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A33823 English liberties, or, The free-born subject's inheritance containing, I. Magna Charta, the petition of right, the Habeas Corpus Act ... II. The proceedings in appeals of murther, the work and power of Parliament, the qualifications necessary for such ... III. All the laws against conventicles and Protestant dissenters with notes, and directions both to constables and others ..., and an abstract of all the laws against papists. Care, Henry, 1646-1688. 1680 (1680) Wing C515; ESTC R31286 145,825 240

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what they Swear or if we do not find as the Judge directs we may come into trouble the Judge may Fine us c. I Answer this is a vain fear No Judge dare offer any such thing you are the proper Judges of the matters before you and your Souls are at stake you ought to Act freely and are not bound though the Court demand it to give the Reasons why you bring it in thus or thus for you of the Grand-Jury are sworn to the Contrary viz. To keep secret your fellows Counsel and your own and you of the Petty Jury are no way obliged to declare your motives it may not be convenient T is a notable Case before the Chief Justice Anderson in Q. Eliz. daves A Man was Arraigned for murder the Evidence was so strong that 11. of the Jury were presently for finding him Guilty the 12th man refused and kept them so long that they were ready to starve and at last made them comply with him and bring in the Prisoner not Guilty The Judge who had several times admonisht this Jury-man to join with his Fellows being surprized sent for him discoursed him privately to whom upon promise of Indempnity he at last own'd that he himself was the man that did the Murder and the Prisoner was Innocent and that he was resolv'd not to adde Perjury and a second Murder to the first But to satisfie you that a Jury is no way punishable for going according to their Conscience though against seeming Evidence and the Reasons why they are and ought not to be question'd for the same I shall here Recite an Adjudged Case that of Bushel in the two and twentieth year of His Majesty Reported by the Learned Sir John Vaughan whose Book is Licensed by the present Lord Chancellor the Lord Chief Justice North and all the Judges then in England the said Case begins fol. 135. and continues 150. The whole well worth Reading but I shall only Select Certain Passages The Case was this BUshel and others of a Jury having at a Sessions not found Pen and Mead Two Quakers Guilty of a Trespass Contempt Vnlawful Assembly and Tumult whereof they had been Indicted were fined forty pound a man and Committed till they should pay it Bushel brings his Habeas Corpus and upon the Return it appeared he was Committed For that contrary to Law and against full and Clear Evidence openly given in Court and against the Directions of the Court in matter of Law they had Acquitted the said W. P. and W. M. to the great Obstruction of Justice c. Which upon solemn Argument was by the Judges Resolved to be an Insufficient Cause of fining and committing them and they were discharged and afterwards brought Actions for their Dammage The Reasons of which Judgment are reported by Judge Vaughan and amongst them he Useth these that follow which I shall give you in his own words Fol. 140. One fault in the Return is That the Jurors are not said to have Acquitted the persons Indicted against full and manifest Evidence Corruptly and Knowing the said Evidence to be full and manifest against the Persons Indicted For how manifest soever the Evidence was if it were not manifest to them and that they Believed it such it was not a Finable fault nor Deserving Imprisonment Vpon which Difference the Law of punishing Jurors for false Verdicts principally Depends And Fol. 141. I would know whether any thing be more Common than for two men Students Barristers or Judges to deduce Contrary and opposite Conclusions out of the same Case in Law And is there any Difference that two men should Infer distinct Conclusions from the same Testimony is any thing more known than that the same Author and place in that Author is forceably urg'd to maintain contrary Conclusions and the Decision hard which is in the Right is any thing more frequent in the controversies of Religion than to press the same Texts for Opposite Tenets How then comes it to pass that two persons may not apprehend with Reason and Honesty what a Witness or many say to prove in the Vnderstanding of one plainly one thing but in the Apprehension of the other clearly the contrary thing must therefore one of these Merit Fine and Imprisonment because he doth that which he cannot otherwise do preserving his Oath and Integrity And this is often the Case of the Judge and the Jury And Fol. 142. I conclude therefore That this Return charging the Prisoners to have Acquitted P. and M. against full and manifest Evidence first and next without saying that they did know and Believe that Evidence to be full and Manifest against the Indicted persons is no Cause of Fine and Imprisonment In the Margent of that Fol. 142. it is thus Noted Of this Mind were ten Judges of Eleven the Chief Baron Turner gave no Opinion because not at the Argument And in the same fol. 142. he saith The Verdict of a Jury and Evidence of a Witness are very Different things in the Truth and Falshood of them a Witness swears but to what he hath heard or seen generally or more largely to what hath fallen under his Senses But a Jury-man swears to what he can Inferr and conclude from the Testimony of such Witnesses by the Act and force of his Understanding to be the Fact Inquired after which differs nothing in Reason though much in the Punishment from what a Judge out of Various Cases consider'd by him Infers to be the Law in the question before him If the meaning of these Words finding against the Direction of the Court in matter of Law be That if the Judge having heard the Evidence given in Court for he knows no other shall tell the Jury upon this Evidence the Law is for the Plaintiff or for the Defendant and you are under the pain of Fine and Imprisonment to find accordingly and the Jury ought of duty so to do then every man sees that the Jury is but a troublesome delay great Charge and no use in determining Right and Wrong and therefore the Tryals by them may be better Abolished than continued which were a strange new found Conclusion after a Tryal so Celebrated for many hundred Years It is true if the Jury were to have no other Evidence for the Fact but what is Deposed in Court the Judge might know their Evidence and the Fact from it equally as they and so direct what the Law were in the Case though even then the Judge and Jury might honestly differ in the Result from the Evidence as well as two Judges may which often happens but the Evidence which the Jury have of the Fact is much otherwise than that For 1. Being Returned of the Vicinage where the Cause of Action ariseth the Law supposeth them thence to have sufficient Knowledge to Try the matter in Issue and so they must though no Evidence were given on either side in Court but to this Evidence the Judge is a stranger 2. They may have Evidence from their own Personal Knowledge by which they may be assured and sometimes are that what is deposed in Court is absolutely false but to this the Judge is a stranger and he knows no more of the Fact than he hath Learned in Court and perhaps by false Depositions and consequently knows nothing 3. The Jury may know the Witnesses to be Stigmatized and Infamous which may be unknown to the parties and consequently to the Court. Fol. 148. To what end is the Jury to be Returned out of the Vicinage where the Cause of Action ariseth to what end must Hundredors be of the Jury whom the Law supposeth to have nearer knowledge of the Fact than those of the Vicinage in General to what end are they Challenged so scrupulously to the Array and Poll to what end must they have such a certain Free-hold and be Probi Legales homines and not of Affinity with the party concern'd to what end must they have in many Cases the View for Exacter Information chiefly to what end must they undergo the Punishment of the Villanous Judgment if after all this they Implicitly must give a Verdict by the Dictates and Authority of another Man under Pains of Fines and Imprisonment when Sworn to do it according to the best of their own Knowledge A man cannot see by anothers Eye nor hear by anothers Ear no more can a man conclude or Infer the thing to be Resolved by anothers Vnderstanding or Reasoning and though the Verdict be right the Jury give yet they being not assured that it is so from their own Vnderstanding are Forsworn at least in foro Conscientiae Fol. 149. And it is Absurd to Fine a Jury for finding against their Evidence when the Judge knows but part of it for the better and greater part of the Evidence may be wholly unknown to him and this may happen in most Cases and often doth Thus far Judge Vaughan whose words I have faithfully Recited and with it shall conclude this Subject Recommending those that would be further satisfied in the Law touching the Power and Duty of Juries to those two Excellent Learned Treatises lately published the one Intituled A Guide to English Juries c. to be Sold by Mr. Cockeril at the Three Legs over against the Stocks-Market the other The Security of English-mens Lives or the Trust Power and Duty of the Grand Juries of England Printed for Benj. Alsop in the Poultrey both which are extreamly well worthy of every English mans Perusal that is liable to be call'd to that Office And now I shall take Leave of the Reader who I hope will join with me and all English Protestants in this Prayer THat Almighty God would preserve our Religion put a stop to the Growth of Popery Confound all their Plots Protect our present Gracious King Defend us both from a Forreign Yoak and Domestick Slavery but continue to us the Enjoyment of our good old Laws Liberties and Priviledges and bring all those to exemplary Justice that have or shall dare attempt to Subvert Diminish or Vndermine them Amen FINIS 1 See Book of Oaths p. 1. 3. 2 Bakers Cron. sol 741. 3 Book of Oaths p. 216. ☞
shall be tryed for any Offence against this Act by his Peers but if Convicted shall be disabled to sit in Parliament during Life And thus much for what is Treason at this day By the Statute of 1 and 2 Phil. and Mar. cap 10. All Trials for Treason shall be only according to the Course of the Common Law And though the greater part of that Statute being Temporary be expired yet this Clause is still in Force The Judgment in all Cases of High Treason except for Counterfeiting Coin for a man is That he shall be drawn on an Hurdle or Sledge to the place of Execution and there be Hanged by the Neck to be cut down being yet alive his Privy Members cut off his Bowels ript up taken out and burnt before his face his Headsevered from his Body his Body divided into four Quarters which are to be disposed of as the King shall order But for Counterfeiting Coin only Drawn and Hanged And in both Cases for a Woman for Modesty sake it is only that she shall be Burnt The reasons or signification of this horrid Judgment on a man for Treason are thus by some rendred and Interpreted 1. He is drawn on a Sledg or Hurdle on the ground in the Dirt to shew that his Pride is brought down for Treason commonly springs from Ambition 2. On this Hurdle he is drawn backward to shew that his Actings have been contrary to Order unnatural and Preposterous 3. He is Hanged between Heaven and Earth as unworthy of either 4. He is cut down yet alive and his Privities cut off to shew that he was unfit to Propagate any Posterity 5. His Head is severed from his Body because his mischevious Brain contrived the Treason 6. His Body is divided to shew that all his Machinations and Devices are torn to pieces and brought to nought and into four parts that they may be scattered towards the four Quarters of the World Heading being part of the judgment in Treason the King commonly to persons of Quality Pardons all the rest of the Sentence and so they are only Beheaded But if a person be Attainted of Murder or any other Felony if he be Beheaded 't is no Execution of the Judgment because there the Judgment always is that he be Hanged till he be dead which cannot be altered So that had Count Conning smark lately been Convicted and Condemned for the Murder of Esquire Thynn all his Guinies or his Friends could not have preserved him from the Gallows unless they could have got an intire Pardon Any person being Indicted for Treason may Challenge that is except against or refuse Five and Thirty Jurors peremptorily that is for his pleasure or for reasons best known to himself and without assigning any Cause to the Court But if he Challenge more that is above three full Juries he Forseits his Goods and Judgment of Peinfort dure that is of being pressed to Death shall pass upon him as one that refuseth the Trial of the Law In Cases of Murder and Felony a man cannot Challenge peremptorily above the number of Twenty But with Cause he may except against more And this is by the Stat. of 22. H. 8. cap. 14. And certainly since the Law of England which is a Law of Mercy does in Favour of Life not only order a man to be Tryed by a Jury of his Country and Equals but also allows him to refuse and have Liberty of excepting against so many of those as shall be Impanelled for that purpose It cannot be supposed that the same Law ever intended that the Prisoner should be denyed a Copy of the Pannel of his Jury that so by the Information of his Friends or otherwise he may know their Qualities Circumstances and Inchnations for how else shall he know whom to Challenge peremptorily and whom to Challenge with Cause to allow a man such Liberty of Challenge and give him no opportunity of such Inquiry is but to mock the Prisoner to whom possibly the whole Jury by face and name may be utter Strangers and sure the wisdom of our Laws never thought every Prisoner so skilled in Metoposcopy that meerly by looking on a parcel of men he could tell which of them were indifferent and which biassed against him Another Statute of King Edward the third Anno 2. Edw. 3. cap. 2. In what Cases only Pardon of Felony shall be granted c. ITem Whereas Offendors have been greatly encouraged because the Charters of Pardon have been so easily granted in times past of Man-slaughters Roberies Felonies and other Trespasses against the Peace 2 It is ordained and Enacted that such Charters shall not be granted but only where the King may do it by his Oath that is to say where a man slayeth another in his own Defence or by Misfortune 3 And also they have been encouraged because that the Justices of the Goal-Delivery and of Oyer and Terminer have been procured by great men against the Form of the Statute made in the 27th year of the Reign of King Edward Grandfather to our Lord the King that now is wherein is Contained that Justices Assigned to take Assizes if they be Lay-Men shall make deliverance and if the one be a Clerk and the other a Lay-man that the Lay-Judge with another of the Countrey associate to him shall deliver the Goals 4 Wherefore it is Enacted that Justices shall not be made against the Form of the said Statute 5 And that the Assizes Attaints and Certifications be taken before the Justices commonly Assigned which should be good men and Lawful having knowledg of the Law and none other after the Form if another Statute made in the time of the said King Edward the first 6 And that the Oyers and Terminers shall not be granted but before the Justices of the one Bench or the other or the Justices Errants and that great hurt or horrible Trespasses and of the Kings special Grace after the Form of the S●atute thereof ordained in time of the said Grandfather and none otherwise The Comment Touching this Statute and several others to the same purpose as 14. Edw. 3. cap. 14. and 10. Edw. 3. cap. 2. and 13. R. 2. cap. 1. and 16. R. cap. 6. c. We shall only give you the words of Cook in the third part of his Instit fo 236. What things the King may pardon and in what manner and what he cannot pardon falleth now to be treated of IN case of death of man Robberies and Felonies against the Peace divers Acts of Parliament have Restrained the power of granting Charters of pardons first that no such Charters shall be granted but in case where the King may do it by his Oath Secondly That no man shall obtain Charters out of Parliament Stat. 4. Edw 3. cap 13. And accordingly in a Parliament Roll it is said for the Peace of the Land it would much help if good Justices were appointed in every County if such as be let to mainprize do put
any Offence after the first Judgment shall be a sufficient Conviction to Bring the Officers or Person within the said penalty for the second Offence 6. And for the prevention of unjust Vexation by Reiterated Commitments for the same 2. Be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That no Person or Persons which shall be delivered or set at Large upon any Habeas Corpus shall at any time hereafter be again Imprisoned or Committed for the same Offence by any Person or Persons whatsoever other than by the Legal order and process of such Court wherein he or they shall be Bound by Recognizance to appear or other Court having Jurisdiction of the Cause 3. And if any other Person or Persons shall knowingly contrary to this Act Recommit or Imprison or knowingly procure or Cause to be Recommitted or Imprisoned for the same Offence or pretended Offence any Person or Persons delivered or set at Large as aforesaid or be knowingly aiding or Assisting therein then he or they shall forfeit to the Prisoner or Party Greived the sum of five hundred pounds any colourable pretence or variation in the Warrant or Warrants of Commitment notwithstandin to be Recovered as aforesaid 7. Provided alwayes and be it further Enacted That if any Person or Persons shall be Committed for High Treason or Felony Plainly and specially Expressed in the Warrant of Commitment upon his prayer or petition in open Court the first week of the Term or first day of the Sessions of Oyer and Terminer or General Gaol delivery to be Brought to his Tryal shall not be indicted sometime in the next Term Sessions of Oyer and Terminer or General Gaol delivery after such Commitment It shall and may be Lawful to and for the Judges of the Court of Kings Bench and Justices of Oyer and Terminer or General Gaol delivery and they are hereby Required upon motion to them made in open Court the last day of the Term Sessions or Gaol delivery either by the Prisoner or any one in his Behalf to set at Liberty the Prisoner upon Bail unless it appear to the Judges and Justices upon Oath made that the Witnesses for the King could not be produced the same Term Sessions or General Gaol delivery 2. And If any person or persons Committed as aforesaid upon his prayer or petition in open Court the first week of the Term or first day of the Sessions of Oyer and Terminer and General Gaol delivery to be Brought to his Tryal shall not be Indicted and Tryed the second Term Sessions of Oyer and Terminer or General Gaol delivery after his Commitment or upon his Tryal shall be Acquitted he shall be discharged from his Imprisonment 8. Provided alwaies That nothing in this Act shall Extend to discharge out of prison any person charged in debt or other Action or with process in any Civil Cause but that after he shall be discharged of his Imprisonment for such his Criminal Offence he shall be kept in Custody according to Law for such other suit 9. Provided alwaies and be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any person or persons sub●ects of this Realm shall be Committed to any prison or in Custody of any Officer or Officers whatsoever for any Criminal or Supposed Criminal matter That the said person shall not be Removed from the said prison and custody into the custody of any other Officer or Officers 2. unless it be by Habeas Corpus or some other Legal writ or where the prisoner is delivered to the Constable or other Inferiour Officer to carry such prisoner to some common Gaol 3. or where any person is sent by ●rder of any Judge of Assize or Justice of the peace ●o any Common workhouse or house of Correction 4. or where the prisoner is Removed from one prion or place to another within the same County in order to his or her Tryal or discharge in due Course of Law 5. or in case of sudden fire or Infection ●r other Necessity 6. And if any person or persons ●hall after such Commitment aforesaid make out and ●ign or Countersign any Warrant or Warrants for ●uch Removal aforesaid contrary to this Act as well ●e that makes or signs or Countersigns such Warrant or Warrants as the Officer or Officers that obey or Execute the same shall suffer and Incur the pains and Forfeitures in this Act before-mentioned both for the first and second Offence Respectively to be Recovered in manner aforesaid by the party Grieved 10. Provided also and be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That it shall and may be Lawful to and for any prisoner and prisoners as aforesaid to move and obtain his or their Habeas Corpus as well out of the High Court of Chancery or Court of Exchequer as out of the Courts of Kings Bench or common pleas or either of them 2. And if the said Lord Chancellour or Lord Keeper or any Judge or Judges Baron or Barons for the time being of the degree of the Coif of any of the Courts aforesaid in the Vacation time upon view of the Copy or Copies of the Warant or Warants of Commitment or Detainer or upon Oath made that such Copy or Copies were denied as aforesaid shall deny any writ of Habeas Corpus by this Act Required to be Granted being moved for as aforesaid they shall severally Forfeit to the prisoner or party Grieved the sum of five hundred pounds to be Recovered in manner aforesaid 11. And Be it Enacted and declared by the Authority aforesaid That an Habeas Corpus according to the true Intent and meaning of this Act may be directed and Run into any County Palatine the Cinqu●… ports or other priviledged places within the Kingdom of Engl. Dominion of Wales or Town of Berwick upon Tweed and the Isles of Jersey or Guernsey any Law or Usage to the Contrary notwithstanding 12. And for preventing Illegal Imprisonments in prisons beyond seas 2. Be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That no subject of this Realm that now is or hereafter shall be an Inhabitant or Resiant of this Kingdom of England Dominion of Wales or Town of Berwick upon Tweed shall or may be sent prisoner into Scotland Ireland Jersey Guernsey Tangier or into any parts Garrisons Islands or places beyond the seas which are or at any time hereafter shall be within or without the Dominions of His Majesty His heirs or successours 3. And that every such Imprisonment is hereby Enacted and adjudged to be Illegal 4. and that If any of the said subjects now is or hereafter shall be so Imprisoned every such person and persons so Imprisoned shall and may for every such Imprisonment maintain by vertue of this Act an Action or Actions of false Imprisonment in any of his Majesties Courts of Record against the person or persons by whom he or she shall be so Committed detained Imprisoned sent prisoner or Transported Contrary to the true meaning of this Act and against all or any
person or persons that shall frame Contrive Write Seal or Countersign any Warrant or Writing for such Commitment detainer Imprisonment or Transportation or shall be Advising Aiding or Assisting in the same or any of them 5. And the plaintiff in every such Action shall have Judgment to Recover his Treble Costs besides damages which damages so to be Given shall not be less than five hundred pounds 6. in which Action no delay stay or stop of proceeding by Rule order or Command nor no Injunction protection or priviledge whatsoever nor any more than one Imparlance shall be allowed Excepting such Rule of the Court wherein the Action shall depend made in open Court as shall be thought in Justice necessary for special cause to be Expressed in the said Rule 7. And the person or persons who shall Knowingly Frame Contrive write seal or Countersign any Warrant for such Commitment detainer or Transportation or shall so Commit detain Imprison or Transport any person or persons Contrary to this Act or be any waies Advising aiding or Assisting therein being Lawfully Convicted thereof shall be disabled from thenceforth to Bear any Office of Trust or Profit within the said Realm of England Dominion of Wales or Town of Berwick upon Tweed or any of the Islands Territories or Dominions thereunto Belonging 8. And shall Incur and sustain the pains Penalties and Forfeitures Limited ordained and provided in and by the statute of Provision and Premunire made in the sixteenth year of King Richard the Second 9. And be incapaple of any pardon from the King His Heirs or Successours of the said Forfeitures Losses or disabilities or any of them 13. Provided alwaies That nothing in this Act extend to give Benefit to any person who shall by Contract in Writing agree with any Merchant or Owner of any plantation or other person whatsoever to be transported to any parts beyond the Seas and receive Earnest upon such Agreement although that afterwards such person shall Renounce such Contract 14. Provided alwaies and be it Enacted That If any person or persons Lawfully Convicted of any Felony shall in open Court pray to be Transported beyond the seas and the Court shall think fit to leave him or them in prison for that purpose such person or persons may be Transported into any parts beyond the seas This Act or any thing therein Contained to the contrary notwithstanding 15. Provided also and be it Enacted That nothing herein Contained shall be deemed Construed or taken to Extend to the Imprisonment of any person before to first day of June one thousand six hundred seventy and nine or to any thing Advised procured or otherwise done Relating to such Imprisonment Any thing herein Contained to the Contrary notwithstanding 16. Provided also That If any person or persons at any time Resiant in this Realm shall have committed any Capital Offence in Scotl. or Ireland or any of the Islands or Foreign Plantations of the King His Heirs or Successours where he or she ought to be Tryed for such Offence such person or persons may be sent to such place there to Receive such Tryal in such manner as the same might have been used before the making of this Act any thing herein contained to the contrary notwithstanding 17. Provided alwayes and be it Enacted That no person or persons shall be sued Impleaded Molested or Troubled for any Offence against this Act unless the party offending be Sued or Impleaded for the same within two years at the most after such time wherein the Offence shall be Committed in Case the party Grieved shall not be then in Prison and if he shall be in Prison then within the space of two years after the decease of the Person Imprisoned or his or her delivery out of Prison which shall first happen 18. And to the intent no person may Avoyd his Tryal at the Assizes or General Gaol delivery by procuring his Removal before the Assizes at such time as he cannot be brought back to receive his Tryal there 2. Be it Enacted That after the Assizes proclaimed for thatCounty where the Prisoner is detained no person shall be Removed from the common Gaol upon any Habeas Corpus granted in pursuance of this Act but upon any such Habeas Corpus shall be brought before the Judge os Assize in open Court who is thereupon to do what to Justice shall appertain 19. Provided nevertheless That after the Assizes are Ended any person or persons detained may have his or her Habeas Corpus according to the direction and Intention of this Act. 20. And be it also Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any Information Suit or Action shall be Brought or Exhibited against any person or persons for anyOffence committed or to be committed against the form of this Law it shall be Lawful for such defendants to plead the General Issue that they are not Guilty or that they own nothing and to give such special matter in Evidence to the Jury that shall Try the same which matter being pleaded had been good sufficent in Law to have discharged the said Defendant or Defendants against the said Information Suit or Action the said matter shall be then as available to him or them to all Intents and purposes as if he or they had sufficiently pleaded set forth or Alledged the same matter in Bar or Discharge of such information Suit or Action 21. And because many times persons charged with petty Treason or Felony or as Accessaries thereunto are Committed upon suspition only whereupon they are Bailable or not according as the Circumstances making out that suspition are more or less weighty which are best known to the Justices of Peace that committed the persons and have the Examinations before them or to other Justices of the Peace in the County 2. Be it therefore Enacted That where any person shall appear to be Committed by any Judge or Justice of the Peace and charged as Accessary before the Fact to any petty Treason or Felony or upon suspicion thereof or with suspicion of petty Treason or Felony which pettyTreason or Felony shall be plainly specially expressed in the Warrant of Commitment that such person shall not be Removed or Bailed by vertue of this Act or in any other manner than they might have been before the making of this Act. The Comment THere are three things which the Law of England which is a Law of Mercy principally Regards and taketh care of viz. Life Liberty and Estate Next to a man's Life the nearest thing that concerns him is freedom of his person For indeed what is Imprisonment but a kind of Civil Death Therefore saith Fortescue Cap. 42. Angliae Jura in omni Casu Libercati dant favorem The Laws of England do in All Cases favour Liberty Touching Commitments and what is Required to make a Legal Mittimus see before Pag. 27. The Writ of Habeas Corpus is a Remedy given by the common Law for such as were unjustly detained
be Indicted for Burglary 7. There is no power given to break Doors for Levying the Penalties therefore let the Constables and Officers be wary what they do in that Case 8. Constables would do well to know and assert the Dignity of their Office they are not to run up and down like Lacquies after the Capricio's of every Justice and spend the Lords day Prophanely in hunting after Meetings if the Justices are upon sufficient Oath Inform'd of a Meeting and will make out a Warrant specifying where it is you 'l goe but to ramble about with them from this place to that you are not obliged no more are you to seize or Imprison persons on the verbal Command of any Justice unless in visible Breach of the Peace but you must have a Warrant specifying the persons Name and Offence before you can lay hold of him or else you may repent it when sued another day for false Imprisonment 9. Since by the Statute of the 29 of Car. 2d. Cap. 7. It is Enacted in these words Provided also that no Person or Persons upon the Lords day shall serve or Execute or cause to be served or Executed any Writ Process Warrant Order Judgment or Decree except in cases of Treason Felony or Breach of the Peace but that the service of every such Writ Process Warrant c. shall be void to all Intents and Purposes whatsoever and the Person or Persons so Serving or Executing the same shall be as liable to the suit of the party grieved and answer Damages to him for doing thereof as if he or they had done the same without any Writ Process Warrant Order Judgment or Decree at all It will concern all Constables and Officers to consider with what safety they can execute any such Warrants at all on the Lords day on peaceable Meetings it being evident that every man they disturb by Colour of such Warrant on that day has by this Statute a good Action against them And so much for Laws against Dissenters In the next place according to our Promise we shall here add an Abstract of the Laws against Popery and Papists and perhaps as 't is said where there are most Laws there are most Offences so here we may say though there be such abundance of Acts of such severe and various Penalties yet there are scarce any sort of Criminals more rarely brought to Conviction or Punishment THE second Refusal of the Oath of Supremacy punisht as High Treason 5 Eliz. 1. To maintain or Extol Authority of the Sea of Rome the second time High Treason 5 Eliz. 1. To obtain or put in Use any Bull from Rome High Treason 13 Eliz. 2. To perswade or Reconcile OR TO BE RECONCILED to the Roman Religion High Treason 23 Eliz. 1. 3 Jac. 4. For Jesuite or Priest made by Authority from the Pope to come into or remain in the Kings Dominions High Treason 27 Eliz. 2. So for remaining in a Seminary six Months after Proclamation and afterward Returning High Treason 27 Eliz. 2. For Concealing of a Bull or other Instrument from Rome or reconciliation offer'd Punisht as Misprision of Treason 13 Eliz. 2. To maintain or conceal those who perswade or are Reconciled to the Roman Religion Misprision of Treason 23 Eliz. 1. To Receive Relieve Comfort Jesuit or Priest knowing him to be such Punisht as Felony 27 Eliz. 2. To go and serve a Foreign Prince having not before taken the Oath of Allegiance and entred Bond not to be Reconciled to the Roman Religion Felony 3 Jac. 4. The first Refusal of the Oath of Supremacy is Punisht as in Case of a Premunire which imports a forfeiture of all Lands and Goods Imprisonment for Life and a Deprivement of the Benefit of Law 5 Eliz. 1. To set forth or defend Power Spiritual in the Sea of Rome Premunire 5 Eliz. 1. To Bring or Receive any Agnus Dei Crosses Pictures or such like from Rome Premunire 13 Eliz. 2. 23 Eliz. 1. To aid any Person who hath put in Use any Bull from the Sea of Rome Premunire 13 Eliz. 2. 23 Eliz. 1. To send or give Relief to any continuing in Colledges or Seminaries beyond Sea Premunire 27 Eliz. 2. Refusal of the Oath of Allegiance upon the second Tender Premunire 3 Jac. 4. 7 Jac. 6. For not Discovering of Priests made beyond the Seas Imprisonment 27 Eliz. 2. Upon Indictment of Recusancy by Proclamation Imprisonment 29 Eliz. 6. Those that are not able or fail to pay their Forfeitures are to be Imprisoned until Payment or Conformity 23 Eliz. 1. Women Covert Imprisoned for Refusal of the Oath of Allegiance 3 Jac. 4. For non-Payment of twelve pence for every Sunday Imprisonment 3 Jac. 4. Women Covert Convicted for Recusancy Imprisoned till her Husband pay ten Pounds a Month or a third part of his Lands 7 Jac. 6. Standing Excommunicated for Recusancy House may be broken up for his Apprehension 7 Jac. 6. Those who shall forbear to come to Church by the space of twelve Months bound to good Behaviour with Surety in the Kings-Bench 23 Eliz. 1. Every Recusant is Confin'd to five Miles Compass for Life 23 Eliz. 2. To ten Miles distant from London 3 Jac. 5. Not to come into the House where the King or his Heir Apparent is 3 Jac. 5. For absence from Church-Service every Sunday twelve pence forfeited 1 Eliz. 2. And for every Holiday twelve pence forfeited 3 Jac. 4. For absence from Common prayer every Month twenty Pounds forfeited 23 Eliz. 1. 3 Jac. 4. For default of payment of twenty Pounds a Month all Goods two parts of Land and Leases forfeited 29 Eliz. 6. 3 Jac. 4. At the Kings Election to take or refuse twenty Pounds a Month or to take two parts of the Recusants Estate 3 Jac. 4. All Copy-hold Lands of Recusants forfeited 25 Eliz. 2. The Forfeitures of the Ancestor charged upon his Heir being a Recusant 1 Jac. 4. A Recusant forfeits for not Receiving the Sacrament according to the Service Book the first year twenty Pounds the second year forty Pounds the third year and every year after sixty Pounds 3 Jac. 4. To the Presenter out of the Recusants Goods forty Shillings forfeited 3 Jac. 4. For every Recusant sojourner and Servant ten Pounds for every Month forfeited 3 Jac. 4. Two parts of Dower or Joynture of a Married Woman forfeited 3 Jac. 5. Coming to Court an hundred Pounds forfeited 3 Jac. 5. For not Baptizing of Children according to the Service-Book publickly within a Month after their Birth an hundred Pound forfeited 3 Jac. 5. For Marrying otherwise than by a Minister an hundred Pounds forfeited 3 Jac. 5. For Burying out of the Church or Church-yard an hundred Pounds forfeited 3 Jac. 5. For sending Children beyond Seas without License an hundred Pounds forfeited 1 Jac. 4. For maintaining a School-master not going to Church or allowed to teach for every Month ten Pounds forfeited 23 Eliz. 1. 29 Eliz. 6. And forty Shillings per