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A41429 The Royal College of Physicians of London, founded and established by law as appears by letters patents, acts of Parliament, adjudged cases, &c. : and An historical account of the College's proceedings against empiricks and unlicensed practisers, in every princes reign from their first incorporation to the murther of the royal martyr, King Charles the First / by Charles Goodall ... Goodall, Charles, 1642-1712. 1684 (1684) Wing G1091; ESTC R8914 319,602 530

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authority in that case 3. The fines and amercements to be imposed by them by force of the Act do not belong to them but to the King for the King hath not granted the fines and amercements to them and yet the fine is appointed to be paid to them in proximis Comitiis and they have imprisoned the Plaintiff for non-payment thereof 4. They ought to have committed the Plaintiff presently by construction of Law although that no time be limited in the Act as in the Stat. of West cap. 12. De Servientibus Ballivis c. qui ad compotum reddend ' tenentur c. cum Dom ' hujusmodi servientium dederit eis auditores compoti contingat ipsum in arreragiis super compotum suum omnibus allocatis allocandis arrestentur corpora eorum per testimonium auditorum ejusdem compoti mittantur liberentur proximae gaolae Domini Regis in partibus illis c. in that case although that no time be limited when the Accomptant shall be imprisoned yet it ought to be presently as it is holden in 27 H. 6. 8. and the reason thereof is given in Fogossa's Case Plow Com. 17. that the generality of time shall be restrained to the present time for the benefit of him upon whom the pain shall be inflicted and therewith agréeth Plow Com. 206. b. in Stradling's Case And a Iustice of Peace upon view of the force ought to commit the offender presently 5. For as much as the Censors had their authority by the Letters Patents and Act of Parliament which are high matters of Record their proceedings ought not to be by word and so much the rather because they claimed authority to fine and imprison And therefore if Iudgment be given against one in the Common Pleas in a Writ of Recaption he shall be fined and imprisoned but if the Writ be Vicontiel in the County there he shall not be fined or imprisoned because that the Court is not of Record F. N. B. in bre de Recaptione so in 47 F. N. B. a Plea of Trespass vi armis doth not lie in the County Court hundred Court c. for they cannot make Record of fine and imprisonment and regularly those who cannot make a Record cannot fine and imprison And therewith agréeth 27 H. 8. Book of Entries The Auditors make a Record when they commit the Defendant to prison A Iustice of Peace upon view of the force may commit but he ought to make a Record of it 6. Because the Act of 14 H. 8. hath given power to imprison untill he shall be delivered by the President and the Censors and their Successors reason requireth that the same be taken strictly for the liberty of the Subject as they pretend is at their pleasure And the same is proved by a Iudgment in Parliament in this Case For when this Act of 14 H. 8. had given power to the Censors to imprison yet it was taken so literally that the Gaoler was not bound to receive them which they committed to him and the reason thereof was because they had authority to do it without any Court And thereupon the Statute of 1 Mar. cap. 9. was made that the Gaoler should receive them upon a pain and none can be committed to any prison if the Gaoler cannot receive him but the first Act for the cause aforesaid was taken so literally that no necessary incident was implyed And where it was objected that this very Act of 1 Mariae hath enlarged the power of the Censors and that upon the word of the Act It was clearly resolved that the said Act of 1 Mariae did not enlarge the power of the Censors to fine or imprison any person for any cause for which he ought not to be fined and imprisoned by the said Act of 14 H. 8. For the words of the Act of Q. Mary are according to the tenor and meaning of the said Act Also shall send or commit any Offender or Offenders for his or their offence or disobedience contrary to any Article or clause contained in the said Grant or Act to any Ward Gaol c. But in this Case Bonham hath not done any thing which appeareth within this Record contrary to any Article or clause contained within the Grant or Act of 14 H. 8. Also the Gaoler who refuseth shall forfeit the double value of the fines and amerciaments that any offender or disobedient shall be assessed to pay which proveth that none shall be received by any Gaoler by force of the Act of 14 H. 8. but he who may be lawfully fined or amerced by the Act of 14 H. 8. and for that was not Bonham as by the reasons and causes aforesaid it appeareth And admit that the replication be not material and the Defendants have demurred upon it yet forasmuch as the Defendants have confessed in the Bar that they have imprisoned the Plaintiff without cause the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment And the difference is when the Plaintiff doth reply and by his replication it appeareth that he hath no cause of action there he shall never have judgment But when the Bar is insufficient in matter or amounteth as this Case is to a confession of the point of the action and the Plaintiff replyeth and sheweth the truth of the matter to enforce his Case and in Iudgment of Law it is not material yet the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment for it is true that sometimes the Count shall be made good by the Bar and sometimes the Bar by the Replication and sometimes the Replication by the Rejoynder c. But the difference is when the Count wantethtime place or other circumstance it may be made good by the Bar so of the Bar Replication c. as appeareth in 18 E. 4. 16. b. But when the Count wanteth substance no Bar can make it good so of the Bar Replication c. and therewith agrée 6 E. 4. 2. a good case and mark there the words of Choke vid. 18 E. 3. 34. b. 44 E. 3. 7. a. 12 E. 4. 6. 6 H. 7. 10. 7 H. 7. 3. 11 H. 4. 24. c. But when the Plaintiff makes a Replication Sur-rejoynder c. and thereby it appeareth that upon the whole matter and Record the Plaintiff hath no cause of action he shall never have Iudgment although that the Bar or remainder be insufficient in matter for the Court ought to judge upon the whole Record and every one shall be intended to make the best of his own case Vid. Rigeways case in the 3. part of my Reports 52. And so these differences were resolved and adjudged betwéen Kendall and Heyer Mich. 25 26 Eliz. in the Kings Bench. And Mich. 29 30 Eliz. in the same Court betwéen Gallys and Burbry And Coke Chief Iustice in the conclusion of his argument did observe 7 things for the better direction of the President and Commonalty of the said Colledge in time to come 1. That none can be punished for practising
before the morrowe of the feast day of Saint Michaell the Archangell next ensueing theire or any of theire respective election or elections or in the meane tyme shall happen to be putt out or removed for cause as aforesaid That then and in every such case it shall and may bée lawfull to and for the said President and Fellowes of the said Colledge att a Court to bée holden in convenient tyme after the death or removall of every or any of the said Censors of the Colledge aforesaid to assemble and meete in the Common Hall or other place aforesaid and then and there to elect nominate and choose any one or more of the Fellowes of the same Colledge for the tyme being to be Censor and Censors of the same Colledge in the place and roome of such Censor and Censors as shall be then vacant by death or removall as aforesaid Which person and persons so nominated and chosen being duely sworne according to the contents of theise presents shall bée and continue Censor and Censors of the same Colledge for and dureing such tyme and in such manner as the person or persons in whose roome or place hée or they shall bée soe chosen should or ought to have beene or continued by virtue of theise presents subject alwayes to bée removeable for reasonable cause as aforesaid AND WEE doe further will and ordaine That the Elects of the said Colledge shall bée chosen out of the Fellowes of the same Colledge in manner and forme following that is to say In case of death or due removall of any the Elects of the said Colledge hereby constituted or of any the Elects of the said Colledge hereafter by virtue of theise presents to be elected nominated and chosen the President and Elects of the same Colledge for the tyme beeing or any five of them whereof the President for the tyme beeing to bée allwayes one from tyme to tyme and att any tyme after such death or deaths removall or removalls respectively shall and may assemble and meete at their said Common Hall or other convenient place in our said Cittie of London and then and there elect nominate and choose any of the then Fellowes of the said Colledge into the place or places of such and soe many of the said Elects as shall bée then voyd by death or removall as aforesaid Which persons soe to bée chosen being duely sworne according to the tenour of theise presents shall bée and continue Elects of the said Colledge dureing their respective lives unlesse for reasonable cause they shall bée removed as aforesaid AND WEE DOE further will and ordeyne that the Fellowes of the said Colledge shall bée chosen out of the Comonaltie of the said Colledge in manner and forme following that is to say In case of death or due removall of any of the Fellowes abovementioned and hereby constituted or of any of the Fellowes of the said Colledge hereafter by virtue of theise presents to be nominated or chosen the President and Fellowes of the same Colledge shall and may from tyme to tyme and att any tyme after such death or deaths removall or removalls respectively assemble and meete att a Court to be holden in theire Common Hall or other convenient place as aforesaid and then and there elect nominate and choose any one or more such and soe many of the most learned and able persons skilled and experienced in the said facultie of Physicke then of the Comonalty or Members of the said Colledge and Corporation to bée Fellowe and Fellowes of the same Colledge and Corporation in the place and places of such and soe many of the said Fellowes of the said Colledge and Corporation as shall bée then voyd by death or removall as aforesaid Which persons soe to be chosen beeing duely sworne according to the tenour of theise presents shall bée and continue Fellowes of the said Colledge dureing theire respective lives unlesse for reasonable cause they shall bée removed as aforesaid AND WEE WILL and by theise presents for us our heires and successors doe give and graunt unto the President Fellowes and Comonaltye of the Kings Colledge of Physitians aforesaid and their successors that it shall and may be lawfull for the President and Fellowes of the said Colledge att any Court or Courts to bée holden att theire Common Hall or other convenient place from tyme to tyme and as often as occasion shall require to summon heare and admonish any of the said Fellowes Elects and Censors of the same Colledge And for cause of evil Governement Non-residence otherwise then as aforesaid without Licence under the Seale of the said Colledge and Corporation or under the Privy Seale of us our heires or successors as aforesaid or for misbehaveing themselves in theire respective places or any other just or reasonable cause from tyme to tyme to expell and amove any of the same Fellowes Elects or Censors from his and theire respective place and places in the same Colledge And after due publication and entry made thereof in the Register of the same Colledge and Corporation from tyme to tyme to proceede to new Elections to supply the place or places of such person or persons soe removed or expelled according to the provision above mentioned and the tenour of theise presents AND WEE WILL and hereby declare That neither the President Vice-president Elects or Censors or any of them for the tyme being by colour of any double capacitie as such and alsoe Fellowes of the said Colledge and Corporation shall have or give more or other then each severall and respective person his or their severall and respective voyce in all or any Election or Elections or other matter or thing whatsoever directed or graunted or to be done or acted by virtue of theise presents Except onely in such case and cases where the voyces shall happen to bée even and equall And then and in every such case wherein the President or in his absence the Vice-president of the said Colledge and Corporation for the tyme beeing is to bee one We will and by theise presents for us our heires and successors doe Ordeyne and Graunt that the President or in his absence the Vice-president of the said Colledge and Corporation for the tyme being shall have and give a casting voyce to the end that all Elections matters and debates relateing to the said Colledge and Corporation may the more easilie certeinely and peaceablie bee settled and determined AND Wee will and further by theise presents for us our heires and successors doe Ordaine and Establish That all and every the Fellowes and alsoe the President Elects and Censors above named and hereby constituted and every of them And alsoe all and every the Fellowes President or Vice-president Elects and Censors and other Officers and Ministers whatsoever of the Colledge and Corporation aforesaid hereafter by virtue of theise presents to be nominated and elected and every of them shall severally and respectively take his and
Physitians in the Cittie of London shall be and remayne at all times hereafter for ever persons able and in Lawe capeable to have purchase receive possesse hold and enjoy any Mannors Lands Tenements Liberties Priviledges Franchises Iurisdictions and Hereditaments whatsoever of what name nature qualitie kind or condition soever the same or any of them shall bee to them and their successors in fee and perpetuity or otherwise And alsoe Goods and Chattells and all other things of what name nature quality or kinde soever the same be And alsoe by the same name to give graunt demise alien assigne and dispose the said Mannors Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Goods and Chattells And alsoe to doe and execute all other things lawfull necessary and convenient for the common profitt of the said Colledge And alsoe by the same name of the President Fellowes and Comonalty of the Kings Colledge of Physitians in the Cittie of London They shall and may for ever hereafter pleade and be impleaded answere and be answered unto defend and be defended in all and whatsoever Courts and places and before whatsoever Iudges and Iustices and other Persons and Officers of us our heires and successors in all and singular Actions pleas suites quarrells causes matters and demaunds whatsoever of what name nature qualitie or kind soever the same are or shal bee in the same manner and forme as any other subjects of this our Kingdome of England being persons able and capeable in Law or any other body Corporate or Politique within this our Kingdome may or can have purchase receive possesse give grant demise alien assigne and dispose pleade and be impleaded answere and be answered unto defend and be defended doe performe or execute And alsoe that they and their successors shall and may for ever hereafter have a Common Seale to serve and use for all causes matters things and affaires whatsoever of them and theire successors which shall alwayes bee and remayne in the custody and keeping of the President of the said Colledge of Physitians for the tyme being And that it shall and may bee lawfull to and for the President and Fellowes of the same Colledge or the major part of them for the tyme being to breake alter change or make new the said Seale from tyme to tyme att theire wills and pleasures and as to them shall séeme requisite and fitt AND alsoe from tyme to tyme and att all tymes hereafter to use and dispose of the Common Seale of the said Colledge for the time being in and about all things matters and affaires whatsoever of or concerning the same Colledge and Corporation in such manner as to them shall seeme fitt and requisite AND for the better order rule and governement of the said Colledge and Corporation and the matters and things thereof and the due and orderly correcting and punishing of all offences and offenders within the power and jurisdiction of the same Colledge and Corporation WEE doe by theise presents for us our heires and successors will ordeyne constitute declare and graunt that there bee and for ever hereafter shal bee forty Fellowes of the said Colledge and Corporation hereby constituted And that thereof att present and for ever hereafter there bee one President Tenn Elects and fower Censors duely appointed nominated and chosen to bee and shall bee respectively President Elects and Censors of the same Colledge and Corporation And all the same Fellowes President Elects and Censors respectively to bée and shalbée from tyme to tyme nominated elected and chosen and have being and continuance as such respectively in manner and forme and to all intents and purposes as in and by theise presents is hereafter mentioned and declared AND further We doe by theise presents for us our heires and successors will ordeyne constitute and appoint Sir Edward Alston Knight Sir Francis Prujean Knight Baldwyn Hamey Francis Glisson Peter Salmon George Ent George Bate Alexander Frazier William Stane John Micklethwait Nathan Pagett Jonathan Goddard Edmond Trench John King Thomas Cox Henry Stanley Daniell Whistler Charles Scarburgh Thomas Wharton Christopher Merrett Samuell Collins Luke Rugeley John Wilby Sir William Pettie Knight Christopher Terne Sir John Baber Knight John Hale Edward Greaves Thomas Croydon Gabriell Beauvoir Thomas Wolfe Martin Luellin Sir John Finch Knight Thomas Baynes William Quarterman James Hide Humfry Whitmore Robert Waller Peter Barwicke and Robert Morrison Doctors in Physicke the first and present Fellowes of the same Colledge and Corporation And to bée and continue Fellowes of the same Colledge and Corporation and to hold exercise and enjoy the office or place of Fellowes of and in the same Colledge and Corporation respectively for and dureing theire severall and respective naturall lives unlesse in the meane tyme for evill governement or misbehaving themselves in the same office or place or for Nonresidence otherwise than while they or any of them respectively shal bee or continue in the service of us our heires or successors without Licence under the Seale of the Colledge and Corporation aforesaid or under the Privy Seale of us our heires or successors or for any the like reasonable cause they or any of them respectively shal bee removed AND Wee doe by theise presents for us our heires and successors will ordaine constitute and appoint the said Sir Edward Alston Knight the first and present President of the same Colledge and Corporation And to bee and continue President of the same Colledge and Corporation and to hold exercise and enjoy the same office or place of President of and in the same Colledge and Corporation from the makeing hereof untill the morrowe of the feast of Saint Michaell the Archangell next ensueing the date hereof and from thenceforth untill another President shall bee in due manner elected and sworne according to the tenor true intent and meaning of theise presents AND Wee doe further by theise presents for us our heires and successors will ordeyne constitute and appoint the said Sir Edward Alston Sir Francis Prujean Baldwyn Hamey Francis Glisson George Ent George Bate Alexander Frazier William Stane John Micklethwaite and Nathan Pagett to bee the first and present Elects of the same Colledge and Corporation and to be and continue Elects of the same Colledge or Corporation and to hold exercise and enjoy the office or place of Elects of the same Colledge and Corporation for and dureing theire severall and respective naturall lives unlesse in the meane tyme for any reasonable cause as aforesaid they or any of them shall bee removed AND Wée doe by theise presents will ordaine constitute and appoint the said George Ent John Micklethwaite Daniell Whistler and Christopher Merrett the first and present Censors of the same Colledge and Corporation and to bee and continue Censors of the same Colledge and Corporation and to hold exercise and enjoy the office or place of Censors of and in the same Colledge and Corporation untill the morrowe of
and doe by all such just and lawfull wayes and meanes as shall be requisite or necessary for the better and speedier effecting of the premises in all things according to the best of their Iudgments and to the truth of the matter appeareing before them AND FURTHER that it shall and may bée lawfull to and for the said Visitors or any two or more of them for the tyme being from tyme to tyme and att any tyme after such cause or matter heard or determined by them or any two of them as aforesaid to remitt and certifie back again to the said President Fellowes and Cominalty of the said Colledge of Physitians their judgment and proceedings therein respectively To the end that due execution and proceeding may bée had and made thereupon according to the tenor true intent and meaning of these presents AND Wee will and by these presents for us our heires and successors doe constitute ordaine declare and graunt that all and every Iudgment Sentence and Decree hereafter made or to bée made by the Visitors aforesaid or any two or more of them upon any Appeale or Appeales of in or concerning the premises shalbée and stand firme and good and bée binding and concluding to all and every person and persons party and parties concerned therein respectively and noe further or other Appeale or releife to bée had sought made or given therein in any Court of Lawe or Equity or elsewhere or otherwise however PROVIDED allwayes and Wée will and by these presents for us our heires and successors doe constitute ordaine and grant that in case of neglect or delay of prosecution of any Appeale or Appeales hereafter to bée had or made in the premisses according to the tenor of these presents or that Iudgment Decree or Sentence bee not from tyme to tyme had and obtayned in all and every such Appeale and Appeales at the prosecution of the partie or parties respectively soe Appealing within six Moneths after every such Appeale or Appeales from tyme to tyme respectively made That then and in every such Case it shall and may bee lawfull to and for the President Fellowes and Commonalty of the Colledge aforesaid and their Successors and to and for the said President and Censors or Vice-president and Censors of the same Colledge for the tyme being in the absence of the President or any three of them as is above mentioned to act and proceed in and upon every such Matter Cause Iudgment Sentence or Decree on which such Appeale or Appeales shall bee soe made as aforesaid and neglected delayed or not determined in tyme by the Visitors as aforesaid in such manner and to all intents and purposes as if such Appeale or Appeales had never byn or byn made Any thinge in these presents conteyned to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding AND WEE DOE by these presents for us our heires and successors further graunt constitute and ordeyne that itt shall and may bee lawfull to and for the President Fellowes and Cominalty of the Colledge of Physitians aforesaid and their Successors and to and for the President and Censors or Vice-president and Censors of the same Colledge for the tyme being in the absence of the President or any three of them as is above mentioned to act doe and proceed by way of Action Distresse Imprisonment or otherwise in and upon all and every matter cause and thing judgment sentence and decree whatsoever hereafter to bee made given ratified or confirmed by the Visitors aforesaid or any twoe or more of them in or upon any Appeale or Appeales to them to bée made as aforesaid and by them from tyme to tyme remitted as aforesaid in such and the like manner to all intents and purposes as by these presents they or any of them may or are impowered to doe in the same or the like Cases when noe Appeale or Appeales shall bée had or made therein Any thing in these presents conteyned to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding PROVIDED alsoe and our will and pleasure is That noe person or persons whatsoever shall att any tyme hereafter bee ympeached sued fyned amerced or otherwise punished by vertue of these presents or for any offence or other matter cause or thing whatsoever therein specified or conteyned unlesse hee or they respectively bee from tyme to tyme impeached sued fyned amerced or otherwise questioned or punished for such his or their offence or other matter cause or thing aforesaid within one whole yeare next after the same shall be committed or done or such person or persons lyable to bée questioned or punished for the same AND WEE DOE further of our especiall grace certaine knowledge and meere motion for us our heires and successors give and grant unto the said President Fellowes and Cominalty of the Kings Colledge of Physitians aforesaid and their Successors all and singular the Fynes Amerciaments Penalties and Forfeitures and every of them by virtue of these presents or any Act of Parliament hereafter to bee made in pursuance or Confirmation thereof or of any the Letters Patents or Acts of Parliament Ordinances Decrees or Impositions aforesaid hereafter to bee assessed forfeited sett or imposed upon any Physitian or Practizer of Physicke as aforesaid or to bee forfeited sett or imposed upon any Apothecary Druggist or other person or persons whatsoever for or by reason of any misdemeanor offence contempt or default whatsoever before in or by these presents or any the Letters Patents Acts of Parliament Ordinances Decrees or Impositions mentioned or specified to bee ymployed and disposed as hereafter in and by these presents is declared The penalties and forfeitures of the Recognizances hereafter in and by these presents mentioned and directed to bee taken in the name of us our heires and successors allwayes excepted AND that the said President Fellowes and Cominalty of the Colledge of Physitians aforesaid and their Successors shall and may by the name of the President Fellowes and Cominalty of the Kings Colledge of Physitians in the Citty of London att all tymes hereafter and from tyme to tyme in any of our Courts of Record according to the due course of Lawe sue for recover levy and take execution of and for the said Fynes Amerciaments Penalties and Forfeitures and every or any part thereof or otherwise levy or obtaine the same and every part thereof Except the said penalties and forfeitures of Tenn pounds and five pounds per Mensem by Imprisonment of the Bodies or distresse and sale of the Goods of the persons offending as aforesaid in manner and forme aforesaid AND FURTHER Wée will and hereby doe order and direct that all and every summe and summes of money had made accrewing or ariseing by or out of the same Fynes Forfeitures Penalties and Amerciaments any or all of them other then the said forfeitures of Tenn pounds per Mensem and five pounds per Mensem the just and reasonable charges and
Nemo in dicta Civitate c. Also the makers of the Act put a distinction betwixt those who shall be licensed to practise Physick within London c. for they ought to have the admittance and allowance of the President and College in writing under their Common Seal but he who shall be allowed to practise Physick throughout England out of London ought to be examined and admitted by the President and 3 of the Elects and so they said that it was lately adjudged in the Kings Bench in an Information exhibited against the said Doctor Bonham for practising of Physick within London for divers months As to the Third point they said That for his contempt and disobedience before them in their College they might commit him to Prison for they have authority by the Letters Patents and Act of Parliament And therefore for his contempt and misdemeanor before them they may commit him Also the Act of 1 Mariae hath given them power to commit them for every offence or disobedience contrary to any Article or Clause contained in the said Grant or Act. But there is an express Negative Article in the said Grant and ratified by the Act of 14 H. 8. Quod nemo in dicta Civitate c. exerceat c. And the Defendants have pleaded that the Plaintiff hath practised Physick within London by the space of one month c. And therefore the Act of 1 Mariae hath authorised them for to imprison him in this case for which cause they did conclude for the Defendants against the Plaintiff But it was argued by Coke Chief Iustice Warburton and Daniel Iustices of the Common Pleas to the contrary And Daniel conceived that a Doctor of Physick of the one Vniversity or the other c. was not within the body of the Act and if he was within the body of the Act that he was excepted by the said latter clause But Warburton argued against him for both the points and the Chief Iustice did not speak to these 2 points because that he and Warburton and Daniel did agrée that this action was clearly maintainable for two other points But to the 2 other points he and the said 2 other Iustices Warburton and Daniel did speak scil 1. Whether the Censors have power for the Causes alledged in their Barr to fine and imprison the Plaintiff 2. Admitting that they have power to doe it if they have pursued their power But the chief Iustice before he argued the points in Law because that much was said in the commendations of the Doctors of Physick of the said College within London and somewhat as he conceived in derogation of the dignity of the Doctors of the Vniversities he first attributed much to the Doctors of the said College within London and did confess that nothing was spoken which was not due to their merits but yet that no comparison was to be made between that private College and any of the Vniversities of Cambridge and Oxford no more than between the Father and his Children or betwéen the Fountain and the small Rivers which descend from thence The Vniversity is Alma mater from whose breasts those of that private College have sucked all their science and knowledge which I acknowledge to be great and profound but the Law saith Erubescit lex Filios castigare Parentes The Vniversity is the fountain and that and the like private Colleges are tanquam rivuli which flow from the fountain melius est petere fontes quàm sectari rivulos Briefly Academiae Cantabrigiae Oxoniae sunt Athenae nostrae nobilissimae regni soles oculi animae regni unde Religio humanitas doctrina in omnes regni partes uberrimè diffunduntur But it is true Nunquam sufficiet copia laudatoris quia nunquam deficiet materia laudis and therefore these Vniversities excéed and excell all private Colleges tanquam inter viburna cupressus And it was observed that King Henry the 8. his said Letters Patents and the King and the Parliament in the Act of 14 H. 8. in making of a Law concerning Physicians for the more safety and health of men therein have followed the order of a good Physician Rex enim omnes artes censetur habere in scrinio pectoris sui For Medicina est duplex removens promovens removens morbum promovens ad salutem And therefore 5 manner of persons who more hurt the body of men than the disease it self are to be removed 1. Improbi 2. Avari qui medicinam magis avaritiae suae causâ quàm ullius bonae conscientiae fiduciâ profitentur 3. Malitiosi 4. Temerarii 5. Inscii and of the other part 5 manner of persons were to be promoted as appeareth by the said Act scil those that were 1. profound 2. sad 3. discreet 4. groundedly learned 5. profoundly studied And it was well ordained That the professors of Physick should be profound sad discreet c. and not youths who have no gravity and experience for as one saith In Juvene Theologo conscientiae detrimentum in juvene Legista bursae decrementum in juvene Medico coemeterii incrementum And it ought to be presumed every Doctor of any of the Vniversities to be within the Statute sc to be profound sad discreet groundedly learned and profoundly studied for none can there be Master of Arts who is a Doctor of Philosophy under the study of 7 years and cannot be Doctor of Physick under 7 years more in the study of Physick and that is the cause that the Plaintiff is named in the Declaration Doctor of Philosophy and Doctor of Physick quia oportet Medicum esse Philosophum ubi enim Philosophus desinit incipit Medicus As to the 2 points upon which the Chief Iustice Warburton and Daniel gave judgment 1. It was resolved by them That the said Censors have not the power to commit the plaintiff for any of the causes mentioned in the Barr and the cause and reason thereof shortly was That the said clause which giveth power to the said Censors to fine and imprison doth not extend to the said clause sc Quòd nemo in dicta Civitate c. exerceat dictam facultatem c. Which prohibiteth every one to practise Physick within London c. without licence of the President and College but extendeth onely to punish those who practise Physick within London pro delictis suis in non bene exequendo faciendo utendo facultate medicinae by fine and imprisonment So that the Censors have not power by the Letters Patents and the Act to fine and imprison any for practising of Physick within London but onely pro delictis suis in non bene exequendo c. for ill and not good use and practice of Physick And that was made manifest by 5 Reasons called vividae rationes because they had their vigour and life from the Letters Patents and the Act it self And the best Expositor of all Letters Patents and Acts of Parliament are the
of Physick in London but by forfeiture of 5 li. by the month which is to be recovered by the Law 2. If any practise Physick there for a less time than a month that he shall forfeit nothing 3. If any person prohibited by the Statute offend in non bene exequendo c. they may punish him according to the Statute within the month 4. Those who may commit to prison by the Statute ought to commit presently 5. The fines which they set according to the Statute belong to the King 6. They cannot impose a fine or imprison without a Record of it 7. The cause for which they impose fine and imprisonment ought to becertain for the same is traversable For although they have the Letters Patents and an Act of Parliament yet because the party grieved hath not other remedy neither by Writ of Error or otherwise and they are not made Iudges nor a Court given to them but have an authority onely so to doe the cause of their commitment is traversable in an action of false imprisonment brought against them as upon the Statute of Bankrupts their Warrant is under the great Seal and by Act of Parliament yet because the party grieved hath no other remedy if the Commissioners do not pursue the Act and their Commission he shall traverse That he was not a Bankrupt although the Commissioners affirm him to be one as this Term it was resolved in this Court in Trespass betwéen Cutt and Delabarre where the issue was Whether William Piercy was bankrupt or not who was found by the Commissioners to be a bankrupt à fortiori in the Case at Bar the cause of the imprisonment is traversable for otherwise the party grieved may be perpetually without just cause imprisoned by them But the Record of a force made by one Iustice of Peace is not traversable because he doth the same as Iudge by the Statutes of 15 R. 2. and 8 H. 6. and so there is a difference when one maketh a Record as a Iudge and when he doth a thing by a special authority as they did in the Case at Bar and not as a Iudge And afterwards for the said two last points Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff nullo contradicente And I acquainted Sir Thomas Fleming Chief Iustice of the Kings Bench with this Iudgment and with the reasons and causes thereof who approved of the Iudgment which we had given And the same is the first judgment upon the said Branch concerning fine and imprisonment which hath béen given since the making of the said Charter and Acts of Parliament and therefore I thought it worthy to be reported and published Dr. Bonham's Case as reported by Brownlow and Goldesborough Trinity 7 Jac. 1609. in the Common Bench. THomas Bonham brought an Action of false imprisonment against Dr. Atkins and divers other Doctors of Physick The Defendants justified that King H. 8. Anno Decimo of his Reign founded a College of Physicians and pleaded the Letters Patents of the Corporation And that they have authority by that to chuse a President c. as by the Letters Patents c. and then plead the Statute of 32 H. 8. Cap. 40. And that the said Doctor Atkins was chosen President according to the said Act and Letters Patents And by the said Act and Letters Patents it is provided That none shall Practise in the City of London or the Suburbs of it or within seven miles of the said City or exercise the faculty of Physick if he be not thereto admitted by the Letters of the President and College sealed with their Common Seal under the penalty of a hundred shillings for every month that he not being admitted shall exercise the said faculty Further we will and grant for us and our Successors to the President and College of the Society for the time being and their Successors for ever that they may chuse four every year that shall have the overseeing and searching corecting and governing of all in the said City being Physicians using the faculty of Medicine in the said City and of other Physicians abroad whatsoever the faculty of Physicking by any means frequenting and using within the said City or Suburbs thereof or within seven miles in compass of the said City and of punishing them for their offences in not well executing making and using it And that the punishing of those Physicians using the said faculty so in the Premisses offending by fines amerciaments imprisonments of their bodies and by other reasonable and fitting ways shall be executed Note the Preamble of these Letters Patents is Quòd cùm regii officii nostri munus arbitremur ditionis nostrae hominum foelicitati omni ratione consulere Id autem vel imprimis fore si improborum conaminibus tempestivè occurramus apprimè necessarium fore duximus improborum quoque hominum qui medicinam magis avaritiae suae causâ quàm ullius bonae conscientiae fiduciâ profitebuntur unde rudi credulae plebi plurima incommoda oriuntur audaciam compescere And that the Plaintiff practised in London without admission of the College and being summoned to appear at the College and examined if he would give satisfaction to the College according to the said Letters Patents and Statute he answered that he had received his Degrée to be Doctor of Physick by the Vniversity of Cambridge and was allowed by the Vniversity to practise and confest that he had practised within the said City and as he conceived it was lawfull for him to practise there That upon that the said President and Commonalty fined him to a hundred shillings and for not paying of that and his other contempt committed him to Prison To which the Plaintiff replyed as aforesaid and upon this demurrer was joyned And Harris for the Defendants saith That this hath béen at another time adjudged in the King's bench where the said College imposed a fine of five pound upon a Doctor of Physick which practised in London without their admission and for the non-payment of it brought an action of debt and adjudged that it lay well and that the Statute of 32 H. 8. extends as well to Graduates as to others for it is general and Graduates are not excepted in the Statute nor in the Letters Patents and all the mischiefs intended to be redressed by this are not expressed in that and the Statute shall not be intended to punish Impostors onely but all other which practise without examination and admittance For two things are necessary to Physicians that is learning and experience and upon that there is a Proverb Experto crede Roberto And the Statute intends that none shall practise here but those which are most learned and expert more than ordinary And for that the Statute provides that none shall practise here without allowance and examination by the Bishop of London and the Dean of Pauls and four learned Doctors But in other places the examination is referred onely to the Bishop
before them said that he would not be ruled nor directed by them being such grave and learned men And for that he hath practised against the Statute he was worthily punished and committed for it should be a vain Law if it did not provide punishment for them that offend against it And Bracton saith Nihil est habere Leges si non sit unus qui potest Leges tueri and for this here are four grave and discréet men to defend and maintain the Law and to punish all Offenders against it according to the Statute by imprisonment of their bodies and other reasonable ways and the said four men have the search as well of those men as of other Medicines And the Statute of 1 Mary provides that the Kéepers of Prisons shall receive all which are committed by the said four learned and grave men And though there be great care committed to them by the said Statute and the said Letters Patents yet there is a greater trust reposed in them than this for we commit to them our lives when we receive Physick of them and that not without cause for they are men of gravity learning and discretion and for that they have power to make Laws which is the office of the Parliament for those which are so learned may be trusted with any thing and for the better making of these they have power to assemble all the Commons of their Corporation and the King allows of that by his Letters Patents for it is made by a congregation of wise learned and discréet men and the Statute of 1 Mary inflicts punishment upon contempts and not for any other offences And they hold a Court and so may commit as every other Court may for a contempt of Common Right without Act of Parliament or Information or other legal form of Procéeding thereupon as it appears by 7 H. 6. for a contempt committed in a Léet the Steward committed the offender to Prison and it was absurd to conceive that the Statute will allow of Commitment without cause And it is a marvellous thing that when good Laws shall be made for our health and wealth also yet we will so pinch upon them that we will not be tryed by men of experience practice and learning but by the Vniversity where a man may have his Degrée by grace without merit And so for these reasons he concluded that this action is not maintainable Coke Chief Iustice said That the Cause which was pleaded why the Plaintiff was committed was for that he had exercised Physick within the City of London by the space of a month and did not very fitly answer for which it was ordained by the Censors that he should pay a hundred shillings and that he should forbear his practice and that he did not forbear and then being warned of that and upon that being summoned to appear did not appear and for that it was ordained that he should be arrested and that after he was summoned again and then he appeared and denied to pay the hundred shillings and said that he would practise for he was a Doctor of Cambridge and upon that it was ordained that he should be committed till he should be delivered by the Doctors of the College and upon this was the Demurrer joyned And in pleading the Plaintiff said that he was a Doctor of Philosophy and Physick upon which the Lord Chief Iustice took occasion to remember a saying of Galen that is Ubi Philosophia desinit ibi Medicina incipit and he said the onely question of this Case depends not upon the payment of the said hundred shillings but upon the words of the Letters Patents of the King and the said two Statutes the words of which are Concessimus eidem Praesidenti c. Quòd nemo in dicta Civitate aut per septem milliaria in circuitu ejusdem exerceat dictam facultatem nisi ad hoc per dictum Praesidentem communitatem seu Successores eorum qui pro tempore fuerint admissus sit per ejusdem Praesidentis Collegii literas sigillo suo communi sigillatas sub poena centum solidorum pro quolibet mense quo non admissus eandem facultatem exercuerit dimidium inde nobis haeredibus nostris dimidium dicto Praesidenti Collegio applicandum Et praeterea volumus concedimus pro nobis c. Quòd per Praesidentem Collegii communitatem pro tempore existentes eorum Successores in perpetuum quatuor singulis annis per ipsos eligantur qui habeant supervisum scrutinium correctionem gubernationem omnium singulorum dictae Civitatis Medicorum utentium facultate Medicinae in eadem Civitate ac aliorum Medicorum forinsecorum quorumcunque facultatem illam Medicinae aliquo modo frequentantium utentium infra eandem Civitatem Suburbia ejusdem sive septem milliaria in circuitu ejusdem Civitatis ac punitionem eorundem pro delictis suis in non bene exequendo faciendo utendo illa nec non supervisum scrutinium omnium medicinarum earum receptionum per praedictos Medicos sive aliquem eorum hujusmodi ligeis nostris pro eorum infirmitatibus curandis sanandis dand ' imponend ' utend ' quoties quando opus fuerit pro commodo utilitate eorundem ligeorum nostrorum Ita quod punitio hujusmodi medicorum utentium dictâ facultate medicinae sic in praemissis delinquentium per Fines Amerciamenta Imprisonamenta corporum suorum per alias vias rationabiles congruas exequatur as it appears in Rastal Physicians 8018. 392. So that there are two distinct Clauses The first if any exercise the said faculty by the space of a month without admission by the President c. he shall forfeit a hundred shillings for every month be that good or ill it is not material the time is here onely material for if he exercise it for such a time he shall forfeit as aforesaid The second Clause is that the President c. shall have Scrutinium Medicorum c. punitionem eorum pro delictis suis in non bene faciendo utendo exequendo c. And for that the President and the College may commit any delinquent to Prison And this he concluded upon the words of the Statute and he agreed with Walmesly that the King hath had extraordinary care of the health of his Subjects Et Rex censetur habere omnes Artes in scrinio Pectoris and he hath here pursued the course of the best Physicians that is Removens promovens removens improbos illos qui nullius bonae conscientiae fiduciâ profitebuntur audaces promovens ad sanitatem And for that the Physician ought to be profound grave discréet grounded in learning and soundly studied and from him cometh the Medicine which is removens promovens And it is an old Rule that a man ought to take care that he do not commit his Soul to a
young Divine his body to a young Physician and his goods or other estate to a young Lawyer for In Juvene Theologo est Conscientiae detrimentum in Juvene Legislatore bursi decrementum in Juvene Medico Coemeterii incrementum for in these cannot be the privity discretion and profound learning which is in the aged And he denied that the College of Physicians is to be compared to the Vniversity for it is subordinate to that Cantabrigia est Academia nostra nobilissima totius Regni oculus sol ubi humanitas doctrina simul sluunt But he said when he names Cambridge he doth not exclude Oxford but placeth them in equal rank But he would always name Cambridge first for that was his mother And he saith that there is not any time pro non bene faciendo utendo exequendo for this non suscipit magis minus for so a man may grievously offend in one day and therefore in such a Case his punishment shall be by Fines Amerciaments Imprisonments of their Bodies and other ways c. But if they practise well though it be an offence against the Letters Patents and the Statute yet the punishment shall be but pecuniary and he shall not be imprisoned for if he offend the body of a man it is reason that his body shall be punished for Eodem modo quo quis delinquit eodem punietur but if a grave and learned Doctor or other come and practise well in London by the space of thrée wéeks and then departs he is not punishable by the said College though it be without admission for peradventure such a one is better acquainted with the nature and disposition of my body and for that more fit to cure any Malady in that than another which is admitted by the College and he said that it was absurd to punish such a one for he may practise in such manner in despite of the College for all the Lords and Nobles of the Realm which have their private Physicians which have acquaintance with their bodies repair to this City and to exclude those of using their advice were a hard and absurd exposition for the old verse is Corporis auxilium Medico committe sodali And also he said that the said President and College cannot commit any Physician which exerciseth the said faculty without admission for the space of a Month nor bring their Action before themselves nor levy that by any other way or means But ought to have their action or exhibite an Information upon the Statute as it appears by the Book of Entries for they ought to pursue their power which is given to them by the Statute for otherwise the penalty being given the one Moiety to them and the other to the King they shall be Iudges in propria causa and shall be Summoners Sheriffs Iudges and parties also which is absurd For if the King grant to one by his Letters Patents under the great Seal that he may hold Plea although he be a party and if the King doth not appoint another Iudge than the Grantée which is Party the Grant is void though it be confirmed by Parliament as it appears by 8 H. 6. 44 Ed. 3. The Abbot of Reading's Case for it is said by Herle in 8 Ed. 3. 30. Tregor's Case that if any Statutes are made against Law and Right they are null and so are these which make any man Iudge in his own Cause and so in 27 H. 6. Fitz. Annuity 41. that the Statute of Carlisle will that the Order of Cistertians and Augustines which have Covent and Common Seal that the Common Seal shall be in kéeping of the Prior which is under the Abbot and four others which are the most Sages of the house and that any Déed sealed with the Common Seal which is not so in kéeping shall be void and the opinion of the Court was that this is a void Statute for it is impertinent to be observed seeing when the Seal is in their kéeping the Abbot cannot Seal any thing with it and when it is in the hands of the Abbot it is out of their kéeping ipso facto And if the Statute shall be observed every Common seal shall be defeated by one simple surmise which cannot be tried and for that the Statute was adjudged void and repugnant And so the Statute of Gloucester which gives Cessavit after the Cesser by two years to be brought by the Lessor himself was a good and equitable Statute But the Statute of Westminster 2. Chap. 3. which gives Cessavit to the Heir for Cesser in time of his Ancestor was judged an unreasonable Statute in 33 Ed. 3. for that the Heir cannot have the Arrearages due in the time of his father according to the Statute of Gloucester and for that it shall be void And also the Physicians of the College could not punish any by Fine and also by Imprisonment for no man ought to be twice punished for one offence And the Statute of 1 Mariae doth not give any power to them to commit for any offence which was no offence within the first Statutes and therefore he ought not to be committed by the said Statute of 1 Mariae But admitting that they may commit yet they have mistaken it for they demand the whole hundred shillings and one half of that belongs to the King And also they ought to commit him forthwith as well as Auditors which have authority by Parliament to commit him that is found in Arrearages But if they do not commit him forthwith they cannot commit him afterward as it appears by 27 H. 6. 9. So two Iustices of the Peace may view a force and make a Record of it and commit the offenders to Prison but this ought to be in flagranti Oriente And if he do not commit those immediately upon the View he cannot commit them afterwards And the Physicians have no Court but if they have yet they ought to make a Record of their commitment for so was every Court of Iustice to doe But they have not made any Record of it And Auditors and Iustices of Peace ought to make Records as it appears by the Book of Entries So that admitting that they may commit yet they ought to doe it forthwith But in this case they cannot commit till the party shall be delivered by them for this is against Law and Iustice and no Subject may do it but till he be delivered by due course of Law for the Commitment is not absolute but the cause of it is traversable and for that ought to Iustify for special cause For if the Bishop returns that he refuses a Clerk for that he is Schismaticus inveteratus this is not good but he ought to return the particular matter so that the Court may adjudge of that Though it be a matter of Divinity and out of their science yet they by conference may be informed of it and so of Physick And they cannot make any new Laws
those that belong to the practice of Physick See Entries fol. 463. Pl. 3. Action was brought against one for practising of Medicines and for that cause it was necessary to shew what practice this was scil tam per visus c. quàm interiores potiones And there is another action there where one that practised as Surgeon practised ut Medicus that where the Plaintiff suit aegrotus of the Colick the Defendant ut medicus sed indoctus cupidus lucri saith to the Plaintiff that he was troubled with thrée Imposthumations and administred to him medicinam insalubrem intoxicatam whereby the Plaintiff was in danger of his life And in the same book fol. 463. Pl. 1. it is shewn what a Surgeon ought to do Entries fol. 127. and an appeal of Mayhem 46. Pl. 5. Register trespass fol. 139. The Statute 32 H. 8. was apparent that the Iudgment of the Parliament was that Surgery was a member of Physick And he said there were 2 kinds of Surgeons Barber-Surgeons who were incorporated 1 E. 4. and Surgeons onely He agréed that the Statute against the words may be construed by equity as Stradling and Morgan's case but to whom shall this equity extend Posito that it extends to Surgeons yet it never extended to Empiricks Equity against the letter ought to be grounded upon the intention 30 E. 3. 6. 1 H. 6. 3. The Statute of Marlebridge there are negative words as here that no person shall drive a distress out of the County c. vide the Case But posito that a stranger shall distrain c. the equity shall not extend to him So in our Case although a Surgeon be tolerated yet a Stranger shall not invade the liberty of Physicians 2. The Statute of 34 H. 8. doth not restrain that which is within 14 H. 8. but meddles with the mischief mentioned in 32 H. 8. And it appeareth that the intention of 34 H. 8. was not to raise a new profession but to tolerate the old For the Statute is where many give Medicines without money scil for Charity and neighbourhood And the purview is general that such c. But the difference is if any will within his own house or to his friend give Medicines it is not within the Statute But if he make profession and set up a Bill that he can cure such and such diseases it is otherwise Pl. Com. 463. And if the question had béen put to the makers of the Statute whether they would raise a new profession it would have béen denied to be their intention 8 Rep. fol. 129. Exercise of brewing is not every brewing for his own house alone c. but profession thereof And 11 Rep. fol. 23. So here But posito that every one may exercise within 34 H. 8. yet it is not a Repeal of 14 H. 8. but as it were a licence or dispensation therewith c. And if it were yet 1 Mariae repeals all 34 H. 8. that any way impeaches 14 H. 8. If it was made to such purpose at first this Act 1 Mariae takes notice of 14 H. 8. and provides that staret continuaret c. Any Act Statute c. to the contrary And what Statute can be to the contrary but the Statute 34 H. 8 As to the Objection that there wants staret and is onely continuaret insomuch that cannot be of any force it shall be as if it were absent and then continuaret is not only a confirmation but is to remove the impediment which is the Statute 34 H. 8. as it was before And although that this Statute of 1 Mariae is a private Statute yet the substance being pleaded is sufficient But the plea in barr is ill this is Iustification by virtue of a Statute Law the Statute gives the Iustification in this manner that he c. justifie generally The application of Plasters and giving of Potions to Sores Agues Stone Strangury c. talibus morbis and doth not say secundum formam Statuti and therefore shall not be construed pro reddendo singula singulis 15 H. 7. 10. where the construction is made reddendo singula singulis c. This form of pleading is also a new form quoad those c. he justifies and he doth not say this is the same practice whereof the Plaintiff declares And so to force the Plaintiff to a replication when the thing is intire as here that he had exercised facultatem medicinae he cannot sever his plea and justifie these Et quoad alia c. plead Not guilty But he ought to plead as it is said before or traverse absque hoc c. 2. The Plea in Barr consists of 2 points one is a Iustification the other is a Travers Et he shall not have the Iustification si hoc parat est verificare 22 H. 6. 6. There without Travers it is good according to Dyer 167. But when the justification tends to all it is not so 27 H. 6. 10. and it cannot be amended nor no repleader now after demurrer Then let the Replication be as it will when the Barr is ill and the declaration good this should not be answered Vide Dr. Bonham's Case Francis Case and Turner's Case c. Mich. 6 Caroli primi Communi Banco The Iudges in this case gave their Resolution RIchardson Chief Iustice for himself and for the other Iudges said That he would recite the principal points of the Case which be The Plaintiffs declare that the Charter made to the College did inhibit That none shall practise Physick c. without licence c. and that the Defendant contrary thereto had practised by the space of 12 months for which he had forfeited 5 li. for every month which amounts to 60 li. The Defendant pleads the Statute 34 H. 8. that made it lawfull for any skilfull c. to administer outward Plasters c. or Potions c. and as to any other practice he pleaded Non culpabilis The Plaintiffs reply and shew the Statute of 1 Mariae which confirms their first Charter Any Act to the contrary notwithstanding Vpon which the Defendant demurred in Law and our Ioint Resolution is that the Plaintiffs shall recover It hath béen objected against the Iurisdiction of this Court that by the Statute of 21 Jac. this action ought not to be brought here But it is clear that it cannot be brought in any other place than in the Kings Courts of Record at Westminster For the Statute doth not mention in what Court it shall be brought and the Statute 21 Jac. which giveth power to Iustices doth not give any other thing to them but that whereof they have Power and Iurisdiction before and before this they had not any Iurisdiction of this Cause Ergo. Another Objection hath béen made that the Action hath not béen well brought because it ought to be brought in the name of the President onely To which I answer that the Charter it self is that they may
remove presentments upon which process may be awarded in this Court The Reason why 't is not sufficient to plead the Tenor of Letters Patents or to shew or produce to the Court the Tenor of Letters Patents as in Pages case is resolved is because the Letters Patents are the private conveyance of a particular person and therefore he must plead and shew forth and produce to the Court the Letters Patents themselves and the Tenor thereof was not sufficient at the Common Law But upon nul tiel Record pleaded a Certificate of the Tenor onely and not of the Record it self hath always béen held a sufficient proof of that issue and the Tenor certified is to be filed in this Court and to remain here always to this purpose onely viz. as a proof of this issue but the Record it self remains where it was before to be made use of for any purposes that may happen hereafter The rest of the Iudges were of the same opinion and so Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff De Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno 28 Car. secundi 1676. Banco Regis The King and the President and College of Physicians Plaintiffs against Marchamont Needham Defendant THe President and the College qui tam c. brought an action of debt upon the Statute of 14 H. 8. cap. 5. for so much money against the Defendant for practising Physick for so many months without licence of the College whereby he was to forfeit 5 li. per month one moiety thereof to the King and the other moiety to the President and College The Defendant pleaded as to part of the money in the Declaration mentioned nul tiel Record as the said Act of Parliament and as to the Residue of the money the Defendant pleaded nil debet The Plaintiffs demurred to the Barr. The cause of the demurrer was for that the Defendant's plea was double viz. it contained two matters one whereof alone would go in answer to the whole money in the Declaration mentioned and would of it self be a good and full Barr to the Plaintiffs Action in case the said matter be true as the Defendant alledgeth and that is the matter of nul tiel Record and therefore the pleading of nul tiel Record to part onely and the pleading of other matter viz. nil debet to the residue makes the Defendant's plea in Barr to be vicious and to be an ill plea in Law The Councel for the Defendant did then object that the Plaintiffs Declaration is naught 't is an action of debt brought by the President and College qui tam c. upon the Statute and an action of debt doth not lie the Plaintiffs should have brought an information upon the Statute and not an Action of debt upon the Statute for the Statute doth not give an action of debt and therefore an action of debt doth not lie Twisden Iustice answered that an action of debt doth lie by equity and construction of the Statute Jones Iustice said that in the Statute of Tithes in 3 Ed. 6. no action of debt is mentioned and yet an action of debt lies upon that Statute and so here Thereupon Rule was given by the Court that Iudgment should be entred for the Plaintiffs In Mich. Term. Anno Car. secundi xxvi THe College brought their Action against John Bourne to which he pleaded nil debet and upon tryal of the Cause at Guild-Hall before Iudge Twisden the Plaintiffs recovered 40 li. Trin. xxxv Car. secundi THe President and College c. brought an Action of Debt upon the Statute of the 14 of H. 8. against Frederick Harder for practising Physick and thereupon had a Verdict against him at Westm for 25 li. which he paid and the Costs that were taxed The same Term they had a Verdict against Nathaniel Merry for 40 li. and against Richard Stone for 45 li. College Questions resolved by the Lord Chancellor and Judges in the fifth of King James his Reign An. Dom. 1607. THe King 's most Excellent Majesty having directed his Letters to the Right honourable Thomas Lord Ellesmere Lord Chancellor of England and to Sir John Popham Knight Lord Chief Iustice of England and one of his Highness's most honourable Privy Council They the said Lord Chancellor and Lord Chief Iustice by virtue of the same Letters called unto them Sr. Thomas Fleminge Knight then Lord Chief Baron of his Majestie 's Court of Exchequer Sir Thomas Walmesley and Sr. Peter Warburton Knights two of his Majestie 's Iustices of the Court of Common Pleas and Sir David Williams and Sir Laurence Tanfield Knights two of his Majesties Iustices of the King's Bench and after due consideration had both of the Charter of King H. 8. made unto the said President and College of Physicians in the tenth year of his Raign and several Acts of Parliament thereof made one in the 14 year of the same King and the other in the first year of Q. Mary for the ordering and governing of the said College and of all the Practisers in London and 7 Miles compass did on the first of May 1607. at the house of the said Lord Chancellor called York house resolve the several questions hereafter mentioned as is expressed under every Question Tho. Harries These Questions were resolved as is expressed under every question by the right honorable the Lord Chancellor of England Lord Chief Iustice of England the Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer Iustice Walmesley Iustice Warburton Iustice Williams and Iustice Tanfield being assembled by the King's Majestie 's appointment to examine view and consider of the Charters Statutes and Laws made for the government of the College of Physicians in London and the Practisers of Physick there the first day of May 1607. at the house of the Lord Chancellor Quest 1. Whether Graduates of Oxford and Cambridge may practise in London or 7 miles compass of the same without licence under the said College Seal by virtue of the clause in the end of the Statute of 14 H. 8. and whether that clause hath not relation to the Statute of 3 H. 8. onely or how far it doth extend Resp All resolved that no Graduate that is not admitted and licensed by the President and College of Physicians under their Common Seal could practise in London or within 7 miles compass of the same Quest 2. Whether by Graduates Graduates in Physick onely are to be understood Resp They resolved That the exception in the Statute of 14 H. 8. cap. of Graduates in the two Vniversities is to be understood onely of Graduates of Physick and of no others And all resolved That by that exception those Graduates may practise in all other places of England out of London and 7 miles of the same without examination But not in London nor within the said Circuit of 7 miles Quest 3. If Graduates not admitted to practise in London practise there whether for evil practice or misdemeanour therein they be not subject to the Correction and government
was with her no body but he did prescribe any thing unto her are greatly suspected if not to have procured yet to have much hasten'd her end Of this no man can better speak than three of your owne College Dr. Gifford Dr. Fox and Dr. Poe who came unto her when she left the other and took great pains with her Likewise at her death and some days before Mr. Abraham Allen the King's Surgeon did attend her My request is that you will heare what they will say and accordingly call the said Mr. Talbott afore you and if you doe find that either by presumption in him or unskilfulnesse for from any malice I do absolutely discharge him that noble Lady's end were procured or hastned you will take such course in censuring and punishing of him that the respect due unto a person of her estate departed as she is may be observed and that his example may be a warning to others to proceed with conscience and discretion when they take the charge of the life of any upon them I have lost a most beloved and kind Kinswoman in the flower of her age and therefore do greatly desire a true accompt of the reason of her death And so I commit you to the protection of the Almighty At Baynard's Castle the 2d of August 1612. Your very loving friend R. Lisle In the 12th year of King James his Reign some of the Members of the College being required to find Arms the College appointed two of their Fellows viz. Sir William Paddy and Dr. Lister to solicite their cause with the Recorder of London the Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen in the behalf of the Fellows Candidates and Licentiates for immunity from the charge of service for Men or Armour Whereupon Sir William Paddy accompanied with Dr. Lister before Sir Tho. Middleton Knight then Lord Mayor and a full Court of Aldermen upon the fourth of October 1614. after a short preamble made that is to say that the Fellows of the College of Physicians of London became Suiters unto the Lord Mayor and that honourable Court that it would please them to take into their considerations the privileges granted unto the College by Acts of Parliament whereby they were as heretofore they have been exempted from the charge of service proceeded to the Reasons following First applying his speech to Sir Henry Montague Recorder for the City he desired him that he would indifferently peruse the words in the preamble of the Act of Parliament recited thus In consideration c. Herein may it please this honourable Court not onely all Articles Graunts and other things contained in the Letters Patents but also for enlargement of further Articles for the said College are to be interpreted available to the said College in as large and ample manner as may be taken thought and construed by the same 14 Hen. 8. Then may it please you to observe that in the 32d of H. 8. they and every of them of the said Body Corporate or Fellowship and their Successours shall at all time and times after the making of the said Act be discharged to keep any Watch or Ward in the said City of London or the suburbs of the same And here the said Sir William requested them to note the word any which in true weight of construction was to be extended as if that Clause had been in more words expressed Then he farther urged that for the Chirurgeons where in the first entrance of the Act it was thought expedient by the wisedom of the Land to provide for men expert in the Science of Physick and Chirurgery And therefore when it followeth that in this Act of Parliament the Chirurgeons by express word are exempt from the bearing of Armour it may truly inferr that Physicians are exempted as before from any Watch or Ward as also Physicians here recited in the preamble should receive a greater or at least the same immunity especially since Physicians are by their Science Chirurgeons without further examination and approbation to be had from the Bishop of London whereunto mere Chirurgeons are subject Then a grave and reverend Knight an Alderman of the Bench replyed That he took the words in the Act of Parliament for the Chirurgeons viz. bearing of Arms were to free their persons and not to exempt them from the charge of the service Whereunto Sir William Paddy answered under his favour and the Judgment of the Bench and Mr. Recorder that the difference between bearing and wearing of Armour was such that the very Etymon of the word bearing as in many other cases comprehended both and therefore should give immunity from both And therewithall Sir William Paddy added this Reason that by the wisedom of the Land it must needs be intended Physicians of the College should be exempted from this and other like services for that in the time of all outward War or domestick they or some of them do attend the Armies in person whereof he there exhibited a Catalogue of divers he had from the Register And now may it please you my Lord Mayor and this honourable Court we address our selves onely to you under whose government we are seated and with love we seek from you favourable construction for just relief which as in your worth you have always afforded to all so do we assure our selves you will dispense unto us who live best by your love and will ever be ready to do you service Then Mr. Recorder perusing every branch of the Statutes recited and the reasons urged and opening every part thereof at large did gravely and judicially conclude that the Acts of Parliament did surely intend to give to the College as much immunity as in any sort to the Chirurgeons Whereupon the Court desired to have a true Catalogue of the Fellows Candidates and Licentiates of the College in number then forty and one which Sir William Paddy and Dr. Lister from the Register did immediately deliver up unto them Which Catalogue the Court then upon this reason required lest others not of the College should delude them and so claim privilege Hereupon was ordered a dispensation for the College from bearing of Arms and immediately after a Precept was awarded by the Lord Mayor and Court to commit all other Physicians or Chirurgeons refusing to bear or find Arms who were not by the College allowed or Chirurgeons licensed according to form In the 13th the following Letter was sent to the President of the College concerning the death of the Lady Arabella To my very loving Friend the President of the College of Physicians in the City of London AFter my heartie commendations Whereas the Lady A●●bella is lately deceased in the Tower and that it is his Majestie 's pleasure according to former custome upon like occasions when persons of great quality do dye in that place her body should be viewed by persons of skill and trust and thereupon Certificate to be made of what disease she dyed as to their Judgment it
granted him from the Arch-bishop of Canterbury and confirmed by the King However he was committed to Newgate ob pessimam praxin Mr. Fitz-Williams attesting that Mr. Bonner was killed by sleeping Pills of his Prescription A week after Mr. President proposed that the cause of Blank 's imprisonment by the Censors being by Blank questioned in the King's Bench should be exemplified and registred viz. How he was by sentence of that Court remanded unto his Prison from whence he came by virtue of a Writ of Habeas Corpus After this Mr. Emmery a Scrivener came to the College to pay the fine imposed upon Blank viz. 20 l. which was then received and a Warrant signed for his enlargement About a month after he again appeared upon summons where he was admonished upon pain of the severest punishment by the Laws to be inflicted upon such Delinquents as he was that he should not adventure any more to practise Physick it being an employment by him so little understood Yet 3 years after he was brought again before the President and Censors by the Messenger and being admonished to cease from practice having neither learning nor licence so to do he justified his practice by the Statute made in the 34 H. 8. c. 8. and appealed to the Law for his defence Wherefore it was resolved to put him in suit which accordingly was done George Butler being cited to appear before the President and Censors returned this answer That he was the King's servant and must attend his Majesty About 3 years after upon a fresh summons he appeared and confessed the giving of Physick to cleanse the body being such as made way for Surgery He shewed a Licence from his Grace of Canterbury which gave him liberty to practise Surgery and Physick so far as was necessary and convenient to that Art which Licence was confirmed under the great Seal About Easter following he gave 3 Pills to Mrs. Style for a sore Leg and stopping at the Stomach by which she died that night she took them To another woman he gave Pills under the pretence of a sore Leg between 7 and 9 of the Clock in the morning with which she grew sick and vomited with great extremity and died about 5 of the Clock in the evening being very well before and going up and down He left his Patent with the President and Censors they never requiring or desiring him upon which application was made to his Grace the Lord Arch-bishop to the Right Honourable the Lord Chancellor the Master of the Rolls and Attorney General that Butler's Letters Patents might be recalled which they consented to About 2 months after Butler appearing before the Censors was asked if he would stand to his former Licence for practice he answered he would ask his Councell Being then required to give over the practice of Physick he answered I mean so to do He knew not that his Licence was called in by the Lord Chancellor nor that a Vacat was set on it Mr. President charged him that he employed one to sell his Medicines which he denied but for a sore Leg or the like he confessed he gave somewhat inward But now understanding that it was unlawfull he promised to do so no more He said he was never told of my Lord of Canterbury's displeasure at his Licence In short he was interdicted all practice in Physick But not long after Butler came to the President and Censors being recommended to them by the Lord Chief Justice upon which the President asked him if he did profess Physick He said No. Being then asked do you give Physick he said No. Being charged with several proofs against him he denied them He confessed he was no Graduate nor of any University but said that he understood Latine and that he practised as a Surgeon Being then examined in Latine he denied to answer which was told him should be related to the Lord Chief Justice that sent him to the College He replied that he cared not three pence for their Information He confessed that he had caused Medicines to be made and that the Apothecaries took of him 100 l. per ann In his Surgery cures he owned that he gave Physick to kill the cause inwardly Being asked what the Pox was he answered an infection taken in nature afore action Upon this examination c. the President and Censors drew up the following Letter which they forthwith presented to the Lord Chief Justice MAy it please your Lordship to be informed That whereas according to your Lordship's command George Butler appeared to be examined of his sufficiency and knowledge in Physick and his practice therein before us the President and Censors of the College of Physicians First he acknowledged himself not to be learned Graduate or of any University neither indeed do we find him to have any learning by such speeches which he let fall from him in conference and as for examination in Latine and in Physick he refused to answere And for the point of practice amongst many particulars alledged against him he did acknowledge in generall that he doth give inward Physick if his Patients in Surgery doe need it and that the Apothecaryes doe take of him 100 l. a year for Medicines and drugs And being charged with 2 several practices the one on the person of Mrs. Style as doth appeare by the aforesaid Butler's confession in our Register for a sore Leg and a stopping in her Stomach when she had no sore Leg but under that pretence he gave her Pills of which she dyed according to the words of the Register the same day The which practice we the President and Censors do condemne for ill and unlawfull The other practice was upon the body of Margaret Shover now againe confessed by him who took upon him to cure her as he saith of the Pox but being by the Censors asked what disease the Pox is he did not give any reasonable answere such is his ignorance But her disease upon Register doth not appear to be soe although he gave her the Unction for the Pox and other purging Physick neither according to Science or Conscience Not long after he was complained of by a woman to whom he gave 25 Pills for which he expected 30 s. a piece To another he gave 4 Purges and had her petticoat in pawn He promised her help within 7 days or to give her 100 l. But after 9 days she was very ill and continued in great weakness Upon this and the like complaints the Censors fined him 10 l. and ordered his imprisonment for 14 days and that he should not be released but by the President 's order About 3 years after he was again complained of for giving Pills of Opium to a Woman by which she was stupified Being called he blew up a powder into her Nose promised her recovery but she died in one hours time The like evil practice he was guilty of upon two more For which the Censors order'd him to be arrested but
he petitioned that he might answer the College action without an arrest which was granted provided he would find Sureties to answer the College Suit if he were cast at Law Which being done and this Cause appointed to be heard at the King's Bench Bar 6 of the Fellows of the College were deputed to attend there and after this hearing Dr. Harvey the Treasurer and the 4 Censors were desired to take special care in the future management of the College's cause against Butler who had procured a protection from the Lord Chamberlain upon which account 4 of the Fellows were ordered by the President to wait upon his Lordship to take off his protection that the College might proceed in their Suit against him The Lord Chamberlain upon their application declared his readiness to comply with the College's request and ordered his Secretary to write the following reference against Butler The College of Physicians having represented that one George Butler under colour of being sworne an extraordinary Chirurgion to his Majestie doth take upon him to give Physick and practise Chirurgery without either skill or Licence to the apparent prejudice and endangering of the lives of his Majestie 's subjects and thereupon desired leave to take the ordinary course of Law to inhibite his practice and to prevent the danger which may ensue thereby I do hereby declare and publish unto all such as it may concerne that I have and do give free leave and liberty unto the said College to use all lawfull wayes and meanes accustomed in like cases either by arrest or otherwise for the suppressing and prohibiting of the said Butler's further practice in as free and ample manner as if the said Butler had never been sworne the King's servant Whitehall the 25th of November 1626. About 8 months after several fresh complaints of great mischief done by Butler in his practice were exhibited against him As particularly for giving a sleeping potion to one Patient who was sound dead in his sleep The wife of this man thus murthered applied her self to the Censors and desired that Mr. Butler might be punished for professing that which he did not understand which she pressed the more because she said such a man as he might kill many both Body and Soul every one being not so well prepared for death as her husband She desired a Certificate from the College concerning Mr. Butler and his ill practice After this Butler sent a Letter to the President and College which being read was rejected After this a servant of Butler's acquainted the Censors that while she dwelt with him a woman came to him for Cure who within 3 weeks died and was carried away secretly without tolling the Bell or any Minister being called Upon this information Butler endeavoured to imprison this servant using all arts to take her which occasioned her application to the College for their protection complaining of the many injuries she had received from Mr. Butler since her appearing against him Wherefore the President ordered the following Letter to be drawn up and presented to the Lord Chief Justice in her behalf MAy it please your Lordship to understand that the Petitioner on the 7th of Jan. last past came to our College voluntarily to complain of the evil practice of Mr. Butler as is in the petition specified since which time we are certainly informed that he hath laid heavy actions upon her and kept her in prison as is above specified We conceiving the chief grounds of his violent proceedings against her to have risen upon her complaint made to us In consideration of her misery We having noe power to relieve her doe presume humbly to intreat your Lordship to take such course as your Lordship in your wisdome shall think fit that she may obtain the benefit of her Petition After this Dr. Winston signified to the College that Butler sent a petition to him to be presented to the College which he refused Then Butler sent a Letter to the President after which it was agreed that if he paid in the money recovered and due to the College before the Term then the other Suits depending might be suspended if it pleased the President A Letter about this time in the behalf of Butler was brought from the Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas by Captain Butler directed to the President and Censors of the College the Contents of which are the following Mr. Doctor Argent I Am informed of a Judgment which is obtained against Mr. Butler at your Suit and the rest of the College of Physicians for 60 l. which I find him very willing and ready to satisfie so far forth as his ability will give leave for the present He will pay half the money in hand and the next some time the next Terme which I conceive is no ill payment his estate considered Therefore I desire you and the rest of your College to take him thus far into your consideration And what you do herein I shall take as done in respect of me who am intreated to write in his favour by some whom I am willing to satisfy in this request appearing to me to be but reasonable and little hurtfull to your selves But to animate him of any other against your Government I neither do nor ever will write Your very assured loving friend Ro. Heath Julii 1. 1633. Captain Butler promised that on Friday 36 l. of the money due from Butler should be paid and desired time till the next Term for the payment of the rest The College took time to consider for a few days and then promised him their answer Upon the Friday aforementioned according to promise Captain Butler brought 36 l. from Mr. Butler to whom by Mr. President 's appointment was given the following note It was ordered by Mr. President and Censors the 5th of July 1633. that Mr. George Butler having sent in 36 l. in part of Payment of the 66 l. due to the College by a judgment given against him in the King's Bench in Easter Term in the 7th year of his Majestie K. Charles 1. his Reign at the request of the Lord Chief justice of the Common Pleas should have time given him for the payment of the other 30 l. till the 20th of November next ensuing and in the mean time all prosecution upon the foresaid judgment should surcease Mrs. Bendwell was complained of by Thomas Audley for undertaking his cure in 3 days though in a Hectick Fever she telling him that she had cured those whom the Doctours had left and could not cure She gave him a Purging drink that wrought day and night and brought him to exceeding weakness He said that about the same time she gave his Laundress physick of whom she had Linen to pawn which she was warned to bring in Complaint was likewise made against her by a man and his wife who had bargain'd with her for a cure and had pawned a dozen of Napkins to raise money for her payment c. She
his hand and not by the drinks and liquours he gave This he understood by his mother who wished him having a scald head to stroke his head with his own hand whereby he was cured And therefore sometimes he used onely his hand sometimes he gave Wine whereinto he dipped his finger that the people might have somewhat to take but the virtue came from his hand Barton was censured to pay 20 l. and to remain a prisoner in Woodstreet Compter till released by the President where he continued till the 19th of October following never having all that time petitioned the College for his liberty And then by virtue of a Writ of Habeas Corpus which he had sued forth of the King's Bench he was carried with his cause to the King's Bench Bar at Westminster The Copy of which Warrant and the Return thereof here immediately ensue NOs Johannes Warner Thomas Adams Vic' Civitat ' London Serenissimo Domino Regi in brevi huic schedul ' annex ' nominat ' ad diem locum in eodem brevi content ' Certificamus quod ante adventum nobis praedict ' brevis scil ' duodecimo die Septembris Anno regni dicti domini Regis nunc Anglie c. decimo quinto Christoferus Barton in dicto brev ' nominat ' commissus fuit Prisone dom ' Regis scil ' Computator ' scituat ' in Woodstreet London praedict ' in eadem Prisona sub custodia Isaaci Pennington Johannis Woollaston tunc vic' Civitat ' praedict ' in eorum exit ' ab officio suo sub custodia nostra detent ' virtute cujusdam Warranti Otwelli Meverell Laurentii Wright Edmundi Smith Willielmi Goddard in Medicinis Doctor Censor ' Collegii Medicor ' in London sub sigillo communi Collegii Medicor ' London praedict ' custodi praedict ' Computatorii London praedict ' vel ejus deputat ' direct ' Cujus quidem Warranti tenor sequitur in hec verba ss We Otwell Meverell Laurence Wright Edmund Smith and William Goddard Doctors in Physick and Censors of the College of Physicians in London being chosen by the President and College of Physicians aforesaid to govern and punish for this present year all offenders in the faculty of Physick within the City of London and the Suburbs thereof and seven miles compass of the said City according to the authority in that behalf to us duly given by certain Letters Patents under the great Seal of England made and granted to the said College and Comminalty by the late King of famous memory King Henry the Eighth bearing date the 23th day of September in the Tenth year of his Raigne And one Act of Parliament made in the 14th year of the said late King Henry the Eighth concerning Physicians Whereby the Letters Patents aforesaid and every thing therein are granted and confirmed And by virtue of the said Act of Parliament and Letters Patents aforesaid and one other Act of Parliament made in the first year of the Raigne of our late Soveraigne Lady Queen Mary intituled An Act touching the Corporation of Physicians in London did cause to be brought before us the sixth day of this instant September at our College house in Pater noster Rowe in London one Christofer Barton and we have examined the said Christofer Barton and upon his examination and other due proofs we have found that the said Christofer Barton hath unskilfully practised the Art of Physick within the City of London and Precinct aforesaid upon the bodies of Richard Ballady of Aldermary Parish London Michael Knight of St. Buttolphs Parish Aldgate London and the child of one Iane Bigge and some others in the month of Ianuary in the year 1638. contrary to the Laws in that behalf made and provided whereupon we have imposed upon the said Christofer Barton a fine of 20 l. for his evil practice in Physick aforesaid and we have also for the same cause sent you the body of the said Christofer Barton Willing and requiring you in the Kings Majesties name to receive and keep him in safe custody as Prisoner there to remain at his own costs and charges without bail or mainprize untill he shall be discharged of his said imprisonment by the President of the said College and by such persons as by the said College shall be thereunto authorised according to the Statute in that behalf made And this our Warrant shal be your discharge Given at the said College the eleventh day of September in the 15th year of the Raigne of our Soveraigne Lord King Charles Otwell Meverell Law Wright Edm. Smith William Goddard To the Keeper of Woodstreet Compter London or his Deputy To Mr. John Penyall one of the Messengers of his Majestie 's Chamber in Ordinary to execute this Warrant ET hec est causa acceptionis detentionis praefati Christoferi Barton in Prisona praedict ' sub custodia nostra Corpus cujus quidem Christoferi coram praefat ' domino Rege apud Westm ' parat ' habemus Being at the Bar the said 19th of October for that the Lord Chief Justice Sir Iohn Brampston was not present the other Judges present would not accept of bail which the said Barton tendered but suspended the matter untill Tuesday the 12th of October following Barton for that time was returned back and coming to the Bar again on the said Tuesday with his Councel and Bail the Lord Brampston being then present my Lord demanded the return of the Warrant which was neglected by the Clerks of the Court and left in the Crown Office in the Temple so my Lord would not proceed but respited the cause untill Thursday the 24th of October following when all parties appearing with Councel on both sides the Warrant and Return was read and the Cause debated and there the Court plainly declared that he should not be Bailed it being against the Law and the Letter of the Warrant grounded upon the Statutes Then it was desired by Barton's Councel that he might go over to the King's Bench which also was denied because he was committed originally to the Compter and willed if he would have liberty to submit to the College and make his peace there Barton being in custody of the Serjeant that carried him up to the Bar exhibited his humble Petition to the President and Censors the 25 of October signed with his own hand for abatement of part of his fine and for his enlargement submitting in all things unto them Whereupon the President and Dr. Meverell one of the Censors were contented to abate the half of his fine of 20 l. and to accept of 10 l. the one half to be paid in hand which was paid and the other half at our Lady day next And so upon the 29th of October signed his discharge and set him at liberty he being put again before his enlargement into the said Prison Mr. President gave order that upon the commitment of any Offender the name of the
of Parliament wanting the Royal Assent 267. The Court replied and shewed the different method of passing Acts of Parliament with the difference betwixt Statute Rolls and Rolls of Parliament 268. The Royal Assent not entred till after H. 5. in the Statute Rolls ibid. The Record brought by the College was not a Transcript of the bill upon which the Answer of the King was written but a Transcript of the Entry which was made upon the Statute Roll upon which it is not necessary that the Royal Assent should be entred and why 269. The 14 15 H. 8. appears by the Record certified to be a good Act of Parliament 270. The Royal Assent was entred at the end of that Session 271. If the Certificate be false the Defendant may bring his Action against the Clerk of Parliament or the Clerk in Chancery 271. The court of Kings Bench cannot cause the Parliament Rolls themselves to be brought into Court ibid. The second objection made by Huybert's Council was That the Issue was whether there was such a Record and that is to be tried by the Record it self now here the tenour of the Record was only certified and not the Record it self ibid. The Court answered that upon the Issue of Nul tiel Record a Certificate of the tenour was sufficient to prove the Issue 272 273. Iudgment entred for the College against Huybert 273. Needham The College declares against him upon an Action of Debt 273. His plea double 273 274. The College demurred and why 274. Iudgment entred against him ibid. Empiricks how described in the 3 H. 8. p. 1 2. not known to the Law neither can they have action 252. One set in the Pillory 306. Another set on Horse-back with his face to the Horse-tail the same tail in his hand as a bridle with a collar of Iordans about his neck ibid. The President and College bound by solemn Oath and conscience to prosecute them 318 321 325 328 330 352 353 387 412. A warrant sent from K. James his Council to the Magistrates of London for their Attachment 370. The Kings Letter to the President and Censors requiring them to put the Laws in execution against Empiricks 372. the King's Letter directed to the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Iustices of London requiring them to assist the President and Censors in suppressing Empiricks and illegal Practisers 374. Keepers of Prisons prosecuted for suffering any of them to make their escape 329 361 403 421. they ought not to practise Physick in prison 314. they cannot be bailed 344 345 469 470. How the College proceeded against them when they procured protections 338 339 352 355 391 423 424. They were summoned to appear upon penalty 354 355 369. punished for exposing bills purging diet-drinks purging confections or tables of the virtue of their Medicines 333 363 364 365 368 369 442 470 471. Several of them examined and rejected 315 323 324 326 331 334 337 342 364 368. their dangerous and evil practice 315 323 331 332 333 334 335 351 355 357 365 367 368 389 391 392 402 421 425 441. their unconscionable dealings 335 352 366 369 391 394 397 419 420 439 445 446. their egregious ignorance and knavery 322 326 330 334 337 354 355 384 385 390 395 399 400 404 405 421 445 446 467. Interdicted practice 322 323 333 337 346 347 356 364 368 384 389 394 395 405 422. Required to give bonds not to practice 314 315 316 319 322 323 324 325 326 332 333 334 342 347 349 355 368 375 386 387 401 420. Letters testimonial granted against them 332 392 403 442. Some of them fined others fined and committed to prison 313 314 315 316 319 320 322 323 324 325 326 327 333 334 337 338 341 342 349 352 354 356 357 365 369 384 385 387 388 391 401 404 413 420 422 439 446 466 467. Sued or prosecuted by the College 147 161 162 221 225 229 259 261 273 275 305 308 310 313 314 319 339 356 387 388 391 393 394 421. they may be sued for 2 years practice 419. Countrey Empiricks sued or prosecuted by the College 309 310 313 314. What the Common Law against Empiricks was before Acts of Parliament were made against them 251. F. Fellows of the College Forty constituted by the last Patent 70. the names of them 40. they were to continue for life if not removed for cause 71. How to be chosen 77. Power to amove any of them 78. they are to be sworn duly to execute 80. to take the Oaths of Obedience and Supremacy ibid. Fines All fines forfeitures and amerciaments to be approved by the next College Court and registred before any levy is made c. the 10 l. and 5 l. excepted 100 101. An appeal may be made to Visitors appointed by the King within one month after the fine is approved 101 102. These Visitors are to receive and determine appeals c. 102 103 104 105 106. H. Hospital of Christ Church No Physician should be chosen into that Foundation but one approved by the College 418. L. Licence A Licence from the Elects will not justice practice in London 362 471. The Bishop's licence cannot do it 471 472. the College's licence not to be allowed to those who have been in Holy Orders 376 401 443. Their obtaining a Licence is a general detriment 443 444. M. Midwives A Petition presented by them to the College 463. The College's Answer to their Petition which was by them delivered to the Archbishop 465. O. Oaths of Obedience and Supremacy to be taken by the President Fellows and Officers of the College 80. Power given to the Elects or to any two of them to administer these Oaths to the President 81. The President to administer them to the Fellows and all Officers 82. P. Physicians By whom to be allowed for City and Countrey 2 3 8 12. All Physicians practising in the several Dioceses out of London Graduates excepted must be examined by the President and 3 of the Elects 12. they are to be licensed by the President and Elects or any four of them 96. they are first to be examined and if able to be approved by Letters testimonial under the hands of the Elects 97. Power given to the President and Elects to summon examine and give testimonials and to reject unfit persons 97. None are to practise in the Countrey till they be licensed under pain of 5 l. per mens and how to be recovered 98. None to practise in London or within 7 miles of the same without licence under their Seal 8 9 343 344 345. Practice of Physick what is to be esteemed such 281. President of the College His office and duty 7 8. Power allowed him to make a Vice-President 74 75. He is to be sworn duly to execute his office 80. to take the Oaths of obedience and Supremacy ibid. to administer them to the Fellows and all College Officers 80 81 82. R. Register made by Patent 55 109. He is to be