It has been usual, particularly in later indictments,
to add, “at several other times”; but
the strictness of naming one day is still necessary,
and the want of the larger words would not quash the
indictment. 2dly, A comparison of the extreme rigor
and exactness required in the more
formal part
of the proceeding (the indictment) with the extreme
laxity used in the
substantial part (that is
to say, the evidence received to prove the fact) fully
demonstrates that the partisans of those forms would
put shackles on the High Court of Parliament, with
which they are not willing, or find it wholly impracticable,
to bind themselves. 3dly, That the latitude of departure
from the letter of the indictment (which holds in
other matters besides this) is in appearance much more
contrary to natural justice than anything which has
been objected against the evidence offered by your
Managers, under a pretence that it exceeded the limits
of pleading. For, in the case of indictments below,
it must be admitted that the prisoner may be unprovided
with proof of an alibi, and other material means of
defence, or may find some matters unlooked-for produced
against him, by witnesses utterly unknown to him:
whereas nothing was offered to be given in evidence,
under any of the articles of this impeachment, except
such as the prisoner must have had perfect knowledge
of; the whole consisting of matters sent over by himself
to the Court of Directors, and authenticated under
his own hand. No substantial injustice or hardship
of any kind could arise from our evidence under our
pleading: whereas in theirs very great and serious
inconveniencies might happen.
Your Committee has further to observe, that, in the
case of Lord Wintoun, as in the case of Dr. Sacheverell,
the Commons had in their Managers persons abundantly
practised in the law, as used in the inferior jurisdictions,
who could easily have followed the precedents of indictments,
if they had not purposely, and for the best reasons,
avoided such precedents.
A great writer on the criminal law, Justice Foster,
in one of his Discourses,[15] fully recognizes those
principles for which your Managers have contended,
and which have to this time been uniformly observed
in Parliament. In a very elaborate reasoning on
the case of a trial in Parliament, (the trial of those
who had murdered Edward II.,) he observes thus:—“It
is well known, that, in Parliamentary
proceedings of this kind, it is, and ever was,
sufficient that matters appear with proper light and
certainty to a common understanding, without
that minute exactness which is required in criminal
proceedings in Westminster Hall. In these cases
the rule has always been, Loquendum ut vulgus.”
And in a note he says,—“In the proceeding
against Mortimer, in this Parliament, so little
regard was had to the forms used in legal proceedings,
that he who had been frequently summoned to Parliament
as a baron, and had lately been created Earl of March,
is styled through the whole record merely Roger de
Mortimer.”