On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
scope of these laws , if the opponent choose- to give notice 4 >( the defect of q ualification . Is every candidate for office inIndies acting under cha ^ js , &c , from the Crown , such as several of our commercial a * id cbari&ble fouridatioas * liable to tbit annoyance 2 It certainly appears that for some time after tjie passing of the penaj ^ aw& of Charles IL a very strict practical construction was put upon them * It might have been quite as well , too , to have at least mentionea the Occasional Conformity Act of Anne ' s reign , and its subsequent iepealr In subjects of this sort , history and general
principle are necessarily mixed up with law , mid no one can have a complete view of the one without the other . We shall next notice the extreme meagreaess of Mr . Beldam ' s acquaintance with the Indemnity Acts , " the effect" of which , he says , " has been to convert the sacramental test into a species of political portcullis , now seldom or never employed against Protestant Dissenters ; to be regretted chiefly on account of the odious distinction it insinuates , and only to be
feared as it perpetuates the possibility of their exclusion . " Now this , however properly the reprobation is conveyed , is giving the Indemnity Acts a vast deal better character than they deserve . The Test laws do practically exclude Dissenters from a great many offices : they are in full operation where any one pleases in elective offices that they should be so ; for the
Indemnity laws do not remove one particle of the legal incapacity where any body avails himself of it ( as has been repeatedly done and much oftener threatened ); and , again , any informer who chooses to set a sharp-witted attorney to work , may easily learn even to defeat the operation of these Acts , in those particulars which they seem intended to remedy . It has indeecj been held ( in re Stevenson , 2 Barn , and Cres . 34 ) by a strained construction of the Act , that where the appointment and consequent obligation to conform had taken place , and begun to run before tfie passing of the Act , its operation should be considered prospective ; but tne Indemnity Act affords no protection to a person wlw ) is appointed after its passing , and who does not
qualify within six months ; and there is abundant time left before the passing of the next Act for an action to be commenced and judgment obtained . Mr * Beldam should also know that it is extremely doubtful whether , wtyen these ; six months have expired , the consequent penalties and disabilities do not attach , without any removal or benefit from any subsequent Act , if the party persist in refusing to take the Test . We have , however , a graver fault to find with Mr . Beldam . Why has he
in the face of the decision of the highest tribunals , chosen to continue Mr , Justice Bfcckstoae ' s utterly unfounded denunciation and classification of Nonconformity as an offence , as a mere state of remission from penalty ? Has Mr . Beldam ever read Dr . Furnfaux ' s Letters on that point / We do not ask this because we expect a lawyer writing even on religious law , to b& $ not ask this because we expect a lawyer writing even on religious law , to to * $
controversialist , but because , if he had read them , he must have seen thai ( bij crotchet has not only reason , but the hi g hest legal authorities against it ; andw ? should have vatyedMr , Beldam's book highly , if he had transferred to it the report which Dr . Fujrneaux has given of Lord Mansfield ' s noble speechj ' c « MTei ^ d bf Wrasel ^ in reversing the judgment founded on Blaclfstone ' s theory- That speech , and the decision grounded ufpon it , wehfcfe
always cotimdered as o « e of the noblest and most efficient safeguard * of Dissenting liberty , one of the grandest events by ^ ^ which bigcrtrywid sophwfrv \^ re foil ^ l in tbeik- endeavours to cramp atid fetter the principles on wlifch ( thteLtg ^ atnni ^ hadrecofttiizodHbaitf ofwtt « cieifcei ? ^ - ^ ' ~*' x ' !" Why , we repeat , even 33 a matter of ta « te , should Mr * Bejdgm gratoitously
Untitled Article
Reviett \*» lteWmton N # n * &nf < j ? mtt / % S 93
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Aug. 2, 1827, page 593, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1799/page/41/
-