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A10218 De pace Regis et regni viz. A treatise declaring vvhich be the great and generall offences of the realme, and the chiefe impediments of the peace of the King and kingdome, as menaces, assaults, batteries, treasons, homicides, and felonies ... and by whome, and what meanes the sayd offences, and the offendors therein are to bee restrained, repressed, or punished. ... Collected out of the reports of the common lawes of this realme, and of the statutes in force, and out of the painfull workes of the reuerend iudges Sir Anthonie Fitzharbert, Sir Robert Brooke, Sir William Stanford, Sir Iames Dyer, Sir Edward Coke, Knights, and other learned writers of our lawes, by Ferdinando Pulton of Lincolnes Inne, Esquier. Pulton, Ferdinando, 1536-1618.; Fitzherbert, Anthony, Sir, 1470-1538.; England and Wales. Public General Acts. Selections. 1609 (1609) STC 20495; ESTC S116053 719,079 571

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forme as they should haue béene if they had béene indicted arraigned and found guiltie in the same Countie where such robberie or burglarie as is aforesayd was done or committed if it should appeare to the Iustices before whom any such felons or robbers should be arraigned by euidence giuen before them or by examination that the same felons or burglarers should haue béene put from their Clergie in case they had béene indicted arraigned and found guiltie in the same countie where the same robberies or burglaries were committed or done as in the same statute made in the safd fiue and twentieth yere among other things more plainely appeareth And where in the Parliament holden at Westminster St. 1. E. 6. 12 the fourth day of Nouember in the first yeare of the raigne of our Soueraigne Lord the King that now is it is ordayned and enacted amongst other things That no person or persons that before that time had béene or at any time hereafter should bée in due forme of law attainted or conuicted of murder of malice prepensed or of poysoning of malice prepensed or of breaking of any house by day or by night any person beeing then in the same house when the same breaking had bin or after that time should bée committed béeing put in feare or dread or of or for robbing of any person or persons in the high way or néere the high way or for felonious stealing of Horses Geldings or Mares or of felonious taking of any goods out of any Parish Church or other Church or Chappell or béeing indicted or appealed of any of the same offences and thereupon found guiltie by verdict of twelue men or should confesse the same vpon his or their arraignement or would not answer directly according to the lawes of this Realme or should stand wilfully or of malice mute should not bée admitted to haue or enioy the priuiledge or benefit of his or their Clergie or Sanctuarie but should bée put from the same And that in all other cases of Felonie other than such as be before mentioned all and singular person and persons which after the first day of March then next following should bée arraigned or found guiltie vpon his or their arraignement or should confesse the same or stand mute in forme aforesayd or would not answer directly in forme abouesayd should haue and enioy the priuiledge and benefit of his or their Clergie and the libertie and priuiledge of Sanctuarie in like manner and forme as hée or they might or should haue done before the foure and twentieth day of Aprill in the first yeare of the raigne of the sayd late King Henrie the eight as in the sayd Act made in the sayd first yeare among other things more plainely appeareth By reason of which article and clause contained in the sayd Act made in the sayd first yeare the sayd Statute made in the sayd fiue and twentieth yeare of the sayd late King which did put such felons and burglarers from their Clergie that doe such offence in one Countie and after are taken with the goods stollen in another Countie and there indicted arraigned and found guiltie was made void By reason whereof diuers and many persons that sithence the sayd first yeare haue committed such Robberies and Burglaries in one Countie and after haue béene taken with the manner in another Countie and there indicted arraigned and found guiltie haue had and enioyed their Clergie which they could not haue had in case the sayd Act made in the sayd fiue and twentieth yeare had stood in force to the great boldening and comfort of such offendors Stealing of goods in one County and carrying them into another Be it enacted St. 5. 6. E. 6. 10. That the sayd Act made in the sayd fiue and twentieth yeare touching the putting of such offendors from their Clergie and euerie article clause and sentence contained in the same touching Clergie shall from henceforth touching such offences to be committed and done stand remaine and be in full strength and vertue in such manner and forme as it did before the making of the sayd Act made in the said first yeare of the raigne of our said Soueraigne Lord that now is any clause article or sentence comprised in the said Act made in the said first yeare to the contrarie thereof notwithstanding This Statute of 5. 6. Ed. 6. doth not reuiue the whole before rehearsed Statute of 25. H. 8. béeing before repealed by the last braunch of the before specified Statute of 1. Ed. 6. 12. but reuiueth onely so much thereof as concerneth the stealing of goods in one Countie and after carying them into another Countie as it appeareth by the words of the same Statute And neither the sayd Statute of 25. H. 8. nor this Statute of 5. 6. Ed. 6. doe extend to Appeales but onely to Indictments so that in an Appeale brought in the Countie whither the goods robbed or spoyled were carryed if the defendant be conuict thereof the defendant may haue his Clergie at this day 27 By a Statute made Anno 5. 6. E. 6. St. 5. 6. E. 6. 9. it was rehearsed and established That whereas at the Parliament holden at Westminster by prorogation anno 23. H. 8. St. 23. H. 8. 1 it was then and there among other things ordained That no person or persons which after that time should happen to be found guiltie after the lawes of this Realme for any manner petit Treason or for any wilfull murder of malice prepensed or for robbing of any Churches Chappels or other holy places or for robbing any person or persons in their dwelling houses or dwelling places the owner or dweller in the same house his wife his children or seruants then being within and put in feare or dread by the same or for robbing of any person or persons in or néere about the highwayes or for wilfull burning of any dwelling houses or barnes wherein any graine or corne shall happen to be nor any person or persons being found guiltie of any abetment procurement maintaining or concealing of any or to any such Petit treasons murders or felonies should from thenceforth be admitted to the benefit of his or their Clergie but vtterly to be excluded therof suffer death in such maner and forme as they should haue done for any the causes or offences abouesaid if they were not Clerkes such as be within the holy orders that is to say of the orders of Subdeacon or aboue all only excepted as by the same act among other things more plainely appeareth the which act was made to endure vntill the last day of the next parliament and after that at the Session of the parliament holden at Westminster by prorogation in the 32. St. 32. H. 8. 3 yeare of the raigne of the said late king the same act with other acts was made to continue for euer Sithence the making of which statute it hath béen doubted that if such robberies and
contrary héereof notwithstanding St. 27. El. 4. If any person or persons haue heretofore sithence the beginning of the Q. raigne that now is made or hereafter shall make any conueiance gift grant Conueiances with condition of reuocation or alteration demise charge limitation of vse or vses or assurance of in or out of any lands tenements or hereditaments with any clause prouision article or condition of reuocation determination or alteration at his or their will or pleasure of such conueiance assurance grants limitations of vses or estates of in or out of the said lands tenements or hereditaments or of in or out of any part of parcell of them contained or mentioned in any writing déede or indenture of such assurance conueiance grant or gift and after such conueiance grant gift demise charge limitation of vses or assurance so made or had shal or doe bargaine sell demise grant conuey or charge the same lands tenements or hereditaments or any parcel thereof to any person or persons bodies politike or corporate for money or other good consideration paid or giuen the said first conueiance assurance gift grant demise charge or limitation not by him or them reuoked made voyde or altered according to the power and authoritie reserued or expressed vnto him or them in and by the said secret conueiance assurance gift or grant Then the said former conueiance assurance gift demise and grant as touching the said lands tenements and hereditaments so after bargained sold conueied demised or charged against the said bargainées vendées lessées grauntées and euery of them their heirs successors executors administrators and assignes and against all and euery person and persons which haue shall or may lawfully claime any thing by from vnder them or any of them shall be déemed taken and adiudged to be voide frustrate and of none effect by vertue and force of this present Act. St. 27. El. 4. Prouided neuerthelesse that no lawfull morgage made or to be made Bona fide and without fraud or couin vpon good consideration Morgages shall be impeached or impaired by force of this Act but shall stand in the like force and effect as the same should haue done if this act had neuer béene had or made Anie thing c. This Act nor any thing therin contained St. 27. Eli. 4. shall extend or be construed to make good any purchase Assurances of lands defeated before the Statute grant lease charge or profit of in or out of any lāds tenements or hereditaments héeretofore made void defeated or vndone by reason or any former conueiance graunt or assurance so as the partie or parties or their heirs or assignes which haue so defeated or made void the same were in actuall possession the first day of this present Parliament of or in the said lands The authority of the court of Starre-chamber tenements or hereditaments whereof or out of which any such purchase graunt lease charge or profite was made Neither this Act nor any thing therein contained shall extend in any sort to restraine or impaire the iurisdiction power or authoritie of the Court of Starrechamber A purchasor doth know before of a fraudulent déede 32 If a man seised of land in fée Co. li. 5. 60. do make a fraudulent conueiance thereof to the intent to deceiue and defraud purchasors contrary to the said Statute of Anno 27. Eliz. and doth continue in possession of it and taketh the profite of it and doth after enter into communication with a stranger for the sale of it to him and by chaunce the same stranger hath knowledge of the same fraudulent assurance and notwithstanding he doth bargaine with the same party for his land doth conclude with him and taketh his assurance from him in this case the same purchaser shal auoide this former fraudulent cōueiance made by the seller of this land though hée had notice thereof before for the said Act of Anno 27. Elizab. by expresse words doth make the fraudulent conueiance voide touching the purchasor and séeing it is within the expresse puruiew of the same Statute it is to be so taken and construed in repressing of fraud and it is not the purchasors knowledge thereof that doth make the fraudulent conueiance good which the said statute hath made voide The father maketh a fraudulent lease and the sonne selleth the land 33 If the father doe make a lease for yeares of his land by couin Co. li. 6. 72. to defraud others to whom he will demise or sell the same land as all fraudulent leases shall be intended to be made to that end and before he doth sell or demise the same land he dieth and his sonne and next heire knowing or not knowing of the said lease doth sell the same land for good consideration Then the purchasor shall auoide this lease by force of the foresaide Statute of Anno 27. Elizab. for séeing the Lawe doth presume that euery fraudulent lease is made generally to defeate purchasors lessées c. within this generality euerie particular purchasor farmor lessée c. is included And it is not materiall though he who sold the land did not make the former fraudulent lease estate or incombrance but if the estate be fraudulent the purchasor shall auoide it whosoeuer selleth the land A womans iointure made by fraud 34 And the same Lawe is if a man doe conuey land to the vse of his wife Co. li. 6. 73 for her iointure by deceit and couin to defraud a purchasor to whom he intendeth to sell the same land in this case if the same fraud be prooued by euidence or confessed by pleading the purchasor shall auoide the said wiues estate Fraudulent déeds to defeat successors of disapidations 35 Because diuers Ecclesiasticall persons being possessed of mansion houses and other buildings belonging to their Ecclesiasticall Benefices or liuings did suffer the same for want of due reparations partly to decay and partly to fall downe conuerting the timber lead and stone to their owne vses and also made déedes of gift and colourable alienations and other conueiances of like effect of their good and cattels in their life time of purpose after their deaths to defraud their successours of such iust Actions and remedies as otherwise they might and should haue had against the executours or administratours of their goodes by the Lawes Ecclesiasticall of this Realme for the redresse whereof by a Statute made Anno 13. Elizab. it was enacted St. 13. El. 10 St. 1. Iac. 25 That if any Archbishop Bishop Deane Archdeacon Fraudulent déedes to defeate successors of dilapidations Prouost Treasurer Chancellor Chaunter Prebendarie or any other hauing any dignitie or office in any Cathedrall or Collegiat Church within this Realme or any Parson Vicar or other Incumbent of any Ecclesiasticall liuing whereunto doe belong any houses or buildings which by lawe or custome hée is bound to maintaine in reparation doe suffer any
not any release of the appellants made vnto him or any such other matter in discharge of the appeale for he shall come time enough to shew that when the appellant doth appeare vpon the Scire facias And the appellée may haue a Scire facias against the appellant though in the Charter there be not this clause viz. ita quod stet rectus in curia Fi. Char. 17 19 An appeale was brought against a principall and accessorie Non-sute doth not aide an appellee that is outlawed the principall was pursued to an Outlawrie whereupon an Exigent was awarded against the Accessorie returnable at a certaine day at which day the Plaintife was Non-suit in his Appeale and then the Principall came with a Charter of Pardon and prayed allowance thereof for that the plaintife was Non-suite which would not bée graunted by the Court for that the non-suit did not ayde him seeing the appeale was determined before against him by the Outlawrie 20 A man beeing arraigned of felonie pleaded not guiltie 8. Ed. 4. 29 and beeing demanded how he would be tried he shewed forth the Kings protection The Kings protection and said that the same was a sufficient discharge for him and would make none other answere whereupon the Iustices agreed that he should be put to his penance viz. to his paine for t dure And yet at another time Fi. Cor. 239 one béeing found guiltie of felonie shewed the Kings Charter which did not containe any pardon but onely that the King had retained him to goe with him into Gascoigne that was allowed and the Iustices did surcease to procéed any further against him Pardon of a felonie before it was committed 21 A. was indicted for that he did the 13. day of February Plo. com 401. an̄ 13. Regin̄ Eliz strike B. whereof the said B. died the 18. day of Iune then next following A. vpon his arraignmēt pleaded the generall pardon by Parliament by which all felonies offences misdemeanours c. in the act not excepted which might bée pardoned before and vntill the 14. day of February were pardoned released and discharged against the Quéene and auerred that neither hee nor the said offence were excepted in the said pardon and praied to be discharged And he was discharged by the said pardon for that the wound giuen by the prisoner was the cause of the felonie the giuing of which wound was an offence misdemeanour against the Crowne the which was pardoned by the Act of Parliament and by that meanes all acts ensuing vpon the same offence were pardoned ❧ Standing mute or answering indirectly AT some time he that is arraigned of felonie is so farre both from making confession of the felonie whereof he is indited and also of pleading not guiltie thereunto that hee will make no answer at all but stand mute of malice and euill will or otherwise plead such matter which is no answer to the felonie whereof hée is arraigned or such a peruerse plea which is no direct answer to the offence whereof he is indited Stand mute or not answering directly Or if he doe answer to the offence yet he will so conclude his plea that the same plea can haue no triall Fi. Cor. 233 283 359 4. Ed. 4. 11 Kel fol. 70. In all which cases he shall be put to his penance for contemning the law and refusing of the ordinarie triall deuised by the law that is to say he shall be put to paine grieuous and durable otherwise tearmed to paine fort dure and as it is commonly tearmed he shal be pressed to death Which paine is called grieuous for that it is so heauie and weightie that hée is not able to endure it and it is called durable because the offendor shall neuer haue ease or reliefe of it but shall die in it 2 The paine grieuous and durable was not at the common law but Felons refusing lawfull triall ordained by the Statute of Westminst 1. made an̄ 3. Ed. 1. St. 3. E. 1. 12 whereby it was enacted That notorious felons openly knowne of euill name who will not put themselues vpon enquests of felonies which men doe prosecute before the Iustices at the Kings suit shal be put in hard and strong prison as they which refuse to be tried by the law of the Realme But this is not to be intended of prisoners which be taken for light suspition By which Statute it doth appeare that none shal be adiudged to this paine if there be not euident or very probable matter to conuince him of the offence whereof he is arraigned or otherwise that he is a notable théefe or openly known to be of an euil name which the Iudge ought strictly to examine before hee procéed to iudgement against him ●●nnance on●● vpon an indictment and not vpon an appeale 3 The iudgement of pennance is only to be giuen when a prisoner is arraigned at the Kings suit and not where he is arraigned at the parties suit 21. Ed. 3. 18 for the words of the Statute be and will not put themselues vpon enquests of felonies which men do prosecute before the Iustices at the Kings suit and therefore in an appeale prosecuted at the suit of the party the iudgemēt of pennance viz. of paine grieuous durable shall not be giuen but another iudgement that is to say that the offendor shal be hanged And an offendor shal haue this iudgement of pennance at the K. suit 40. Ass p. 40 although that suit be begun before his due time viz. within the yeare after the offence committed where the king ought to haue taried vntill the yeres end for the interest of the party who was to pursue his appeale within the yeare Pennance for piracie 4 If a man be indicted and arraigned before Commissioners to heare and determine for Piracie and Robbery committed vpon the sea 7. El. Dyer 242. and he wil stand mute and not answere directly he shall haue iudgement of pennance viz. of painefort dure and that is by force of the statute of Anno 28. H. 8. St. 28. H. 8. 15. which hath ordained That all Treasons Felonies Robberies Murthers and confederacies committed vpon the Sea or in any other Hauen Riuer Créeke or place where the admirall hath or pretendeth to haue iurisdiction shal be inquired heard cried determined and iudged in such shires places in the realme as shal be limitted in the kings Commission or Commissions to be directed for the same in like forme as if any such offences had béene committed vpon the land And such Commissions shal be had vnder the great Seale directed to the Admirall or his Lieutenant and Deputy and to thrée or foure such other as shal be appointed by the Lord Chancelor as often as néed shal require to heare and determine such offences after the common course of the laws of this land vsed for Treasons Felonies Robberies Murthers and
false déede or writing as aforesaid after the said first day of Iune Stat. 5. El. 14 11 This Act or any thing therein contained Persons not chargeable by this statute shall not extend to charge any Ordinarie or any their Commissaries Officials Registers or any other their Officers or Ministers with any the offences aforesaid for putting their seale of office to any will to be exhibited vnto them not knowing the same to be false or forged or for writing of the said will or probate of the same Neither shall this Act or any thing therein contained extend or be hurtfull to any Proctor Aduocate or Register of any Ecclesiasticall Court within this realm for the writing setting forth or pleading of any Proxie made according to the Ecclesiasticall lawes or customes heretofore allowed and vsed by the Ecclesiasticall Courts of this Realme for the apparance of any person or persons beeing cited to appeare in any of the said Courts Ecclesiasticall Officiall Nor to any Archdeacon or Officall for putting their authentique seale to the said proxies or proxie Nor yet to any Iudge Ecclesiasticall for admitting of the same but they and euerie of them may hereafter doe in all poynts concerning the same as they and euerie of them might lawfully haue done before the making of this Act. Neither shall this Act extend to any Attourney Attourney Lawyer or Counsellor Counsellor that shall for his client plead shew forth or giue in euidence any false and forged déed charter will court roll or other writing for true being not partie nor priuie to the forging of the same for the pleading shewing forth or giuing in euidence of the same Neither shall this Act extend to any person or persons Exemplification that shall plead or shew forth any deed or writing exemplified vnder the great Seale of England or vnder the great seale of any other authentique Court of this Realme A Iudge A Iustice Nor shall extend to any Iudge or Iustice or other person that shall cause any seale of any Court to bee set to any such déed charter or writing inrolled not knowing the same to bee false and forged Any thing in this Act to the contrarie notwithstanding Forging of a customarie booke 12 If one or more tenants of a Mannor 15. Eliz. Dy. 322. wherein there bee seuerall Copiholders doe make a customarie booke or roll of the same Mannor in parchment or paper and doe insert therein diuers customes whereof some be false and doe set his or their owne seales thereunto and the seales of some other Copiholders of the same Mannour and the same customarie booke or roll is intituled and pretended to be collected renewed set forth and allowed by the Lord and all the Freeholders and Copiholders of the said Mannour where in truth it is set forth and made without the priuitie or consent of the Lord of the same Mannour or of the residue of the Copiholders thereof This is a forgerie and false making of a writing sealed to the intent to benefit themselues and to disinherit the Lord of the Mannor and therefore punishable by the open and shamefull punishment contained in the foresayd Statute of 5. Elizab. The proces to leuie costs and damages of a forger 13 Whereas the sayd Statute of 5. Elizabeth hath ordayned 15. Eliz. Dyer 323. That if any person shall bée conuicted of forging of a false deed vpon a bill or information to bee exhibited into the Court of the Starre chamber according to the order and vse of the Court hee shall pay vnto the partie grieued his double costs and dammages to bee assessed in the same Court Therefore when any man is attainted of Forgerie in the Starre chamber for the recouerie of the double costs and dammages taxed by the Court a writ in English shall bee made and directed to the Sherife of the Countie where the offendor doth dwell reciting the Statute and the conuiction commaunding the Sherife to leuie the said costs and dammages of the goods cattels and profits of the lands and tenements of the offendor and to bring the money into the Starre chamber Which writ shall bee sealed with the great Seale and vnder the Teste of the King And there by the order of the Court the money shall be deliuered to the partie grieued The kings pardon of forgerie 14 If a man be attainted of Forgerie in the Starre Chamber 15. Eliz. Dyer 323. Co. li. 5. 50. or in an action of Forger of false déeds founded vpon the said statute of 5. Eliz. the king may pardon his corporall punishment of setting vpon the pillorie flitting his nostrels and perpetuall imprisonment viz. so much of the penaltie of the sayd statute as is to be inflicted for a terrour or example to his people for that hée onely hath interest therein as hée hath in the issues and profits of the said offendors lands And as he may pardon the second offence of him who béeing once conuicted of forgerie doth eftsoones commit the same againe and thereby doth become a felon And as the plaintifes release discharge or discontinuance by the words of the said statute shall discharge the defendants iudgement or execution touching such costs and dammages as the plaintife should haue had against the defendant So may the kings pardon discharge the same defendant of any penaltie or forfeiture that the same statute doth giue vnto him which be the corporall punishments and the issues and profits of the defendants lands 23. El. Dy. 302. 15 Whereas the said Statute of 5. Elizab. hath ordained Forging of Testament That if any shall forge the will of any person in writing to the intent c. That then hée shall be punished as is aforesaid Yet if one do forge the Testament of another person whereby any lease for yeares shall bée conueyed hée is within the danger and penaltie of the said statute though no mention bee made in the statute of a Testament and he shall be charged onely in respect that hée hath forged a writing sealed But of a will concerning fréehold or inheritance there is speciall mention made in the same statute 12. Eliz. Dyer 288. 16 If a Clerke doe write the will of another man which is deadly sicke and after the Testator is become speechlesse Inserting more in a will than is directed and past memorie doth insert some article or clause in the same will which the Testator did not direct him to doe yet this is no forgerie punishable by the sayd statute of 5. El. nor within the meaning of the makers of the same For the principall déed or writing which was the wil of the Testator was not forged neither was any false déed charter writing or will though the article or clause inserted therein hauing no sufficient warrant was false and therefore not the Testators wil nor part thereof nor to be proued therewith 17 And though the said statute of 5.
or yeares of it and then doth assure it to the bargainée this is deceit and a writ of Deceit is maintenable against him for it for though he hath assured the land he hath not assured it clére and discharged according to his bargaine but hath deceiued the purchasor therein 11. E. 4. 6. 18 If a man doe sell a piece of cloth to another Deceit vpon a warranty and warrant it to be fortie elles long and it is not so long the buyer may haue a writ of Deceit against the seller of the same cloth by force of his warranty although the warranty be by word onely 6. Ed. 6. Dyer 76. without writing so that it be at the time of the bargaine made But if the warranty be at another time after the bargaine made then the buyer must haue some writing to testifie this warranty or otherwise hée shall not haue a writ of Deceit against the seller 9. Ed. 4. 13. Fit Nat. Br. 98. 19 If an action of Debt bee brought against two as executors Deceit by confession of an action brought against executors whereas one of them was neuer executor nor administrator and if he which is executor do make default he who was not executor doe appeare confesse the action he that was named executor may haue against the other an action of Deceit for he hath vndertaken to plead a plea to the action of debt which he could not doe and that also to the deceit and hurt of another 26. H. 8. 7. 20 If a man doe marry a wife possessed of goods Couin by aliening of his wiues goods those be the husbands to giue and dispose at his pleasure during the mariage betwéene them But if after they be diuorced the wife shall haue her goods againe vnlesse the husband hath giuen or sold them before the Diuorce for in that case the wife is without remedie And yet if the husband doe alien those goods by couin to the intent to defraud and defeat his wife of them and after they be diuorced then shee may auerre the couin and recouer the goods from the alienée 35. H. 6. 5. Co. lib. 3. 78 83. li. 5. 83. 21 Though buying of goods in an open marketh doth worke an alteration of the property of the same goods Sale of goods in opē market by couin and doth bind the Title as well of all strangers as of the owner if the goods be sold in such a shop or place as is commonly vsed for the selling of goods of the same kind or nature yet if one man do steale purloine or iniuriously take away another mans goods and then by couin betwéene him and a third person doth sell the same goods in an open vsual place of sale 7. H. 7. 12 in an open market or faire to the third person who at the time of buying of the same goods did know that the seller came not lawfully by them or that they were not his goods this is a void sale And in respect of this Couin the first and right owner of these goods may lawfully take and carrie them away notwithstanding the said sale in open market Fraudulent assurances to defeat the discontinuée in tayle 22 If the father being tenant in tayle of certaine lands M. 34. E. 1. Fitz. Garrantie 88 will make a feoffement thereof to another with warrantie and so discontinue the estate taile hauing assets of other lands in fée simple to leaue to discend to his son and heire and then within few dayes before his death will alien the same fée simple land to his sonne and heire and to his heires vpon couin and to the intent that the same fee simple land should not be pleaded to come by discent from the sayd father to his sonne nor adiudged as Assets by discent in his hands yet this couin being found by verdict in a writ of Formedon brought against him by the heire of the land entailed shall giue the discontinuée aduantage to plead that the same heire had assets by discent in fee simple left him by his said father for that the law doth adiudge this alienation made by the father to the sonne a little before his death by couin to defraud the discontinuée of his lawfull plea to be as no alienatiō but that the father dyed seised of the same fée simple land and that it came to his sonne and heire by discent 23 Because Lords of Mannors lands and tenements haue as great right to enioy the wardship of the bodies and lands of their wards Fraudulent conueyance to defeat a Lord of his wardship as they haue to their other inheritances lands and goods and it is as great an iniury to deceiue them thereof by couin and collusion as to defeat and defraud them of their other lawfull titles therefore by a statute made at Marlebridge anno 52. H. 3. it was enacted That if any man do enfeoffe his eldest sonne or heire St. 52. H. 3. 6 being within age of his inheritance that therby the Lord might loose his wardship yet notwithstanding such feoffement the chiefe Lord shall haue his wardship And by the said statute it was further ordained That if any persons meaning to demise their lands for terme of certaine yeares that they might thereby defeat the Lords of the fee of their wardships will faine false feoffements containing that they are satisfied of the whole seruice due vnto them vntill a certaine terme and that such feoffées are bound to pay at the said term a great summe to the value of the same lands or much aboue so that after the said terme the land shall reuert to them or their heires for that no man wil desire to hold the same of so great a price yet by such fraud no chiefe Lord shall loose his wardship And if the chiefe Lords do by iudgement of the Court recouer their wardships yet the feoffees shall haue their action reserued to recouer their terme or fée when the heires shall come to their lawfull age And for the further preuention of couin in auoiding of wardships by one other stat made anno 34. H. 8. it was ordained St. 34. H. 8. 5 That if any person or persons hauing estate of inheritance of or in any Mannors lands tenements or hereditaments holdē of the king by Knights seruice in chief or otherwise of the king by Knights seruice or of any other person or persons by Knights seruice haue giuen at any time since the 20. day of Iuly anno 32. H. 8. anno Dom. 1540 or hereafter shall giue will deuise or assigne by will or other act executed in his life his mannors lands tenements or hereditaments or any of them by fraud or couin to any other person or persons for terme of yeares life or liues with one remainder ouer in fee or with diuers remainders ouer for terme of yeares life or liues with one Remainder ouer in fée simple to
any person or persons or to his or their right heires Or at any time since the said 20. day of Iuly hath conueyed or hereafter shall conuey or make by couin contrarie to the true intent of the Act prouided 34. H. 8. for the making of Wils any estates conditions mesnalties tenures or conueyāces to the intent to defraud or deceiue the King of his Prerogatiue primer seisin liuerie reliefe wardships mariages or rights or any other Lords of their wardships reliefes heriots or other profits which should or ought to accrue growe or come vnto them or any of them by or after the death of his or their tenant by force and according to the Statutes made 32. H. 8. 1. 34. H. 8. 5. and the same estates and other conueyances béeing found by office to be so made by couin fraud or deceit contrary to the true intent of the said Acts Then the king shal haue as wel the wardship of the bodie and custodie of the lands c. as liuery primer seision reliefe and other profits which should or ought to appertaine to him according to the true meaning of the said acts as though no such estates or conueyances by couin had neuer béene had or made vntill the said office be lawfully vndone by trauerse or otherwise And the other Lord and Lords of whom any such lands c. shal be holden by Knights seruice as is aforesaid shall haue their remedy in such cases for his or their wardships of bodies and lands by writ of right of ward and shall distraine and make auowrie or cognisance by themselues or their bailifes for their reliefes heriots and other profits which should haue béene to them due by or after the death of their tenant as if no such estate or conueyance had béene had or made Sauing the right and title of the donees feoffées leasées and deuisées thereof against the said deuisor and his heyres after the interest and title of the King or other Lord therein ended 24 If the father doe make a feoffment of his lands holden by Knights seruice Fitz. Collusion 29. 33. H. 6. 14. Co. li. 1. 122. to his eldest sonne He that is not partie to a fraud shall sustaine no losse then by the foresaid Statute of Marlebridge the Lord of whom the same lands be holden is inpossibilitie to haue the wardship of the said sonne if the father die his said sonne being within age But if the same sonne doe after make a feoffment of the same land to an other bona fide and after the father doth die leauing his sonne within age there this possibilitie is destroyed for that the stranger who had no notice of this fraud hath purchased the land bona fide and therefore shall sustaine no preiudice by it And yet in that case if the sonne had made the Feoffment after the fathers death Co. li. 2. 94. this alienation had not depriued the Lord of his wardship which was once lawfully deuolued vnto him 25 And it is a deceit collusion and defrauding of the lawe and a great disheritance and preiudice to the Lords of the Fee of whome any lands bee holden to giue the same lands in Mortmaine or to doe any Act or procure any thing to be done whereby they may come into Mortmaine contrarie to the statutes of Magna Charta 7. Ed. 2. 13. Ed. 1. 15. R. 2. and 23. H. 8. for the Lordes doe loose the wardships mariages reliefes and other seruices of their Tenants by that meanes And therefore by the Statute of West 2. it was enacted That if any religious or Ecclesiasticall person doe impleade an other St. 13. E. 1. 31. by a Reall action of land and the Tenant will make default after default whereby hee ought to loose the land Then hee which doth recouer shall not haue Execution of the same Land recouered vntill he hath sued forth the kings writ of Quale ius directed to the Escheator of the same countie to make enquirie by a Iurie what right hee that recouered the land hath to the same And if he hath right Deceit and Collusion to bring land into mortmaine iudgement shal be giuen for him he shall haue execution of the same land And if it be found that he hath no right to recouer by his said action but that the lands were lost by collusion betwéen him and the tenant of the land then the land shall accrue to the next Lord of the fee if hée demaund it within a yéere next after the Enquest taken And if he doth not demaund it within a yeare it shall accrue to the next Lord aboue if he demaund it within halfe a yeare after the same And so euery Lord after the next Lord immediat shall haue halfe a yeare to demaund it successiuely vntill it come to the King to whom through the default of other Lords the land shall accrue For this recouerie of land by default by a compact and couin before agreed vpon betwéene the demaundant being a religious or Ecclesiasticall person and the tenant is to defraud the intent and meaning of the Statutes of Magna Charta and an 7. Ed. 1. whereby it was ordained St. 9. H. 3. 37 St. 7. Ed. 1. That if any religious person or other whatsoeuer will buy or sel any lands or tenements or wil receiue the same by colour of any gift or lease or by reason of any other title whatsoeuer or will by other practise or deuise procure the same to himselfe whereby such lands or tenements may come into mortmayne he shall forfeite the same lands And by the equitie of the foresaid Statute of Westminster 2. if any Ecclesiastical person doe recouer land against another by reddition 3. Ed. 4. 14. confession or action tried yet the collusion shal be inquired of for that the same recouerie may be by collusion before had betweene the demaundant and the tenant And because that by feoffments fines recoueries and other assurances made of trust of lands to the vse of parish Churches Lands assured in Mortmaine to churches chappels Guilds c. Chappels Guildes Fraternities c. there groweth to the King and other Lords and subiects of the Realme the like losses inconueniences and is as much preiudiciall to them as doth and is where lands be aliened in mortmaine Therefore for the eschuing and auoydance of them by a Statute made an 23. H. 8. it was enacted St. 23. H. 8. 10. That all feoffments fines recoueries wills and other estates deuised or in any wise made of trust of any mannors lands tenements or hereditaments to the vse of any parish churches chappels churchwardēs Guildes fraternities or brotherhoods erected or made of deuotion or by common assent of the people without any corporation Or that the Feoffees Conisees Recouerées or other persons and their heires thereof seised shall take leuie or perceiue or cause to be taken c. the issues and profites thereof and the same to
prices or the buying of anie dried or salted fish herring or sprats not forestalled and solde for reasonable prices or the buying of any corne fish butter or chéese by any such Badger lader kidder or carier as shall be assigned and allowed to that office or doing by thrée Iustices of Peace of the Countie where the said badger lader kidder or carier shall dwell which shall sell and deliuer in open faire or market or to any other victualler or to any other person or persons for the prouision of his or their house or houses all such corne graine butter and chéese as any such person shall buy or cause to be bought and that within one moneth next after he shall so buy any such corne graine butter or chéese so that the same shall be bought without forestalling or else that any such common prouision made or héereafter to be made without fraud or couin by any person or persons of any of the things abouesaid for any citie borough or towne corporat or for the prouision or victualling of any ship castle or fort within the kings dominions without forestalling which shall be imployed onely to that vse and purpose or the buying and prouision of any of the victualls aboue mentioned necessary for the furniture and prouision of the inhabitants or of the towne of Barwicke Holy Island or the Marches of England against Scotland which without fraud or couin shall be transported and conueied as soone as winde and weather may serue to such of the places aforesaid for the which the same shall be so prouided shall not be in any wise deemed adiudged or taken any offence contrarie to this Act. If any person or persons hauing sufficient corne and graine for the prouision of his or their owne house or houses St. 5. 6. Ed. 6. 14. and sowing of their grounds for one yeare doe buy any corne in any faire or market Buying of corne for the change of seede for the change of his or their séede and do not bring to the same faire or market the same day so much corne as he shall fortune to buy for his seede and sell the same if he can as the price of corne then goeth in the said market or faire then euery such person or persons so buying corne for séede shall forfeit and loose the double valew of the corne so bought If any person or persons shal buy any manner of oxen ronts stieres kine heifers St. 5. 6. Ed. 6. 14. calues shéepe lambs goats or kids liuing Buying and selling of cattell aliue and sell the same againe aliue vnlesse he or they do kéepe and féede the same by the space of fiue wéeks in his or their owne houses ground farme ground or else in such ground or grounds where he or they haue the herbage or common of pasture by graunt or prescription then euery person and persons so buying and selling againe shall loose the double valew of the cattell or things so bought and sold againe The moitie of all which forfeitures afore rehearsed shall be to the King and the other moitie to him or them that will sue in any of the Kings Courts of Record by B.P.A. or I. c. in the which no W.E.P. c. The Iustices of peace in euery County within this Realme or Wales at their quarter Sessions St. 5. 6. Ed. 6. 14. shall haue full power and authoritie by vertue of this Act to inquire heare and determine all and euery the defaults and offences The authoritie of Iustices of peace committed or done contrary to this Act within the County where any such Sessions shall be kept by Inquisition presentment bill or information before them exhibited by examination of two lawfull witnesses or by any of the same waies or meanes by the discretion of the said Iustices and to make processe thereupon as though they were indicted before them by Inquisition or by verdict of twelue men or more and vpon the conuiction of the offendor by information or sute of any other than the King to make extracts of the one moity of the forfeitures to be leuied to the Kings vse as they vse to doe of other fines issues and amerciaments growen in the Sessions of peace and to award execution of the other moity for the complainant or informer against the offendor by Fieri facias or Capias as the Kings Iustices at Westminster may doe and vse to doe And if any such conuiction or attainder shall héereafter happen to be at the Kings sute onely then the whole forfeitures to be extracted and leuied to the Kings vse onely Whatsoeuer person shall at anie time heereafter be punished by vertue of this Act But once punished for one offence for any thing mentioned in this Act then the same person shall not otherwise be vexed troubled sued or put to any paine or punishment for that one thing wherefore hée or they shall haue béene so punished Prouided alwaies St. 5. 6. E. 6. 14. that it shal be lawfull to euery person or persons which shal be assigned and allowed by thrée Iustices of the peace of the county where he shall dwell Transporting allowed by Iustices of peace thereunto to buy otherwise than by forestalling corne graine or cattell to be transported or carried by water from any port or place within the said Realme or Wales vnto any other port or place within the saide Realme or Dominions if he or they shall without fraud or couin shippe or imbarke the same within fortie dayes next after he or they shall haue bought the same or taken couenant or promise for the buying thereof and with such expedition and diligence as winde and weather shall serue to carrie and transport the same to such port or place as his or their cockets shall declare and there doe dis-barke vnlade and sell the same and doe bring a true certificat thereof from one Iustice of peace of the County or maior or bailife of the towne corporat where the same shall be vnladen and also of the Customer of the port where such vnlading shal be of the place and day where the saide corne or cattell shall be disbarked vnladen and solde to be directed vnto the Customer and Comptroller of the port where the same was imbarked At all times when wheate shall be commonly at the price of sixe shillings eight pence the quarter When corne may be ingrossed or vnder St. 5. 6. E. 6. 14. mault and barley at thrée shillings foure pence the quarter or vnder otes or otes maulted at the price of two shillings the quarter pease or beanes at the price of foure shillings the quarter or vnder and rie or mescelin at the price of fiue shillings the quarter or vnder all which quarters shall be intended to be of London measure then it shall be lawfull to euery person and persons not forestalling to buy ingrosse and keepe in his or their
murder in him that slew him although the murderer did not know the party whom hée killed and although the fray was on the sodaine Because the Constable and his assistants came by authoritie warrant and commaund of the Lawe to kéepe the peace and auoide the danger which might ensue by the breach thereof And therefore the Lawe doth adiudge this murder and that the murderer had a prepenced malice in him to oppose himselfe against the Lawe and the iustice of the Realme And if the Shiriffe or any of his Bayliffes or Officers be killed in the execution of the Kings Processe or in doing their office The Shiriffe or his officer is slaine in execution of Processs● this is murder And it is murder if a watchman be killed in watching and doing of his office for in those cases the Lawe doth construe the offence not onely as done to the person that is slaine but to the office of execution of iustice or the keeping of the peace which the law had imposed vpon him that was slaine and so the offender by killing of this man hath done as much as in him lieth to restraine the execution of iustice or to hinder the preseruation of the peace Murder and manslaughter committed in the death of one man 26 If a man goe with malice prepenced to fight with an other and to kill him and a third person séeing them fighting Plo. Com. 100. goeth on the suddaine without malice to take the part of him that went with his malice and to fight for him and then they two strike and kill the man that was by them assaulted This is wilfull murder in the first man which went with the malice prepenced to kill and but manslaughter and no murder in the other who went to take his friends part and had no malice prepenced to kill As if the master vpon malice prepenced doth lie in the way to assault and kill a man and taketh some of his seruants with him that hee doth not acquaint with this malitious intention and the master doth assault the same person who he did lie in waight for and doth fight with him and the seruants doe take their masters part and also fight with the partie assaulted and they altogether doe kill him This is willfull murder in the master and but manslaughter in the seruants for that in them there was no malice prepenced towardes the partie slaine But if the master had made his seruants priuie to his intention and they had gone with him and killed the other it should haue beene adiudged murder in the seruants also 27 If a man vpon malice prepenced do lie in waight to kill an other man Plo. Com. 101. and doth méet him A man bearing malice to one doth kill an other assaile and fight with him a third man being in the companie of him that is assailed doth fight and defend him In this case if the first man that made the assault doe kill the third man who tooke part and defended the second man that was assailed it is in him wilfull murder though at the first he did beare no malice to him that hee killed neyther knew him But when the first man did beare malice to the second man that hee first assaulted and ment to haue killed him and to haue put his intended malitious purpose in execution against him and slew one other who resisted his purpose the law doth construe it that he caried a malicious and reuenging mind against all those that did resist his wicked purpose And therefore as he slew one in the defence of an other so is his malicious and murdering minde and intention expounded to be transferred from the one to the other and he shal be adiudged a murderer as if he had killed the first man And the same lawe is if one man doe lie in waight in a place to kill an other man and a stranger doth come to the same place and he that doth lie and waite to kill mistaking the man doth kill that straunger thinking he had bin the same person which he did meane to kill This killing shal be adiudged wilfull murder for it is grounded vpon malice prepenced though it were not executed vpon him to whom he did beare the malice And therefore it shal be adiudged the like offence as if hee had slaine the same person that hee meant to haue killed And so it is if a man vpon malice prepenced doe shoote at one man with intent to kill him and his arrow or pellet doth kill an other man to whom he did beare no malice this shal be adiudged murder in him for in his act doing he intended murder and séeing he directed his arrow to kill one man and that slew another the offence shall be accounted in equall degrée as if had killed him whom he meant to haue slaine for the end of the fact shall be iudged by the beginning thereof and the later part shall taste of the first and the first part which was the shooting of the arrow or pellet was grounded vpon malice prepenced and a murdering minde and so the offence in Lawe shall be iudged wilfull murder Plow com 474 28 The husband did giue to his wife a rosted apple wherein hée had put poison with intent to poison and kill her and the wife not knowing the intent of her husband nor that the apple was poisoned deliuered the same apple in the presence of her husband to a yoong childe of their owne to eate who did eate of it and died thereof within few daies after Giuing poison to one another taketh it dieth This was adiudged wilfull murder in the husband for that he deliuered the poisoned apple with intent to kill one person and séeing by his act death did ensue although it was to another person than he meant to kill yet it shall be adiudged murder in him for he was the originall founder and only cause of this death and this murder should be vnpunished if he should not be punished therefore for the wife which deliuered the poisoned apple to her owne childe could not be guiltie of any offence for that she was ignorant of the mischiefe pretended But if one doe lay rats-bane or other venomed thing in a house or place with intent to kill rattes mice or other vermine and a man or woman doth eate of it and dieth thereof this is no murder or other felony in him that laied it for that he had no intent to hurt any man or woman M. 2. El. Di. 186 29 An aduouterer and a harlot being by him begotten with childe Two agréeing vppon a murder and one of them doth it did agrée that after the womans deliuery the childe should be killed whereupon the mother after her deliuerie perswaded the Midwife to kill the childe who did it accordingly viz. she cut the throat of it In this case the mother and midwife were adiudged principall murderers and the aduouterer
who was accessarie before the birth of the childe and the murder done was adiudged to continue accessarie after the murder done and to suffer death without the benefit of his Clergie Fitz. Cor. 383 30 If a man intending the death of another Meaning without act is not homicide doth beate him so gréeuously that he doth leaue him by all the beholders iudgement thought to be dead and then doth flie away and after the other doth reuiue and liue this is not felony in him that did that violence though it doth plainely appeare that hée had a meaning to kill him for it is not felony except the partie stricken be indéede killed and die within a yéere and a day after the stripes giuen But on the other side if one man doe strike another with intent onely to beate him yet if hée die of this battery within a yeare and a day after it is felonie in him that did strike him For though as Bracton affirmeth Act without meaning is homicide the old Lawe of this Realme did hold Quod in maleficijs spectatur voluntas non exitus nihil interest vtrùm quis occidat an causam mortis praebeat But now we say Lex antiqua mutatur and doe affirme Quod exitus in maleficijs spectatur non voluntas duntaxat Co. l. 4. 40. 31 A man brought drinke to another that was mingled with poison Homicide by giuing poisoned drinke to another and aduised him to drinke it telling him that it would be a meane to procure him to get a childe of his wife by reason of which perswasion he to whom that poisoned drinke was brought did receiue it after drunke it in the absence of him who brought it vnto him and shortly after died In this case hee that brought the drinke was adiudged a principall murderer though he was not present at the time of the receipt of the drinke or otherwise he shoulde haue beene guiltie of that horrible offence and yet haue escaped vnpunished for there was none in this case to whom hee could be accessarie And so note this for a speciall case where a felonie is committed and neither principall nor accessarie be present at it Many doe attempt an vnlawfull acte and one of them committeth homicide 32 If seuerall persons assemble together to doe a disseisin Fitz. Cor. 350. 11. H. 4. 13. to breake a house or commit any vnlawfull act and of them killeth a man he and all the other shal be adiudged principall fellons because they all came to doe an euill acte though not that act As if they all had come to haue killed or robbed one man and after they killed or robbed an other Homicide by carying abroad 33 A man was indicted that he did feloniously carry his owne father being sicke against his will in a frostie and colde time from one towne to an other whereof he died and this was adiudged felony in him 2. Ed. 3. 18 for in this case the sonne had a meaning that his fathers life should be shortened and he brought to his death A man dieth in the hands of a Phisition or Surgion 34 If a phisition ar surgion hath a man in his cure Fit cor 163 who dieth being in his cure or at any time after this is not felony in the same phisition or surgion bicause he did not any thing to his patient with a felonious intent but against his will And moreouer it is not to be discerned whether the man came to his death by any willfull default in the said Phisition or Surgion or by his former infirmitie or other cause Homicide vpon the euill wordes of an other 35 Anno. 3. Ed. 3. Itin. North Fit cor 331 it was presented that through the euill wordes of a woman two men did fall out and fought and one of them killed an other and this was adiudged felony in the woman But it must be intended that the woman by her words did perswade councell or aduise them or one of them to fight with the other and so was accessarie before the felonie committed Homicide by a franticke man 36 A man that is franticke though he kill an other man M. 21. H. 7. 13. Fitz. forf 33 Fi. Dower 183. Fitz. N. b. 202. d Fitz. cor 193 351. Co. l. 4. 42 26. Ass p. 27 Plow com 19. Co. l. 4. 125 cannot commit murder for he hath not a felonious intent nor doth carrie within him malice prepenced to any neyther doth know what he doth And therefore he is not to be arraigned for the killing of a man in his Lunacie though after hee doth recouer his memorie neither shall he be inforced to sue for his pardon And the same law is of a man that is deafe and dumbe who can not commit murder for he hath not a felonious intent neither doth he know what hee doth And therefore if he kill a man he shall not be arraigned thereof nor driuen to sue for his pardon But if a man that is drunke doe in his drunkennes kill an other man it is felony and he shal be hanged therefore for it is voluntarie ignorance in him to be drunke Homicide by an Infant 37 An Infant of the age of twelue yeares 3. H. 7. 2. 12. 12. Aff. p. 30 or aboue may commit murder and so may an Infant of the age of eight or nine yeares if it may appeare by hiding of the person slaine or by any other act that the aboundance of his malice doth excéede the tendernes of his yéeres But if an enfant of tender and yonger yéeres doe kill a man this is no felonie because he wanteth discretion and vnderstanding Pl. com 19. and the Lawe will impute it to the ignorance which commeth to him by nature Fit cor 311. 38 If a man hath a beast that is accustomed to doe hurt Homicide by a beast and the owner knowing thereof doth not tie him or otherwise kéepe him fast shut vp but suffer him to goe at libertie and after that beast killeth a man this is felony in the owner for by his sufferance of the beast to goe at libertie the owner doth seeme to haue a will to kill or that hée vsed this beast as an instrument wherewith to kill And this was a Lawe ordained by Alured Alured king of the West Saxons Fit cor 263 22. Ass p. 94 39 To make it Homicide it is requisite that the partie killed be in Esse In homicide the party killed must be in Esse viz. in rerum natura for if a man kill an infant in his mothers wombe this is no felonie neither shall he forfeit any thing for it and that for two causes the one because the thing had no name of Baptisme the other for that it is hard to iudge if the infant died of that batterie or not or vpon some other cause Wherefore a man being indicted in
the rauishment of women Rauishment of a woman therefore by the stat of West 2. St. 13. E. 1. 33 it was enacted That if any man from henceforth rauish any woman maried maid or other woman where she doth not consent neither before nor after he shall haue iudgement of life of member and likewise where a man rauisheth a woman married lady damsell or other with force although she consent afterward he shal haue such iudgement as before is said if he be attainted at the K. suit for the K. shall haue the suit Abusing a woman vnder x. yeres of age 3 By a stat made An. 18. El. it was ordained St. 18. El. 6 That if any person shall vnlawfully carnally know abuse any woman child vnder the age of x. yeares euery such vnlawfull carnall knowledge shal be felony the offendor thereof being duly conuicted shall suffer as a felon without allowance of clergy The forf for consenting to a rape 4 By a statute made An. 6. R. 2. 6. it was ordained St. 6. R. 2. 6. That wheresoeuer and whensoeuer ladies daughters and other women be rauished and after such rape do consent to such rauishers that as wel the rauishers as they that be rauished euery of them be frō henceforth disabled by the same déed vnabled to haue or challenge heritage dower or ioint feoffemēt after the death of their husbands and auncestors and that incontinently in this case the next of the blood of those rauishers or of them that be rauished to whom such heritage dower or ioint feoffemēt ought to reuert remaine or fall after the death of the rauisher or of her that is so rauished shall haue title incontinently that is to say after the rape to enter vpon the rauisher or her that is rauished and their assignes and land tenants in the same heritage dower or ioynt feoffement and the same to hold in a state of heritage and that the husbands of such women if they haue husbands or if they haue no husbands in life that then the fathers or other next of their bloud haue from henceforth the suit to pursue and may sue against the same offendors and rauishors in this behalfe And to haue them thereof conuict of life and of member although the same women after such rape do consent to the said rauishers And further it is accorded that the def in this case shall not be receiued to wage battell but that the truth of the matter be thereof tried by inquisition of the countrey sauing alwayes to our soueraign lord the K. and to other lords of the said realme al their escheats of the said rauishers if peraduenture they be thereof conuict A woman rauished con●eiued with child By the opinion of Britton Britton if a woman at the time of the supposed rape doe conceiue with child by the rauisher this is no rape because a woman cannot conceiue with child if she doe not consent It is a good plea in an appeale of Rape to say that before the rauishment supposed Bracton he kept and vsed the plaintife as a Concubine Or to plead A Concubine that though he lay with her yet he did not carnally know her for that is the force of the declaration in an appeale of Rape T. 9. E. 4. 26 If a man shal be charged with a Rape by the way of indictmēt or otherwise he ought to be charged expressely by this word Rapuit and not by any other words This word Rapuit necessary in an indictment notwithstanding they doe amount to as much as this word Rapuit doth as carnaliter cognouit or such like S. Appeales 81. 85. St. 3. H. 7. 2 5 By a statute made Anno 3. H. 7. it is ordained Taking a woman against her will That if any person or persons shall take any maid widdow or wife which hath any lands or goods or is heire apparant to her auncestor against her will vnlawfully such taking procuring and abbetting to the same and also receiuing wittingly the same woman so taken against her will and knowing the same shal be felony and such misdoers takers and procurers to the same and receiuers knowing the offence in forme aforesaid shal be reputed and iudged as principal felons But this act doth not extend to any person taking any woman onely clayming her as his ward or bondwoman St. 39. El. 9. And by a statute made An. 39. El. it was enacted That all and euery such person persons as shall be conuicted or attainted for any offence made felony by the said act of 3. H. 7. or which shal be indicted or arraigned of or for any such offence and stand mute or make no direct answer or challenge peremptorily aboue the number of twenty shal in euery such case loose his and their benefit of clergy No Clergy allowed and shall suffer paines of death without clergy any former law c. notwithstanding Prouided alwaies That this act shall not extend to take away the benefit of Clergy but onely from such person and persons as hereafter shal be principals or procurers or accessaries before such offence committed St. 8. El. 3. 6 By a statute made Ann̄ 8. El. it was enacted Transporting of shéepe That no person or persons shall bring deliuer send receiue or take or procure to bee brought deliuered sent or receiued into any shippe or bottome any Rammes Shéepe or Lambes or any other kind of Sheepe being aliue to be conueyed out of any of the Quéenes dominions vpon paine that euery such person his aidors abbettors procurors and comforters shall for his first offence forfeit all his goods for euer to the Quéene and Informer that will sue for them in any Court of Record wherein no W. E. P. c. And further euery such offendor shall suffer imprisonment one whole yeare without baile or mainprise and at the yeares end shall in some market Towne in the fulnesse of the Market on the Market day haue his left hand cut off and that to be nailed vpon the openest place of such Market The second offence felony And euery person eftsoones offending against this statute shal be iudged a felon and shal suffer death as in cases of felony But this act shall not extend to any corruption of blood or be preiudiciall to any women claiming dower by or from any such offendor And the Iustices of Oyer Determiner Iust of Gaole deliuery and I. of P. in euery Countie and Shire within this Realme of England and Wales and other the Qu. Dominions shall haue full power and authoritie by vertue of this Act to enquire of euery offendor and offendors contrary to the forme and effect of this act and to heare and determine euery offence and offences committed done contrary to the forme and effect of the same according to the course of the laws of this Realme 7 For as much as
by the heire it is a good plea to plead 20. H. 6. 47. Kel fol. 120 Fi. Cor. 384 27. Ass p. 25 that he which is dead hath a wife liuing to whom the appeale is giuen or that the plaintife who supposeth himselfe to be heire is not next heire to him that was slaine but that he hath an elder brother or that he is a bastard or to plead that the plaintife in this appeale of death hath surceased his time for that the appeale was not brought within the yeare and day after the death of him who is supposed to be killed or to say 8. H. 4. 18 that he of whose death this appeal is brought is liuing at such a place or to bring the party supposed to bee slaine into the court that he may be séene and knowne to be liuing Fi. Cor. 17 11. H. 4. 14 91 In an appeale of Robbery it is a good plea to plead that the plaintife is his villaine And in appeale of Rape brought by the husband and wife Robbery Rape it is a good plea to plead neuer accoupled in lawfull marriage or to plead villenage in the plaintife In an appeale of Robberie it is no good plea for the defendant to plead in barre Co. lib. 4. 43 2. R. 3. 14 that the appellant brought an action of Trespas against him for the same goods caried away and recouered for the appeale of Robbery is of a higher nature and concerneth the life of a man 92 There be some other pleas in barre in an appeale which bee generall Generall pleas in barre in appeale and will serue for all manner of appeales of Felony Fi. Cor. 32 2 as to plead that the plaintife is attainted of Treason or Felony Or that he is a Monke a Priest not of perfect memorie dumbe deafe a lazar a naturall foole or that he is maymed by another and not by the defendant But if the plaintifes attainder bée but by Outlawrie which is erronious then his attainder is no barre but for the time Fit Vtlarie 47. viz. vntill he hath reuersed the Vtlary S. Approuers 10. 14. 93 It is a good plea in barre in an appeale The plaintife brought another appeale to say that the plaintife at another time brought an appeale of the same felony against the defendant 9. H. 4. 2. 47. Ed. 3. 16. in the which he was Nonsute or made a Retraxit Or that the plaintife did at another time pursue an appeale of the same felony against another who was attainted or acquit at his sute If a man be indicted of Manslaughter and vpon his arraignment he confesseth the felony and prayeth and hath his Clergy If after an appeale of murther be brought against the said offendor Co. li. 4. 40. 45. of the murther of the same man it is a good plea for him to plead that he was at another time conuict of the same felony And the same law is if one bring an appeale of Murther against another and the defendant pleadeth not guilty and is found guilty of manslaughter and hath his Clergy if after he be indicted arraigned of the same offence and he doth plead the former conuiction it is a good plea in barre S. Indictments 47. Fit Cor. 98. 94 It is a good plea in barre in an appeale for the defendant to plead The plaintifs release in barre that the plaintife made vnto him a Release of the same offence for it will not serue to plead a Release made to any other sauing to himselfe though the other to whom the Release is made be named with him in the appeale And in like sort though the plaintife made a Retraxit against one of them this shall not barre him against them both but the appeale shall stand good against the other 95 And when the defendant hath pleaded any of the foresaid pleas Pleading not guilty after other pleas yet in fauor of life the law doth permit him to plead ouer to the felony viz. not guilty and his plea by that means shall not be adiudged double 22. E. 4. 39. vnlesse it be in the case of a release for there he shall not be allowed to plead ouer to the felony because it is contrary to his foresaid plea Neither shall he plead ouer to the felony when the defendant in an appeale of Robbery doth plead Villenage in the plaintife for if hee should plead ouer to the felony the plaintife by that meanes should bée infranchised 28. E. 3. 91. 18. E. 3. 32 But if the Villenage be found against the defendant hee shall haue this plea of not guiltie as well as hee shall haue when he pleadeth any of the foresaid barres without concluding ouer to the felony yet notwithstanding if the barre be foūd against him he may plead ouer to the felony viz. not guilty sauing in pleading of a release for by that plea he confesseth the felony by implication Where the K. may prosecute an appeale begun by another 96 If the appellant do surcease to prosecute his appeale against the defendant the king may pursue it for the appellant may by seuerall meanes leaue off and omit to prosecute his appeale as by Nonsute Release Retraxit 3. H. 6. Fi. Cor. 3 or a woman by taking a husband during the sute of Appeale and because in all those cases the sute doth cease by the act of the party plaintife therfore in which of them soeuer it doth cease after declaration in the appeale the defēdant shall not go at liberty but shal be arraigned at the kings sute vpon the same declaration for that it doth appeare by the declaration there is a felony committed and the yeare day and place where and when the said felony was committed and the same is not yet tried and the law will not allow such great offences whereof she taketh notice to be concealed and remaine vnpunished And the same law is if the appellants appeale doe cease by the act of God 21. E. 3. 18. as if the appellant doe die Or if it cease by the act of the Law as if the appellant be hanged Or if the appellant do take the priuiledge of his Clergy Fi. Cor. 369 in which cases the defendant likewise shal be arraigned at the K. sute But in euery arraignment which is to be at the K. sute vpon an appeale begun by an appellant the declaration in the same appeale must be once good and true for if it were neuer good and abated for that cause Fit cor 1●1 the appellée shall not be arraigned at the kings sute notwithstanding the abatement be after declaration And therefore if the appeale be abated by misnaming of the defendant 4. H. 6. 16 he shall not be arraigned at the kings sute Or if it be abated by misnaming of the plaintife or of the towne or for want of a materiall word And so it is if the defendant in an appeale doe
Peace of the same Countie where such offendors shall happen to be shall vpon his or their corporall Oath before the Iustices of the Peace in the open Quarter Sessions of the same Countie where such offendors shall then bée or at the Assises and Gaole Deliuerie of the same Countie before the Iustices of the same Assises and Gaole Deliuerie abiure the Realme of England and all other the Quéenes Dominions for euer vnlesse her Maiestie shall licence the parties to returne and thereupon shall depart out of the Realme at such Hauen or Port and within such time as shall in that behalfe be assigned and appointed by the said Iustices before whom such abiuration shal be made vnlesse the same offendor bée letted or staied by such lawfull and reasonable meanes or causes as by the common lawes of this Realme are permitted and allowed in cases of abiuration for felonie And in such cases of let or stay then within such reasonable and conuenient time after as the common law requireh in case of abiuration for felony as is aforesaid And the Iustices of peace before whom any such abiuration shall happen to be made as is aforesaid shall cause the same presently to be entered of Record before them and shall certifie the same to the Iustices of Assises and Gaole deliuerie of the said Countie at the next Assises or Gaole deliuerie to be holden in the same countie And if any such offendor which by the tenour and intent of this act is to be abiured as is aforesaid shall refuse to make such abiuration as is aforesaid or after such abiuration made shal not go to such hauen and within such time as is before appointed from thence depart out of this Realme according to this present act or after such his departure shall returne or come againe into any the Qu. Realmes or Dominions without her speciall licence in that behalfe first had and obtained Then in euery such case the person so offending shal be abiudged a felon and suffer as in case of felonie without benefit of Clergie If any person or persons that shal at any time offend against this act shall before he or they be so warned or required to make abiuration according to the tenour of this act repaire to some parish Church on some sonday or other festiuall day and then and there heare diuine seruice and at Seruice time before the Sermon or reading of the gospel make publike and open submission and declaration of his and their conformity to her Maiesties lawes and statutes as in this act is hereafter declared appointed That then the same offendor shall thereupon be cléerely discharged of and from all the penalties and punishments inflicted or imposed by this act for any of the offences aforesaid Prouided that no Popish Recusant or seme couert shal be compelled to abiure by vertue of this act Prouided also that euery person that shall abiure by force of this act or refuse to abiure being thereunto required as is aforesaid shal forfeit and loose to her Maiestie all his goods and cattels and all his lands tenements and hereditaments during his life only and no longer But his wife shal not loose her dower neither shall his blood bée corrupt S. Felonie by stat 9. 17 By a statute made an̄ 35. El. 2. St 35. El. 2. intituled an act for the restraining of Popish Recusants to some certaine place of abode it is ordained Popish Recusants shall abiure the Realme That Recusants not conforming themselues to the obedience of the lawes of this realme in comming to the Church to heare diuine seruice which shall not vpon the request of two Iustices of peace or Coroner of the same countie abiure the realm and depart for the same and not returne without the Queenes licence shal be adiudged felons and suffer and loose as in case of felonie without benefit of Clergie S. Fel. by St. 10. St. 3. E. 1. 10 18 By the stat of West 1. made an̄ 3. E. 1. it is enacted Abiuration of a Trespasser That he which committeth trespasse in parkes or ponds shall abiure if hee cannot find suretie no more to doe the like offence But that abiuration is not for felonie neither shal he forfeit his lands or goods Pleading not guiltie HAuing made mention of one of the pleas which a prisoner brought to the barre to be arraigned of Treason or Felonie doth plead viz. of the Confession of the offence and shewed how many sorts of Confessions of felonie the law doth take notice of by what meanes she doth procéed against the parties confessing I am now to treat of a second or one other plea that the prisoner vpon his arraignment doth plead in his own defence which is the plea of Not guiltie For when a prisoner by an appeale or an Inditement is charged with treason or felonie he may estrange himselfe from the offence if he will and ioyne the same issue which the defendant oft times doth in an action of trespasse some other personall actions viz. he may plead and take for his issue Not guiltie This plea of not guiltie is the most common and vsual plea Pleading not guilty the most common plea. that he which is arraigned of treason or felonie hath to plead vpon an inditement or an appeale and it is the plea whereunto euery person that is arraigned shall be enforced vnlesse it be in speciall cases viz. where he hath matter of Iustification or matter in Law to plead And this plea of Not guiltie doth tend to the fact that is to the felony and therefore it receiueth great fauour in Law 7. Ed. 4. 15. 4. H. 6. 15 4. H. 7. 5. 10. H. 4. 4. 9. H. 4. 2. for the Law doth allow this plea to him who is arraigned after he hath pleaded in abatement or barre of the appeale or inditement so that his barre doe not comprehend such matter as doth confesse the felonie as a Release of the appellant or the Kings pardō And that plea he shall haue also though one of his pleas were matter in law for though those pleas doe require diuers trials 29. Ed. 3. 91. 22. E. 4. 39. 27. As p. 3 14. Ed. 4. 7 yet in fauour of life hee shall haue both those pleas as well as he shall haue when he doth plead matter triable by the Bishop or by Record viz. and moreouer not guiltie Which pleas he shall haue notwithstanding he doe not conclude moreouer not guiltie that is to say Pleading not guilty after other pleas he shall come time enough to plead not guiltie after the matter triable by the Bishop or by Record is found against him And the manner of pleading in all those cases is to plead his plea and to pray allowance thereof and ouer to the felonie not guiltie Vpon the plea of not guilty no coūcel allowed 2 Vpon this plea of onely not guiltie the partie indited shall not haue coūcell
1. H. 5. 10 Fit Chall ' 105. 38. Ass p. 22 doe challenge any of the Polles hee must shewe the cause vpon his Challenge which must be presently tried for that it is in a plea of the crowne wherein the king is a party 6 A man outlawed of Felonie An Outlaw of Felony shall haue his challenges vpon an Issue taken for the auoidance of the Felony Fi. Chall ' 153. 165. For though hée cannot challenge a worse man then himselfe béeing outlawed for Felony yet séeing it is in Issue to trie whether hee bee an Outlaw or not and by this tryall if it bée found for him to defeat the same Outlawry that opinion of him ought to bee holden in suspence vntill the said issue shall be tried against him 21. H. 6. 30. 14. H. 4. 19. 7 It is a good Challenge vpon cause to say that one of the Iurors is an Alien or a Villaine or an Outlaw A Iuror an alien villaine or outlaw for then hée is not Liber legalis homo For though an Alien borne hath dwelt in this Realme from his childhood and be sworne in a Léet or other Court to the Kings obedience yet he is not the Kings liege man for the Steward of a Léet nor any other can make an Alien Legalis homo but onely the King ❧ Euidence 1 WHen a prisoner is indicted of Treason or Felony hath pleaded not guilty is therupon arraigned and finished his challenges then euidence is to be giuen against him to proue him guilty which euery person shall bée admitted to doe for the king And because the euidence of those that tooke the said offendor with the manner did first accuse him or brought him before the Iustices of Peace to be examined of the supposed offence hath béene alwaies adiudged most pregnant and effectuall Therefore by a statute made Anno 1. 2. Ph. Ma. St. 1. 2. P. M. 13. it was ordayned That two Iustices of Peace at the least Euidence against an offēdor let to batle wherof one of them to be of the Quorum when any prisoner is brought before them for any manslaughter or felony before any bailement or mainprise shall take the examination of the said prisoner and information of them that bring him of the fact and circumstances thereof and the same or as much thereof as shal be materiall to proue the felony shall put in writing before they make the same bailement which said examination together with the said bailement the said Iustices shall certifie at the next generall Gaole deliuerie to bée holden within their Commission and that euery Coroner vpon any inquisition before him found whereby any person or persons shall bée indicted for murther or manslaughter or as accessorie or accessories to the same before the murther or manslaughter committed shall put in writing the effect of the euidence giuen to the Iury before him béeing materiall And as well the said Iustices as the said Coroner shall haue authority by this act to bind all such by Recognisance or Obligation as doe declare any thing materiall to proue the said murther or manslaughter offences or felonies or to bée accessories or accessories to the same as is aforesaid to appeare at the next generall Gaole deliuerie to bée holden within the County City or Towne corporat where the tryall thereof shall bée then and there to giue euidence against the party so indicted at the time of his triall and shall certifie as well the same euidence as such bond and bonds in writing as hée shall take together with the Inquisition or Indictment before him taken and found or before the time of his sayd tryall thereof to bée had or made And likewise the said Iustices shall certifie all and euery such bond taken before them in like manner as is before said of baylements and examination And in case any Iustice of peace or Quorum or Coroner shall offend in any thing contrary to the true intent and meaning of this act then the Iustices of Gaole deliuery of the Shire City Towne or Place where such offences shal happen to be committed vpon due proofe thereof by examination before them shall for euery such offence set such fine on euery such Iustice of Peace and Coroner as the same Iustices of Gaole deliuery shall thinke méet and shall estreat the same as other Fines and Amerciaments assessed before Iustices of Gaole deliuery ought to bee S. Mainprise 13. 2 Because the foresaid statute of 1. 2. Ph. Ma. 13. doth not extend to any such prisoners as shall be brought before any Iustice of Peace for Manslaughter or Felony and by such Iustice shall be committed to ward for the suspition of such Manslaughter or Felony and not bayled in which case the examination of such prisoner and of such as shall bring him is as necessary or rather more then where such prisoner shall be let to bayle For the reformation whereof St. 1. 2. P. M. 10. by a statute made Anno 2. 3. Ph. Ma. it was enacted That such Iustic●s or Iustice before whom any person shall bée brought Euidence against an offendor cōmitted to prison for Manslaughter or Felony or for suspition thereof before he or they shall commit or send such prisoner to ward shall take the examination of such prisoner and information of those that bring him of the fact and circumstances thereof and the same or as much thereof as shall be materiall to prooue the Felony shall put in writing within two dayes after the said examination and the same shall certifie in such manner and forme and at such time as they should and ought to doe if such prisoner so committed or sent to ward had béene bayled or let to mainprise vpon such paine as in the said former act is limitted and appointed for not taking or not certifying such examinations as in the said former act is expressed And the said Iustices shall haue authority by this act to bind all such by Recognisance or Obligation as doe declare any thing materiall to proue the said Manslaughter or Felony against such prisoner as shall bee so committed to ward to appeare at the next generall Gaole deliuery to be holden within the County City or Towne corporat where the triall of the said Manslaughter or Felony shall be then and there to giue Euidence against the party And the said Iustices shall certifie the sayd bands taken before them in like manner as they should and ought to certifie the bands mentioned in the said former act vpon the paine as in the said former act is mentioned for not certifying such bands as by the said former act is limitted and appointed to be certified 3 And for that men should be the readier and more willing to giue Euidence against Robbers and other Felons Restitution vpon attainder by euidēce by a statute made Anno 21. H. 8. St. 21. H. 8. 11 it
conuicted or Clerke attainted and the day and place of his outlawrie conuiction and attainder and the day and place where and when the said felony or other offence whereupon the said person or persons shal be so indicted outlawed or Clerke attainted shall be made and done before the K. in his bench at West in the county of Midd. there to remaine of record for euer among other the K. records there within xl daies next after any such attainder conuiction or outlawrie shall be had made or procured if the terme be thē if not within xx dayes next after the beginning of the terme next following the said xl daies but also shall deliuer a transcript of euerie such indictment whereupon the said person persons shal fortune hereafter so to be conuicted or Clerkes attainted to the Ordinary to whom the body of the said person or persons shall be committed at the time that the sayd person or persons shall bee committed the sayd Ordinarie paying to euerie such Clerke as shall write the sayd Transcript for euerie copie of such indictment twelue pence for his paines vpon paine that euery Clerke of the Crowne Clerke of the peace and Clerke of Assise for the time being before whom such Indictment Attainder Outlary or Conuiction shal be so had made pronounced or remaine for the non-certifying of euery such record and deliuering of the copy of such Indictment to the said Ordinaries according to this statute to loose and forfeit forty shillings the one moity thereof to be to the king and the other moity to him that will sue for the same by action of Debt Bill Information or otherwise in any of the kings Courts of Record wherein no Wager of Law Essoine or Protection shal be allowed and the clerke of the Crowne in the kings Bench shall receiue the said certificats and transcripts at such time as they shall be tendered and profered vnto them by the said clerkes of the Crowne clerkes of the peace and clerkes of assise or by their deputy or deputies without taking any thing for the same vpon paine of forfeiture of forty shillings for euery such certificat by him refused Prouided alwaies that if there be any more persons contained and named in any such Indictment other then such person so attainted conuicted or outlawed that then such clerke of the crowne clerke of assise or clerke of peace with whom the record of such attainder outlary or conuiction shall remaine shall within the time before in this act limitted certifie the transcript of such indictment outlarie or conuiction onely concerning such person or persons so indicted and attainted outlawed or conuicted into the kings Bench at Westminster as is aforesaid which transcript so certified shall be had and taken as good effectuall and auaileable in the Law to all intents and purposes against such person and persons against whom it shall be so obiected alledged or pleaded as if the very record thereof whereupon he or they were so indicted were there present And be it enacted c. That the said clerke of the crowne in the kings Bench for the time being shall at all such times as the Iustices of Gaole Deliuerie or Iustices of Peace in euery County within this Realme of England doe write vnto him for the names of such persons which be so attainted by Outlarie or clerkes attainted or conuicted and certified into the said Bench shall incontinently without delay certifie the said names and surnames of the said persons with the causes why and wherefore they were conuict or attainted vnto the Iustices of Gaole deliuery or Iustices of Peace vpon paine and penalty to forfeit for euery name of such persons which shall be so written for and not certified by the said Clerk of the Crowne in the Kings Bench to the said Iustices fortie shillings Prouided that this Act nor any thing therein contained shall not extend to the Clerkes of the Crowne Clerkes of the Peace Clerkes of Gaole deliuerie neither to any of the Prenotaries within the Counties of Wales and Chester or within the Counties Palantine of Lancaster and Duresme or any of them to make any transcript of any such attainder conuiction or outlawrie of any person or persons conuicted attainted or outlawed before the Kings Iustices of his Counties of Wales nor Chester or Countie of Lancaster Duresme or any of them but that the same Records shall and may remaine and be in the custodie and kéeping of the sayd Clerkes and Prenotaries in such maner and wise as they are at this day this Act or any thing therein contained to the contrarie notwithstanding 43 Though the deliuering of him to the Ordinarie who hath the benefit of his Clergie and making of purgation bée taken away the Statute of 18. Eliz. 6. yet because both deliuering to the Ordinarie and making of purgation were vsed by the space of many generations in this realme and seuerall lawes statutes and some prouinciall councells were made and ordained touching the ordering direction and gouernance of those which as Clerks conuict or attaint were committed to the Ordinary and were to make purgation or not I will therefore briefly set downe the effect of some of those laws as antiquitie did retaine them He which had the priuiledge of his Clergie and was deliuered to the Ordinarie that did demaund him was not set at libertie to goe wandring vp and downe the Countrie but was safely and straitly kept in the Bishoppes prison In what sort a clerke deliuered to the Ordinarie was vsed hauing for foode vppon the Sonday bread ale and pease and vpon all the other daies courser bread and small drinke once in the day onely or in the Kings prison if the Bishop would haue it so vntill hée had purged himselfe of the crime wherewith hée was charged or otherwise had failed of his purgation and could not make it And if the Bishop would not admitte him to make his purgation then the King would direct his Writte to the Bishoppe commaunding him to suffer the same prisoner to make his purgation 15. H. 7. 19. or the King at his pleasure might pardon the prisoner or cause him to be set at libertie without making any purgation And when a Clerke was to make his purgation the King was to be made priuie thereunto who did direct his Writ to the Shirife of the countie where the offendor was prisoner commaunding him to make proclamation through his Countie that if any man could shew cause why such an offendor viz. A. B. prisoner in the Kings or Bishoppes prison should not make his purgation that then he should appeare such a day and in such a place and shew the same cause And in London the Preacher at Paules Crosse did likewise notifie that A. B. The manner of making purgation prisoner in such a prison was to make his purgation in such a Diocesse at such a place vpon such a day at which day assigned whether any crime or not to giue