Lord Justice-Clerk Lord Thesaurer-Deput by Act of Parliament 1661. the President of Session was then and not till then ordain'd to preceed the Register Advocat and Thesaurer-Deput and the Register and Advocat then were ordain'd to preceed the Thesaurer-Deput By this Act of Revocation all the Exceptions in any former Acts are likewise Revocked but under this part of the Revocation do not fall the Exceptions in the former Act of Annexation for King James was then major and though he had not been major yet these Exceptions being made by a publick Law it may be said that publick Laws cannot be taken away by a Revocation for the Revocation is but a privat Act of the Kings whereby His Majesty secures Himself against privat Deeds done by Himself in His Minority but not against what He consented to as publick Laws By the last Clause of this Act it is provided that his Majesty shall not be prejudged by suffering any party to possess any Lands or others fallen under the Revocation but that his Majesty may put his hand thereto at any time but any obstacle by the first part of which Clause it is not meant that prescription shall not be valid against the King but only that the possessors shall not have the benefit of a possessory judgement and by the last Clause it appears that our King 's having revock'd they needed not intent Reductions ex capite minoritatis but may brevi manu intromet with what falls under Revocation even as they may do in their annex't property for this same Clause is like to that contain'd in the Annexation Ja. 2. Par. 11. Cap. 41. and which is repeated in all the other Acts of Annexation See Observ. upon that Act but it is more reasonable to think that the King needs no Reduction because he must prove Lesion in case of Reductions ex capite minoritatis but the King needs prove nothing in the case of Annexation yet our King is still in use to pursue Reductions and not summarly to dispossess these who have right WHilst our Parliaments grew very factious in the time of Q. Mary the Popish and Protestant Party contending who should prevail in Parliament the Popish Clergy who were very numerous in Parliament since all the Bishops and Miter'd Abbots did sit there as Church-men each of them who had Lands and Heretage craved two Votes one as Church-men and another as Barons To prevent which for the future this Act was made discharging any of the three Estates to take upon him the Office of all the three Estates or any two of them but the following words are not so clear viz. That every man shall only occupy the place of that self same estate wherein he lives and of which he takes the style which was designed to keep Barons who could not get themselves chosen to represent their Shires from being chosen as Burgesses of Parliament though they were Provosts or Magistrats as they then ordinarily were and by it also a Burgess who is ordinarily so design'd may be debarr'd from being chosen as a Baron of a Shire This Act was long in Desuetude but of late by Acts of Burrows all Burgesses are discharged from electing Gentlemen to represent them in Parliament under the pains specified in these Acts for they found that Gentlemen did not adhere to nor understand the true interest of Burghs and the King found that none desired to be so elected except such as had private designs albeit upon the other hand it is represented that this is the way for Burgesses to have their interest maintain'd by Lawyers or able States-men either of which they may choose and the people of England who are very jealous of their priviledges do choose such by which likewayes their Parliament is so considerable and their Laws are made by so judicious Lawyers But by an Act of the 3 Par. Ch. 2. it is determin'd that only actual Trading Merchants can represent Burghs-Royal in Parliament and that Act was founded upon an express Decision of the Session THe unlaws for absents from Parliaments here set down are 300 pounds for every Earl 200 pounds for every Lord 100 pounds for every Prelat and 100 Merks for every Burgh but there is no penalty appointed for Barons and I think that they are comprehended under the word Lords for the Lords and Barons make but one State of Parliament and Laird is but a corruption of the word Lord of old 10 pounds only was the unlaw or amerciament as is to be seen by the Preface of all the Acts of Parliament which bears ordinarly these words alii vero quasi per contumaciam se absentaverunt quorum nomina patent in rotulis sectarum quorum quisque adjudicabitur in amerciamento decem librarum THis Act appointing every State of Parliament to have three Apparels conform to a pattern to be made was not made that every man might have three several Habits
to these His Laws and the 9 Act Par 3 Ch. 2. Ordains all such Licences Protections c. to be sign'd and the Signers to be lyable c. It may be likewise doubted whether the Commission of the Kirk can grant Protections since there is only allowance by this Act granted to the Privy Council Session Exchequer and Justice Court but since the 61 Act 1 Par. Ch. 2 Declares that the Acts Decreets and Ordinances of that Commission shall have the strength of the Acts and Decreets of Parliament they are really a Commission of Parliament And therefore as the Parliament can grant Protections so can they especially since without this they cannot exerce well the Jurisdiction intrusted to them by the Parliament and it seems inherent in all Courts that they should be able to protect all whom they Cite and it is clear by this Act that the Supream Courts of Scotland have power before this Act of Parliament to grant Protections for this Act reserves only their former power but grants them no new power These Protections are thought the same with the induciae moratoriae granted by the Civil Law l. 4. C. de precibus Imperator c. which are not valid by that Law nisi idonea fideijussio super debiti solutione praebeatur But I think these to be rather Suspensions and that Cautioners in Suspensions with us arose from this THis Act anent Teinding of Corns is Explain'd fully in Act 73 Par. 6 Ja. 6. BY this Act he who accuses another for Treason and proves not commits Treason Observ. This is only in case of malicious accusation for the Act says That malicious accusers c. and therefore if the pursuer had probable grounds for his accusation he seems not to incur the hazard of this Act. Observ. 2. That though the Act says Whoever accuses yet the Kings Advocat runs no such hazard for he accuses ratione officii but to prevent this he gets alwayes in Treason a warrand from the King or Council upon Reading the Depositions of the Witnesses taken by way of Precognition or else he has an Informer who finds Caution to insist sub poena talionis Observ. 3. That the pursuer is only lyable if the party calumniat be call'd accus'd and acquit therefore the Accuser repenting and not insisting it seems that he will not be lyable in this pain but for not insisting he will be only lyable in the sum under which he has found Caution and possibly in poenam arbitrariam if malice appear and yet it may be urg'd that he should be lyable to the pain of Treason since not insisting was the pursuers fault and no man ought to have advantage by his own fault nam qui dolo desiit p●ssidere pro possessore habetur Dub●●atur If this Act extends to such as pursue only Statutory Treason and sure it does not if they pursue not the same as Treason though upon the event it may prove so It may also be doubted if a Witness who has Deponed against a man in a previous Tryal as guilty of Treason and thereafter Depons he knows nothing of it commits Treason for this wrongs the party as much as an accusation yet if this Deposition was not emitted ultroneously but on a Citation it cannot be call'd an accusation nor punisht as such but it seems punishable by Death by l 1. in prin ff ad L. Cor. de fals LAnded men Convict of Theft Reiff or Reset commit Treason It may be doubted if an appearand Heir be punishable in that case as a Landed man or if a person once a Landed man but denuded be lyable Though Landed men may be thus punished as Traitors yet they are ordinarly pursu'd for single Theft and the Kings Advocat does restrict his Libel to ordinary Theft But because it may be punishable as Treason therefore the Lords Advocate Thefts against Landed men though the Libel bear only single Theft THe murthering any person who is under the trust power or assurance of the slayer commits Treason Assurance is extended to such as we have invited to our house or such as we are under trysting and capitulation with This Act is likewayes extended to Husbands killing Wives Bairns Servants e contra THis Act determining what is Usury is explained in my Criminal Pract. Tit. Usury THis Act declares that such as exact other Customs from the people than what is warranted by express Law or express warrand or immemorial possession shall be punished as oppressors It is thought that possession for 40 years is equivalent to immemorial possession and warrands such exactions by prescriptions SHips transporting Victual are confiscated and the Masters and Clerks imprisonable during pleasure This is now abrogated for it is lawful to transport Corn even without a warrand from the Exchequer except where the same is discharged by special Proclamation because of Dearth THis Act discharging the eating of Flesh in Lentron is in Desuetude tho till of late eating of Flesh was discharged without a previous warrand under the hand of the Clerks of the Privy Council THis Act appointing the slayers of Deer Cunnings to be punished as Thieves is explained crim pract Tit. Theft num 15. BEcause the people were oft times mistaken in executing their Brieves Legally through the difference arising from several Jurisdictions therefore some places are here appointed to prevent mistake and a General is subjoined appointing Brieves to be executed either at the head Burghs of Shires or Stewartries or where Brieves were most usually served From which last words it may be observed that Executions are sufficient though they be not at the real head Burghs if they be at the place where they used to be executed and thus Executions at Dunce were sustained for the Shire of Berwick though Greenlaw was really the head Burgh by the Erection and Executions of a Warning were sustained though not at the right Paroch Church within which the Lands lay since it was executed at the place at which Warnings used to be executed 24 January 1667. The Earl of Argile contra George Campbel so far the presumption of habite and repute prevails even over truth BY this Act the granter of a Woodset is declared not to be prejudged by his negligence though he suffer an Ecclesiastick quietly to intrude and to continue long yea even 100 years in the possession of Laick Patronages to which he has right because during the none-redemption the Woodsetter did not look upon himself as Heretor The reason of this Act has certainly been because Church-men possessing per decennalen triennalem possess●onem prescrived a right and the Act seems to imply that because the granter of the Woodset was not valens agere whilst the Woodset stood therefore his negligence should not prejudge him but I conceive that Church-men now prescriving a right by 40 years peaceable possession will exclude all the rights of Laick Heretors as well when the Lands
in other cases where there is no Statute it would seem that Rights granted to a man should regularly extend to his Heirs arg hujus legis Observ. 1. Though this Act mention only Rentals set by the King yet the Rentals set by Subjects are not extended to Heirs except Heirs be therein-mentioned and though a Rental mention Heirs indefinitly yet it will only extend to the first Heir and will neither be accounted null for want of an Ish nor be extended to all Heirs for then it would be equivalent to an Heretable Right THis Act Discharges the Disponing of the Kings Casualties in great as the Casualties of a whole Countrey which is most reasonable and therefore all Gifts of Regalities may be quarrell'd as null because in them all the Escheats are Dispon'd and though this Act Discharges the giving away of Casualties arising from any one Crime yet this Objection was Repelled against the Gift of Usury in which were given away all the profits arising to the King by Usury ALL pecunial pains are ordain'd to be taken up according to the rate the Money gave when the Fine was impos'd or else the Fine is to be augmented according to the augmentation of the Money and this Act was reasonable because it was not just that Delinquents should get advantage by not payment and it was necessary because without this Act Fines as all other Debts might be pay'd according to the current Money at the time the same fell due THe pain of negligent Sheriff-Clerks is tinsel of their Moveables and the principal Sheriffs are to pay 100 pounds for them besides the damnages of parties Observ. 1. That in the time of this Act Sheriffs had the nomination of their own Clerks but now since the Sheriff-Clerks are nominated by and depend upon the Secretary it is not just that the Sheriff should be Fineable for the fault of the Clerk Observ. 2. That though by this Act the Sheriff-Clerk is oblig'd to send an Inventar of all the Registrat Hornings yearly to the Thesaurer yet this is in Desuetude THis Act is in Desuetude as to the price to be taken by Messengers but they still find Caution to the Lyon at their admission de fideli administratione RElief is a Duty due by the Vassal to the Superiour at his Entry for relieving his Fee out of the Superiours hands By this Act it is appointed that when this Casualty arises to the King it may not be compounded for but that all that is due be taken and the true avail is a years Retour-duty in Ward-lands and the double of the Feu-duty in Feu-lands Hope tells us that though a Gift of Non-entry contain the Relief yet the Donatar will not have Right thereto because such is the Custom of Exchequer as he says But I think that the true reason is because this Act Discharges this Casualty to be gifted When ere the Vassal takes out a Precept from the Exchequer for Infesting himself he is lyable for the Relief and the Sheriff may be Charg'd therefore conform to the Responde Book or the party may be Summarly Charg'd for it by this Act and the ground may be also poynded for it as de●itum fundi when a party gets a Precept the Servants of the Chancery write down respondebit Vicecomes de c or Respondebit any Judge to whom the Precept is direct and that is call'd the Responde here mention'd by which Responde-book the Sheriffs and their Deputes are Charg'd yearly in Exchequer BY this Act the Sheriff did count for all Escheats yearly for then he might have intrometted summarly and had Letters of Intro●ission but now he is not countable nor oblig'd to intromet but the Escheats are gifted to Donatars BY this Act all Commissions for judging Crimes are ordain'd to pass the Quarter-Seal but now Commissions are granted by the Council without any Seal and though this Act Discharges justly the granting Commissions for judging Slaughter ordaining that Crime to be Judg'd only by the Justices yet now the Council uses to grant Commissions even for Judging Slaughter Murder Witchcraft and all such Crimes But though the Council may grant such Commissions for Judging these Crimes when they fall in under general Commissions that are granted by the Council yet I see not how they can grant Commissions contrary to this Act for Judging Slaughter in special Observ. 2. That all Commissions of the Justiciary should be under the Quarter-seal to the end as this Act of Parliament observes there may be a Responde made thereupon and yet the Council now uses to grant Commissions which have no other warrand but a Paper subscriv'd by themselves and not by way of Signature as is here ordain'd and the great fault that is committed in granting these Commissions is that the Process is never ordain'd to be returned to the Justice-Clerk to the end that both it may be known whether the Processes be legal and that it may be known what is due to the King for which the Responde mentioned in this Act was to be made vid. observ on 126 Act Par. 12 Ja. 6. Observ. 3. From these words of the Act That no Commission be granted to proceed in Slaughter but that the Justice-general and his Deputs proceed thereupon It uses to be urged that a Council of War cannot be a sufficient Warrand for Souldiers to Judge Murders and other Crimes committed by any of their Number against Countrey-men these not being Military Crimes but being Crimes that should be tryed by our fundamental Law in the Justice-Court where the people have a double security both by Learn'd Judges and an Inquest of Neighbours and a Kings Advocat to be careful of the probation and it may as well be pretended that they may Judge their own Souldiers in civil Cases and that they may judge a Countrey man when he kills a Souldier Vid. Crim. pract Tit. Jurisdiction of Justices over Souldiers and the Council ordain'd Burr a Drummer to be delivered up to the Justice Court for killing a Woman though he had suffered two Councils of War November 3. 1681. But to clear this the King by His Letter to the Council has declar'd that Souldiers are only to be be Try'd for Military Crimes by a Counsel of War and that for ordinary Crimes they shall be judg'd by the Justices c. AS parties may pursue Crimes without concourse of the Kings Advocat so by this Act the King may pursue without an Informer ad vindictam publicam THis Act ordains that no Rests be allow'd to the Thesaurer exceeding 20000 pounds a year but that he shall compt for what is above this sum so that he may do Diligence therefore as accords but this is not observ'd The second part of this Act ordains that the King be not prejudg'd by general Ratifications in Parliament for though Ratifications cannot prejudge third parties yet they might have prejudg'd the King who past them if His Majesties Interest
at eleven of of the Clock in the forenoon yet it does not irritat and annul all Courts holden at any other hour and Courts are ordinarly held at other hours but it may be doubted whether a party cited to a peremptory Diet and staying till twelve of the Clock and taking Instruments thereon could be unlawed in the afternoon for absence but if the Court once sit parties are obliged to attend THough this Act appoints the Expences of parties accus'd and acquitted to be modifi'd by the Justice-Clerk and his Deputs yet they are now only modifiable in full Court by the Justices but it is doubted whether the Justices can modifie Expences where the Defenders are absent since the only Certification against absents is that they shall be Denunc'd Rebels But yet the modifying Expences seems to be the necessary result of all Processes and that inest officio judicis It is also doubted whether the Justices can ex intervallo modifie Expences none having been sought the time that the Letters were brought back and the party declar'd Fugitive and the Justices are in use to do both but the case has not been yet fully Debated BY this Act the Roll of Assizers was to be given by the party accuser or a Notar in his name but now by the third Article of the Regulations for the Justice-court the Assizers are nam'd and the List subscriv'd by the Justices for it was thought too severe that the Kings Advocat or the party accuser should have the naming of the Assizers BY this Act Customers passing Customable Goods for Gratitude are to be Try'd Criminally and their Moveables to be Escheated in case they be convicted Observ. 2. That the Kings Servants are only to be punish'd in case they transgress for Money so that negligence is not punishable except it be gross but yet if Customers should wittingly and willingly pass Goods for Friends or Relations I think it would be punishable by a Fine And since the stealing of Customs is Theft this connivance in strict Law seems a Theft-bute or accession to theft Observ. 2. Though this Act declares this accession punishable in a Justice-air yet the Exchequer and Council do also punish the same by arbitrary punishments THis Act is Explain'd fully crim pract tit Assizes but it is fit to add that His Majesty having written a Letter in anno 1683. desiring the Justices to Examine Witnesses in Treason when the Council requir'd them at any time before insisting in the Process to the end His Majesties Advocat might know how to Libel and to prevent the absolving of Rebels who were truly guilty by the mistake of citing the wrong Witnesses it was alleadg'd that the desire of that Letter was contrary to this Act ordaining all probation to be receiv'd only in presence of the Pannel 2. That this would ingage Witnesses to adhere to the Depositions that might be Elicited from them by the too great zeal of His Majesties Servants or the influence of others To which it was answer'd that as to the first the Depositions to be taken in that previous Tryal were not to be made use of to the Assize which was all that was discharg'd by this Statute As to the second It was not to be imagin'd that the Judges to whom only this was to be intrusted would prejudge any Pannel or be corrupted by any influence and before the Witnesses Depon'd these Depositions should be destroy'd so that the Witnesses could be under no apprehensions upon that account and the people were in a better condition by this Letter than formerly for it was securer to trust previous examinations to the Judges than to the Kings Advocat who did alwayes Examine alone formerly and this would prevent unjust trouble when there were no Witnesses who could Depone against the persons accus'd through error or malice THis Act is also Explain'd in the Title Assizes But it is fit to add that Blair and others being Convict of Error for assoilȝying some Traitors wrongously and their Escheats being gifted they rais'd a Reduction of the Gift as founded upon a Verdict that was null by this Act in so far as the Kings Advocat had spoke with the Assyzers after they were inclos'd which reason was repell'd because the Justices had declar'd that the Advocat had only spoke to the Assyzers in their presence when the Assyzers were desiring to be solv'd of some doubts which was ordinary and allowable December 21. 1682. It may be also doubted whether such Verdicts can be reduceable for though the Act declare that the Assizers may assoilȝe if any speak to them yet if they and the Justices proceed it seems not quarrellable or at least before the Session for I remember that the Justices having declar'd a Bond of Glenkindies forefaulted for not producing some Witnesses against himself the Lords declar'd that the Justice-court being a Supream Court their Acts and Sentences were not quarrellable before the Session Queritur if both these may not be quarrell'd before the Parliament and I think they can not except the Decreets of the Session can THis and the following Acts to the end of this Parliament were made for quieting the Borders and Highlands as to which the same courses are to be taken though now the Borders are Governed by a Commission of both Kingdoms so they are not put to find Caution as they were by these Acts but the Acts here set down are generally observ'd as to the Highlands still except in so far as I shall here observe upon the respective Acts. Observ. 1. Though this Act appoints that the first day of every Moneth shall be appointed for hearing Complaints concerning the Borders and Highlands yet that is in Desuetude as to both Observ. 2. That that part of the Act ordaining a special Register to be made for Borders and Highlands is in observance quoad the Highlands by a late Act of His Majesties Privy Council BY this Act all the Lands-lords contain'd in this Roll are ordain'd to find Caution which Roll is subjoin'd to the Acts of this Parliament but that Roll is now very much alter'd for many others are now ordain'd to find Caution who are not therein specifi'd but are now in the Proclamations of Council March 17. 1681. c. because the Heretors mention'd in the Acts of Parliament are often extinct and the Lands for which they were to be bound are dispon'd to others And whereas by these Acts these Landlords and Chiefs of Clans were ordain'd to produce their Delinquents before the Justice or his Deputs they are now to produce them before the Council or else to pay the Debt which are great arguments to prove that in matters of Government de facto we consider more the Reason than the Letter of the Law Though this and the 103 Act of this Parliament which is coincident with this may seem severe because the innocent is bound for the guilty yet necessity and publick interest has introduc'd
suffering the Rebel to possess three years has been found to be presumptio juris for inferring Simulation June 1666. Oliphant contra Oliphant There is a Title in the Civil Law de collusione detegenda which though it run there only against Collusion inter dominos servos yet the whole matter of Collusion is there Treated by the Doctors and it is defin'd to be sub specie litis lusus Vide Barthol Ca●oll de simulationibus where this Subject is fully Treated By the last Clause in this Act it is provided that the Thesaurer or his Deputs may cause secure the Houses of the Committers of the Crimes upon the expences of the readiest of the Escheat Goods that is like that annotatio bonorum allow'd by the Civil Law in Criminals against absents and though the Act of Parliament specifies only that this may be done in Crimes yet I conceive that all Rebellion is comprehended under the word Crimes for in all cases even for civil Rebellion not only may the Thesaurer Seal till Caution be found but even the Lords of Session will upon a Bill allow the Sealing of the Rebels Goods at the Donatars instance till Caution be found WIlful setting of Fire in Coal-he●ghs is Treason vid. crim pract Tit. Fire-raising THis Act is Explain'd crim pract Tit. Beggars and Vagabonds THis Act against Forestalling is fully Explain'd crim pract tit Forestallers TAis Act punishing the Carriers of Wool Nolt and Sheep into England by Escheating the Transgressors Moveables is not abrogated by the Union of the Crowns the Nations being still distinct THis Act against Deforcers is Explain'd crim pract tit Deforcement THis Act is Explain'd crim pract tit Art and Part num 2. THis Act declaring that none but actual Burgesses shall Traffick is fully Explain'd 5 Act 3 Sess. 2 Par. Ch. 2. BY this Act all manner of persons Inhabitants of Burghs exercing any manner of Traffick or having Change therin shall bear Stent Which Act was found not to extend to Indwellers though they have the benefit of the Mercats and had never any other Residence but within Burgh and have the benefit of Seats in the Kirks and so should at least pay Contribution for the Ministers Stipend January 11. 1678. Town of Alerdene contra Lesk And by the 275 Act 15 Par. Ja. 6. All such as have an hundred pounds of yearly Rent may be Stented but by 276 Act of that Parliament they are only to be Stented according to the value of what Rent they have within that Burgh and not according to what they are worth else-where but it may seem that by the 275 Act all who have an hundred pound to spend ought to be Stented that therefore Indwellers are to be Stented though they have not an hundred pound of Rent in House-mail or Trade for the Act sayes if they may spend and not if they have and therefore that the persons who come in accidentally to live in Town should not pay yet if they have no other constant Dwelling save in Burgh that in that case they ought to pay because it is just all Subjects should bear some burden and they bear none else-where to which nothing can be answered but that the Act ordains only such to be Stented as have Rents and Livings copulative Observ. That by this Act one of every Craft is to be exeemed as His Majesties Servant from all Taxation Watching and Warding such as the Kings Tailȝour His Smith c. And yet this Act does not exeem them actually but only allows His Majesty to exeem if He pleases so that except these be actually exeemed by their Gift this Act will not exeem them This priviledge is renew'd Act 275 Par. 15 Ja. 6. And His Majesty by His Gifts to His Work-men declares them to be exeem'd conform to these Acts whereupon the Council in anno 1680. did find they should not be stented and all these priviledges are again Ratifi'd in the Parliament 1681. But there being a Declarator rais'd of these priviledges before the Lords of Session in anno 1684. It was objected first That because these Acts being made in favours of the Kings Servants whilst our Kings liv'd in Scotland and they actually ty'd to Service the saids Acts should not now take place but should cease with the Service whereupon they are sounded 2. Though Wrights Masons c. Who are actually at present ty'd to serve may plead this priviledge yet the same cannot be crav'd by the Kings Barbers Shoe-makers c. who never serve 3. The said Exemption could extend no further than to the value of the imployment they had from the King but if the Kings Smith c. have from the people the imployment that other poor Smiths should have it were not just that he should be exeem'd which were to make them pay the value of the Impositions that should be put upon him 4. That these Laws could not exeem from paying for their other Trades So that if the Kings Mason be likewise a Vintner he should pay for his gain in that Trade 5. These Acts of Parliament could only free from Watching and Warding which are inconsistent with personal attendence but should not be extended to Stents and Impositions which were not usual before these Acts since the general words of Laws are ordinarly restricted to what ordinarly happens in the time 6. Though these Exemptions could secure against Impositions laid on by the Town yet they cannot secure against Impositions laid on in Parliament by voluntar offers made by the Subjects themselves in which those Trads-men must be considered as voluntary Offerers as well as others since they are re-presented in Parliament as well as others And in which Act Colledges and Hospitals are only exeem'd and not they this Debate is as yet come to no Decision BY this Act the Crafts-men living in Suburbs of Free and Royal burrows are discharg'd to work and their work declared con●●●●able but this Act is not extended to Suburbs that are erected in a Burgh of Barony for these are priviledged by their erection and are not meer Suburbs but distinct Jurisdictions July 21. 1629. and there is a Decreet arbitral betwixt Edinburgh and the Suburbs wherein there is a Liberty allow'd to these who live in their Suburbs to work to Strangers but not to Towns-men This Act of Parliament has likewise been extended not only to Suburbs but to all who were within the Liberties and Priviledges of Burrows Royal though the saids places be not properly Suburbs and that the Act of Parliament discharges only the exercise of such Crafts in Suburbs adjacent to the saids Burrows July 7. 1671. Town of Stirling contra Polmais whose Tennents and Trads-men in Saint Ninians lived a mile from the Town of Stirling vid. etiam Durie March 21. 1628. and the reason of this Decision was because such Un-free men as live within the Priviledges do as well abstract the Trade of the Inhabitants as
another and bound himself for his appearance person for person but now the Peace is secured by Sureties or Cautioners who if they present not the person for whom they are bound that very hour they Forefault their Bonds nor is the presenting the Prisoner afterwards sufficient which speciality has been found necessary in Border Sureties These Pledges were Distributed of old amongst the Nobility and Gentry who were to be answerable for them because we wanted then many and sure Prisons and because they were unwilling to receive these Pledges therefore this Act obliges them to receive and keep such Pledges under the pain of two thousand merks It may be doubted if Pledges may not be taken in other Crimes as well as these relating to the Borders and Highlands argumento hujus legis since this may tend much to the quieting of the Countrey and if the Nobility may not be forc'd to keep these for Prisons may be often so full that Prisoners cannot otherwayes be kept and by many Acts of Secret Council the Nobility was before this Statute oblig'd to keep Pledges By the Common Law Obsides or Pledges could only be granted ex causa publica sed non ex privata Bald. in l. ob aes C. de obl act But it seems that Pledges though for Criminal Causes could not bind themselves to corporal punishment quia nemo est dominus suorum membrorum licet aliter obtineat de consuetudine ob bonum publicum Bald. in tit de pace Constant. § damna in finè King JAMES the sixth Parliament 17. THere have been two Commissions granted for considering of an Union betwixt this Kingdom and England one in this year 1604. and another in anno 1670. Betwixt which there are only these two differences that in this Act the Names of the Commissioners are set down and they had no other Commission but the Act of Parliament but in the other Commission 1670. the persons were nominated by his Majesty under His Great Seal the nomination being refer'd to the King by that Act of Parliament The second difference is that in this Commission 1604. their power is limited with this provision viz. not derogating any wayes from any Fundamental Laws ancient Priviledges Offices Rights Dignities and Liberties of this Kingdom but the other has no such exception and yet it may be doubted whether by vertue of the last Commission those who were Commissionated could have derogated by their Treaty from any of our Fundamental Laws ancient Priviledges Offices and Dignities That the Parliament of Scotland could not consent to an Union of Parliaments though all its Members were admitted without at least Consulting the Shires and Burghs which the respective Members of Parliament represent may be thus urg'd all Nations considering the frailty of their Representatives and that some ages and generations do too easily quite what is fit and necessary for securing their Liberty have therefore thought fit to declare some Fundamentals to be above the reach of their power and that Parliaments cannot overturn Fundamentals seems clear not only because these were not Fundamentals if they could be overturn'd that being the true difference betwixt Fundamental and other Laws But if a Parliament should enslave their Kingdom to a Forraigner the people might by a subsequent Election disown the Perfidie or if two of three Estates should by plurality exclude the third surely their Exclusion would be null and that the Constitution of a Parliament is a Fundamental appears not only from the Nature and Weight of that Priviledge but likewise from this Commission anno 1604. wherein it is call'd Fundamental and looked upon as unalterable nor is it imaginable how the Parliament cannot invert the Constitution of one Estate and yet can invert and alter the Constitution of the whole and by our Statutes it is Declared Treason to endeavour to lessen the power of the three Estates of Parliament and it cannot be said that their power is not lessened when they cannot make one Act or Statute by their own authority or when others have more interest in and influence upon their Determinations than they themselves have and when from being absolute they become subject to another and a Parliament has but some such power over the people as the Magistrats and Council have over a Burgh for the Parliament is but the great Council of the people and Kingdom and it is most certain that the Magistrats and Council of a City or Town could not consent to Incorporat with another Town and consent to the eversion of their own without the full consent of their people whom they Govern Commissioners for Shires and Burghs are the same with us that procuratores universitatis are in the Civil Law and Procurators etiam cum libera could not alienat the Rights of their Constituents without a special Mandat for that effect l. procuratori ff de procurat nor can they exchange nor transact upon what belongs to their Constituents which is our case exactly l. mandato generali ff de procurat and if we consider the Commission whereby they sit in Parliament we will find it does only empower them to Represent in Parliament their Constituents in every thing which shall be advantagious for them From which Commissions I argue first That this is but mandatum generale for it empowers them only in general Terms and bears no Warrand to Treat with England of an Union of M●onarchies or Parliaments generali mandato etiam cum libera ea veniunt quae sunt de consuetudine l. quod s●no l. § qui assidua ff de aedidit edict non comprehendit ea quae sunt usui regionis repugnantia it empowers not such as have it to do things extraordinary and which it is probable the Constituents would not allow l. ut si filius ff de donationibus l. indebitum ff decondict indebit cap. generali de reg jur in sexto but in such cases as Lawyers observe and Reason Teaches the Constituent is to be Consulted and a special Mandat is required as is clear by the Laws above-cited Our Commissioners for Shires and Burghs sit by vertue of Commissions and as they need a Warrand to sit so cannot they exceed it when they sit and are not arbitrary Nor could the Parliament of Scotland as now Constituted resign their Parliamentary power over to the Council Nor does their Commission empower them to ordain that there shall be no future Parliaments and when they exceed their Commissions they are no more Members of Parliament and therefore what they do is null 3. By these Commissions the Commissioners for Shires and Burghs are only empowered to Represent them in the Parliament of Scotland which presupposeth that there must be a Parliament and consequently that they cannot exstinguish or innovat the Constitution of the Parliament of Scotland for how can they Represent the Shires and Burghs in a Parliament which is not and certainly the Parliament of Scotland can be
said to be no more when they make but a part of the Parliament of Great-Britain for Scotland cannot be called Britain nor a part of a Parliament cannot be called a Parliament no more than the Commissioners for the North of Scotland can be called the Parliament of Scotland but how our Commissioners could sit in the Parliament of Great-Britain by vertue of their former Commissions I see not and therefore it seems to be both fit and just that the Commissioners of Shires and Burrows should be sent home to their respective Constituents to crave their advice and consent in so weighty and comprehensive an Affair nam quod omnes tangit ab omnibus debet approbari It may be likewise contended that this Great Determination of Uniting both Parliaments requires at least the full assent of the Members of both Parliaments and that though the Parliament had power to alter its own Fundamentals yet if any one dissent the Union of both Parliaments must stop for both in Law and Reason the power of making Laws and the Right to retain or resign Priviledges are two different things the one is a Legislative Power which is regulated by plurality of Voices the other is founded upon Dominion or Property and is not subject to Suffrage no more than other Properties are for as every Member has Right so his Right cannot be taken away from him without his own consent though all these who are in the Society with him should renounce what is theirs in re pari melior est conditio prohibentis in re communi nemo dominorum jure quicquam sacere potest invito altero L. Sabinus ait 28. ff com divid thus if the Members of a Society were by Law free from Impositions though all the Society save one should submit to pay yet plurality would not in that case oblige the Refuser and if all who had interest in a Commonty should condescend to Resign their Right therein in favours of another yet if one were refractory that one would not be prejudged by the consent of all the remanent partners whence it seems consequential that as the Parliament cannot Debar any Member from sitting in Parliament so that if one Member by advice from his Constituents oppose the Union of Parliaments it could not be carry'd by plurality for what ever Reason militats why plurality should not oversway in the one does likewise militat in the other and if the right of every Member is given as the cause why he cannot be debar'd from sitting Why should not the same Right empower him much more to stop the total alteration of the Parliament even as a man cannot be Debar'd from using a Commonty It will likewise operat that the Commonty cannot be altered in its Nature without his consent and the Right of these who sit in Parliament is as much prejudg'd by extinguishing the being of a Parliament as by debarring them from sitting or Voicing in it Our Shires and Burghs have Right to be Represented in no Parliament save that of Scotland and therefore if the Commissioners had power to overturn the being of the Parliament of Scotland they could have debar'd our Shires and Burghs from being Re-presented in the Parliament of Great-Britain seing they could pretend no Right to sit there so that it seems either plurality of Voices may exclude any particular Member and may retrinch that Member Or else by the same Reason no plurality can establish an Vnion of both Parliaments and if our Parliament could by plurality of Voices overturn the Fundamentals and destroy the very being of our Parliament How shall it be possible to secure our Parliament when it is joyn'd in with the Parliament of England into one Parliament of Great-Britain so as that the Parliament of Great-Britain may not by the plurality of Voices likewise overturn any Fundamentals that shall be condescended on but that the Fundamental Constitution and priviledges of Parliament are not subject to Suffrage and cannot be abrogated nor innovated without the universal consent of all its Members and Commissioners may be clear likewise from many Instances for it is most certain that the Parliament as now Constitute could not by any Statute Ordain that there should be no more Parliaments or resign over their Parliamentary power in the hands of the Council nor could they Transmit the Power they possess in favours of their own Heirs or exclude any of the Three Estates and sure if Fundamentals be not subject to plurality of Voices the power of Uniting of Parliaments and suppressing of Monarchies is not for these comprehend all other Priviledges and Fundamentals and if the priviledges of one of the Three Estates cannot be altered by plurality I see not how the priviledges of all the Three can be and we have seen Parliaments in the last age do such irregular things that the succeeding Parliaments have been forc'd not only to abrogat their Laws but even to find that they had exceeded their power which implyes that it was not arbitrary King IAMES the sixth Parl. 18. THis Act Declares His Majesties Royal Prerogative by way of acknowledgement without any new Concession in these words They all in a voluntar humble faithful and united heart acknowledge His Majesties Soveraign Authority Princely Power Royal Prerogative and priviledge of His Crown over all Estates Persons and Causes and Confirms to His Majesty His Imperial Power and whatever Soveraign Authority any of His Predecessors had and Casses annuls and abrogates all any way done to the prejudice of His Authority any manner o● way so that it seems that all former Acts of Parliament lessening any way the Royal Power are hereby abrogated By this Act likewise the Estates of Parliament promise to maintain defend and advance the Life Honour Soveraign Authority Prerogative Royal and priviledge of His Crown with their Lives Lands and Goods to the outmost of their power But because this Act was too general therefore by the 2 3 4 and 5. Acts of the first Parliament Charles the Second His Majesties Royal Prerogatives in the choice of the Officers of State Counsellours and Judges in Calling and Dissolving of Parliaments and making of Laws in making of Peace and War and ordering the Militia c. are expresly acknowledged and Ratified and by the second Act of the second Session of the first Parliament All endeavours to restrain His Royal Person to Depose or Suspend Him and all endeavours tending thereto are Declared Treasonable and all stirring up of the People to the hatred or dis●ike of His Royal Prerogative are punishable in manner therein mentioned and by the 27 Act of the 3 Sess. of the 1 Par. Ch. 2. His Majesty is Declared by His Prerogative Royal To have the only Power of Ordering all Trade with Forraigners Nota This is the first Act that mentions the word Prerogative which was formerly call'd the Priviledge of the Crown and therefore this Act mentions both the Old and the New Words by asserting
allowance is only specifickly given to Dukes Marquesses Earls Viscounts Lords or Prelats and yet I see no reason for the Distinction but on the contrary it seems more reasonable that to the end a whole Shire may be represented that therefore they may be allow'd to deput some to Vote in case others be absent for though it may be answer'd that the power of Proxies is unnecessary in Shires because if their members be necessarly absent they may choose others For to this it may be reply'd that they cannot choose new Commissioners except in case of De●th whereas the Shire may be much concern'd to have their Proxies at any one Dyet Likeas by the 52 Act Par. 3 Ja. 1. All Free-holders are allow'd to have Proxies in case of lawful absence from Parliaments It is ordinary also for the chief Burrows to choose and send an Assistant to attend their Commissioner Observ. 2. By the said 52 Act Par. 3 Ja. 1. absents seem only to be allow'd to send their Procurators for excusing their absence but by this Act they are allow'd to Reason and Vote and therefore it may be doubted whether a Brother who cannot Vote in his own Brothers Cause may notwithstanding be admitted to Vote for his Brother as Proxie for another to whom his Brother is a stranger since here sustinent personam extranei but seing the affection is the same I think they would not be allow'd nor does the Parliament now allow Proxies in any case It may be li●ewise doubted if this Act may be extended to Conventions since the Act speaks only of Parliaments and does not add or other General Councils as the Act 113 Par. 11 Ja. 6. and other Acts do but yet the Act 52 Par. 3 Ja. 1. allowing Proxies in absence speaks of Parliaments and General Councils Obs. 3. It is the Kings advantage and interest that Proxies should be allow'd for they are only to be allow'd by this Act where the reason of absence is warranted by the King His Commission●r or Council and so the King may allow Proxies or not as He pleases and needs never allow any to those whom He suspects which is also the present Custom of England as to the Peers Observ. 4. That though Letters of Actourney out of the Chancery be sufficient for absence in other Courts yet by this Act the absents must give a written warrand under their own hand THis Act gives instructions to Justices of Peace and Constables which i● renew'd and somewhat altered by the 38 Act Par. 1 Ch. 2. But by this Act their Decreets are ordain'd to receive Execution by Letters of Horning and Poynding and that no Suspension shall be granted but on Consignation which Consignation is neither appointed by the foresaid Act 38. nor is it now in viridi observantia and though by both the Acts they are ordain'd to proceed against Cutters of green Wood Slayers of red and black Fish c. yet they are not in use to proceed in such cases because the Act appoints that Commissions shall be granted to them for that effect but these Commissions have never as yet been granted Though by our Customes no person can be holden as confest except they be personally cited because else men might be drawn in snares by Citations at Dwelling-houses yet here they are allow'd to be holden as confest upon the second Citation at their Dwelling-houses because the subject is small in Justice of Peace Courts This Act is likewise Explain'd crim pract tit Justices of Peace and is Ratifi'd by the 38 Act Par. 1 Ch. 2. Where the Council is allow'd to grant them what further instructions they shall think fit The Council uses to name Justices of Peace in place of such as dy and it being alleadg'd that all Commissions for Justices of Peace should slow from the King immediatly this was refused by the King as being contrary to the constant Custome of Council whom the King allows to name Justices of Peace BY this excellent Act such as have peaceably possessed their Lands for fourty years are secured by Prescription As to this Act it is observable First That Prescription is only competent to such as have bruiked by vertue of Heretable Infeftments and therefore he who alleadges Prescription must alleadge an Heretable Title but though the Possessor be not expresly Infest yet if he has possessed the subject as part and pertinent it will be sufficient and therefore a Salmond-fishing was found to be prescriv'd though it was alleadg'd to be inter regalia since the Prescriver was Infest cum piscationibus in general February 7. 1672. But if the Prescriver be Infest upon a bounded Evident it will not furnish him a valid Title for prescriving as part and Pertinent any Land that is without the bounding November 14. 1671. This Act is also extended to Heretable Offices as to Patronages Pensions and all Servitudes though not expresly mention'd and though Heretors and Wodsetters are enumerated sometimes as different from one another Act 6 Sess. 2 Par. 1 Ch. 2. yet Heretage in this Act comprehends Wodsets and it is even extended to long Tacks so that it was found that after fourty years they could not be quarrel'd as granted without consent of the Patron July 7. 1677. This want of a Title likewise and of bona fides hinders a Vassal to prescrive against his Superiour since the reddendo of that same Charter whereupon he founds his prescription obliges him still to know his Superiours Right and by this Act for the same cause a Wodset cannot prescrive where the Reversion was incorporat in the body of his own Infeftment Since this Act appoints that His Majesties Lieges bruiking for 40. years shall have Right by prescription it may be doubted whether prescription can run in favours of strangers who have not been Naturalized Observ. 2. That these fourty years are only to run from the date of their Infestments by this Act and yet in warrandice it is only to run from the date of the Distress but from both it is clear that the reason is because till then they who have such Rights non valent agere and therefore the exception allow'd by the Civil Law of non valens agere is allowable in ours though it be not expressed in this Act as minority is whereby it seems that exceptio firmat regulam in non exceptis Likeas it was found in the Earl of Lauderdail's case against the Earl of Tweddel that Lauderdail being Forefaulted by the Usurpers prescription could not run against him during that Forefaulture but where there is a Title prescription may run albeit the Defender was absens reipublicae causa at the least durst not come home in the Usurpers time for alleadg'd Crimes committed against them as was found in White-foords case the 24 of July 1678. He having kill'd in Holland Dorislaus one of the Kings Murderers for the Lords thought that he might have Transferr'd his Title to another and if this reason hold it seems that
seq THis Act is fully Explain'd in Act 200. Parl. 14. Ja. 6. THis Act is fully Explain'd in the 114 Act Par. 11 Ja. 6. THis Act Discharging that a Peck should be taken to the Boll though with consent of Parties was made to prevent extortion upon the same Ground that Usury is Discharg'd but yet it not having been observ'd for a long time the Council stopt a Gift that was granted thereof as to bygones till His Majesty should be acquainted THis Act concerning Dispositions made by Bankrupts is fully Explained by me in a Treatise a-part already Printed upon this single Act. THis Act Regulating the Prices of all Writs and Seals is for the most part either in Desuetude or is innovated by the 16 Act Sess. 3 Par. 2 Ch. 2. Wherein new Regulations are set down and from this Act it is observable that the Secret Council may make prices in all such Cases for this Act Ratifies only their Act and though the Act Ratifi'd bear this Act to have been made by the Secret Council and Session yet the Act of Parliament which does Ratifie that Act Ratifies it only as an Act of Privy Council and so insinuats that the Privy Council hath power to Regulate both the price of Session and Exchequer These Regulations of Prices in our Law are like to the notiti●● mentioned Cod. de ann cap. lib. 1. Tit. 52. quae singulis offi●iis delegabantur quibus continebatur quantum singuli pro dignitate ●fficio pro libellis mandatis codicillis accipiendis vel insinuandis pendere quantum pro annona capite accipere deberent FOr understanding this Act it is fit to know that Annualrents are only due by our Law either by Statute or Paction so that regularly they are not due otherwise They are due by Statute either by the Act of Sederunt 1613. appointing That where Cautioners are distressed and forced to pay they shall have Annualrent from the Term that they pay though the Bond wherein they are Cautioners bear none yet this is in effect ex pacto because it arises from the Clause of Relief this being a Damnage incur'd by them or by this Act of Parliament by which Annualrents are due after the Party is Denunc'd though the Bond whereupon he is Denunc'd bear no Annualrent upon the same ground that in the Civil Law usurae debentur ex mora in bonae fidei contractibus l. 32. § 2. ss de usuris So that as by the Civil Law they were due ex pacto vel ex mora they are due only with us ex pacto vel ex lege which is the same thing almost since lex in hoc casu apud nos sundatur in mora for though there may be mora sine usuris yet by this Act there are never usurae sine mora But this Denunciation must be at the Head Burgh of the Shire where the Debitor lives Denunciations at the Mercat Cross of Edinburgh being a Warrand only for Caption but not inferring Annualrent which may seem strange since Annualrents are by this Act infer'd after Denunciation because of the Debitors negligence but the reason of the Decision is that the Lords thought the Debitors did not know exactly when they were Denunc'd at Edinburgh but it has been found that the Debitor is lyable in Annualrent after he is Denunced at the Head Burgh of the Shire though the Horning be not Registrated since the Act only appointed Denunciation and yet there can be no Caption till the Horning and Executions be Registrated and thus it is clear that Caption and Payment of Annualrents are very different effects of a Horning since sometimes Caption will follow where Annualrent cannot and sometimes Annualrent will follow where Caption cannot February 11. 1673. Smith contra Wauch Annualrents are sometimes due without either express Law or Paction because of the tacite and presumable consent of the Party as if a Party pay Annualrent for one Term or if he promise to pay bygone Annualrents though he promise not for the future yet January 13. 1669. Hume contra Seaton The Lords found that he ought to pay constantly Annualrent for the future though the obligation did bear no Annualrent or from the Principles of Natural Equity as in the price of Lands which pay Annualrent though none be pactioned because the Buyer has the Rents of the Lands Or in Tochers because they are given ad sustinenda onera matrimonii and the Husband intertains the Wife Or where the sum is ordain'd to bear Annualrent after her Marriage to whom it is left quo casu before Marriage the Lords found that Annualrent was due since matrimonia debent esse libera but yet regulariter annualrent is not due in cases alimentary And a Father providing his Daughter to a Sum for her Portion without mentioning any thing of annualrent the Lords would not decern annualrent though annualrent was only said to be omitted there through the ignorance of the Notar but because of the presum'd will of the Father they modifi'd the aliment equal to the annualrent But so unfavourable are usurae usurarum call'd usurae judaicae by the Doctors of the Civil Law that an obligation to pay annualrent for annualrent if it were not pay'd at the Term was not sustain'd though it was alleadg'd that here pactum mora were joyn'd with Equity the Woman to whom they were due being a poor Widow who behov'd to borrow Money to live upon if her annualrent were not pay'd and to pay annualrent for that Money which she so borrow'd January 26. 1669. Lady Braid contra the Earl of Kinghorn It is fit to know that the Statute 2. Robert 3. appointing annualrents not to run against Minors is now in Desuetude though it would seem reasonable that their mora should not prejudge them but Minors Money do still bear annualrent by our Law The King uses to pay Annualrents for the ballance of his accounts de facto but is not oblig'd thereto by Law THis Act is Explain'd Crim. pract tit Falshood NOta That Usury is excepted from this Commission to uplift Money due by penal Statutes c. Ergo Acts against Usury seem penal Statutes It is observable that though by this Act it be Declar'd That Commissions for penal Statutes be not put to Execution till they be authoriz'd by the Lords of Secret Council yet this is too much in Desuetude but the Lords of Secret Council do use to Discharge them till they acquaint the King THe Laws of the twelve Tables contain'd several Sumptuary Laws though there was then little Luxury and particularly at Burials and Saint Chrisostom condemns feign'd Mourners whom we call Saulies because they pray for the Souls of the Dead Vid. 14 Act Par. 3 Ch. 2. THis Act appointing Houses in Edinburgh to be Sklated and Letters of Horning to be direct to that effect shews that the Parliament may Dispose upon privat Estates ob bonum
formerly observ'd that they were in use to regulate the Mint also VId. observ on Act 13 Par. 18 Ja. 6. THough by this Act the Clangrigor were abolish'd and they ordain'd to alter their sirname because of their bangstry yet because of their good Services done to His Majesty during the late Rebellion they were restor'd in anno 1661. It has been always believ'd that no Clan or Family can change its sirname in Scotland without express Act of Parliament or Act of Council for that might occasion great confusion and might be a ground of cheating the people in their Evidents and securities But any privat man may as we see daily in Tailies and it does not follow that because the Parliament only can force men to change their sirname that therefore they cannot do it voluntarly themselves BY this Act it is expresly declar'd that because particular Acts of Parliament and Acts of Ratification are made without hearing of Parties that therefore the Lords of Session shall Judge in these cases without respect to those Acts according to the privat interests of parties The immediat occasion of making this Act was the case betwixt John Stuart of Coldinghame and the Earl of Hume which was this The Earl of Bothwel having been Forefaulted the Priory of Coldinghame was Dispon'd by the King to the Earl of Hume which Earl of Hume set in Tack a-part of the Teinds of the said Priory to the Laird of Wedderburn but thereafter the Earl of Hume having entred in a Transaction with John Stuart Son to the Earl of Bothwel he suffers by Collusion a Decreet of Parliament to pass in anno 1621. whereby John Stuart was not only re-habilitat as to his Blood but the Forefaulture Rescinded in so far as concerned his Right to the Priory of Coldinghame upon a pretext that he had a commendam of it settled in his person before his Father was Forefaulted whereupon Dowglass of Evelaw pursuing the Laird of Wedderburn for a Spuilzie of Teinds in anno 1627. he obtains a Decreet notwithstanding of very unanswerable grounds then alleadg'd because the Lords of the Session would not call in question the Act of Parliament 1621. Notwithstanding of the Act salvo subjoyn'd to the Acts of that Parliament for the Lords found that the Session as an inferiour Judicature could not canvass special Acts of Parliament but because the Subjects might be extreamly prejudg'd in their privat Rights by such Acts of Parliament therefore the foresaid Claus● was inserted in this Act and that it might extend to this Case though anterior it is expresly declar'd in this Act that this was the meaning of all former Acts Salvo and accordingly the Lords of the Session did in February 1679. Repone the Laird of Wedderburn to Debate upon his just Rights notwithstanding of the Act of Parliament 1621. By this Act several privat Rights and Ratifications are excepted from this Act salvo But since the Act salvo proceeds upon the principal of natural Reason and Justice it seems that even these Exceptions are questionable for else the Act salvo should signifie nothing For these who had the interest to obtain privat Acts of Parliament would likewise have the interest to get them excepted from the Act salvo and upon this Reason it was doubted and not Decided whether Exceptions from the Act salvo made in privat Rights though not repeated in the Act salvo were sufficient to secure these Rights against the Act salvo for though it might be alleadg'd that in these there is a speciality from this case since the Act salvo being posterior and simple Annuls and Derogats from the former Reservation yet even there it may be alleadg'd that it cannot derogat since in the former special Act the Parliament Declar'd their special Inclination that it should not Derogat Nota The Act salvo jure is never Voted in Parliament because it is but an Act in Course and for the same Reason Ratifications are not Voted now since no man can be concern'd in either albeit of old I find that Ratifications were past in Parliament in the form of decreets and so must have been voted but it seems strange why Acts for granting of Mercats and Imposing Customs for the maintaining of Bridges should not be Voted And in the Parliament 1681. The Reports of the Articles thereof as to these past the last D●y without being Voted which was oppos'd by some as irregular because there the consent of some parts of the Nation was requisite But I conceive that this likewise proceeded from the numerousness of the things that were brought in and the general acquiescence of the Members and the time they were to sit being so short and it seems securer to settle these by a vote K. CHARLES II. Parliament I. Session first ALbeit KING CHARLES the Second did hold a Parliament at Saint-Iohnstoun in anno 1650. yet this Parliament being the first after His Majesties happy Restauration is by the Inscription Intituled The First Parliament of KING CHARLES the Second though that Parliament 1650. is not Rescinded by the general Act Rescissory which is the fifteenth Act of this Parliament Nor by any other special Act And so that Parliament stands still in force so that this Inscription seems unwarrantable THe Rebellious Parliaments in the former age did choose their own President though the Chancellour ought to have presided in all Courts as is insinuated by the 40 Act Par. 5 Ja. 5. but this they did to have the President of Parliament Depend upon Them and not upon the King and therefore by this Act it is Declar'd that the Chancellour is ratione officii to preside in all publick Judicatures where he is present Observ. 1. That this Act says That the Lord Chancellour and such as shall be nominated by His Majesty shall preside and therefore if the King please He may Nominat another President though the Chancellour be present And I find that His Majesty has Nominated others to preside where the Chancellour was present Obser. 2. That though when the Chancellour is absent His Majesty can only Nominat another President Yet this does not exclude His Majesties High Commissioner from the power of Nominating a President since he has mandatum cum libera and Middleton did Nominat the Earl of Crawfurd to preside in this Parliament when Glencairn then Chancellour went to London Observ. 3. That the Chancellour is to preside not only in the Parliament but in all other publick Judicatures and therefore though it was pretended by the Thesaurer that notwithstanding of this Act the Chancellour could not preside in Exchequer though he was named in the Commission Because the Exchequer was rather the Kings Chamberlains Court than a publick Judicature in which the Thesaurer was chiefly intrusted because he was chiefly to be answerable yet this pretence was groundless since the Exchequer is a Judicature which Hears and Discusses Causes relating to the Revenue and is Declar'd a Judicature by the
places without which the War cannot be mannag'd It having been controverted whether the Earl of Caithness might Garison one of his Castles without express Warrand from the Council they found he could not though it was alleadg'd that he was a stranger in Caithness and the Countrey was broken For this Act of Parliament having Discharg'd all Garisoning of Houses upon any pretext whatsomever if it should be allow'd upon such pretexts as this not only would the express Letter of the Law be overturn'd but all persons dissaffected might Garison upon this pretext whereas on the other hand there can be no inconveniency since the Council will allow liberty to Garison and if present danger do press the Heretor he may Garison his House for his own Defence till he obtain that Order THis Act annulling the Convention of Estates 1643. was unnecessary it being formerly annull'd by the third Act of this Parliament THis Act Declaring the League and Covenant null and the Discharging the Renewing thereof under the Highest perril seems unclear because of the indeterminatness of the punishment and seems unnecessary because by the fourth Act of this Parliament Subjects making Leagues amongst themselves or with Forraigners are guilty of Treason THis Act does in the first part Command all Jesuits Priest●● and Traffiquing Papists not to say Mass and to remove forth of the Kingdom within a Month under the pain of Death whereupon it was doubted whether within that Month they could be punished with Death else this Month had not only been elusory but might have prov'd a snare since they might have thought that this Month was allow'd for preparing for their Departure and so they might have appear'd and gone about their Business in order thereto By the second part of this Act Children are ordain'd to be taken from Parents Tutors or Curators Popishly affected that they may be bred with well affected Protestants at the sight of His Majesties Privy Council which Act is renew'd by a Proclamation of Council in January 1679. THough the Parliament 1648. be here Ratifi'd yet it is thereafter abrogated by the general Act Rescissory which is the fifteenth Act of this Parliament that not having been resolv'd upon till after this was past The Parliament 1649. is by this Act absolutely Rescinded and that without a general salvo and though by the Act Rescissory there is a general salvo in favours of the Rights and privat Securities past in other Parliaments as is clear by the last words of the 15 Act yet there is none subjoyn'd to this Parliament That Parliament 1649. had taken from Patrons the power of presenting they having conceiv'd it most Antchristian that the Minister who was to care for Souls should be chosen by one man and oftimes by one who would never hear him but they reserv'd to the Patron the Right of Teinds without prejudice to the present Stipend and therefore that Act is hereby Rescinded and Patrons restor'd to the power of Presentation and though it cannot be deny'd but that the people had a share in the Elections as is clear by Saint Cyprians Epistles yet this was when they pay'd them and were themselves very judicious and dis-interested in the infancy of Christianity and before Patrons had by founding Churches the interest they have now and now the people are by an Edict cited to Declare what they know why such a man should not be chosen And in the Reform'd Churches of Germany as Carpz in his jus Consist Relates the people have vocationem from which the Presbyterians borrow'd their Word Call By this Act it is Declar'd That such Parsons and Ministers as are in present possession of Kirks belonging to Laick Patrons shall claim no Right nor Possession but what they had before the making of this Act they being otherwise sufficiently provided THis Act was unnecessary because these Parliaments are taken away in the general Act Rescissory THis Act appoints all Officers of State to take the Oath of Allegeance and to assert under their Hands all the former Royal Prerogatives but now the Council do put the same to all who are suspected and Fine or Banish such as refuse to take it because the Act having left to the Council to put this Oath to any and having nam'd no penalty the penalty is to be understood arbitrary But now all who are in publick Trust take the Test appointed by the 6 Act 3 Par. Ch. 2. THis Act Confirms all Judicial proceedings under the Usurpers except when they were quarrel'd within a year and this Act having appointed that within that time the Sentences of the Usurpers might be quarrell'd without Suspension or Reduction and the Writ by which they were quarrel'd was call'd a Review which was in effect a Reduction and was like both in the Name and Matter to that revisio allow'd by the Civil Law THe Usurpers having by the Example of our Rebellious Parliaments laid on an Excise upon Bear and Ale this Loyal Parliament did grant His Majesty 40000 pounds Sterling to be uplifted yearly out of the Custome and Excise in manner mentioned in the 14 Act But it has been much doubted whether it had not been better to have continued the Excise upon the Bear and Ale than to have laid it upon the Malt for now Brewers endeavour to take as many Pints out of the Boll of Malt as they can which hinders much the consumption of the Malt by making the Drink weak whereas if it had been laid upon the Drink they would have endeavoured to make the Drink strong And for which Excise the Commissioners of the respective Shires are lyable personally and they have their Relief off the Deficients the Goods of which Deficients are hereby to be poinded without carrying them to the Mercat Cross they being apprised at the next Paroch Church Door which is like the priviledge given to Ministers Stipends by the 21 Act of the 3 Sess. of this Parliament Though by this Act the Excise is laid upon the Retailer of Commodities yet by the 12 Act Par. 2 Ch. 2. The Importers are declar'd to be lyable for the same Excise AFter this Parliament had Rescinded some privat Parliaments they considered that all the Parliaments from the year 1640. till the year 1650. were but Branches of one and the same Rebellion and therefore they did annul them all by this Act which is call'd The Act Rescissory But privat parties Rights obtain'd in these Parliaments are salved In this Act it is acknowledg'd by the Parliament That our Kings hold their Crowns immediatly from God Almighty which was done to exclude that Rebellious Republican and Sectarian Principle That our Kings deriv'd their Power from the People for if so then the people might call them to an accompt Depose or Suspend them and our very Stiles which acknowledge our Kings to be by the Grace of God does convince us that they are not Kings by the people and therefore Argentorat
for the Act runs disjunctively Writing Preaching Praying or advis'd and malicious Speaking THis is the first Act whereby Conventicles are Discharg'd and in it they are call'd Nurseries of Sedition But yet there is no penal Sanction against them in this Act but by the 2 Act of the 3 Sess. of this Parliament they are Declar'd to be fineable in a fourth part of the yearly Rent every Burgess being to lose the priviledge of his Burges-ship and Merchandizing beside the payment of a fourth part of his Moveables Observ. 1. I see by this Act no Fine impos'd upon such as live within Burgh and are not Burgesses Observ. 2. By this Act it is requir'd That before with-drawers from publick Ordinances be punish'd they must be first admonisht by the Minister before two Witnesses which is not observ'd Observ. 3. The Council are empower'd by this Act to impose such arbitrary punishment as they please upon With-drawers But it is thought that such general powers cannot extend to Life nor Limb. Observ. 4. That these Acts are only to last for three years and are by the 5 Act of the 2 Sess. of the next Parliament continu'd for other three years and further if His Majesty pleases so that it is in His Majesties Power to Discharge these Acts when He pleases By the Laws of the twelve Tables privat and clandestine Meetings under pretext of Religion were Discharg'd and the word Conventicul● is oft mention'd in the Civil Law l. 1. 3. ff de collegiis illicitis Plin. lib. 10. Complains of them as the Pest of the Empire In these Words Haec tempora serio docent magna monstra talibus parentibus alii nec quicquam in tota re-publica magis esse perni●iosum vid. de crimine conventicula Farin quaest 113. inspect 4. There is a Proclamation extant in the Registers of Council in King James the sixths Reign Declaring all privat Convocations without the King's consent and particularly Conventicles which is the first time I see them nam'd in our Law to be punishable as Treason For collegia conventicula permittere valde quidem est regale Argen art 56. num 37. THis Act appoints the Declaration thereto subjoyn'd acknowledging the League and Covenant to have been unlawfully impos'd and not to have been Obligator c. To be taken by all persons in publick Trust or Office under His Majesty and which seems to be very strange all Members of the Colledge of Justice are declar'd to fall under this general and such as offer to exerce before they take the Declaration are Declared to be punishable as Vsurpers of His Majesties Authority and this punishment is de facto arbitrary and is impos'd by the Privy Council This Act is extended to Baillies of Regality by the second Act of the 3 Sess. of this Parliament and by a Decision of the Council both these Acts are extended to Baillies in Burghs of Barony though they be exprest in neither of these Acts and that because of these words in this Act and all who enjoy any other publick Charge Office or Trust within the Kingdom which is as all general Clauses ought to be extended to particulars that are of the same nature with these to which the general Clause is subjoyn'd and there was as great reason to extend this to Baillies of Burghs of Barony as to Baillies of Burghs of Regality By that Act also such as refuse to accept Offices within Burgh are punishable by losing their Burgesship and they may be also compell'd to accept though the Act mentions not this expresly for by the Common Law cives cogi possunt ad suscipiendum munera reipublicae l. ss de decurio But with us they cannot be oblig'd to continue longer than a year January 2. 1668. Wilson contra Magistrats of Queensferry Though this Act of Parliament obliges all who are Privy Counsellors c. to take the Oath of Allegiance and this Declaration Yet His Majesty by a Letter to the Council in November 1679. Declares that the lawful Sons and Brothers of the present King are oblig'd to take no Oathes because of their presumed Fidelity and that Loyalty is their Interest as well as Duty and upon this Ground it seems to be that His Royal Hig●ness had not formerly taken these Oaths as Admiral We see likewise that both the Sons and Brothers of Kings are Serv'd not as Subjects but as the King Himself and though they be Dukes or Earls yet they take not place as other Subjects but as the Sons and Brothers of the Royal Family and thus the Sons of Kings were call'd adminicula augusti subsidia dominationis and in St. Matthew St. Peter affirms that the Sons of Kings are exempt from Trib●t nor are they in France ever Subjected to any corporal punishment or put to Death vid. Le Bret. Tit. des enfans freres du Roy leur Praerogatives And they are exempted by the Parliament 1681. from taking the Test. THis excellent Act does appoint all Sheriffs and Justices of Peace to assist such as are Robbed or Opprest in taking back their Goods immediatly upon intimation and to restore them within fifteen days or otherwise to be lyable but the word immediatly does restrict the Act so as that Sheriffs are not thereby empowered after a long interval to bring back Goods or make such Intimations or raise the people for concurrence and therefore the Gentlemen of Caithness were found lyable in a Spuilzie for Robbing and away taking an Heirship out of Strathnaver though they alleadg'd that they were Convocated and Commanded by the Earl Caithness so to do he being Sheriff and Justice General and they conceiv'd that they might have been punishable if they had disobey'd which Defence was Repell'd because though that Convocation was since this Act yet so long a time having interveen'd the Sheriff could only have proceeded via ordinaria It may be doubted from this Act whether when any man complains of Oppression as that a Robber or Neighbour sits violently down upon his Land The Sheriff and Countrey are not oblig'd to concur by this Act since the Act seems to be restricted to the way of taking of Goods though it speaks generally of oppression and I think they are lyable in the one case as well as in the other and this case being a permanent Act is more easily redress'd By this Act likewise the Heretors Wodsetters and Feuars within the Paroch where the Goods are found to have been Disposed or sparpelled are declar'd lyable for the value of the Goods but from the context of the Act it is clear that they are only lyable subsidiarly in case the Goods cannot be otherwise recover'd The words Wodsetters and Feuars needed not to have been subjoyn'd to Heretors for both these are Heretors But it seems to have been more necessary to have added Liferenters since it was just that men who are Liferenters should be lyable for a Father may put his Son who is minor
Act that the Militia is come in place of the old Weapon-showings and that there being 20000 Foot and 2000 Horse granted as a Militia by the 26 Act 3 Session of the first Parliament which does specifie the particular proportion of Horse and Foot to be given by every Shire It might have been thought that these proportions could not have been altered but by the Parliament and yet the King and Council having Converted the Foot of some Shires unto Horse seems to be founded upon the last Clause of the former Act whereby His Majesty is intreated to give Directions to His Privy Council for mannaging of that whole affair as His Majesty shall think fit which Acts of Council and the said alteration of the proportions are hereby Ratifi'd as having been Legal and in the last Clause of this Act His Majesties Subjects are Commanded to obey whatever Orders and Directions they shall receive from the Privy Council relating to the Militia and upon these Clauses was founded the overtures of the late Conversion of the said 22000 to 5000 augmenting the number of the days wherein the said 5000 are to serve according to what might have been exacted from the whole 22000 so that the 5000 are to meet the number of 176 dayes because the 22000 were oblig'd to meet fourty dayes though this last model was by some objected to be a standing Force and all Laws are stricti juris and to be fulfill'd in forma specisica but especially Taxations which are a Gratuity founded upon the free Offer of the people as this is to allow Conversions in such Cases would discourage the Subjects from future offers This Act likewise did Ratifie the Acts of Council which appointed the Shires to provide at their own Charge Colours Standarts Drums and Trumpets though that might seem an Imposition but these being necessars and the natural Consequents of the first Grant and the Parliament having granted to the Council the former power as said is these Acts of Council are therefore hereby approven as Legal Both this and the former Act doe ordain the Militia to be furnished with fourty Dayes Provision which was the old provision that was ordinarly to be made by such as came to the Host albeit sometimes twenty dayes provision be only appointed as in the 90 Act 13 Par. Ja. 3. And of late the Council has ordain'd this provision to be made in Money though it was contended that the Parliament having appointed only provision to be made it was in the power of the persons obliged to furnish their own men according to their conveniency But Money being thought fitter for expedite Marches the Council thought they were authorized by the former Clauses to make this Conversion and some have thought that by the same power the Council could ordain the Shires from whom no proportions of Militia was sought to advance free Quarter to such of the Militia as could not furnish themselves or at least might force them to be the first advancers in Cases of necessity This Act concerning the Militia is further clear'd by the first Act of the third Session of this Parliament appointing such as 〈…〉 serve either as Officers or Souldiers in the Militia to accept and to take the Oath of alleadgeance and that those who are set a-part for the Militia be not altered c. NOtwithstanding of all our former excellent Acts for securing singular Successors yet they were still un-secure because they could not know if the Vassal had Resigned his Feu ad remanentiam in his own Superiours hand for in that case there was no Seasin requisite which is the only Register whereby singular Successors know if Lands were formerly Dispon'd and therefore by this Act it is appointed that these Instruments of Resignation ad remanentiam which are equivalent to Seasins be Registrated in the Register of Seasins within sixty dayes which is the time appointed for Registrating of Seasins by the 16 Act Par. 22 Ja. 6. By this Act likewise as in that Act Instruments of Resignation of Lands holding Burgage are excepted but it seems that they must be Registrated within the Town-Court-Books within the same sixty dayes for the Act sayes only That such Instruments being Registrated there shall not fall within the Certification BY this Act it is Declared unlawful to poind Moveables upon Registrat Bonds or Decreets for personal debts till the parties be first Charged and the dayes of the Charge expire The reason of which Act was because Noblemen and persons of quality were oft-times poinded and so affronted and Merchants surprized and thereby Ruined before they knew that a Decreet was recovered against them or their Bond was Registrated But this Act was found not to extend to other Diligences ex paritate rationis this being an Act restrictive of former Laws and Customs From this Act are expresly excepted poindings used against Vassals for their Feu-duties But this Exception was very unnecessary and unproper for such poindings did not at all fall under the prohibition of the Statutory part of the Act which only prohibits the poinding Moveables for personal Debts Exception is likewise made of Decreets obtained by Heretors against their own Tennents in their own Courts only and therefore it has been doubted whether Tennents may be Remov'd and Ejected without a previous Charge and though upon Decreets before the Lords previous Charges are necessary Yet upon Decreets of Removing before inferiour Courts it is the Custom to eject immediatly and though this may seem hard yet it is necessary because the intrant Tennent must Remove immediatly and so must have a place to which he may remove sibi imputet the Tennent who being warned did not provide himself timeously IT is fit to observe from the Narrative of this Act that the Parliament thought the King and Council had power to emit Proclamations Commanding the Parochs to Protect and Defend their Ministers and to be lyable to such Fines as the Council should think fit besides the Ministers Reparation if the Offenders were not brought to condign punishment which shows what great power the King has in the like Cases and the Council are hereby authorized to proceed in taking such courses for the future which general power may go very far especially where these courses are otherwise satisfied by necessity This Act is more fully Explain'd in the observations upon the 27 Act Par. 11 Ja. 6. FRom this Act Discharging Suspensions against Bishops Ministers and other Benefic'd persons without Consignation It is observable from comparing the Narrative and Statutory part of the Act that Vniversities and Colledges are still accounted a part of the Clergy and have still the same priviledges with them SInce we find that the Parliament grants Acts for Naturalization of Strangers as is clear by this and by the 65 Act Par. 8 Q Mary It may be doubted if the King can Naturalize Strangers by a Deed of His for else those Acts were unnecessary and in
us'd in the 4 Act Par. 16 Ja. 6. BY this Act the Fines appointed for House-Conventicles are for every Man and Woman having Land and Heretage Liferent or proper Wodset a fourth part of their valued yearly Rent each Tennent twenty five Pounds each Cottar twelve Pounds each Serving-man a fourth part of their Fee each Merchant or chief Trades-man to be Fin'd as a Tennent and each inferiour Trades-man as a Cottar if their Wives or Children be present at House-Conventicles they are to pay the half of the respective Fines and if themselves be present at Field-Conventicles they are to be Fin'd in the double of these Respective Fines so that though the Act do not specifie Wives and Children yet they are to be comprehended under the word others Field Conventicles are by this Act Declared to be Meetings where any shall without Licence or Authority Preach Expone Scripture or Pray in the Fields or in any House where there are more persons than the House contains so that some of them are without Doors which last alternative was added because some to shun the double avail Preached within a little House many thousands being without It has been doubted whether those who were within and knew not that any were without can be punished as a Field-Conventicle for though versabantur in re illicita yet it was such a res illicita as had a determined and different punishment and it were hard that where the punishment is Death as it is for the Minister Preaching at a Field-Conventicle that he could be overtaken where he could not know his Guilt It seems by this Act that if the House could hold more though some were known to be without Doors yet that Meeting could not be call'd a Field-Conventicle since the Act sayes or in any House where there be more persons than the House contains and the Reason inductive of the Act ceases in this case By this Act Magistrats of Burghs-Royal are Fineable at the Councils Pleasure for each Conventicle keeped within their Burgh but that which was thought somewhat severe by the Burrows was that they should have been Fin'd where they discovered the Conventicles themselves since in Law Diligence can only be requir'd in Magistrats and in Policy it seems that this would discourage Magistrats from doing Diligence to discover Nor is it sufficient that by this Act they have Relief from those who were present at the Conventicle since these oft-times are neither known nor able to Relieve The Master and Mistres of the House likewise where the Conventicle was kept are lyable to relieve the Magistrats upon which ground an Act of Council was made making the Heretor lyable for the Fines against which it was objected that the Parliament 〈◊〉 not the Heretor lyable but the Master which is the Lands-lord who because he is present may hinder the Keeping of Conventicles in his House which the innocent Heretor who may be very remotely absent cannot By this Act the Minister who Preaches at Field-Conventicles is punishable by Death but the Minister who keeps House-Conventicles cannot be so much as Fin'd for he is only ordain'd to find Caution not to do the like thereafter under the pain of five thousand Merks or to enact himself to go out of the Kingdom and not to return By this Act the half of the fines are declared to belong to Sheriffs Stewarts Lords of Regality and therefore by the 17 Act of the 3 Sess. Par. 2. They are ordained yearly to give an account of their Proceedings to His Majesties Privy Council under the pain of five hundred merks In which Act this Act is Explained as to some other points BY this Act such as offer their Children to be baptized by any but their own Ministers or by such as are authorized by the Council in absence of their own Minister upon a Certificat from their own Minister or in his absence from one of the Neighbou●ing Ministers are to be fin'd i● an Heretor in a fourth part of His valued Rent Every person above the degree of a Tennent having only a personal Estate in an hundred pounds Scots Every inferiour Merchant considerable Trades-man and every Tennent labouring Land in fifty pounds Scots Every meaner Burges Trades-man and Inhabitant within Burgh and every Cottar in twenty pounds Scots and every Servant in half a years Fee But because upon this Act these who would not conform did to shun these fines delay to Baptize their Children Therefore by the 11 Act Sess. 3 of this Parliament the same fines are Impos'd upon such as keep their Children unbaptized for thirty dayes THis Act is formerly Explain'd in the 1 Act Sess. 3 of the 1 Par. Ch. 2. But for further clearing thereof it may be observ'd that since by this Act Husbands are not made lyable for their fines as by the 5 Act of this Parliament It was urg'd that therefore they could not be fin'd for them since it was presumeable they were designedly left out here because tho a man may hinder his Wife to go to a Conventicle and therefore was justly punished by that for her going whereas no man can force his Wife to go to Church and therefore he was not to be punish'd for her in this Act it was also urg'd that Laws should not be extended de casu in casum where it was probable that the ommission was design'd and so tho Adjudications and Comprisings were equipollent Diligences by our Law yet it was found that an Adjudger was not lyable to pay a years Rent for his Entry as a Compryzer was because the Statute appointing the one had not exprest the other and therefore an express Statute was made for extending this to adjudications which is the 18 Act Par. 2. Ch. 2. and this extension was less favourable because it was a penal Statute and it was against the principles of Law that one person should be punished for another To which it was answered That the Parliament had refer'd the Regulation of Conventicles to the Council and had invested them for this end with their own full power to prevent the Cheats that might be invented and the dangers that might ensue 2. This being a matter of Government must be interpreted so as to preserve the Government and if Wives who were the half and the more humorous half of Scotland were allow'd to abstract all the other Remedies would be ridiculous and they would debauch their Children Tennents and Servants as well as influence their Husbands 3. In all other Cases they were lyable for their Wives for Conventicles by the said 5 Act for Popish withdrawing and Superstitions by the 104 Act 7 Pa. Ja. 6. For their VVives swearing and cursing by the 3 Act Pa. 1 Sess. 1 Ch. 2. In all which Acts the Parliament considered more the good of the Kingdom than the advantage of private parties and extensions are allow'd in favourable Cases and there is none more favourable than this especially since the VVomen
Clause is here added to this Act and is not in the 4 Act 1 Par. Ch. 1. THis Act is Explained in the Observation on the 8 Act 1 Par. Ja. 6. but more fully in my Jus Regium Cap. The Right of Succession Defended and it is remarkable that it was past without a contrary Vote or the least Objection only most thought it so just that it was unnecessary and really it had been so if some in England had not controverted it THis Act Discharges ●ree-quarter and Localities but because some pretended that by this Act they were free from all necessity of carying Corn or Strae or Grass whereas if this were true the Souldiers Horses had been made unfit for Service by such Carriages and the Troopers and Dragoons might have been easily Murther'd whilest they went out singly to bring it in therefore by Act of Council this is fully regulated THere having been a full Debate before His Majesty how far Masters were answerable for their Tennents the Parliament to prevent the like for the future made this Act being fully convinc'd that Masters in Scotland could command their Tennents and Servants suitable whereto there are many old Statutes Commanding Masters to present them and finding that without this the Peace could not be secured and upon the event it is found that this has secur'd the Peace for Tennents and Servants knowing that their Masters would find out their Crimes which Sheriffs and others could not know and that they could not get Service or Land any where If they were disorderly they have conformed and this hath Restor'd Masters to the just Influence which our Predecessors had over their Tennents and Servants and which they lost by their Fanaticism by which they came to depend only on their Ministers and minding more Conventicles than their Work and in which extravagancy they were so far advanc'd that they would not see themselves till they were secur'd that they should be allow'd to go to these nor is the Master ty'd by this Act to any hard thing since by presenting them to Justice or by putting them out of his Land or out of his service he is free from all danger and this is in his power as also to secure him yet further it is Declar'd that he may break their Tacks and that if any Master take them who are put away he shall be lyable unto three years Duty It having been also Debated before the King that there could be no Deputs nam'd for putting the Laws against Ecclesiastick Disorders to execution within the bounds of Heretable Judges therefore His Majesties Power is Declar'd as to this Point by the Clause of this Act but this is now unnecessary because by the 18 Act of this Parliament His Majesties cumulative Power is Declar'd as to all points IT is very observable that the longer the World lasts Probation by Witnesses-lessens alwise in esteem because men grow alwise more Wicked In our Saviours time out of the mouth of two or three Witnesses every word was to be established Thereafter by our Law and by the Laws of other Nations nothing above an hundred pounds could be proven by Witnesses And albeit of old the affixing of a Seal was probative without a Subscription or Witnesses but as by former Acts the Subscriptions of Parties is Declar'd requisit So though formerly the Designing the Witnesses was sufficient although they did not Subscrive Yet by this Act no Writ is Declar'd Probative except the Witnesses Subscrive and without their Subscriving the Writ is Declared null But the Act of Parliament does not condescend whether this nullity shall be receivable by way of exception Or if it must require a Reduction But I conceive it must be null by way of exception since the Law hath Declar'd such Papers null and the want of Witnesses appears by production of the Paper it self The second thing Established by this Act is that no Witnesse shall sign as a Witness to any Parties Subscription except he know the Party and saw him subscrive or saw or heard him give warrand to the Nottar or touch the Pen The occasion of which part of the Act was among other remarkable Cases that a Gentlewoman pretending that she could not Write before so many Company desir'd to sign the Paper in her own Chamber whereupon she got the Paper with her and at her return brought it back subscriv'd and she thereafter rais'd a Reduction of the same Paper as not truly sign'd by her and though this should hardly have been sustainable at her own instance because she was heard to own it by the subscriving witnesses and the whole company yet this exception of dole could not have secluded her Heirs or Executors from reducing it as said is If witnesses without seeing a party subscrive or giving warrand to subscrive shal subscrive as witnesses they are declared to be punishable as accessory to Forgery which quality some think was added to seclude the punishment of Death it being as may be pretended too severe to punish by Death that which is the effect of meer negligence and unto which very many fall through negligence yet our Law knows no difference betwixt accessories and principals further than ex gratia accessories may sometimes find a mitigation of the punishment I conceive also that a party signing as Witness without seeing the Paper subscriv'd should be lyable to a third party who got assignation to that Paper in Damnage and Interest if it be Reduced ex eo capite since he was a loser by his negligence But quid juris 1. If the party himself to whom the Paper was granted were pursuing such an action for Damnage and Interest since he should have considered his own security and the Witnesses might have trusted to his exactness 2. Quid juris if the Witness heard Command given to one of the Nottars since the Act says That unless they heard him give Warrand to a Notar or Notars and touch the Notars Pen and yet even in that case the Paper may be null because there was not a Command given to both the Notars and a third party may thereby lose his Right 3. It may be doubted if upon a Notars asking if the party will warrand him to subscrive the party do give a Nod whether that Nod will be equivalent to a Warrand and free the Witness who thereupon subscrived as Witness And it seems it should for the Act says except he saw or heard him give Command and a man cannot see a Warrand otherways than by a Nod and nutus was sufficient by the Civil Law to infer a Mandat The third point in the Act is that albeit in all Forraign Nations the Subscription of a Notar proves in all Obligations for there the Notar keeps the Paper sign'd by the Party and gives only a Duplicat sign'd by him and albeit in our Law a Notars Subscription did prove in all Instruments such as Seasins Intimations c. If the Witnesses were
may be urg'd that He may since the Session is his own Court wherein He does Justice to His People by His Judges and therefore as any of His Majesties Vassals may hold their Courts when they please much more may His Majesty hold His. Likeas His Majesty has oft-times by His Council order'd the Session to sit when and where He pleas'd And whereas it is pretended that if this were true Acts of Parliament in ●his case were unnecessary and that such alterations have never been made without the Parliament To this it is answered That at first the Session was a Committee of Parliament and so the Diets of Session behov'd to be appointed by Parliament and now likewise it is fit that the Inclinations of the Subjects be gratifi'd by such Acts taking along their consent in a Case of so general a concern but it does not necessarly follow that all things that have been Establ●shed by an Act of Parliament at some times can at no other time be order'd by His Majesty alone for we see that there are several Acts of Parliament Regulating Trade and Coynage and yet it cannot be deny'd but that Trade and Coynage are inter Regalia ALbeit by the fourteenth Act 1 Par. Ch. 2. The Excise is to be taken up by the Commissioners of the Excise or Collectors appointed by them and for whom the Commissioners are answerab●● and may be quartered upon for their Deficiency By this Act the grant of the Excise which is to Commense from the Kings Death gives His Royal Successors only a Right to what the Drink Exciseable it self can yield and so the Shires will not be oblig'd to burden their Land with Cess for Deficiency of the Excise as now they do THis Act is formerly Explain'd in the Observations on the 47 Act Par. 11 Ja. 6. BY our former Law it was generally believ'd that all Widows had Right to a third of their Husbands Estates call'd with us a Terce except the Wife had been expresly secluded by her Contract of Marriage and that she had Right to her Joynture and to a third of the superplus of any Land wherein her Husband died Infeft But in a Case betwixt Prestongrange and the Lady Craigleith Debated in the Session immediatly before this Parliament It was alleadg'd that the said Lady being competently provided by her Contract of Marriage to a great Joynture she could not likewise have Right to a Terce because primo provisio hominis tollit provisionem legis and therefore where a Wife is provided by express agreement and the Provision acquiesced in by the Wife and her Friends it is in the construction of Law reputed to be in full satisfaction of all she can crave if the same amount to a third of all the Lands which the Defunct had at his Decease 2. This is Declar'd to be our Law by the 16. cap. lib. 2. Reg. Maj. N. 6 10. And by Balfour in his Title of the Wises Dowry and Terce And by Craig lib. 2. Cap. 22. 3. By the Laws of other Nations it is clear that where a Wife is secured by a Conventional Provision she can have no Right to any legal Provision This the French expresly determine when they say that a Wife having dotarium praesixum cannot claim dotarium ex lege consuetudinarium 4. This Terce is the same in the Analogy of Law that a Legi●tim or an Aliment is to Children but so it is that neither of these are due when the Children are provided and therefore the most that can be due in either Case is supplementum legittimae the Law having only designed the rationabilis tertia And there is no more due to our Queens by the 2 Act 1 Par. Ja. 3. Albeit these Reasons were thought very pungent and tending much to the support of old Families and to secure Men against the importunity of their Wives yet because some positive Decisions had run in favours of the Wives though abundantly provided therefore the case was referr'd by the Session to the Parliament and they by this Act ordain'd that in time coming if the Wife be provided tho her Provision were never so small she shall be excluded from a Terce unless her Right to a Terce be secur'd to her by and attour her particular Provision But because this Act was not thought a Declaratory Statute but a Regulation therefore the Case depending was remitted back to the Session THis is fully Explain'd in the Observ. upon the 16 Act 22 Par. Ja. 6. HIs Majesty having by vertue of His Prerogative Royal Declar'd by the 27 Act 3 Sess. Par. 1 Ch. 2. The Sole ordering and disposing of Trade with Forraigners He did by Act of Council Anno 1681. Regulate the matter of Trade and Manufactories which Proclamations are here Ratifi'd for a security to such as shall undertake Manufactories and therefore it may be doubted if His Majesty can dispense with any thing relating to Manufactory since in this third Parties have followed the Faith of his Majesties Acts and Proclamations so that His Majesty seems to be bound to them ex quasi contractu It is declared by the last Clause of this Act That no persons contraveening this Act shall be lyable to the Penalties unless they be found guilty within three Moneths after the delation Upon which Clause it was found that the Offenders were free though they had confess'd their Contravention by their Oath within the three Moneths because there was not a formal Sentence against them albeit it was alleadg'd that in confitentem nullae sunt partes judicis and the King had done sufficient diligence and the reason of the Act did only militat in favours of those who where not oblig'd to Depone after so long a time and the King could not be prejudg'd where his Officers had done sufficient Diligence for this in effect was a Prescription which runs only against the negligent Likeas in this Case the want of a Decreet could not be oppon'd since it was occasioned by a Petition given by the Defenders craving a delay with which the King gratifi'd them But yet the Council thought the words of the Act so positive that they would not go over them especially since the Clause did resolve in an Indemnity to People who might have and did ordinarly contraveen by mistake or through necessity and all such Indemnifying Clauses should be favourably Interpreted BY the 212 Act 14 Par. Ja. 6. The Lords of Session can only be declined to Vote or Judge in Causes belonging to their Fathers Brothers or Sons But because the prohibition of that Act was too narrow and that the reason thereof did equally militat against all Judges Therefore by this Act the Prohibition of the former Act is extended to degrees of Affinity as well as Consanguinity As also to Uncles and Nephews so that now no Lord of Session or other Judge whatsomever is Capable to Vote where either the Pursuer or Defender is Father Brother
see that the Redeemer must wait from Sun to Sun and tho where the Common Good is to be Rouped in Towns or the Customs in Exchequer the same use to be done in half an hour or so yet it is a different thing where Creditors are to offer for getting payment of their own just Debts and for the same reason it seems though a just Creditor come somewhat late yet if he offer more he ought to be preferred nam de minimis non curat praetor and the interest of lawful Creditors ought to have greater favour It is doubted if a part of the Bankrupts Lands may be Rouped since the Act ordains in general his Estate to be Roupt and a part of the Estate cannot be call'd the Estate and it were hard to choose out the Mannor-place and some little part of the Land by the want whereof the rest would become of little value The Act also by ordaining the price to be distributed among the Creditors insinuats that one Creditor cannot choose a part to be Roupt for payment of his particular Debt Whether the Lords may stop offers when they grow exorbitant in prejudice of offers of a just price made by lawful Creditors and whether a Creditor should be preferr'd to a stranger both offering the same price tho the stranger made the first offer and if a Creditor in passion may be allow'd to repent and if he should get Deductions in case of supervenient War Pestilence or vis major may be seen with many other intricat questions fully discust by Matheus de auctionibus and Postillus de sub-hastationibus where all the matter of Roups are excellently Treated WHen Field Conventicles and other Insolencies grew insupportable the Privy Council required the Sheriffs Baillies of Regalities and other Magistrats to call together these within their Jurisdictions for repressing the same but they answered that this was not possible whereupon the Council being justly jealous that the Sheriffs did not their Duty gave Commissions to the Commanding Officers and other Gentlemen to be Conjunct-Sheriffs as to all Ecclesiastick Disorders and found that these contributed much to quiet the Countrey but this being complained of as a streach of the Prerogative This Act was made Declaring That His Majesty may by Himself or others Commissionated by Him take Cognizance and Decision of any Causes He pleases notwithstanding of any Jurisdiction bestowed by Him and His Predecessors For understanding whereof it is fit to know that all Jurisdictions granted by absolute Princes are cumulative and not privative for tho they empower others to distribute Justice to their people for their and their Peoples greater Conveniency yet they never thereby denude and debar themselves from judging or appointing others for the King may see and the People may find Judges very unfit and that the Government is ruined by them and yet a Crime cannot be prov'd whereby Deprivation may be infer'd whereas there is no inconveniency on the other hand 2. This is clear by Craig to be our Law lib. 2. diag 8. Illud tamen generaliter observandum quod jurisdictio nunquam privative sed cumulative delegari potest non est enim quasi translatio juris ex una persona in aliam sed tantum mandata jurisdictio quae non obstante delegatione adhuc remanet in delegante 3. This is no more than what was allow'd to the King by the 27 Act Par. 5 Ja. 3. Whereby it is Declared That it shall be lawful to the King at his empleasance or pleasure To take Decision of any matter that comes before him likeas it was wont to be as of before 4. This keeps Heretable Officers in a just aw and secures People for if they will be partial or remiss they know that others may be nam'd to supply their Defects THe occasion of this Act was a Solemn Debate betwixt Provost Curry and Charles Oliphant in December 1677. In which the said Provost rais'd a Reduction of a Right made by the Mr. of Mordingtoun to the said Charles of the Lands of Nether Mordingtoun and Edringtoun as made by a Minor and though an Oath was adjected by the Minor to Ratifie at his majority Yet that was likewise null since by the same facility that Minors will Contract to their Laesion they will likewise swear to their Laesion and therefore it is the publick interest as well as the interest of the Minor that such Oaths should not bind To which it was answered that though the World whilest Pagan did Rescind such Oaths yet by the famous Law sacramenta puberum such Oaths were to be observ'd and though Oaths given against a publick Law were not to be observ'd yet in such a Case as this where the publick was not concerned and where there was no Statute against the interposing such an Oath the Oath ought to be observed as being a matter of far greater consequence than the Contract Nor should Judges favour Perjury or ensnare people who trusted Oaths and even in Countreys where Statutes were made against the validity of such Oaths they ordained the Minor to be first absolved by a Church-man and since we had no such Absolutions we could admit of no Restitution To which it was Reply'd that the Laws Restoring Minors were founded upon publick Good and Interest and therefore it were absurd to suffer the Contravention of them to be secured by an Oath and that an Oath adjected by a Minor should no more bind than an Oath adjected by a Wife which has been by many Decisions found not to be binding and even in these Countreys where the Canon Law takes place this authentick Constitution is not observ'd viz. in France Flanders c. as is observed by Guidilinus de jure novissimo lib. 3. cap. 12. It was 2 ly alleadged That such Oaths ought not to secure where the Deed is in it self invalid and illegal as here where the Father authorizes the Son to Confirm a Deed to the Fathers own advantage nam nemo potest esse author in rem suam 3. It ought not to be respected even by the opinion of the Civilians where there is aenorm laesion which aenorm laesion is dolus praesumptus and no oath can secure against fraud or dole 4. Though the Minor might have prejudged himself by that oath and thereby have secluded himself from craving Restitution yet he could not prejudge the Provost who was a third Party and was his Creditor for the effect of the oath being only personal could not reach him The Lords upon this Debate sustained the Contract and Repelled the Reason of Reduction though rais'd by a singular Successor But they caused draw this Act of Parliament Discharging for the future the exacting of such oaths annulling likewise the Contract and Declaring the Elicitor of the Oath to be infamous Nota These words in the Act That it shall be competent to any person related to the minor to obtain the Writs to be declared null were adjected because some minors