The statement is true.
The English Bill of Rights (1689) was a charter drafted by the Parliament and directed to the King and Queen of the time (William III and Mary II). The Bill established certain rights to the people, limit the monarch's power and gave the Parliament sovereignty, by giving it absolute power over government institutions and laws, for example, under this bill, the king and queen now needed the Parliament's consent to establish new courts of law, act as a judge, set aside laws, maintain an army in peacetime and collect taxes.