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

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take into his or their hands or possessions all such copie customarie holds so holden of thē or any of thē immediatly to retain the same during only the life of such offēdor or offendors in such maner as he or they should haue had the rents or seruices of such copy or customary hold in case such person or persons so refusing had not refused A farmer required refuseth to serue 39 All euery farmer being a yeoman husbandman artificer or labourer 1. M. 12. beeing of the age of xviij yeares or more vnder the age of lx years not sick impotent lame maihemed nor hauing any other reasonable excuse or cause to the contrary being required by the sherife Iustice or Iustices of peace or other hauing authoritie by this act or by commissiō or letters c. they declaring their said authoritie or being required by their said Landlord or Landlords for the time being to whom the rents of such farmes shal be then rising growing or comming to serue the king for any the causes aboue rehearsed and refuse so to doe shall during only the life of such farmer or farmers so refusing forfeit and loose to such Landlord and Landlords as should haue had the rents of such farmer during the life liues of such person persons so refusing all their said farmes And it shal be lawfull to euery such Landlord c. their heires and assignes to whom the rents of such farmes should haue bin due during the life of such person or persons so refusing in case he or they had not refused to enter take into his or their hands or possessiō al such farms to retain the same only during the life of euery such offēdor or offendors But after the death expiration or determinatiō of the interest or terme of yeares of euery such copyholder customary holder or farmer as so shal offēd forfeit any of the said copi-holds customary holds or farmes as is aforesaid thē euery such person as should or ought to haue had the copy holds customary holds or farmes after or by the death expiration or determination of the interest or terme of years of such copie-holder customarie holder or farmer in case such copie-holder customarie holder or farmer had not so offended ne forfeited shall and may haue the same copie-hold customarie holds and farmes by entrie action admission or otherwise in like manner forme and condition and by such meanes as they and euery of them should might or ought to haue had if no such forfeiture or offence had bin had done or committed 40 If any person shal be spoken vnto moued 1. M. 12. or stirred to make any cōmotion Disclosing a commotion when one is moued insurrection or vnlawfull assembly for any of the intents aboue mētioned and doe not within 24. houres next after he shal be spoken vnto moued or stirred vnlesse he haue good and reasonable cause of excuse declare the same vnto one Iustice of the peace or Sherife of the said countie or to the Mayor Sherifes Bailifes or other head officers of any citie or town corporat where such commotion c. shall be had he shall suffer imprisonment by the space of thrée moneths without baile or mainprise vnlesse he shall be discharged by 3. Iustices of peace whereof one to bee of the Quorum of the same shire where the offence shall be committed 1. M 12. 41 If any person béeing aboue the age of eightéene yeares An able person required refuseth to serue and vnder the age of thréescore beeing able to serue and not sicke lame or impotent shall be required by any Iustice of peace or any Sherife of any Countie where any such assembly shall be or by any Mayor Bailife or other head Officer of any citie borough or towne corporat or by any other by the commandement of any such Iustice Sherife Maior c. to goe with him or them to suppresse the persons vnlawfully assembled in manner and forme aforesaid then euery person which so béeing able and required doth willingly and obstinately refuse so to doe shall suffer imprisonment for one whole yeare without baile or mainprise 1. M. 12. 42 If the King shall by his Letters patents make any Lieutenant in any Countie or Counties of this Realme Attendance vpon a lieutenant for the suppressing of any commotion rebellion or vnlawfull assemblie then as well all Iustices of peace and the Sherife and Sherifes of the same as all Maiors Baylifes and other head officers and all inhabitants and subiects of any Countie Citie Borough or towne corporat within euery such Countie shall vpon declaration of the said Letters patents and request made bee bound to giue attendance vpon the same Lieutenant to suppresse any commotion rebellion or vnlawfull assemblie vnlesse hee so required haue any reasonable excuse for his not attendance vpon paine of imprisonment for one whole yeare 1. M. 12. 43 The order and forme of the Proclamation that shall be made by the authoritie of this Act shal be as hereafter followeth The forme of the Proclamation or with the like order and words in effect viz. The Iustices or other persons authorized by this Act to make the said Proclamation shall make or cause to be made an Oyes and after that shall openly pronounce or cause to be pronounced these wordes or to the like effect The King our Soueraigne Lord chargeth and commandeth al persons being assembled immediately to disperse themselues and peaceably to depart to their habitations or their lawfull businesse vpon the paine contained in the act lately made against vnlawfull and rebellious assemblies And God saue the King 1. M. 12. 44 If any person or persons doe or shal molest let hinder Hinderance of the Proclamation or hurt any person or persons that shall proclaime or go to proclaime according to the proclamation and order aforesaid whereby such proclamation shal not be made then euery such person so molesting or hurting c. and hauing knowledge of his message shall incurre such daunger and suffer such paines and forfeitures the persons assembled to whom the proclamation should haue beene made should by this Act incurre for not obeying the Proclamation if it had béene made or for doing after the Proclamation of any the things before expressed And also all such persons beeing assembled to the number aforesaid to attempt or doe any the things aforesaid to whom Proclamation should or ought to haue beene made if the same had not beene let shall likewise in case they doe after put in vre and doe any the things aforesaid hauing any wayes knowledge of the let so made or by any meanes procuring the same let incurre like danger and suffer like paines and forfeitures aforesaid in euery their degrees as though the proclamation had beene made any clause article c. in this Act c. notwithstanding Other mens right saued 45 All
Ordinarie nor other person or persons whatsoeuer hauing authoritie to take probation of any Testament by himselfe or any of his ministers for the probation insinuation and approbation of any testament or testaments or for the registring sealing writing praising making of Inuentories giuing of acquitances fines or any other things concerning the same shall take or cause to be taken of any person or persons onely thrée shillings six pence and not aboue whereof to the Ordinarie for him and his ministers two shillings six pence and to the scribe the xij d residue for registring of the same The goods exceeding xl l. And where the goods of the Testator doe amount aboue the cléere valew of fortie pounds sterling then the Ordinarie by himselfe nor any of his Ministers for the probation of any testament or for the registring sealing c. or for any thing concerning the same probat shall take of any person but onely fiue shillings and not aboue whereof to be to the saide Ordinarie for him and his ministers two shillings six pence and not aboue and two shillings six pence residue to be to the scribe for the registring of the same Or else the scribe to be at his libertie to refuse the two shillings six pence and to haue for the writing of euery tenne lines of the said testament a penny whereof euery line to containe in length tenne inches And euery such Bishop Ordinarie or other person hauing authority to take the probation of any testament their Registers Scribes and Ministers shall approoue insinuate seale and register the said Testaments and deliuer the same sealed with the seale of their office to the executor or executors named in such testaments for the summes abouesaid and in manner and forme aboue rehearsed with conuenient speede without any frustratorie delay If any person die intestate An administration granted or the executors named in any such testament refuse to prooue the said testament Then the Ordinarie or other person or persons hauing authoritie to take probat of testaments shall graunt the administration of the goods of the testator or person deceased to the widdow of the same person or to the next of his kinne or both as by the discretion of the same Ordinarie shall be thought good taking surety for the true administration of the same goods taking nothing for the said administration granted vnles the goods of the person so deceased amount aboue the value or summe of C. s̄ And in case the goods of the person so deceased amount aboue the value of C. s̄ and not aboue xl l. then hée his officers shall take only ij s̄ vj. d not aboue And in case any person or persons at any time require a copie or copies of a testament prooued or inuentorie made The fées for copies then the said ordinarie c. or his ministers shal from time to time with conuenient spéed without frustratory delay deliuer or cause to be deliuered a true copie or copies of the same vnto the said person or persons demanding the same taking for the search for the making of the copie of either of the said testamēt or inuentorie but only such fée as is before rehearsed for the registring of the said testament or else the scribe or register to be at his libertie to demand haue take for euery x. lines thereof being of the proportion before rehersed j. d. But where any persons hauing authority to take probat of testamēts haue vsed to take lesse sums of mony than abouesaid for the probat of testamēts or cōmissiō of administ●atiōs or other cause concerning the same they shal take such sums for the same as they before the making of this act vsed to take not aboue Euery Bish ordinary archdeacō chācelor cōmissary official other persō persons hauing authoritie to take probat of Testaments their Registers Scribes Praisors Summoners Apparitors and all other their Ministers whatsoeuer they be The forfeture of the offendor that shall doe or attempt or cause to be done or attempted against this Act in any thing shall forfeit for euery time so offending to the partie grieued in that behalfe so much money as he shall take contrary to this Act and ouer that shall forfeit to the King and the party grieued ten pounds to be recouered by A. I. B. c. wherein no W.E.P. And euery of the same Bishops and other persons which shall incurre the danger of such penalty shall be charged onely for himselfe and none of them shal be chargeable to the penalty for others offences Extortion is an Ordinary for the Seale of a Citation 28 Shortly after the making of the foresaide Statute of Anno 21. H. 8. the graund Councell of the Realme being as carefull that Ordinaries or their Officers should no more commit extortion in sealing of Citations than they might in proouing of Willes granting of Administrations or such like did therefore by a statute made Anno 23. H. 8. ordaine St. 23. H. 8. 9 That if any Archbishop Bishop Ordinarie Officiall Commissarie or other person hauing spirituall iurisdiction or any substitute or minister of his doe aske demand take or receiue more than three pence for the seale of a Citation hée shall pay to the partie of whom he doth demand take or receiue the same double dammages and costs and shal forfeit for euery offence tenne pounds to the king and I. to be recouered by A.I. wherein no W.E.P. c. Mortuaries 29 Because in former times it was vncertaine and by this meanes oft times great question did grow what and how much Parsons Vicars or other spirituall men or their farmors ought to take for Mortuaries or Corse Presents after the death of their Parishioners Therefore to the intent that the same should be limited in certaintie and not be excessiue nor any Extortion Exaction or other wrong committed in the taking St. 21. H. 8. 6 or receiuing of them by a Statute made Anno 21. H. 8. it was established That no Parson Vicar Curate or parish Priest nor any other spirituall person nor their farmers Baylifes or Lessées shall haue take receiue or demaund of any person or persons within this Realme for any person or persons dying within the same any maner of Mortuarie or Corse present nor any money or other thing for the same more than is héereafter expressed Nor shall conuent or call any person before any Iudge spirituall for the recouerie of any such Mortuaries The penaltie for extorting for a Mortuarie or any other thing for the same more than is héereafter expressed vpon paine to forfeit for euerie time so demaunding receiuing taking conuenting or calling any such person or persons before any spirituall Iudge so much in valew as they shall take aboue the summe limited by this Act and ouer that fortie shillings to the partie grieued contrary to this Act for the which the partie grieued shal haue an action of
case of felony Relieuing them which be assembled 35 If any wife or seruant of any of the same persons 1. M. 12. or any other person whatsoeuer shall willingly and without compulsion bring send deliuer or conuey any money harnesse artillerie weapon meat bread drinke or other victuall to any person or persons so beeing assembled as is aforesaid during such time as he or they shall so be assembled or be together as is aforesaid then euery wife seruant or other person so bringing or conueying c. any of the foresaid things to the same persons so beeing assembled together in forcible manner or to any of them and not departing to their houses or dwelling places vpon request or commandement made vnto them as is aforesaid shall bee adiudged a felon shal suffer execution of death as in case of felonie Vnlawful assemblies aboue two and vnder twelue 36 If any persons aboue the number of 2. and vnder the number of 12. 1. M. 12. beeing assembled together shal intend goe about practise or put in vre with force of armes vnlawfully of their owne authoritie to murder kill or slay any of the kings subiects or to ouerthrowe cut breake or cast downe or dig vp the pales hedges ditches wall or other closure of any parkes or parke or other ground inclosed or the bankes of any fish-pond or poole to the intent that the same or any of them from thenceforth should remaine open not inclosed or void or to haue common or way in the same parks or parke or other grounds or ground inclosed or in any of them or to destroy any parkes or parke or fish-pond or poole or any warrens or warren of conies or any doue-houses or to pul or cut down any house barne or mil or to burne any stacke of corne or graine or to alter defaulke or abate the rents or yearely value of any mannors lands or tenements of any of the Kings subiects or the price of any victual corne or graine or any other thing vsuall for the sustenance or apparell of men and being required or commanded by any Iustice of peace or the sherife of the countie or by any mayor bailife or bailifes or other head officer of any citie or towne corporat where such assembly shall be had by Proclamation to be made in the Kings name to retire or returne to their habitations places or houses and they so required by such proclamation shall not so do but after that shall in forcible manner in forme aforesaid attempt to do or put in vre any of the things last aboue mentioned then euery of the same persons beeing aboue the number of two and vnder the number of twelue shall suffer imprisonment of his or their bodies by the space of one whole yeare without baile or mainprise The remedie of the parties grieued And also if any person or persons shall be damnified or hurt by the doing committing or putting in vre of any vnlawfull act or thing aboue mentioned then all and singular persons so damnified and hurt shall recouer and haue dammages with the costs of their suit sustained in that behalfe trebled against the offendors therein 1. M. 12. 37 If any persons aboue the number of two shal vnlawfully of their own authoritie assemble together to the intent with force and armes to do practise Raising of power to suppresse vnlawful assemblies or put in vre any of the things aboue mentioned Then it shall be lawfull to euery Iustice of peace to euery Sherife in any countie beeing within the K. dominions and to euery mayor bailife and other head officer of any citie or towne corporat for the time he shall be in office or any other person or persons hauing the K. commission or Letters from his highnes as wel to raise and assemble the kings louing subiects in maner of warre to be arraied in such great number as he or they then shall thinke meet or able to the intent by violence of strength to suppresse apprehend and take the said persons that shall bee so vnlawfully assembled And if the said persons so vnlawfully assembled after such cammandement or request by proclamation made shal continue together and not endeauour themselues to returne towards their habitations houses or places from whence they came in as short time as they may conueniently Then it shall be lawful to euery I. of peace sherife and also euery mayor bailife and other head officer of any citie or town corporat to euery other person hauing authoritie as is aforesaid after such commandement or request by proclamation made and to such persons as shal be assembled with any Iustice of peace or sherife or with any mayor bailife or other head officer of any citie or town corporat and with euery other person hauing authoritie as is aforesaid to suppresse apprehend take those persons so vnlawfully assembled which after such proclamation made shall continue together and not endeauour thēselues to returne towards their habitations c. And if the said persons so vnlawfully assembled together or any of them shall fortune to be killed slaine maihemed or hurt in or about the suppressing or taking of them then euery such Iustice Sherife Maior c. and euery other person hauing authoritie as is aforesaid and all and singular persons by him or them assembled shal be frée discharged and vnpunishable as well against the king as against all and euery other person and persons of for or concerning the killing maiheming or hurting of any person or persons so vnlawfully assembled that shall be killed slaine maihemed or hurt about or by occasiō of taking or suppressing of thē c. 1. M. 12. 38 All and euery Copieholder and Customary holder being a yeoman artificer husbandman A copieholder being required refuseth to serue or labourer being of the age of xviij yeares or more vnder the age of lx years not sicke impotent lame maihemed neither hauing any other iust or reasonable excuse or cause to the contrary and beeing required by the sherife Iustice or Iustices of peace or other hauing authoritie by this act or by commission or letters c. they declaring their said authoritie or being required by the immediat Lord or Lords of whom such copie or customary holds then shall be holden to serue the King for any the causes aboue rehearsed and refuse so to doe shall only during the life of such person or persons so refusing forfeit to his Lord or Lords of whom such copie or customarie holds then shal be immediatly holden should be holden during the life of such person or persons so refusing in case he had not refused all their copie customarie holds And it shal be lawful to euery such Lord c. his heirs or assignes of whom such copy or customary holds shal be immediatly holden should haue bin holden in case that such persons or persons had not so refused to enter
and euery the heire and heires of all and euery the offendor and offendors in any the cases aforesaid and all and euery person and persons 1. M. 12. bodies politicke and corporat their heires successors and executors and euery of them other than such person and persons onely as shall be attainted conuicted and outlawed of any the foresaid offences of felonie shall haue hold enioy all such right title entrie interest leases possessions rents conditions profits and aduātages as they or any of them shall or of right ought to haue in or to any mannors lands rents reuersions seruices or hereditaments whatsoeuer or in or to any part thereof in as large manner to all intents as if such attainder had neuer beene had any thing in this act c. notwithstanding c. Sauing to euery person and persons bodies politicke and corporate and their successors their liberties and franchises in such maner as if this act had neuer beene made Procuring others to offend 46 If any person or persons doe moue stirre 1. M. 12. or procure any person or persons to commit any of the offences in this Act specified then euery such person and persons which shall procure stirre or mooue any person or persons so to offend shall suffer such punishment by imprisonmēt without baile or mainprise as is before expressed in this Act against counsellors of such offendors Vnlawful assemblies by xl or aboue 47 If any persons to the number of fourtie or more 1. M. 12. shall assemble together in forcible manner vnlawfully and of their owne authoritie to the intent to execute doe or put in vre any of the things aboue specified or to doe any other felonious or rebellious act or acts and so shall continue together by the space of three houres after proclamation shall bee made at or nigh the place where they shall be so assembled or in some market towne thereunto next adioyning and after notice to them giuen thereof Then euery person so willingly assembled in forcible manner and so continuing together by the space of three houres after such proclamation made and notice thereof giuen shall bée adiudged a felon A lieutenant shall not appoint a deputie 48 No lieutenant that shall bee made by authoritie or colour of this Act 1. M. 12. or for to execute this Act shall constitute vnder him or in his place any deputy nor shall call or appoint to appeare before him by the onely authoritie of lieutenancie or of commission of lieutenancy any person for any cause or matter whatsoeuer saue onely for the causes and matters expressed in this Acte and for none other Aiding of the offendors after the offence 49 No person or persons shall bee put to any losse forfeiture paine 1. M. 12. or punishment of life land or goods as accessorie to any person or persons that shall commit any of the offences contained in this act for receiuing comforting or aiding of any such offendor after such act committed or done 1. M. 12. 50 No attainder or conuiction of any person or persons The attainder of those offences no corruption of blood for any offence or offences herein contained shall be any corruption of blood betwixt the offendor and any of his auncestors or such person or persons as should haue beene heire to such offendor if no such attainder or conuiction had béene had sauing to euery person and persons bodies politicke and corporat c. their liberties and fran●●●ses in such manner as if this Act had neuer beene made ❧ Of Force forcible Entries and forcible retayning of possessions Vnlawfull force an enemy to peace 1 FOrce and violence executed without warrant of Law be so méere contrarie to the peace and justice of the Realme as disobedience is to loyaltie and contempt to gouernment for whosoeuer doth make a Forcible entrie into lands in the possession of an other doth secretly reuolue in his mind and distrust to himselfe that there is no Law in the Realme to redresse his wrong or no ministers to execute the same and therefore he will sit in iudgement of that cause himselfe and take into his owne hands the distribution of justice and assume into his possession by the strength of his arme what the phantasie of his head shall resolue to be his due whereas the Law in conuenient time would truely satisfie him whether the land in question by the rules of justice be his or not and also assigne him a milde and calme course to recouer all his whole dutie with valuable damages for the time he is iniured And because this force and forcible entrie into lands is so opposite and méere repugnant to the peace and justice of the Realme and tendeth so much to the dishonour of the King and his Crowne and the discredit of the Law that any person by byrth and oath deuoted to the obedience of the King and his Lawes should presume of his owne authoritie by force and strong hand to resist them both and as it were in contempt of them violently to intrude himselfe into an other mans possession before the law hath decided his title therein Therefore the wisedome of the Realme hath by the space of many generations first prouided to restraine those forces and forcible Entries and next to inflict condigne punishment vpon them which were offendors therein Whereupon by a Statute made An̄ 5. There shal be no forcible entry into lands R. 2. the King defended St. 5. R. 2. 7. that none from thenceforth should make any Entrie into any lands and tenements but in case where entrie is giuen by the Law and then not with strong hand nor with multitude of people but only in a peaceble course maner And if any from henceforth do the contrary and thereof be duely conuict he shall be punished by imprysonment of his bodie and thereof ransomed at the Kings pleasure 2 But for that the said Statute of 5. R. 2. did giue no spéedie remedie to those which were expelled out of their lands or tenements nor assigned any speciall persons to suppresse the said disorder Therefore by an other Statute made An̄ 15. St. 15. R. 2. 2 R. 2. it was further ordained The penaltie of forcible entrie into lands or benefices That when any such forcible entrie shall be made into lands or tenements or into any Benefices or offices of the Church and the complaint thereof come to the Iustices of the peace or any of them that the same Iustices or Iustice take sufficient power of the County and go to the place where such forcible entrie is made if he or they find any that holdeth such place forcible after such entrie made they shall be taken and put into the Gaole there to abide conuict by the record of the same Iustices or Iustice vntill they haue made fine and ransom to the King And all they of the Countie aswell the Shirife as other
or meanes of any others or by his owne act consent or agréement shall wilfully and corruptly commit any manner of wilfull Periury Periury committed by witnesses for Bankrupts by his deposition to be taken before the said Commissioners or the greater part of them as is aforesaid Then the party or parties so offending and all and euery person and persons that shall vnlawfully and corruptly procure any such vnlawfull wilfull and corrupt Periurie shall or may therefore be indited in any of the Kings Courts of Record and after his or their conuiction thereof shall incurre such forfeiture and receiue and haue such paines and punishment as are limitted by the statute made concerning Periury St. an̄ 5. El. 9. Anno 5. Eliz. 9. Co. li. 5. f. 99 28 A man cannot be indited for Periurie vpon the foresaid statute of 5. Periury committed vpon an indictment of Riot El. for giuing false euidence on his oath to the Enquest at a Sessions vpon an Indictment of Riot For the statute was ordained against procurers of Periurie in a matter depending in suit and variance by any Writ Action Bill Complaint or Information and so procurement of Periurie vpon an indictment is out of this braunch of the said statute And the second braunch of the same statute touching committing of Periury shal haue the same construction which the first hath though it be not there in words and shall haue reference to the first And it shal be expounded as if the words of the statute had béene If any person shall wilfully and corruptly commit any wilfull Periurie in any cause depending in suit by any Writ Bill Action c. And the same law is if a man commit wilfull Periury Periury vpon an indictment of Felony vpon euidence giuen to the great Enquest vpon an indictment of Felony he is not to be punished by force of the foresaid statute of Anno 5. Eliz. Periury in prouing a suggestion for a prohibition 29 If wilfull Periurie be committed in the Kings bench 7. 8. Eliz. Dyer 243. by any witnesse produced to proue a Suggestion for a Prohibition there graunted against an Ecclesiasticall Iudge according to the statute of 2. 3. E. 6. St. 2. E. 6. 13 whereby the party is staied of this consultation this shall not be examined and punished in the Starre chamber for the statute of 3. H. 7. St. 3. H. 7. 1 which maketh mention of such things as the Court of Starre chamber is to hold plea of prouideth no more punishment by speciall words for Periurie then it doth for Murder or Rape There is a prouiso in the foresaid statute of Anno 5. El. That the Lord Chancelor and others of the Qu. Counsell shall and may procéed in the punishment of all offences in such wise as they might haue done and vsed to do before the making of the said Act to all purposes so that they set vpon the offendors no lesse punishment then is contained in the said Act. 30 A Bill of Periurie may be sued in the Chancery for a periurie committed in the same Court A suit vpon periury in the Chancery contrary to the foresaid statute of Anno 5. 12. El. Dy. 288. El. and if the defendant do plead vnto it not guilty he shall be sworne to his plea and also shall answer to Interrogatories as it is vsually done in the Starre chamber for the L. Chauncellor had absolute power before the said statute of Ann̄ 5. El. to punish Periury And therefore by a prouiso in the said statute his power therein is not restrained by the same statute And if the Court of Chauncery will examine Periury committed there it must be done by a bill in Latin and pleaded in Latin and the issue shal be ioyned there and tried in the K. Bench as it is vsed in the like cases Where periury shal be punished in the tēporall court where in the spirituall 31 There is no remedy or punishment for Periurie in a spirituall Court against indictors that do endite a man of felony which be periured 22. H. 8. Kel 39. or against a Iury which doth giue a false verdict betwéene party and party And if a suit be commenced in the spirituall court against an offendor in Periurie in either of those cases he may haue a prohibition for this periury doth rise vpon a cause that is temporall viz. the Treason or Felony Debt Trespas or plea of land and for this periury the offendors shall be punished by attaint by the common law or otherwise And so it is if a man be defamed by a false indictment there is no remedy in the spirituall Court for his defamation for that it groweth vpon a matter which is temporall But where the Periury doth rise vpon a matter which is spirituall as vpon a Testament Matrimony or Legacie or such like then the spirituall Iudge hath authority to punish it and in that case a Prohibition will not lie And as there is no punishment in the Ecclesiastical Court for Periury that doth rise vpon a cause that is temporall So the Law hath prouided Co. lib. 4. 20 that defamation Defamation which is another euill fruit of a malicious and corrupt heart and of a leud and venomous tongue shall not be punished in the Ecclesiasticall Court vnlesse it concerne matter that is méerely spirituall and determinable in the Ecclesiasticall Court as to call a man Hereticke Schismaticke Adulterer Fornicator c. and vnlesse it doth concerne matter that is méerely spirituall onely For if such a defamation doe concerne any thing that is determinable at the common Law the Ecclesiasticall Iudge shal not hold plea thereof And yet if such a defamation be méerely spirituall and onely spirituall notwithstanding he that doth sue in the Ecclesiasticall Court for being defamed cannot sue there for recompence or dammages but only for the punishment of the offence ❧ Maintenance Champertie Embracerie and Buying of Titles MAintenance is where a man giueth to another that is demaundant What maintenance is the enormities thereof or tenant plaintife or defendant in any suit or to any other in his behalfe or to his vse any summe of money or other reward for to maintaine his plea or suit Or otherwise vseth persuasion or maketh labour for him or vseth other meanes to countenance aid or assist him when he himselfe hath nothing therewith to doe Which is an offence that the wisdome of the Realme from age to age hath condemned and hath indeuored to inflict diuers punishments vpon the transgressors therein as it may appeare by the statutes of West 1. West 2. 28. Ed. 1. 33. Ed. 1. 8. H. 6. 19. H. 7. 32. H. 8. 18. El. The law doth so greatly desire the continuance of peace betwéene one member of the Commonweale and another so much condemneth variance suits without cause that many times and in many causes the plaintife is amerced
is depending to giue iudgement for the plaintife then the def may haue an action of Maintenance against him for that the same iudgemēt is a thing wholly belonging to the office of a Iudge and not of a Iuror therfore he doth therin intermeddle with another mans office and another mans cause more than he hath to do or may iustifie and so hath committed vnlawfull maintenance Maintenance in a Iuror 18 If a Iurie be charged to inquire of a matter in issue 17. E. 4. 5. 18. Ed. 4. 4. one Iuror may persuade his cōpanions or any of them to passe for the plaintife or def as he conceiueth the truth of the cause to be or as their euidence doth induce them this is no maintenance but if one of the Iurors will giue or promise money to another of his fellowes to giue his verdit for the pl. or def this is vnlawfull maintenance though he doth wage him to giue his verdit according to truth and right of the cause in issue Maintenance by speaking of words 19 If a man of great authoritie in a country will in the presence of a Iurie 22. H. 6. 5. 13. H. 4. 19. and the standers by at the tryall of an issue say openly that he will spend mony in the cause in question in the behalfe of the pl. or the def or that hee will giue money to labour the Iury or wil speake other great or high words in fauor of one of the parties this is vnlawful maintenāce in him though he do spend no mony in that cause nor doth labor the Iury therin for it may be that whē the Iury do by his words know his meaning they dare not in respect of his authoritie or greatnesse in that coūtie giue their verdit otherwise thā he would haue them None shall sit with the Iust of Assise on the bench And for the preuention of that kind of maintenance by a stat made An. 20. R. 2. it was ordained That no Lord or other of the country great or small St. 20. R. 2. 13. shall sit vpon the bench with the Iust of Assise in their Sessions in any of the Shires of England vpon paine of a great forfeiture to the King neither the Iustices shall suffer the contrarie to bée done Maintenance in comming to the barre with one of the parties And in like sort if a man of great authoritie in the Countie where an Issue is to be tried hauing nothing to doe in that cause doth come to the barre with the plaintife or defendant 22. H. 6. 6. that is one of the parties to an Issue that is then to bée tryed and standeth by him this is an vnlawfull maintenance in him though hée neither doth nor yet speaketh any thing in the matter for his presence and companie with the one partie doth shew to the Iurie his particular affection to the same partie and doth ofttimes induce them to fauour as much as labour and persuasion by words could doe And though the Iurie doe not respect him but giue their verdict for the other partie to that suit according to their euidence and the truth of the cause in question yet he hath done what in him lyeth to the contrarie 21. H. 6. 15. 22. H. 6. 5. 28. H. 6. 7. Dyer fo 95. 20 And so it is if two be in suit and do ioyne in issue Maintenance by giuing of money to labour a Iurie and the Master of one of the parties to that issue or any other will deliuer money of his owne to a stranger to labour the Iurie impanelled to try that issue to giue their verdit for his said seruant or friend this is maintenance vnlawfull in the Master or other though the partie to whom the money was giuen did neuer deliuer it to the Iurie nor did not labour vnto them in such sort as hée was directed or though the Iurie did giue their verdict against his said seruant for when the Master had deliuered the money to the stranger and told him to what purpose he should vse it he had done as much as he could do in that suit to hinder the course of iustice though his direction tooke no successe according to his desire And also it is vnlawfull maintenance if one giue money to a man that is impanelled of a Iurie to giue his verdict on the one side though that partie impanelled doth not appeare or do appeare and is drawne out by challenge or otherwise 22. H. 6. 6. And it is maintenance vnlawfull if one do threaten to kill or beat a Iuror if he do not giue his verdict for the one part to that issue which hee doth name though the same Iuror do otherwise 28. H. 6. 6. 21 If a Iurie do come to a mans house What is maintenance in a witnesse and what not and desire him to informe them of the truth of a matter whereof they do doubt and he doth informe them therof this is iustifiable But if one do come to a Iurie or of himselfe do labour to informe them of the truth of a cause in question this is maintenance vnlawfull and therefore punishable And so it is if the Court be informed by the plaintife or defendant when an issue is to be tryed that there is a man at the bar or in that place who doth know the truth of the matter in issue and doth desire that the same man may be examined by the Court to testifie the truth of that cause in question to the Iurie and the Court doth cause him to be called to testifie his knowledge therein and he at the commaundement of the Court deliuereth that which he doth know in that matter this is maintenance iustifiable But if the same partie will come to the barre of his owne head and testifie for the plaintife or the defendant this is vnlawfull maintenance and hée may be punished therefore 22. H. 6. 6. 22 If one man do labour to indict another by force whereof he is indicted Maintenance by procuring of an indictment in this case hee that is indicted may haue a writ of Maintenance against the procurer of that indictment and yet this is no quarrell but it is a taking of a part St. 1. E. 3. 14. and so prohibited by the stat of anno 1. E. 3. and it is in the nature of an action betwéene the King and the partie indicted and the foresaid statute is generall that it shall not be lawfull to any person great or smal to maintain quarels or to take parts to the let or disturbance of the Common law What is maintenance in a mainpernor 23 If a man be arrested indicted or sued 34. H. 6. 25. 14. H. 6. 6. 18. E. 4. 12. so that he is compelled to become bound with mainpernors for his apparance the mainpernor may come into the Court and sée the apparance of the same partie recorded and iustifie the
life time for murder of another person And if this man had béene outlawed or otherwise attainted of Felonie in his life time this lease should haue béene forfeited to the King and the wife should haue had no part thereof P. 16. E. 4. 7 P. 9. Eliz. Dyer 262. 45 If one which is felo de se hath a debt due to him vpon a contract No forfeiture of a debt vpon a simple contract and not by specialtie hée shall not forfeit the debt to the King amongst his other goods and chattels for that the sayd debtor shall bée rebutted of his law against the King Pl. Com. 260. 262. 46 If a villeine doe giue himselfe a deadly wound A villeine felo de se and then his Lord seiseth his goods and after the Lord of the same villeine doth seise his goods and then this villeine doth dye within a yeare and a day after the wound giuen and so becommeth felo de se and after the whole matter is found before the Coroner those goods of the villeines shal bée forfeit to the King and the King shall haue them out of the Lords possession for the forfeiture shall haue relation to the wound which the villeine gaue himselfe and that was before the Lords seisure of his goods For if a man doth giue himselfe a deadly wound and dyeth thereof within a yere and a day after all the goods cattels and debts which hee had at the time of the blow giuen or at any time after shall bée forfeited to the King and in his life time hee hath no authoritie to dispose of them after the wound was giuen 4. 5. P. M. Dy. 160 47 A man was bound with two Suerties One mortgaged his goods and then became felo de se for the payment of twentie pounds at two seuerall dayes and the principall debtor for the securitie of his Suerties by his Indenture did sell vnto his sayd two Suerties twentie oxen for twentie pounds with a Prouiso in the Indenture That if hée did discharge or saue them harmelesse of the sayd Obligation of twentie pounds that then the said sale of the twentie oxen should bée void And it was agréed betwéene them that the principall debtor should haue the occupation and vse of the said twentie oxen at the will of the said Suerties and to bée vsed as his owne And after one day of paiment due to the Obligée and no money payd by the seller or principall debtor and before the second paiment was due the seller killed himselfe and became felo de se hauing those twentie Oxen in his possession and the Suerties seised the beasts as their owne And notwithstanding the propertie was in them by the not performance of the condition yet it was adiudged that the Aulmoner should haue the beasts or the money which they were sold for and then hée should discharge the Suerties against the Creditor And so the Aulmoner was awarded to haue in these beasts the best estate of the seller and the same that the Debtor might haue had if hee had payed the debt at the due times which were agréed vpon Homicide by casualtie 48 Though Homicide is most vsually knowne and termed by the killing of one man or woman or more by another man or woman or more yet hominis cedium whereof the same word Homicide is deriued may bée done by some other casualtie though when a man is slayne by some other mischaunce than by the hand or meanes of another man as by the fall of a pit of earth or stone or a trée or killed by a Beare or Bull or such like it is not aptly nor vsually sayd that Homicide is committed but that such a man is slaine 49 When a man commeth to his death by the meanes of any thing that falleth vpon him or by the meanes of a hurt which himselfe receiueth in falling from some other thing without the procurement of another man that thing which is the cause of his death shall bée forfeited to the King taken for a Deodand A Deodand and distributed in almes And it is not materiall whether the thing that killed the man was moouing or not at that time when it killed him for though it were not moouing yet it shall bée taken and accounted as a Deodand as well as if it were moouing Fitz. Cor. 403. M. 6. E. 6. Dyer 77. because all things moouing with the thing which was the cause of the mans death shall bée forfeited in like sort as the principall thing according to the old rule Omnia quae mouent ad mortem sunt Deodanda And yet those goods which bée forfeited as Deodand bée not forfeited vntill the matter be found of Record Co. li. 5. 110 and therefore they cannot be claimed by prescription And the same Iurie which doth find the death of the man must also find and appraise the Deodand A trée and the bough of another tree do kil a man 50 If a man do fell a trée Fitz. Cor. 398. and that trée falleth vpon the bough of another trée which bough falleth vpon a man and killeth him in this case both the bough that killed the man and also the trée which did fall vpon that bough shal be Deodand for they both did moue vnto and were the cause of his death Falling off a cart or from a cart 51 If a man do ride in a cart and the same cart falleth vpon him Fitz. Cor. 388. and killeth him as well the same cart as the horses that drew the cart shall be Deodands And in like sort if a man bee in a cart and by the stirring of the horses which drew the cart or any of them he is cast out of the cart and dyeth thereof Fitz. Cor. 397. Pl. Com. 323. as well the horses which drew the cart as also the cart shall be Deodands for the horses and cart béeing fastened together bée all the cause of the mans death Falling from a cart laden 52 If a man fall from a cart laden with Corne Hay Wood Fitz. Cor. 326. c. and the wheele of the cart breaketh his necke backe or c. whereby hée dieth as wel the Corne Falling from cart that is in lading Hay Wood or c. as the cart shal be Deodands But if a man do fall from a cart as he is lading of Corne Hay Wood Fi. Cor. 326 c. by the stirring of the horses and thereby breaketh his necke backe or c. whereby he dyeth the cart and horses shal be Deodands but not the corne c. for that the corne c. were not the cause of his death If a man that doth driue a cart doe clime vpon one of the whéeles of the cart Fitz. Cor. 409. to gather apples plums or c. and doe fall from that whéele and breaketh his necke back or c. whereof he dieth if it be
of treason or felonie which graunting of Pardon is one of the most ancient and honourable prerogatiues that is annexed to the Imperiall Crowne of this Realme being an authoritie in a sort to reuiue a dead man and to continue him in life whom the Lawe adiudged to die And it is only granted vpon a good hope that the king hath of the amendment of the life of that subiect who hath offended his lawes and whose crime his owne conscience doth assure him that he may pardon notwithstanding his othe taken at his coronation which othe is that he will to the vttermost of his power cause equall and right iustice to be done in all iudgements and discretion in mercy and truth for as Bracton Bracton saith The King at his coronation The Kings oath at his coronation by an oathe taken in the name of Iesus Christ the sonne of God ought to promise his subiects thrée things The first that he will commaund and doe his whole indeuour during his raigne that true peace may be performed to the Church of God and all his people The second that he will by all meanes restraine euery kind of rapine and oppression The third that in all Iudgements he will commaund iustice and mercie to be obserued that by his mercifull dealing with others the God of mercie may take commiseration vpon him and that by his iustice all his people may enioy peace 2 Because authoritie to remitt and pardon Treasons Murders Manslaughters and other felonies with diuers others of the most ancient prerogatiues and authorities of Iustice appertaining to the imperiall Crowne of this Realme were seuered and taken from the saide Crowne by sundrie gifts of the Kings of this Realme to the great diminution and detriment of the royall estate of the same and to the hindrance and delay of iustifie For reformation whereof by a statute made Anno 27. H. 8. St. 27. H. 8. 25. it was enacted That no person or persons of what estate or degree soeuer they be shall haue anie power or authoritie to pardon or remit any treasons None but the king shal pardon treasons felonies c. murders manslaughters or felonies whatsoeuer they be nor any accessories to any treasons murders manslaughters or felonies or any outlawries for any such offences aforesaid committed done or diuulged by or against any person or persons in any parts of this Realme or Wales or the Marches of the same But that the King his heires and successors kings of this Realme shall haue the whole and sole power and authoritie thereof vnited and knit to the imperiall crowne of this realme as of good right and equitie it appertaineth any graunts vsages Acts of parliament or any other thing to the contrary notwithstanding 3 But because the Kings of this Realme haue not had that circumspection in graunting of pardons which Bracton doth thinke fit and haue béene many times deceiued in their grants by false suggestions and for that offendors in times past were greatly encouraged and lesse feared to offend in respect that pardons of manslaughters robberies felonies and other trespasses against the Peace were so easily graunted For the redresse whereof by a statute made Anno 2. Ed. 3. St. 2. Ed. 3. 2 it was ordained In which cases onely the K. may grant pardon of felonie c. That no such charters should be graunted but where the King may doe it by his oathe that is to say in case where a man doth kill an other in his owne defence or by misfortune which laide Statute was after rehearsed and confirmed by an other Statute made Anno 4. Ed. 3. St. 4. E. 3. 13 And also by another Statute made Anno 14. Ed. 3. St. 14. Ed. 3. 10. the effect of the same was rehearsed and confirmed and it was moreouer ordained That if any charter of pardon were from thenceforth graunted contrarie to the purport of the said Statutes that then the same should be accompted as voide 4 And though there be wordes large enough in the foresaide Statutes to make frustrate all those charters of pardon which be graunted against the forme of the same Statutes Non obstante in a pardon yet by putting into the Charters of pardon these wordes viz. Non obstante aliquo statuto actu ordinatione in contrarium edito the force of those Statutes be cleane taken away and not onely of those but also of all other in which this clause of Non obstante is inserted for it is a dispensation of the Statute and commonly put in euerie Letters patents But because the Kings of this Realme were oft times deceiued in granting of charters of pardon by the false and vntrue suggestion of others Therefore to auoide those abuses by a Statute made Anno 27. Ed. 3. St. 27. E. 3. 2 it was accorded That in euery charter of pardon of felonie The suggestion comprised in the pardon which shall be graunted at the suggestion of any person the suggestion and the name of him that maketh it shall be comprised in the same charter And if after the suggestion be found vntrue the Charter shall be disallowed and accounted nothing worth And the Iustices before whom such Charters shall be alleaged shall enquire of the same suggestions and if they finde them vntrue they shall disallow the Charters and procéede further as the Lawe requireth 5 Because the Commons did complaine in Parliament of the outrages mischiefes and dammages which did come to the Realme by treasons murders rauishments of women commonly done committed and the rather for that charters of pardon were too easily granted thereof and did desire the King that such charters of pardon might no more be granted in those Cases Whereunto the K. did answer that he would yéeld to their petition sauing the prerogatiue and regal authority which his progenitors before that time had And to the intent that the King would be certainely informed before of what offences he did graunt pardon Therefore by a Statute made Anno 13. R. 2. St. 13. R. 1. 1 Stat. 2. the King did graunt with the assent of the Parliament That no Charter of pardon shall be allowed before any Iustice for murder The offences shall be specified in the pardon for the death of a man slaine by awaite assault or malice prepensed treason or rape of a woman vnlesse the same murder death of a man slaine by awaite assault or malice prepensed treason or rape of a woman be specified in the same Charter And if a Charter of the death of a man be alleadged before any Iustice in which Charter it is not specified that hée of whose death any such is arraigned was murdered or slaine by awaite assault or malice prepensed the same Iustices shall enquire by a good Enquest of the visne where the dead was slaine if hée were murdered or slaine by awaite assault or malice prepensed And if they shall find that he was murdered or
the workes of euerie Rabbie Counsell Father Doctor and other Expositor of the same thereby to learne which parts of the said Testament be written Hystorically which prophetically which metaphorically which hyperbolically and which literally and how euery of them are to be construed takē and into al the books of controuersies in religion which haue bin written in all former ages and this our present time and all the reasons produced for the maintenance of each seuerall persons opinion and then will bend his care vpon the church of God and learne by the report of the Ecclesiasticall Hystoriographers related from the first creation of man vntill this day when where by whom whose meanes she hath flourished and increased and again when where by what meanes she hath bin obscured and blemished And also will haue respect to the Cosmographers and Chroniclers of the seuerall kingdomes and prouinces of the world who did describe the scituation of them the nature and disposition of the people of each countrey their forme of gouernment their seuerall laws and customes the fertilitie and barrennesse of their soyls and how in times they haue flourished and decayed And further will reuolue in his mind the hundreds of volumes which haue bin written of the Common and Ciuile Lawes and of the rites of other kingdomes nations and cities And also will take notice of the infinit number of singular men which in seuerall ages haue written learnedly and profoundly of Grammer Logicke Rhetorick Philosophy Physick Arithmetick Geometry Musicke and Astronomie and published to all posteritie the seuerall grounds principles and maximes of euerie of them And moreouer will diligently hearken vnto the number of volumes collected in seuerall ages of the procreation nature and course of life of all the beasts of the field the wormes of the earth the fowles of the ayre and the fishes of the sea and of the beginning increase vertue of all trees hearbs roots plants things vegetatiue and of the operation of all stones mynes quarreyes metals and other things which grow vpon the face of the earth or lye hidden in the ground And further will take a view in his memorie of the millions of bookes which haue been written in the Syriake Chaldie Hebrew Greeke and Latin tongues for the increase of all sorts of learning and knowledge And lastly will giue his heart leaue to thinke of the huge multitude of Treatises which haue beene composed in verse mytre and rime in a sweet and harmonicall tune and then if the same curious carper at other mens ignorance after his said due consideration had of all the writings and writers aforesaid and of their seuerall deepe wisedoms knowledges and vnderstandings in the arts sciences and things aforesaid and how necessary beneficiall or comfortable they be to man will returne home againe and looke into his owne breast and bosome and examine himselfe seriously what he doth lacke of all the artes and sciences aforesaid and also how farre from perfection he is in his owne profession I doubt not but whatsoeuer before he thought of himselfe he wil now find that he hath but a small drop sparke or particle of learning or knowledge in respect of that he wanteth and which hee may perceiue to haue beene in some others and that hee hath no cause to maligne the ignorance of others but rather to pitie his owne and to say with the old Philosopher Hoc solum scio quod nihil scio Cratippus Many wholly deuoted to their owne opinions do desire to maintaine Paradoxes to strain all their wits to defend them though their assertions seeme neuer so improbable and their arguments neuer so weak to others as appeareth by Rodolphus Agricola who did write a book De vanitate scientiarū which the whole wisdome of the world in all ages hath so much admired and honoured and by Erasmus Roterodamus who compiled a Treatise Of the prayse of folly attempting therein to proue by a farre fetched argument that the folly of man and woman together is the onely cause of the propagation and continuance of mankind vpon the face of the earth and that the fault and folly of Adam in eating of the forbidden apple contrarie to Gods commaundement being the breach of the peace betweene God and man was the cause that moued Iesus Christ the son of God to descend from the bosome of his father to take flesh of the blessed virgin Marie to suffer his passion for the sinnes of man and so to renew peace betweene God and man And therefore we must not insist vpon the priuat conceits or particular phantasies of a few opinatiue persons but shall do well rather to obserue what care our fathers from one age to another did take and what ordinances they established in Parliament that seuerall penall criminall and capitall lawes and statutes should be read or proclaimed in Churches St. 25. E. 1. 3 St. 7. R. 2. 6 St. 33. H. 8. 9. St. 5. El. 1. in Faires in Markets at the generall Assises and Quarter Sessions of euerie countie at Leets and Lawdayes and in the Halls of euerie Inne of Court and Chauncerie and how the same is continued and duely put in practise at this day to the intent that the same lawes and the penalties thereof should be heard learned knowne and vnderstood by all sorts of persons willing to perceiue and apprehend the same But if there be any who persuading themselues that they doe search further into the bowels of reason or experience than all our foresaid law-makers and others haue done and will by disputes encounter the publishing or reading of our foresaid lawes in the English tongue I must and will patiently content my selfe suffer them to affirme what they please and say with mine old Schoolemaster Cato Arbitrij nostri non est quid quisque loquatur OF MENACES ASsaults Batteries Imprisonments Maihems 1VNdertaking to write of the peace of the King and the Kingdome and the chiefe impediments thereof and to declare which be the great and generall offences of the Realme I haue thought it good to begin with the verie root and principall cause of the same which are menaces threatnings and other bitter wordes beeing as streames gushing out of contentious spirits and venimous tongues The euill fruits of menaces their naturall fountaines and spring heads from whence doe ensue sometimes assaults batteries riots routs vnlawfull assemblies forces and forcible entries some other times forgeries periuries and oppressions and ofttimes maihems manslaughters and murders And therefore king Dauid hauing felt the sting of the bitter curses opprobrious slaunders and sharpe menaces of king Saul Shemei Nabol and others did verie aptly and effectually decipher euill tongued persons by these words Psal 13. Sepulchrum patens est guttur eorum linguis suis dolose agebant venenum aspidum sub labijs eorum Quorum os maledictione amaritudine plenum est Veloces pedes eorum ad effundendum sanguinem Contricio
a Lords freeholder to plead That those tenants of the plaintifes which departed from their tenancies were the fréeholders and the fréehold tenants of the plaintifes and not his tenants at will For if it be so the plaintife shall recouer nothing against the defendant because hee hath other sufficient remedie to recouer the seruices of his fréeholders or the land in stead of thē And so it is to plead that the tenants which departed 21. H. 6. 31. were tenants for terme of yeares 6 In the cases aforesaid he that is wronged in his owne person his seruants or tenants by the menace of another whereby hée sustaineth losse shall haue his action of Trespasse against the offendor for the said menace and the hurt which he receiueth thereby and the king also shall haue a fine of the offendor for that the menace was of life and member and suggested to bee done vi armis and so tended to the breach of the peace But if it bée such a menace as doth not tend to the breach of the peace Menace which is iustifyable then the law is otherwise for then the partie menaced shall neither haue an action of Trespasse or other remedie against the menacer neither shall the king haue a fine of him As if a man dye seised of certaine lands and a stranger will abate 22. H. 6. 48 21. H. 6. 26. 9. H. 7. 7. and then the heire of him who dyed seised will enter vpon the stranger and menace and threaten him That if he will not depart from the possession of the same land that then hée shall repent it as the law will allow this is menace iustifiable for that he hath said no more than the law will allow him to performe And in like sort if A. be disseised of his fréehold eiected out of his terme of yeares Li. Intr. 555 dispossessed of his goods beaten assaulted or euill intreated by B. if in this case A. will say vnto B. That he will not endure those wrongs nor put them vp at his hands but will prosecute suit according to the law of the Realme in the sharpest maner that he can for the redresse of those iniuries and for the due punishment of B. this is menace iustifiable and nothing tending to the breach of the peace for A. hath said nothing but that the law will permit him to doe And in these cases the menacer doth yeeld to make the law iudge of his wrongs and that also in peaceable manner but in the former cases the menacer doth threaten to be the reuenger of his owne iniuries and so to be his owne iudge and that also in a forcible and vnlawfull sort And so it is if one man owe money to another and at the time assigned doth not pay if the creditor do say to the debtor that he will sue him according to the course of law 16. E. 4. 7. and imprison him for his debt this is menace iustifiable for the law doth allow him to doe it 7 As menace in words is accounted in many cases to be a meane of the breach of the peace and so punishable by the lawes of the realme so menace by deeds by behauiour gesture wearing of armour or vnusuall and extraordinarie number of seruants or attendants is accounted to be in affraie and feare of the people a meane of the breach of the peace and so punishable for the law doth intend that he which in a peaceable time doth ride or goe armed without sufficient warrant or authoritie so to doe doth meane to breake the peace and to doe some outrage seeing she is able and wil be alwaies ready to defend euery member of the common weale from taking or receiuing of force or violence from others if himselfe doe not giue cause to the contrarie Whereupon by a Statute made at Northhampton St. 2. E. 3. 3. anno 2. Ed. 3. it was enacted That no man great nor smal of what condition soeuer he be except the kings seruants in his presence his ministers in executing of the kings precepts or of their office and such as be in their companie assisting them and also vpon a Crie made for armes to keepe the peace and the same in such places where such acts happen be so hardie to come before the kings Iustices or other the kings ministers in doing their offices with force and armes nor bring no force in affraie of the peace nor to goe nor ride armed by day nor by night in faires markets Menace by going or riding armed nor in the presence of the Iustices or other ministers nor in no part elsewhere vpon paine to forfeit their armour to the king their bodies to prison at the kings pleasure And that the kings Iustices in their presence Sherifes and other ministers in their bailiwicks Lords of franchises their bailifs in the same mayors bailifs of cities boroughs within the same cities boroughs borough-holders wardens of the peace within their wards shal haue power to execute this act And that the Iust assigned at their cōming down into the coūtrey shall haue power to inquire how such officers Lords haue executed their offices in this case to punish them whom they find haue not done that which pertained to their office St. 7. R. 2. 13 20. R. 2. 1. And after by a statute made anno 7. R. 2. it was ordained That no Lord Knight nor other little or great shall go nor ride by night or by day armed nor beare sallet or skull of yron nor other armour vpon the paine of forfeiture thereof to the king except the kings officers and ministers in doing their offices And by the same statute it was also assented that none should ride or goe with Launcegaies Launcegaies beeing an armour defensiue then vsed in affraie of the people but that the same Launcegaies should be for euer put out 8 And shortly after the same Statute of 2. Ed. 3. was put in execution Wearing of a priuie coate for a knight was attached and arraigned in the kings Bench for that hee did weare armor vnder his vpper garment in the kings palace 24. E. 3. 33. and in Westminster hall who pleaded that there was debate betwéen him and another knight who did that weeke strike him and yet did menace him and that for feare of further perill and to saue his life hee did weare the same armour But this was adiudged no plea for the court did award that hee should forfeit his armour and be committed to the marshalsey And though he desired to be let to mainprise he was not admitted thereunto vntill the kings pleasure was knowne And the other knight his aduersarie was sent for into the kings Bench and there commanded vpon paine of all that he could forfeit that hee should not meddle nor doe any thing but that which was good to his said aduersarie Labourers shall weare no weapons
Tithingman of the same parish of L. he was by this defendant stripped naked from the middle vpward and openly whipped vntill his body was bloudy And the same law is if any Iustice of peace Maior Bailife or other head officer shall commit any offendor which shall cut or vnlawfully take away any corne or graine growing or robbe any orchards or gardens or breake or cut any hedge pales railes or fence or digge pul vp or take vp any fruit trées or trées in any orchard garden or elsewhere to the intent to take cary the same away Or shall cut or spoile any woods or vnderwoods poles or trées standing not being felony by the lawes of this Realme Or shall be a procuror or receiuor knowing the same contrary to the statute therefore made An. 43. El. intituled Sta. 43. El. 7. an act to auoid and preuent diuers misdemeanors in lewd and idle persons shal be committed by a I. of Peace or by a head officer of a city borough c. to some Constable or other inferiour officer of the city borough Towne or Hamlet where the offence shall be committed or the partie apprehended to be whipped If in this case the said Constable or other inferior officer shall whip the same offendor vntill his body shal be bloudie the same offendor shall neither haue an action of Trespas of assault battery nor other remedy against the said Constable or officer for in the foresaid cases Punishments by the order of law in all other cases where an offendor is punished for petit Larceny by whipping for other offences by the pillorie the stocks the tumbrell or otherwise for any offēce committed by him contrary to any of the lawes or statutes of the Realme there is no peace broken nor blame to be imputed to him or them which do execute that punishment for it is the iustice of the law which doth inflict those punishments vpon offendors for transgressing the law the executioners of those punishments be but the instruments of the law as the axe is in the Carpenters hand Battery for disobeying of a writ or warrant 24 In an action of Trespas of assault battery 21. H. 7. 39. Fitz. Trespas 108. it is a good plea for the def to plead that he had a warrant to arrest the plaintife and that by force of that warrant he did arrest him then the plaintife made assault vpon him therefore the hurt which he receiued was by his own assault for euery subiect is boūd to obey the K. writs all mandates precepts warrants awarded by his Iustices shirifes and officers sufficiently authorized And he that doth resist them or denyeth to obey them encountreth the iustice of the law and therefore the beating of him who refuseth to submit himselfe to the obedience of the Law is no breach of the peace but a meane to performe the law 25 Though the Law hath a regard to preserue peace betwéen all persons and in all places and caryeth a vigilant eye that one person shall not menace assault beate maihem or imprison an other but in certaine cases and for some speciall causes and imposeth an heauie burden vpon such as shall breake that peace by any of the meanes aforesaid Yet she hath a more speciall respect to some ceraine places to some tymes and to some persons and caryeth that reuerend and due care and consideration of them that she inflicteth a more sharpe and bitter punishment vpon such as shall violate the peace in them or to the offence of them And therefore for the auoiding of the disturbance of the peace in the Church where God is to be honoured and all peace to be preserued and to continue peace to preists clerks and others whilest they are dooing diuine seruice There was a statute made Anno 50. E. 3. and after rehersed and continued Anno 1. Sta. 50. E. 3. 1. 1. R. 2. 15. R. 2. whereby it was enacted That if any of the Kings officers or other person doe arrest any priest clerke or other Arresting one in a Church dooing diuine seruice which is doing any diuine seruice in the Church Churchyard or other place dedicated to God he shall be imprisoned and punished at the Kings pleasure and further shall recompence the partie arrested But no people of the Church shall kéepe them within the Church or Sanctuarie by fraud or ●ellusion 26 And because it is most necessarie in euery Christian common weale to prouide that peace and tranquility may be preserued and continued among the people and specially in holy Church in the time of diuine seruice and preaching and that all things being contrary thereunto or that are or may be in disturbance thereof may by forsight be eschewed and auoyded and remedy therefore prouided Sta. 1. M. 3. By a like statute made Anno 1. Reg. M. it was ordeined That if any person of his owne authoritie Disturbance of a preacher in his sermon shall willingly and of purpose by open words or déeds maliciously or contemtuously disturbe or by any other vnlawfull wayes disquiet or misuse any Preacher allowed to preach by the Quéene or by any Archbishop or Bishop of this realme or by any other lawfull Ordinary or by any of the Vniuersities of Oxford and Cambridge or otherwise lawfully authorized or charged by reason of his cure benefice or spirituall promotion or charge in his open sermon preaching or collation that he shall preach or pronounce in any Church Chappell or Churchyard or in any other place vsed or appointed then euery such offendor his aydors procurors or abbettors immediatly after any of the said misdemeanors committed or at any time after shal be arrested by any Constable or Churchwarden of the said parish towne or place where the said offence shal be so committed or by any other officer or by any other person then being present at the time of the said offence and carried to any Iustice of peace within the said shire or within any City borough Libertie or towne corporat wherein Iust of P. be where the said offence shal be so committed And the said Iustices vpon due accusations thereupon made by the apprehendor or other person of the offendor forthwith shal commit him to safe kéeping within 6. days immediatly after the said accusation so made the said Iust with one other Iust of P. within the shire city borough liberty or town corporat shal diligently examin the offence aforesaid And if the said two Iustices shall vpon their examination find the person so accused guiltie of any of the said offences whereof he shall be accused and that by two sufficient witnesses or by his confession then they shall commit him to the Gaole of the said Shire City Borough c. where the offence was committed there to remaine without baile or mainprise by the space of thrée moneths then next ensuing and further to the next quarter sessions c.
good iustification for him though the Iustice of peace did erre in the awarding of the proces And the same law is if the Shirife doth erre in any warrant that he doth direct to the Bailife of a Libertie Arresting an offendor deliuering him to the Constable If a man do arrest an other 10. Ed. 4. 17. who he knoweth hath committed a robberie man slaughter or other felony do deliuer him to the Constable to carrie to the gaole and the Constable will set him at libertie or doth not carrie him to the gaole or that the same person arrested be rescued out of the possession or custodie of him that did arrest him yet in neither of the foresaid cases he that was arrested shall haue an action of False imprisonment against him that did arrest him for that there was no default in him that the offendor was not imprisoned according to his desert Imprisonmēt vntill he hath made an Obligation 50 An action of False imprisonment was brought for imprysoning the plaintife vntill he had made an Obligation of xl 2. Ed. 4. 19. pounds to the defendant and others vnknowen by duresse and this was adiudged maintenable for if the plaintife did not know their names he could not expresse their names for the Obligation is not the effect of this suit but the imprisonment and he shall not recouer dammages for the Obligation but for the imprisonment for that he is not yet damnified by the Obligation because when that is sued he may plead that it was made by duresse of imprysonment and so auoid it But if the action of False imprisonment be brought of an imprisonment vntil he had made a fine he shall recouer dammages for both for he is presently grieued by the fine and so is he not by the Obligation 51 If a master do imprison a man in a house 22. Ed. 4. 45. and deliuer the key of the doore of that house to his seruant The seruant not chargeable for the masters offence the partie imprysoned cannot haue an action of False imprysonment against the said seruant for the kéeping of the key But if the seruant that hath the key do know that the same partie were wrongfully imprysoned then he ought to let him go at libertie for the seruant is bound to obey his masters commaundement but in those things that be lawfull onely And if the seruant which kept the key did not know that the same partie was imprysoned in that house then vpon his plea of not guiltie he shall be excused in an action of False imprisonment brought against him by the partie imprisoned Imprisonmēt by force of a Iustices 52 If a writ of Natiuo habendo or a Iusticies be directed to the Shirif 2. H. 4. 24. he cannot iustify the impris of any man by force therof for they be but commissions to hold plea. And the bodie of a man shall not be arrested or taken but by proces awarded out of a court of record and by those Commissions the Shirises court is not made a court of record 9. Ed. 4. 30. 53 In an action of False imprisonment A warrant vpon a Supplicauit it is a good iustification for the defendant to plead that a Supplicauit came to the Shirife to apprehend the plaintife who made his warrant to the defendant to take him which he did accordingly And yet the Shirife can not giue his authority to an other to take suerty of him 5. H. 7. 6. 54 A Iustice of peace can not direct a warrant to apprehend him who hath broken the peace for he is to be punished by inditement Arresting him who would break the peace at the Kings suit or by action of Trespas of batterie at the partie grieued his suit But he may direct his warrant to apprehend him who he doth doubt meaneth to breake the peace in time to come and to bring him before himselfe or some other Iustice or else to commit him to prison for one Iustice of peace alone may doe his endeuor to preserue the peace before it be broken but being once broken it must be punished by inditement in the presence of diuers Iustices of peace or by action at the common Law Sta. 5. El. 4. 55 If any seruant woorkeman or laborer Imp. of a seruant for assaulting of his master shall wilfully or maliciously make any assault or affray vpon his master mistresse or dame or vpon any other that shall at that time haue the charge or ouersight of him or of the worke wherein he is appoynted or hired to worke and beeing thereof conuicted before any two of the Iustices of peace Maior or head officer of a towne corporat where the offence is committed or before either of the Lords Presidents of the North or Wales by the confession of the said seruant workman or laborer or by the witnesse and oath of two honest men Then euery such offendor shall suffer imprisonment by the space of one whole yeare or lesse by the discretion of two Iustices of peace if it be without a towne corporat if it be within a towne corporat then by the discretion of the Maior or head officer of the same towne corporat with two others of the discréetest persons of the same corporation at the least And if the offence shall require further punishment then to receiue such other open punishment so as it extende neyther to life or limme as the Iustices of peace in open Sessions or as the more part of them or the said maior or head officers or vj. or iiij at the least of the discréete persons of the same corporation before whom the offence shall be examined shall thinke conuenient for the qualitie of the said offence so committed 56 By which foresaid cases and many more Where imprisonment is lawfull and where not it appeareth that imprisonment is lawfull and sufficiently authorized by the Common Lawes and Statutes of this Realme in diuers respectes and for many crimes and there is by it no breach of the peace nor offence to the Law when it is inflicted by the warrant of the law for it aduaunceth as much the justice and peace of the Realme to haue offendors punished as to haue the innocent protected But the imprisonment which tendeth to the breach of the peace and the offence of the law is when one person or more vpon his or their owne authoritie eyther in reuenge of some supposed wrong receiued or in hope of a priuat gaine expected or for some other cause will of his or their owne authority imprison or arrest an other for the redresse whereof the party grieued shall haue an action of false imprisonment or an action of trespas recouer his damages And the same offendor which before did wrongfully imprison an other shall then vpon his conuiction by verdict or his owne confession be himselfe lawfully imprisoned vntill he hath paid to the king a
Ed. 1. 25. and doth not except an Enfant By the statute of Westm̄ 2. if he that is named a disseisour in an Assise do personally alleage any false exception whereby the taking of the assise is deferred viz. that at an other time an assise of the said tenements passed betwéene the said parties or that a writ of higher nature is depending betwéene them of the said tenements Imp. for failing of a record pleaded and doth vouch any rols or records to warrant the same and at the day giuen he faileth of his warrant he shall be adiudged a disseisour without recognizance of the assise and shall restore double dammages of that which shall be found and for his falshood shall be one yeare imprysoned And fourthly a man in diuers cases shall bee imprysoned for his stubbornesse wilfulnesse disobedience and contempt to subiugate and submit himselfe to the censure and iudgement of the Law and to performe accomplish that which the law doth expect at the hands of him and all others being in his case As if a Quid iuris clamat or Per quae seruitia be brought against a man Imp. for not atturning who doth appeare in Court and will not atturne to the plaintife nor plead in barre he shall be imprisoned for his stubbornes And if the tenant that ought to do homage or fealtie to his Lord Imprisonmēt for not doing his true seruice do appeare in Court and will not do such of the said seruices as be claimed of him neither plead in barre thereof Fitz. Per q̄ seruitia 23. he shall be imprisoned vntill he will do his foresaid seruices for his wilfull contempt of the law and disobedience to justice And if a writ of Estrepement be directed to the Shirife to prohibit him to commit wast in lands against whom a reall action Co. Lib. 5. 105. or action of Wast is depending for or touching the same lands the Shirife by force of the same writ may resist him who would do wast And if he cannot otherwise redresse the offence he may impryson him if néed be he may take the power of the Countie to assist him for this disobeying of the Kings writ and resistance of the Shirife is a wilfull frowardnesse and contempt of the law in the offendor and therefore he deserueth to tast the smart of the Law by imprisonment for his contumacy And in like sort by the statute of An̄ 27. Stat. 27. H. 8. 20. Stat. 32. H. 8. 7. H. 8. An̄ 32. H. 8. it was ordeined That if any person after sentence difinitiue giuen against him by the Ordinarie his Commissarie or other competent minister or lawfull Iudge do obstinatly refuse to pay his Tythes or duties or such summes of money adiudged wherein he is condemned for the same Then two Iustices of the peace of the same Shire whereof one to be of the Quorum shall haue authoritie vpon information Imp. for obstinate refusing to performe the Ordinaries sentence certificat or complaint made in writing by the ecclesiasticall Iudge that gaue the same sentence to cause the same person so refusing to be attached and committed to the next Gaole and there to remaine without bayle or mainprise vntill he hath found sufficient suerties to be bound by Recognizance or otherwise before the same Iustices to the vse of the King to performe the said sentence In the same maner may any one of the Kings Councell or two Iustices of peace vpon an Information or request made to them by the Ordinary St. 27. H. 8. 20. commit any offendor to ward for any contempt contumacie disobedience or any other misdemeanour of his in any suit for subtraction of Tythes offerings and other duties of the Church vntill he hath found suerties c. vt gladius gladium iuuet What is Matheining 58 Maiheming is an other gréeuance in the Realme and a speciall cause to disturbe the peace And that is when one member of the Common weale shall take from an other member of the same a naturall member of his bodie or the vse and benefit thereof and thereby disable him to serue the common weale by his weapons in the time of warre or by his labour in the time of peace and also diminisheth the strength of his body and weaken him thereby to get his owne lyuing and by that meanes the common weale is in a sort depriued of the vse of one of her members How many sorts there be of maiheming 59 This maiheming is a dismembring of a man or taking away some member or part of his body or the vse thereof As when a wound blow or hurt is giuen or done by one person or more to an other person whereby he is the lesse able to defend himselfe in the time of warre or to get his lyuing in time of peace And therefore if a man do put out the eye or cut off the hand or foote or any ioynt of the hand or foote of an other it is a Maihem though it be done by chaunce medley Sta. 5. H. 4. 5 But if one man of malice pretended do cut out the tongue or put out the eyes of any of the Kings subiects it is Felonie And if one man do crush the mouth or head of an other or break out his fore-téeth it is a maihem for with them he may defend him selfe in battaile but to breake his hinder téeth or to cut off his Nose Fitz. Corone 458. or Eares whereby he loseth his hearing is no maihem but a deformitie or blemish of his bodie and no weakning of his strength It is a Maihem to pull any boane out of a mans head or to cut off any finger of a mans hand 28. Ed. 3 94. Lib. in t fol. 45. or to breake any of them so that they become shronke vp or dried vp or dead or crooked Gelding of a man is also a maihem though it be in a secret place yet it maketh him more féeble and vnable to defend himselfe in in bataile or to worke for his liuing If by any wound receiued the sinewes or vaines of a man be shronke vp it is a maihem To cut off the chéeke or iawbone of any person Lib. intur fol. 45. or so to crush or breake any of them that the same person is the lesse able to take his meate or drinke is a maihem If one person or more doe take an other person by force and put him in the stocks or otherwise bind him fast and after poure so much skalding what oyle and vinegar or hoat melted lead or other skalding licor vpon any part of his body and so continue it vntill it doth wast and consume the flesh of the same part and drie vp and mortifie the veynes and sinewes of the same parte it is a maihem If A. do strike at B. and the weapon wherwith he striketh breaking or falling out of his hand by the force of the blow doth put
himselfe he may commaund them vpon paine of imprisonment to surcease 5. H. 7. 6. or else he may with his weapon part kéepe them asunder and call and procure others likewise so to doe And then he may carrie them before a Iustice of peace to find suertie of the peace which if they refuse to doe he may commit them to prison 3. H. 4. 9. or els the Constable may take suerties of them by Obligation to kéepe the peace And if any of the offendors doe flée into a house 13. Ed. 4. 9. the said officer may breake open the dores and arrest him and so he may doe if the offendor doe flée into another Countie for that the arrest is for the benefite of the commonweale And likewise if any of the said officers shall learne that certaine persons be fighting or quarreling in a house in such sort that they are like to breake the peace or that a man and a woman be in a house together committing addultery or fornication 7. E. 3. 10. 1. H. 7. 6. he may breake open the dores and arrest them to come before a Iustice of peace to find suertie of the peace or otherwise if he will he may commit any of the said offendors to prison And if any of the parties to an affcay haue receiued any daungerous wound then the officer must arrest the offendor and carrie him to a Iustice of peace 22. Ass p. 56 who is eyther to commit him to prison or to let him to mainprise vntill the next Gaole deliuery that it be knowen whethir the partie wounded will liue or die thereof or els the officer himselfe may commit him to prison vntill the same be knowen 38. Ed. 3. 6. for if the partie wounded doe die the offence wil be felony If the common voice and fame of the County be that C.D. hath committed a felony any of those officers that doe suspect him thereof may arrest him for it And so he may search within the limits of his authority for any persōs suspected of felony for it is a chiefe parte of the Constables dutie to preserue the peace and represse felons And if any of the officers before mentioned do arrest an offendor or any person suspected for any of the causes aforesaid who ought to be carried to the Gaole or before a Iustice of peace the same officer néede not carrie him presently to the Gaole 22. Ed. 4. 35. or before the Iustice but he may put him in the stocks or some other safe custody for a time vntill he can prouide sufficient company to assist him to conduct the same offendor to the Gaole or to the Iustice 2. Ed. 4. 9. Or if the partie arrested be so sicke diseased or wounded that he cannot be presently carried without daunger of death the officer may stay him vntill he be recouered 85 But the peace of the Realme hath béen so precious to all ages Euery able person is a Conseruator of the peace and Treasons Felonies assaults batteries and other forcible violences and offences so odious that the Lawes and Statutes of the Realme and the wisedome of our forefathers haue made and appointed besides the Magistrates and officers before mencioned all sortes of able persons in some sort and to some purposes preseruers of the peace intending that as all the members of the common weale doe taste swéet comfort and pleasant repose by the benefit of peace so they should be all partakers when néede requireth of the paines to maintaine and continue the same peace and to punish the transgressors thereof Sta. 3. E. 1. 9. And therefore by the Statute of Westm̄ 1. it is ordained That all men generally shall be ready at the commaundement and summons of the Shirifes and at the crie of the country to pursue and arrest felons when néede shall be aswell within fraunchises as without and they that will not and be thereof attainted shall make a grieuous fine to the King Sta. 3. Ed. 1. By the statute intituled Officium Coronatoris it is enacted That vpon all Homicides Burglaries men slaine or put in great daunger huy and crie shall be leuied and euery man shall follow the huy and crie and the offendors steppes if it may be and whosoeuer doth not and is thereupon conuicted shall be attached to appeare before the Iustices of Gaole deliuerie St. 5. E. 3. 14. By the Statute of Anno 5. Ed. 3. it is established That if any man suspect lewd persons then termed robertsmen wasters or drawlatches of any manslaughters felonies or robberies be it by day or night they shall incontinently be arrested by the Constable of the towne and if it be within franchise deliuered to the Bailifes of the franchise and if in guildable to the shirife and kept vntill the comming downe of the Iustices of Gaole deliuerie who shall procéede to the deliueraunce of them St. 17. R. 2. 8. By the Statute of 17. R. 2. it is defended to all the Kings people aswell Lords as others that none shall make assemblies Riots or Rumors against the peace And if any such assemblie be begun as soone as the Shirife and other Ministers may haue knowledge thereof they with the strength of the country shal disturbe such offendors and put them in prison vntill the law be executed vpon them And all Lords and other liege people of the Realme shall be attending with all their strength and power to the Shirifes and Ministers aforesaid St. 2. H. 5. 8. By the Statut of An̄ 2. H. 5. it is prouided That the Kings people being able to trauaile in the Countie where Riots assemblies or routs against the law be shal be assistant to the Iustices Commissioners Shirife or vndershirif of the same Countie when they shall be reasonably warned to ride with the said Iustices Shirife c. in aide to resist such Riots Routs and Assemblies vpon paine of imprisonment and to make fine and ransom to the King St. 15. R. 2. 2 By the Statute of 15. R. 2. it is ordeined That if the Shirife or any other of the Countie doe not attend vpon a Iust of peace to arrest such offendors as doe make forcible entries into lands or tenements he or they so offending shall be imprisoned and pay a fine to the King Sta. 1. M. 12. By the Statute of An̄ 1. M. it is established That if any person being aboue the age of xviij yeares and vnder the age of lx being able to serue and not sick lame or impotent shall be required by any Iustice of peace or any Shirife of any County where any vnlawfull assembly of xij persons or aboue shall be to do any vnlawfull act prohibited by that statute or by any Maior Bailife or other head Officer of any Citie Borough or towne corporat or by any other by the commaundement of any such Iustice Shirife Maior c. to go with him or them to suppresse the
the said Chauncellor for the King or any other against any person for any misbehauing by vnlawfull maintenances giuing of liueries signes and tokens retainers by Indentures oathes writings or otherwise embracery of the Kings subiects vntrue demeanings of Shirifes in making of pannels and other vntrue returnes by taking of money by iniuries by great Riots and vnlawfull assemblies haue authority to cal before them by writ or by priuy seale the said misdooers and they and other by their discretion by whom the truth may be knowne to examine and such as they finde therein defectiue to punish them according to their demerits after the forme and effect of the Statutes thereof made in like manner and forme as they should or ought to be punished if they were thereof conuict after the due order of the law And though the Iustices of peace doe assesse a fine in the Country vpon some that haue committed a Riot there yet the Lords in the Starre chamber may assesse vpon the said offendrs for the same Riot a greater penalty if they sée cause for in this case the offendors be not twice punished for one offence but part of the due punishment is inflicted at one time and part at another And the Lords doe sufficiently punish an offence which was but remisly done by the Iustices 3 A Riot is where thrée persons or aboue do assemble themselues together to the intent to beate or maihem a man to pul downe a house wall pale What is a Riot hedge or ditch wrongfully to claime or take common or way in a ground to destroy any parke warren douehouse pond poole barne mill or stacke of corne or to doe any other vnlawfull act with force and violence and against the peace and they doe it If a man goe abroade with his houshold seruants which he hath commonly of his owne familie though they be more then his abilitie or degrée is to maintaine and doth make a fray by the way this is no Riot vnlesse the Master did before make his seruants priuy that hée meant to make an affray for it is no riot except there be an intent before to doe some violence and hurt If thrée foure or more doe enter into landes with force vppon the possession of an other though their entrie be lawfull yet is it a Riot St. 5. R. 2. 7. for the Statute of Anno 5. Richard 2. doth prohibite entrie into Landes and Tenements with force or a multitude of people 4 An vnlawfull assembly is where thrée persons or aboue What is an vnlawfull assembly doe assemble themselues together to the intent to doe any of the Actes aforesaide or any other such vnlawfull act with force and violence against the Peace although they doe it not indéede but after their assemblie they departe by their owne consent vpon some feare conceiued or other cause without dooing of any outrage for their intent of assembling was vnlawfull though the act subsequent did not ensue according to the same 5 A Route is where thrée persons or aboue doe assemble themselues What is a Rout. for the reuenge of their owne common quarrell As if the Inhabitants of a Towne doe assemble together to pull downe a house wall pale ditch or other inclosure of a parke pasture or close or the head of a poole where they wrongfully pretend to haue title of common or a way or to beate or maihem one man or more that haue done to them all some publike offence If they once méete 17. Ed. 4. 4 procéede and goe forward towardes the execution of any of the Actes aforesaide and doe shew by Armour Gesture or Spéech that they meane to doe any violence or to terrifie or feare any of the Kings people it is a Rout whether they put their intended purpose in execution or not But if a Maior and Aldermen or Bayliffe and Burgesses or the fellowes of any societie doe assemble in their common quarrell and make a Riot Rout or Vnlawfull assembly this shall be punished in their owne priuate naturall persons and not in the body politike for it was their priuate persons that assembled to offend the Lawe and not the bodie politike If a man goe to the Sessions Market Faire Rout by wearing of Armour or other assemblie of company with his seruants in Harnesse though he hath no intent to fight or to commit any Riot yet this is a Rout by the manner of his comming and is contrary to the Statute of 2. St. 2. Ed. 3. 3 Edw. 3. which hath ordained That no man shall bring any force in affray of the peace nor shall go armed in faires markets or elsewhere vpon paine of imprisonment and forfeiture of his Armour Lawfull assemblies of thrée persons or more 6 An Assembly of thrée persons or more which is not to the terrour of the people nor to doe some Act with force and violence against the peace is not vnlawfull nor prohibited by any of the Statutes before mentioned The watch in London vpon Midsummer night is lawfull and so be such like in other Cities and Townes Assemblies be lawfull that be vsed vppon Maie day to fetch in Maie boughs or floures and so be assemblies at Church-Ales Whitson or Midsummer-Ales Assemblies at the fetching home setting vp or dauncing about a Maie-pole and assemblies at the bayting of a Bull or Beare or at the mowing or making of Dole or Reuell meade and assemblies of Minstrells and their fellowes at certaine places and times of the yéere allowed by old and ancient customes are also lawfull And Assemblies to play at Cardes Tables Bowles Clash Bucklers Wasters halfe Sword Tennis Quoits Cailes or such other games be likewise by the common lawe tollerable though some of the same games be prohibited vpon some penalties by Statute to be vsed by some persons and assemblies to runne at Quintall Sand bagge Base Footeball Stooleball Handball St. 33. H. 8. 9 or such like disports be also lawfull For these assemblies be not made with the intent to breake or disturbe the Peace or to offer violence force or hurt to the person of any but either to trie Actiuity or to increase societie amitie and neighbourly friendship And if in any of the said assemblies any of the parties the same shall make a fray with a stranger that is no Riot neither doth it make the residue of the same company Riotors who came thither for their disports and not to any euill or vnlawfull intent But if any of the same company shall fall out with a stranger or some others of their owne associates and then some of them doe take one parte and some of them another An Assembly lawfully begunne doth end riotously whereby a Riot is committed then so many of both sides as shall take sides and be parties to that quarrell shall be adiudged Riotors but not the residue for the Riot did not take his beginning at the first méeting when they did all
in returning of those Iurors lest by their partialitie Truth may be concealed Periurie committed and so iustice subuerted Fitz. Challenge 113. 7. Ed. 4. 56. 33. Ass p. 12 12. Ass pl. 1. 26. Ass p. 56 12. Ass p. 36. 44. Ass p. 18 Plo. Com. fol. 425. 29. Ass p. 2. 28. Ass p. 22 7. H. 4. 10. Fitz. Challeng 94. 99. 8. H. 5. 5. 20. H. 6. 39. 11. H. 4. 26. 38. H. 6. 6. 24. Edw. 37. And for that cause the prouidence of the Lawe doth not allow that Shiriffe Vndershiriffe Bailiffe of Franchise Coroner Causes of suspition in Shiriffes in impannelling of Iuries or other person as indifferent or méete to impannell a Iurie who is a partie to the sute or matter in question or who doth maintaine either of the parties plaintife or defendant in the same sute or is of councell with either of them in that sute then in issue Nor who is within the distresse receiueth the yéerely fée or weareth the liuerie or robe of any of the parties to that sute Nor who is of kinred by nature or of affinitie by marriage to any of the parties to that sute Nor who doth returne that Enquest or any of the Iurors therein at the denomination or by the procurement of any of the parties to the same sute or of any other person whatsoeuer Nor who doth impannell that Enquest or any of the Iurors therein for the fauour which he doth beare more to the one partie than to the other Nor who was an Arbitrator in that cause in question and to be in triall and did treate and conferre of the same Nor who is then in sute of lawe with either of the parties to this question or triall for any matter of trespasse malice or euill will Nor who did baptize the childe of any of the parties to this sute and triall 4. Ed. 4. 11. or any of the parties to the same sute did baptize his childe All which the Lawe doth suspect as causes of fauor and affection in the Shiriffe his Vndershiriffe c. and to be moouers fauourers or consentors to Periurie and therefore vpon challenge of the Array so being impannelled and the same prooued the whole Array shal be quashed 4 As the Lawe hath great care that Shiriffes Vndershiriffes Bayliffes of Liberties Coroners and all others hauing authoritie to returne enquests should therein be voide of all partialitie or presumption or cause thereof to the intent that a gappe should not be left open by their meanes to those that be willing to enter into corruption of conscience and so to commit Periurie In like sort hath shée vigilantly foreséene that those Iurors which be returned by the said Shirifes c. may be so sifted tried and examined that they may be found in all respects Probi legales homines Euery Iuror must be an honest and lawfull man viz. honest vpright 33. H. 6. 55. 26. Ass p. 28 14 H. 4. 19. 9. Ed. 4. 16. 11. H. 4. 4. and lawfull men in the eie and iudgement of the Lawe and that none of them be an Alien a villaine or outlawe an excommunicate person and thereby not legalis homo nor conuicted in a Writ of Conspiracie or an Attaint and by that meanes not probus homo and so to be challenged in euery cause and by euery person and further that they may be prooued to bee men of indifferencie and voide of all partialitie and such as will wholy respect the trueth of the cause in question and in their verdict nothing regarde any that is partie thereunto And therefore if there be any lawfull cause to feare particular fauour and affection in any of the Iurors and that hée will rather incline to Periurie than giue eare to the trueth of the cause the Lawe doth allow to the partie grieued Challenges of Iurors suspected or suspecting the same seuerall Challenges to the same Iuror and thereby to haue him drawne and remooued out of that Enquest A witnesse 5 As if a man be a witnes in a cause in question he can not be a Iuror in the same cause for the witnes doth testifie vpon his certaine knowledge 23. Ass p. 11 12. Ass p. 12 11. Ass p. 19 and the Iurors of an Enquest must giue their verdict according to their euidence And besides he that produceth a witnesse expecteth at his hand a fauourable deliuery of his euidence or otherwise he would not produce him which fauor euery Iuror must be wholy voide of if he will auoide Periurie Periurie suspected by deliuering his verdict before hand 6 If a Iuror after he is returned and before he is sworne 20. H. 6. 39. 8. Ed. 3. 69. will say that he will passe for the plaintife or defendant and doth speake it for the fauour which he beareth to the one partie or the hatred which he hath to the other and not in respect of his owne knowledge of the trueth of the cause the Law doth feare periurie in him and therefore shée will remooue him out of that enquest if he be challenged therefore Periury suspected by lying at the charge of one of the parties 7 If one that is impannelled of a Iurie doth goe to the Assises with one of the parties to the issue and doth eate and drinke with him at his charges 8. Ed. 3. 69 13. H. 4. 13. Fitz. Challenge 177. the Law doth suspect the same Iuror of partialitie and so of inclination to Periurie in recompence of that kindnes receiued and therefore she will remooue him out of that Enquest if he be challenged therefore 20. H. 6. 39. 9. Ed. 4. 46. 7. H. 7. 18. 8 If two men be in question for any cause Periurie suspectcted by an Arbitrator in the cause in question and then do refer the matter in debate to be heard ended by two Arbitrators whereof the one doth make choice of one Arbitrator and the other of an other which Arbitrators doe méete together and confer of the cause but do not agrée whereupon the party grieued doth prosecute the said suit to an issue and one of the same Arbitrators is returned of that Enquest the law doth suspect the same Iuror of partialitie and so of inclination to Periurie and therfore she will remoue him out of that Enquest if he be challenged therefore for when he was chosen by one of the parties alone this election maketh him in a sort of councel with him that did choose him and so fauorable vnto him but if he had bin chosen by the consent of both the parties together 3 H. 6. 25. the law would haue made other construction of him and adiudged him indifferent 34. Ass p. 6. 9 If two men do combine themselues by Oath bond couenant or faithfull aduised promise that one of them will take an others part be his friend and assist him in all causes whatsoeuer And after there is a sute commenced betwéene one
of the Iurors and that the Iuror in respect thereof doth beare an extraordinarie affection and is to make a recompence to the same partie and that therefore in this triall hée will fauour him and be a meane of Periurie and therefore if the Iuror be challenged for that cause he shall be drawen And some doe affirme the same cause of challenge and feare of Periurie to be 7. H. 6. 40. 19. H. 6. 66. if a Iuror hath béene godfather to either of the parties to that triall or to any childe of his 14 The Lawe expecting to be satisfied per Veredictum Iuratorum of the trueth of such causes as doe come to an issue dooth carefully foresée that those Iurors who are to deliuer the trueth by their verdict Periurie suspected in respect of ignorance of the cause should either before the time of the triall vpon their owne priuate knowledge or by their Euidence at the time of the triall be certainely informed of that trueth of the thing in question lest by ignorance mistaking falshoode for trueth they should slide into Periurie And because those that be dwelling or haue some land where the land lease or thing in question doth lie are more likely to haue intelligence of the trueth of the cause in question both to satisfie themselues and informe their Companions than other strangers of the same Countie are who dwell farre off the Lawe hath ordained by the Statute of Anno 27. Elizab. That there shall be sixe sufficient Hundredors impannelled vppon euery Issue ioyned which is to be tried in any of the Courts of the Kings Bench Stt. 27. El. 6. Common Pleas and the Exchequer Want of Hundredors or before the Iustices of Assise in all cases where euerie Iuror by the auncient lawes of this Realme ought to haue fortie shillings of fréeholde at the least And that at or vppon the triall of any personall action there shall two sufficient Hundredors at the least appeare And for that cause if in those cases there be not so many Hundredors at the least the Lawe doth conceiue they be ignorant of the truth of the Issue in triall And to that end for the auoiding of Periurie she will reiect the whole Iurie if they be challenged And so it is in an Assise where the plaintife is to be put in possession per Visum Iuratorum if he recouer or in any action where the Iurie is to haue the view of the land in question 8. Ed. 3. 69. Fitz. Chall 102. 169. if the same Iurors Want of the view or some of them had not the view of the land in question nor did know it before the Lawe will suspect that they will commit Periurie if they should be sworne séeing they be ignorant of the land and know it not in specie And therefore vpon challenge they shall be remooued 1. R. 3. 4. 15 Because our Law-makers haue in seuerall ages found by experience that nothing is a greater motiue enticement Periurie in respect of pouertie or rather inforcement to Periurie than néede and pouertie Therefore they haue endeuoured by many Statutes to prouide that such as be returned of Enquests should not onely be men of good behauiour and credite but also of conuenient liueliehoode estate and abilitie to liue of themselues for that Necessitie which hath no lawe nor bridle should not compell them to sell truth for rewardes nor to plunge themselues into Periurie for bribes And for the preuention of this Periurie in poore persons and such as bee of meane and weake estate Stt. 21. Ed. 1 by a Statute made Anno 21. Ed. 1. it was ordained That no Shiriffe Vndershiriffe or Bayliffe of Libertie shall put in any Recognisaunces of Assises Iuries Enquests or Attaints Iurors impanelled that shal passe out of their owne Counties that shall passe out of their proper County any person of their Bayliwickes except he hath lands and tenements to the yearely value of a hundred shillings at the least or that shall passe within the Countie except hée hath lands to the yearely value of xl s. And for the same cause vpon the same reason of preuention of periurie in poore and néedy persons by a Statute made Anno 3. H. 5. it was established St. 3. H. 5. 3 That no persons shall be admitted to passe in any enquest vpon triall of the death of a man or in any enquest betwéene partie and partie in plea reall or in plea personall whereof the debt or dammages declared do amount to xl Markes if the same person hath not lands and tenements of the yerely value of xl s̄ aboue all charges so that he be challenged for that cause by the party But by the Statute of An̄ 23. H. 8. St. 23. H. 8. 13. euery person being the Kings naturall subiect borne which by the name of a Citizen a fréeman Iurors to try felonies in corporat townes or any other name doth inioy the liberties of any Citie borough or town corporat where he dwelleth being worth in goods to the cléere value of xl li. shall be admitted in triall of Murders and felonies in euery Sessions and gaoles of deliuery kept in and for the libertie of such Cities Boroughes or Townes corporat albeit he hath no fréehold But this Act extendeth not to any Knight or Esquire dwelling abyding or resorting in or to any such citie borough c. And by the Statute of An̄ 27. Eliz. it was enacted Sta. 27. El. 6. That in all cases where any Iuror to bee returned for the triall of any issue or issues ioyned in any of the Courts of the Kings Bench common Pleas the Exchequer or before Iustices of Assise by the Lawes of the Realme now in force ought to haue estate of fréehold in lands Where Iurors must haue 4. li. land tenements or hereditaments of the cléere yerely value of xl s̄ in euery such case the Iurors that shal be returned shall euery of them haue estate of fréehold in lands c. to the cléere yearely value of foure pounds at the least out of auncient demesne within the Countie where the issue is to be tried By the Statute of 11. H. 7. it is prouided St. 11. H. 7. 21. That no person shal be impannelled summoned or sworne in any Iury or Enquest in Courts within the citie of London Iurors in London except he be of lands tenements goods or cattels to the value of xl Markes And no person shall be impannelled summoned or sworne in Iuries or Enquests in any Court within the said Citie for lands or tenements or action personall wherein the debt or dammages amounteth to the summe of xl markes except he be in lands tenemēts goods or cattels to the value of one hundred marks St 19. H. 7. 13. By the Statute of Anno 19. H. 7. it was ordained That euery of the xxiiij persons dwelling within the shire where any riot
verdit or misdemeanors shall happen to be made shall haue full power to compell such Iurors and euery of them vpon paine of imprisonment to be bound by Recognisance in a certaine summe of money by their discretion to be limited that the same Iurors and euery of them shall personally appeare at a certaine day by the same Iusticiar Steward or other officer to be limited before the Lord President and other of the Councell aforesaid for the time being then and there to abide and stand to such direction and order as the same councell shall make ordaine and decree of in and vpon the same And the same councell shall thereupon haue authoritie by examination or otherwise to heare and determine all and euery such cause and shall haue like authoritie to commit euery of the same Iurors to prison or other punishment as shal be thought meet by the discretion of the said counsel or otherwise assesse or taxe euery such Iuror to his fine and ransome by the same discretion to be paied and leuied of their lands goods and cattels to the vse of the King Periurie committed by witnesses 20 Hauing written of the restraint and punishment of periurie in Iurors consisting of twelue persons at the least impannelled or sworn to deliuer their verdict according to their euidēce I am now to expresse what punishments the law doth inflictt vpon such which doe come one by one as deponents or witnesses to testifie the truth and to informe the Iudge or the Iurie of the veritie of the matter in issue or question according to their knowledge whereof euery man by himselfe may be called singularis testis though there be more witnesses sworne in that cause And séeing that iustice cannot be executed without the knowledge of the truth of the cause in question that truth is in most cases only to be deliuered by the othes and testimonies of such parties as were witnesses priuie or best acquainted with the matter in variance Therefore first it is to be obserued that the wisdom of the law hath thought it necessarie to prouide that such witnesses may be compelled vnder a great paine to appear in court and testifie their knowledge concerning such matter in question as by the Statute made Anno 5. A witnes vpon proces serued shall appeare El. it was ordained St. 5. El. 9. St. 29. El. 5. That if any person vpon whom any proces out of any of the courts of Record within this Realme or Wales shal be serued to testifie or depose concerning any matter depending in any of the same courts and hauing tendered to him according to his countenance or calling such reasonable sums of money for his costs and charges as hauing regard to the distance of the places is necessarie to be allowed in the behalfe doe not appeare according to the tenor of the said Proces hauing not a lawfull and reasonable let to the contrarie then the partie making default shall forfeit for euery such offence x. l and shall yéeld such further recompence to the partie grieued as by the discretion of the Iudge of the court out of the which the said proces shall be awarded according to the losse and hindrance that the partie which procured the said proces shall sustaine by reason of the non appearance of the said witnesse the said seuerall summes to be recouered by the partie so grieued against the offendor by A.I.B.P. c. in any of the K. courts of Record wherein no W.E. or P. c. 21 There were seuerall statutes made during the raignes of king H. 6. K. H. 7. and K. H. 8. against Periurie and the procurers and committers of periurie and lastly one was ordained Anno 32. H. 8. St. 32. H. 8. 9 against such as should suborne witnesses to the hindrance of Iustice and the procurement of periurie Sithence the making whereof for that the penaltie therein is small towards the offendors in that behalfe the said offence of subornation and sinister procurement of false witnesses did neuerthelesse greatly increase and by reason of the wilfull Periurie committed by the same suborned witnesses diuers persons did sustaine disherison and great impouerishment as well of their lands and tenements as of their goods and cattels The penaltie for procuring of wilfull periury in witnesses for the redresse and more sharpe punishment whereof St. 5. El. 9. 29. El. 5. by a Statute made Anno 5. El. it was enacted That all and euery person and persons which shall vnlawfully and corruptly procure any witnes or witnesses by Letters Rewards Promises or by any other sinister and vnlawfull labour or meanes whatsoeuer to commit any wilfull and corrupt Periurie in any matter or cause whatsoeuer depending in suit and variance by any Writ Action Bill Complaint or Information in any wise concerning any lands tenements or hereditaments or any goods cattels debts or dammages in any of the courts of the Chauncerie Starre chamber White hall or in any other of the Kings Courts of Record or in any Léet view of Franke pledge or Law day Auncient demesne Court Court Hundred Court Baron or in the Court or Courts of the Stannerie in the countie of Deuon and Cornewall Or shall likewise vnlawfully and corruptly procure or suborne any witnesse or witnesses which shall bée sworne to testifie in perpetuam rei memoriam Then euery such offendor or offendors shall for his hers or their said offence béeing thereof lawfully conuicted or attainted forfeit fourtie pounds to the King and the partie grieued hindered or molested by reason of any of the offences aforesaid that will sue for the same by A. B. P. or I. in any of the Kings Courts of Record wherein no W. E. P. or I. shall bée allowed And if it happen any such offendor or offendors béeing so conuicted or attainted as is aforesaid not to haue any goods or cattels Lands or Tenements to the value of fourtie pounds then euery such person or persons so conuicted or attainted of any of the offences aforesaid shall suffer imprisonment one halfe yeare without Baile or Maineprise and stand vpon the Pillorie one whole houre in some Market Towne neere or next adioyning to the place where the offence was committed in open market there And no person béeing so conuicted or attainted shall bée from thenceforth receiued as a witnesse to bée deposed in any court of Record within any of the Kings dominions of England Wales or the Marches of the same vntill the Iudgement giuen against him or them shall bée reuersed by Attaint or otherwise And vpon euery such reuersall the parties grieued shall recouer his or their dammages against all and euery such person and persons as did procure the said iudgement so reuersed to bee first giuen against them or any of them by action to be sued vpon his or their case according to the course of the common Law St. 5. El. 9. 22 If any person or persons either by the subornation
request his opinion of them whether they will serue to defend his title in the cause in suit and the partie doth affirme them to be good and sufficient in law to iustifie and maintaine his cause this is vnlawfull maintenance in that person who giueth this counsell for by this meanes the partie may be encouraged to prosecute or defend a suit which the law will not warrant him to effect Co. li. 1. 177 And if L. being a man that is not learned in the law will publish that B. hath good right and title to the Mannor of D. wheras in truth B. hath no good right title thereunto but C. hath the onely right title to the same in this case because L. hath taken vpon him the knowledge of the law and intermedled in a matter wherin he hath nothing to do C. may haue an action vpon the case against the said L. for slandering of his title and shall recouer his damages against him and his ignorance of the law will not excuse him 33 In an Action of Maintenance the plaintife declared Maintenance by an Atturney That the defendant maintained one B. in the court of L. in an action of Couenant 36. H. 6. 37. which the plaintife brought against the said B. in the same court Whereunto the defendant pleaded That he was retained to be the Atturney of the same B. in the said suit which the plaintife did prosecute against him by force wherof he came to a man learned in the law by the commandement of the said B. his client and desired him to be of counsel with the said B. and gaue him his fée of the money of the said B. the which is the same maintenance And this was adiudged maintenance iustifiable for when an expert and learned man is Atturney for another he is to do all lawfull things which he can touching that suit for the benefit of his client with the priuitie or direction of his client as in retaining of learned counsell suing forth of originall or iudiciall proces procuring a Iurie to be impanelled Kel fol. 50 13. H. 4. 19. and returned by the Sherife by obtaining a Supersedeas for his client when cause doth require it and he may giue euidence to the Iury vpon the tryall of his clients cause and also he may request any of the Iurors impanelled for the triall of the said cause to appeare for the spéedy end of the said suit 34. H. 6. 26. But neither the same Attourney who is retained for that only cause nor a generall Attourney that is constituted by any person in al his causes according to the stat of West 2. St. 13. E. 1. 10. may do any vnlawfull thing in his clients behalfe as to giue or promise money or other reward of his owne or his clients to a Iuror 11. H. 6. 10. to giue his verdict for his client or to threaten him if hée doe otherwise or to defend or offer to defend his clients cause at his owne charges or to procure the Sherife to returne a Iurie at his denomination for the tryal of his clients cause for in all these cases last specified the maintenance is vnlawfull and punishable for he cannot do them as an Attourney but as a straunger a maintainor and of his owne wrong And if a man do maintaine a suit by an Atturney 22. H. 6. 24. an action of Maintenance doth lye against the Master Maintenance in a Sherife or his bailifes And if the Sherife of any Countie his Vndersherife or any Bailife do any of the things aforesaid 13. H. 4. 19. in any suit prosecuted betwéene partie and partie other than impanell a Iury and summon them to appeare at a day time prefixed by the kings writ it is vnlawfull maintenance in him 22. H. 6. 35. 34 In an action of Maintenance the defendant pleaded Maintenance in respect of neighborhood That he whō it is supposed that he maintained is his neighbour and that hee came vnto him and told him that the plaintife had procured a Capias to arrest him therefore praied the defendant to giue him counsell what he were best to doe and hée this defendant aduised his said neighbour to goe to London and to yéeld his bodie to the Iustices and to procure a Supersedeas which is the same maintenance whereupon the action is brought And this was adiudged no vnlawfull maintenance but a neighbourly and friendly counsell which euerie person may giue to another For if a husbandman or any other doe come to his neighbour and tell him that a stranger doth owe him money or doth detaine his goods from him and request his counsell that neighbour may aduise him to bring an action of Debt or Detinue against the same straunger 12. Ed. 4. 14. 19. Ed. 4. 3. Or if one neighbour shall tell another that hée hath a cause to put in suit and desire that hee will instruct him what learned man in the law he doth know to whom he may repaire for counsell his neighbour may informe him of such one as hee taketh to bee learned and also may goe with him to that learned man and bee present when he doth retaine him of his counsell and open his case vnto him and also hee being a meane man and of small countenance or authoritie in the countrey may goe to the barre and stand by him at the tryall of his cause in question but if that neighbour shall giue any money to the counsellor to be retained with his neighbour or shall giue any money or other reward to the Sherife or Vndersherife or to any Bailife to arrest the other partie in his neighbours behalfe or to answer his suit then is it vnlawfull maintenance in him and hee is by action of Maintenance to bee punished therefore Where the master may maintaine his seruant 35 In an action of Maintenance brought by A. against B. the plaintife declared 31. H. 6. 8. that where he brought another action before against C. the said defendant did maintaine the same C. in the same first action whereunto B. the defendant pleaded That the same C. is his seruant retained in his seruice for one whole yeare and therefore he retained one M. an Apprentice of the law to be of counsell with the said C. his seruant and paid the said M. his fee with part of the wages due to the said C. which was the same maintenance and this was adiudged a good plea in barre and lawfull maintenance 22. H. 6. 35. 9. H. 6. 64. 28. H. 6. 12. 19. Ed. 4. 3. 19. H. 6. 30. for it is lawfull for the Master to request a man that is learned in the law to be of counsel with his seruant in his suit and to pay the same counsellor his fée with part of the wages of his said seruant and to goe with his seruant to the barre at the tryall of his cause in question which the
be adiudged to the pillory the third time he shal be imprisoned make fine the fourth time he shall forsweare the towne And in this manner shal it be done of all that offēd in like case as of cookes that séeth flesh or fish any waies that is not holesome for mans body or after that they haue kept it so long that it looseth the naturall holesomenesse then séeth it againe and sell it And in like sort St. 39. El. 10 by one other statute made An. 39. El. it was enacted That if any alien or stranger born or any denizen or naturall born subiect of this realme shal bring into any hauen port créeke or town of this realme any salt fish or salt herrings which shal not be good swéet seasonable méet for mās meat shal offer the same to be sold and shall be warned by any officer of such Port c. where the same shal be offered to be sold that the same be not seasonable nor méet for mans meat Then if he or they shall after that offer any of the said vnseasonable fish to be sold to any person within this Realme or being an alien borne and no denizen shall not depart with the same from the said Hauen Port or Towne so soone as conueniencie will serue Then all and euery person owners therof shall forfeit to the Queen all the said vnseasonable fish vnméet for mans meat as is aforesaid And by a statute made Anno 4. Ed. 3. it was established St. 4. E. 3. 12 That assay shall be made of wines twice euery yeare once at Easter and another time at Michaelmas and more oft if néed be by the lords of the Townes and their Baylifes and also by the Mayors and Baylifes of the same townes and all wines that be found corrupt shal be powred out and the vessels broken ❧ Extortion Exaction 1 EXtortion is a wrong done by an Officer What is Extortion as Ordinarie Archdeacon Officiall Maior Bailife Shirife Escheator Coroner Vndershirife Auditor Receiuer Clerke or other Officer or by any other by colour of an office in taking of an excessiue reward or fée and more then the law doth allow him for execution of his said office which offence in some degrées is worse then the priuy picking of a mans purse in secret and the transgressor in a sort may be compared to the Fréebooter which with drawne sword and with menacing words assaulteth the trauailer by the way who casteth down his purse to him for feare of further hurt And so is the poore sutor many times inforced to doe to the Officer when of necessitie he must vse his helpe It is a thing most odious and offensiue to the iustice and peace of the Realme and to all the members thereof that those men who be specially made choice of and principally selected to serue their prince and countrey and to further the execution of iustice in their offices and places and be sufficiently rewarded with conuenient stipends for their paines therein should in contempt of the law assesse their owne fées in a sort put their hands in other mens purses and there take what they will and thereby doe wrong vnder the colour and shadow of iustice Exaction is a wrong done by an officer What is Exaction or by one pretending to haue authoritie in demaunding and taking reward or fée for that matter cause or thing which the law doth allow no fée at all And as our common statute lawes haue declared which offences or acts they doe condemne and adiudge as Extortions and Exactions so haue they prescribed in most cases seuerall penalties to be inflicted vpon the seuerall transgressors therein leauing the residue to be punished at the kings pleasure or by the discretion of such of his Iudges Iustices or others by his commission authorized before whom the offendors shall be thereof conuicted And further our said statute lawes haue set downe for the most part what fées or duties the sutor ought to pay to the officer the officer is to demaund of him to the intent that the one shall not be ignorant what to offer nor the other what to require and to the end that the Law hauing written it in a sort in the officers forehead what his duty is he may blush when he looketh in the sutors face and demaundeth more 2 I will begin with an Exaction that no former generation did tast of heare of or feare but it hath sprung vp of later yeares bin greatly exclaimed of and condemned in this our present age which is taking of money or some other reward for a Report or Certificat wherein the offendor most commonly doth a double iniury and to two seuerall persons viz. first to him whose mony fee or other reward he taketh for the fauourable making of that report in his behalfe whereas the law doth allow him none for reporting but otherwise bountifully rewardeth him for that and all such other paines and next and chiefely to him in preiudice of whom or whose case he maketh that report He doth not now indifferently respect the cause in question but bendeth his eye vpō the reward which he hath receiued and deuiseth to accomplish the request of the one and yet to yéeld to the other not the effect but some colour of iustice The King at his coronation doth promise to all his subiects Mag. Chart. St. 9. H. 3. 29 Quod nulli vendemus nulli negabimus aut differemus iusticiam whereupon the whole realme did take it vnkindly at their hands who being the kings Substitutes in place of iustice and receiuing but a small particle of his authoritie would doe then all the said offences at once and sell denie and deferre iustice to some of the kings subiects certifie that for good which was bad or that for iustice which was méere iniurie Or if they did make report and certificat of that which was iust and true would sell it and take money or other reward for it which the king himselfe vpon his oath refuseth to doe And therefore because all ex●●tions extortions and corruptions be odious as well in this as in all other well gouerned Commonweales and to the intent to preuent the like enormities in this and other ages by a statute made Anno 1. Iacob it was enacted St. 1. Iac. 10 That no person to whom any order or cause shal be committed Exaction by taking or reward for a report or referred by any of the Kings Iudges or Courts at Westminster or any other Court directly or indirectly or by any act shift colour or deuice haue take or receiue any money fée reward couenant obligation promise agréement or any other thing for his report or certificat by writing or otherwise vpon paine of forfeiture of one hundred pounds for euery such report or certificat and to be depriued of his office and place in the same Court The one moitie to be to the king his
4. 23. by a Statute made Anno 2. H. 4. it was declared That the said Marshall may take the fees héereafter following viz. of euery person which commeth by Capias to the said Court iiij d and if he be let to mainprise vntill his day ij d more And of euery person being defendant which is impleaded of Trespas and findeth two Mampernors to keepe his day vntill the end of the plea ij d. And of euery person committed to prison by iudgement of the steward in whatsoeuer maner the same be iiij d and of euery ptrson deliuered of felony iiij d and of euery felon let to mainprise by the Court iiij d. But if the Marshall or any of his officers vnder him doe take any other fées than are before declared the said Marshall and euery of his officers shall lose their offices A Seruitor of bills in the Marshals Court. and also pay to the partie gréeued treble dammages for the which the said party shall haue his sute before the Steward of the said Court for the time being A seruitor of bills which beareth a staffe of the Court shall take for euery mile from the said Court vntil the same place where he shall do his seruice j. d and for xij miles xij d to serue a Venire facias or a Distringas out of the same court the double And if any Seruitor of Bills do the contrary he shall be imprisoned and make fine to the K. after the discretion of the Steward of the same court and also be foreiudged and banished the same court All which articles the steward at his comming into the country hath authoritie to proclaime and put in execution 21 And for that the kings of this realme haue from time to time bestowed vpon such as they assigned to be muster masters or captains in times of wars liberall and bountifull stipends and allowances the rather to the intent they should not exact or make a pray of such as should be or then were souldiers Therfore to preuent such like exaction by a statute made An̄ 4. 5. St. 4. 5. P. M. 3. P. M. it was ordained Muster masters exacting mony to spare souldiers That if any person which shall be commanded by the Q. her heirs or successors by commission leters or otherwise authorized to leuy muster or to make men to serue in her warres or otherwise for the defence of this Realme do by any meane exact leuie receiue or take or cause to be taken any mony or other reward or thing whatsoeuer of any persō for seruice in wars or that shal be appointed named or mustred to serue in any such seruice or for the sparing or discharging of such person from the said seruice then he shall forfeit ten times so much as he shall receiue exact or take to the Q. I. to be recouered by A.I. c. wherein no W.E.P. If any captaine petit captaine or other hauing charge of men shall for any aduantage or gaine by him to be receiued discharge or licence any of the men or souldiers appointed to serue in the warres vnder his rule or order to depart from the said seruice or shal not pay vnto his souldiers Exacting by captaines of their souldiers to euery of thē their full whole wages conduct and coat mony within x. daies next after he shal haue receiued the same then the party offending in giuing such licence or discharge shall forfeit for euery such offence x. times the value of the thing so receiued to the Q. I. to be recouered by A. I. wherin no W.E.P. c. And also he shal pay vnto euery such souldier from whom he shall with-hold any such wages conduct or coat money treble the summe so with-holden Extortion by taking of scauage of merchants 22 Because Scauage otherwise called Shewage was many times wrōgfully and extortiously taken by Magistrates of cities and corporat townes of merchants that transported or brought their marchandizes thither therefore by a statute made Anno 19. H. 7. it was prouided That if any maior shirife St. 19. H. 7. 8 bailife or other officer in any city borough or towne within this realme doe distraine take or leuie any custome called Scauage or Shewage of any merchant denizen or of any other the K. subiects denizens for any merchandize to the K. before truly customed that is brought by land or water to be vttered in any citie borough or towne in this land or if any maior shirife bailife or other officer in any city borough or towne for non paiment of the said scauage let or disturbe any merchants or any other persons denizens to sel and vtter their merchandize by them brought into any city borough or towne then he which offendeth shal forfet for euery offence xx l. to the K. the party grieued or any other that wil first sue by A. of debt in any shire wherein no W.E.P. shal be allowed But the maior shirifes cōmunalty of London and euery of them shall haue such summes of mony for scauage of euery person denizen as of right they ought to haue 23 Euery of the chiefe Iustices of the Kings Bench and Common Pleas and the maior of the Staple at Westminster and the Recorder of the Citie of London before whom any obligation being of the nature and force of a statute Staple shall be recognized St. 23. H. 8. 6 according to the statute of An̄ 23. H. 8. The Iustices Clarks fee vpon euery Recognisance shal take for euery such Recognisance iij. s̄ iiij d the clarke that shall write make and inroll the same iij. s̄ iiij d and for the certificat of euery one such obligation xx d. And if any of the said Iustices Maior Recorder or Clarke take of any of the K. subiects aboue the summe or summes to them limited by this statute then the same offendor shal forfeit for euery time so offending xl l. to the K. and I. to be recouered by A. I. wherein no W.E.P. c. And by the Stat. of An̄ 27. St. 27. Eli. 4. Eli. it was further ordained That no Clarke of the same Recognisances shall or may take for or in respect of any search to be made for or concerning any statute Merchant or of the Staple The Clarkes fée for search brought vnto him to be entred aboue ij d for one yéers search so after the rate of ij d for euery yéere not aboue vpon paine to forfeit lose to the partie or parties grieued twentie times as much as he shal take contrary to the true meaning of this Act to be recouered in any of the K. courts of Record by action of debt B. P. I. wherein no W.E.P. 24 Because it is well perceiued that learned and expert Atturnies be necessarie members in our State and great meanes to further iustice and to bring sutes to their expected ends and that they must therefore
and the disseisée may at his choyce either haue an Assise and recouer double dammages and the defendant shal be amerced or else the K. vpon complaint shall redresse the matter If lands be graunted by the Kings Patent without any title sound by Enquest St. 1. H. 4. 8. or where the Kings entrie is not giuen by the law and if any be put out or disseised of his fréehold thereby this is an oppression And the partie put out shal haue a speciall Assise against the kings Patentée and recouer treble dammages Oppression by approuement of common 2 If the Lord of a Mannor wherein he hath certaine fréehold tenants and certaine neighbours do approue some part of the wasts woods or pastures of the same Mannor not leauing to his said tenants and neighbours sufficient common of pasture vnto their tenements or not sufficient and conuenient ingresse and regresse to the same this is an oppression of the same tenants and a disseisin of their common And the sayd tenants and neighbours or any of them may by force of the Statutes of Merton and West 2. St. 20. H. 3. 4 St. 13. E. 1. 46. bring an Assise of Common of pasture against the Lord who doth so approue and oppresse And if it be found by the Iurie that their ingresse and regresse were any thing hindered by the deforceors or that they had not sufficient pasture then they shall recouer their seisin by the view of the Iurors so that by their discretion and othe they shall haue sufficient pasture ingresse and regresse and the disseisors shall be amerced and render dammages which dammages by force of the statute of Anno 3. Ed. 6. St. 3. E. 6. 3. shall be trebled by the iudgement of the Court where such Assise and iudgement shall be had Oppression by surcharge of common And so it is if the Lord of a Manor doth surcharge the common with so many cattell Fitz. Admes 11. Common 29. as that his fréeholders or neighbours cannot haue sufficient common for their cattell as they had woont to haue or as they ought to haue belonging to their tenements this is an oppression and disseisin of their common and any of them may bring an Assise of Common of pasture against the said Lord and recouer his common and his dammages Inclosure of common by cause of vicinage is no oppression But if there be two Lords of two seuerall Mannors which haue two wasts adioyning parcell of their mannors Co. li. 4. 38. lying together without inclosure or seperation and yet the bounds of each mannor is well knowne by certaine méers and marks in which wasts the tenants of the one mannor and of the other haue reciprocally had and vsed common by cause of vicinage 13. H. 7. 14 M. 14 Eliz. Dyer 316. In this case one of those Lords may inclose against the other by that meanes vtterly take away his common by cause of vicinage from him though it hath béene otherwise vsed time out of the remembrance of man And this common per cause de vicinage is rather an excuse of a Trespasse when the cattell of the tenant of one Mannor do stray into the wasts of the other Mannor than any certaine inheritance for the tenants of one Mannor may not put their cattell into the wast of the other Mannor but they may come thither onely by escape and this inclosure is onely to preuent the escape of the cattell which is a lawfull act and no oppression For in the case aforesaid where the wasts of both the Mannors be adioyning together and that the one of them hath common with the other by cause of vicinage Co. li. 7. 5. and that the one village hath an hundred acres of common and the other but fiftie acres of common Commoners shall charge common according to the quantity thereof in this case the inhabitants of the village which hath but fiftie acres of common can put no more cattell into their sayd common of fiftie acres than it will maintaine without hauing respect to the common in the said hundred acres for if they do it is an oppression and wrong nece conuerso for the originall cause of this common by cause of vicinage was not for profit but for preuenting of suits in a Champion countrey in respect of reciprocall escapes from one towne to another 3 It appeareth by the preamble of the statute of Marlebridge that they who tooke distresses of their tenants or neighbours for rents supposed to bée due to them or for any trespasses done to them and after did driue the same distresses forth of the countie where they were taken to be impownded in another countie were accounted to do it to oppresse them whose cattell they so did distrain and impownd and the same was also adiudged an act done against the peace whereupon for the eschewing of such oppressions by the same statute and also by the statute of West 1. St. 25. H. 3. 4 St. 3. E. 1. 16. it was ordained Oppression by distresses That no man shall cause a distresse to be driuen forth of the Countie wherein it was taken And for the auoiding of the like oppressions vexations and troubles by a statute made Anno 1. St. 1. 2. P. M. 12. 2. P. M. it was enacted That whosoeuer shall driue any distresse out of the Hundred Rape Wapentake or Lath where it was taken except it be to a pownd ouert within the same shire being not aboue thrée miles distant from the place where it is taken or shall impownd in seuerall places goods distrained for any cause at one time whereby the owner shall be constrained to sue seuerall Repleuies for the deliuerie of the same distresses shall forfeit to the partie grieued for euerie such offence fiue pounds and treble dammages And whosoeuer doth take for kéeping in pownd pondage Pondage money or the impownding of a whole distresse aboue iiij d. or doth take so much where lesse hath vsually béen taken shall forfeit to the partie grieued fiue pounds and so much as hée taketh ouer the said iiij pence And because the law hath deuised that one neighbour may distraine the goods of another for his debt duetie or dammages sustained and that the same distresse shall be reasonable according to the quantitie of the sayd supposed debt or dammages and that then the same distresse shall bée put in a pownd ouert sub custodia legis vntill it bée decided whether the same was taken vpon iust cause or not and not to the end that one neighbour should by distraining vniustly oppresse another or demaund of him that which is not due or put him to further charge or trouble than the necessitie of that cause for the recouerie of his owne debt or damages required therefore by the before mentioned statute of Marlebridge it was further established That if one neighbour take a distresse of another whereby he hath receiued
lesse without award of the Kings Court he shall make fine according to the quantitie of the trespas and neuerthelesse sufficient amends shal be to them which haue receiued losse by such distresse Distraining out of his fee. Or if one do distrain another to come to his Court which is not of his fée or vpon whom hee hath no iurisdiction by reason of his Hundred or Bailiwike or doe take a distresse without his fée or the place where he hath iurisdiction or bailiwike hee shall make fine according to the quantitie of his offence Excessiue distresse Or if one do take any vnreasonable excessiue distresses which is grieuous and more than the quantitie of the debt or damages this is an oppression an he shall be amerced 41. Ed. 3. 26 29. Ed. 3. 23. As a man auowed the distraining of 200. shéepe and 16. beasts for ij pence rent and he was amerced therefore for all that he tooke aboue vj. shéepe were adiudged an oppression and so vnlawful But if a man distraine for homage 28. Ass p. 50 42. Ed. 3. 26. Co. li. 4. 8. Fitz. Na. Br. 178. 27. Ass p. 51 28. Ass p. 50 the distresse cannot be too excessiue how many beasts soeuer he doth take for that homage is not valuable though for rent fealtie and other seruices it may be excessiue And in like sort Oppression by often distresse if the Lord of a Mannor or any other who hath rent issuing forth of certaine land do distraine the tenant of the same land diuers times for rent or seruices where none is behind vnpaid this is an oppression of the same tenant who is distrained for in this case the partie who claimeth this rent cannot distraine for rent séeing none was due to him but his distresse is onely taken to vexe the tenant of the land and so to oppresse him And therefore the sayd tenant may haue an Assise of Souent foits distresse against the same Lord and recouer dammages of him according to the losse he hath receiued by the same distresses viz. for not plowing or for not manuring his land Lib. in t 82. Co. li. 4. 8. or for taking no profit thereby But it is otherwise if the same seuerall distresses were taken for homage Seueral distresses for one thing And so it is if a man do distraine for rent or seruices or for any other thing Fit Nat. Br. 71. and depending a suit betwéene the parties for the same rent seruice or other thing he who did distrain doth distrain again for the same rent seruice or thing for the which he did distrain before the beasts or goods of him whose hée did first distraine this is an oppression of him whose goods be twice distrained For the redresse whereof hée may haue a writ of Recaption A writ of Recaption against him who so did distraine his goods twice for one cause whereby hée shall recouer dammages for his second distresse And also hée that did take the same distresse shall make fine to the King for his oppression and wrong though the first distresse were lawfully taken yea and though the rent or seruice for the which he did distraine were behind vnpayed or vndone séeing by the first distresse the cause being prooued true and lawfull hée might haue had returne of the goods or cattell which hee did distraine vntill hée had béene satisfied of the rent seruice or thing for the which hée did distraine But a man may distraine the cattell of him who bée eating of his corne or grasse Distresses for damages for t or doing any other hurt in his ground 47. Ed. 3. 7 so often as he shall find them doing hurt therein and it is no oppression or wrong so to do for he doth not distraine twice for one cause as in the former case but distraineth seuerall times for seuerall new offences 4 And euerie Trespasse which the law doth interpret to bee iniuriously committed vi armis may also fitly be termed an oppression for it is done vpon the offendors owne wrong without warrant of law St. 5. R. 2. ● As if one person doe enter vpon anothers land expell him out of the possession therof whereas his entry is not giuen by the law or doth enter with strong hand or multitude of people Fitz. Tresp 13. 45. 234 20. H. 6. 22. 9. Ed. 4. 28. 9. H. 6. 64. 21. H. 6. 5. 21. Ed. 4. 18. 9. Ed. 4. 29. 10. Ed. 4. 4. 21. Ed. 4. 4. 1. H. 7. 10. 37. H. 6. 36. 21. H. 7. 1● 11. H. 4. 64. 20. H. 6. 14. 3. H. 6. 12. 10. H. 6. 16. 43. Ed 3. 13. 4. Ed. 3. 48 47. Ed. 3. 22 43. Ed. 3. 35 1. H. 5. 1. and not in peaceable manner this is an oppression And so it is Oppression by Trespasses if one person doe pull downe breake or impaire anothers house or any part thereof Or if one person doe fell cut downe or carrie away the Timber Trées or Wood of another Or if one person doe fell cut tread downe or carrie away the corne or grasse of another Or if one person doe with his cattell depasture feed or eat the corne grasse or hay of another Or if one person doe take and carrie away the money plate iewels houshold-stuffe cattell corne hay or any kind of goods of anothers Or if one person doe plough till eyre or digge the ground or soyle of another Or if one person doe mayme imprison wound or beat another or doth mayme wound or beat the seruant of another whereby he looseth his seruice Or if one person doe hunt chase or hawke in the frée Warren of another or doe take kill or destroy his game there Or if one person doe fish in the Pond Poole Mildam Stew or other seuerall fishing of another Or if one person doe breake the doue-house of another or destroy the flight of the doues of another Or if one person doe digge the Myne of Tinne Lead Stone Coale Grauell Sand Matle Chalke c. of another Or if one person doe pull vp take away the meerestones which by consent haue béen set betwéen his own ground and anothers In all and euerie of which cases the partie grieued may pursue an Action of Trespasse against the offendor and declare that hée committed any of the said offences vi arm●s wherein if the defendant be attainted hée shall pay to the plaintife his dammages sustained and to the King a fine for that he hath done an oppression to one of his subiects and made an offence to the law Fit Nat. Br. 183. 4. Ass p. 3. 5 Euerie Nusance which one person doth to the land of another Oppression by Nusances wherein the owner hath an estate for the terme of life in tayle or in fée simple may also bée accounted an oppression for those Nusances be put in practise by the offendors onely will and by his owne open playne and manifest
is an oppression and for the redresse thereof the same tenant may pursue against his lord a Writ of Ne iniuste vexes grounded vpon a braunch of the statute of Magna Charta St. 9. H. 3. 10 thereby commaunding the Lord that he shall not oppresse nor vniustly vexe his tenant for more rent or seruices then hée ought to pay or doe 12. E. 4. 7. 28. Ass p. 33 5. Ed. 4. 82. Or otherwise the tenant may auoid this surplusage of rent in an Assise Writ of Rescous or Cessauit brought against him by his lord but in a Repleuin he cannot auoid his lord of this rent newly incroched séeing the same lord hath had seisin thereof and so it is if the lord of a Manor 40. Ed. 3. 44. 49. Ed. 3. 22. 39. E. 3. 6. which is auncient demesne will encroch vpon his tenants and distraine them or any of them that hold their lands by Charter fréely to doe other seruices or customes to the same lord then they ought to doe or that their auncestors were accustomed to do this is an oppression of the same tenants and for the redresse thereof all the tenants of the said auncient demesne Manor may haue against their said lord the kings writ of Monstrauerunt directed to the said lord commaunding him thereby that hée shall not require nor cause to bée required of his said tenants more seruices or customes then they ought to doe Fitz. Na. Br. 14. or had wont to doe And if after the said writ directed he will distraine the goods of them or any of them againe to doe more seruices then they ought to doe Then the same tenants or such or so many of them as bee so distrained may procure an attachment against their said lord Fitz. Na. Br. 15. returnable in the K. Bench or common place for this oppression and contempt wherin euery of the same tenants shall recouer his dammages seuerally according to his losse 8 Euery excessiue amerciament which one person doth take of another Oppression by excessiue amerciament is also to be accounted an oppression of the party so amerced for by the Statutes of Magna Charta West 1. St. 9. H. 3. 14 3. Ed. 1 6. it is ordained That no Citie Borough Towne or man shall be amerced but for a reasonable cause and according to the quantitie of his offence and euery fréeman shall bée amerced sauing his fréehold a marchant sauing his marchandize and euery other mans villaine besides the kings sauing his villaine tenure and the same amerciaments shall bee assessed by the oath of honest and lawfull men of the same vicenage So that if one person doe take a much greater amerciament of another then the quantitie of his offence doth require in a Court Baron or other Court which is not of record or doe take that amerciament of his owne authoritie without being before assessed by others vpon their oathes and so maketh himselfe iudge in his owne cause this is an oppression of the party amerced for the redresse whereof the party grieued may procure to be directed to the lord of the said Manor or to his Baylife a Writ of Moderata misericordia which was founded vpon the said stat of Magna Charta commaunding them thereby Fitz. Na. Br. 75. that they shall take a moderat and indifferent amerciament of the same person according to the quantity of his offence And if the lord or his baylife will not then cease to distraine for the said excessiue amerciament the partie so oppressed may haue against the offendor an attachment directed to the Shirife of that Countie where the same Distresse is taken to attach him to appeare in the kings Court and to answere his said offence Oppression by committing of wast 9 The Wast and Estrepement which one person hauing a particular estate in another persons land doth make or commit to the disheritance of him in the reuersion or remainder of the same land without his consent may also be accounted an oppression of him in whom the said inheritance is for when one person doth lease or otherwise conuey his land to another for the terme of life liues or yeares he doth in effect but lend the same land to the sayd particular tenant for the terme betwéene them agréed vpon expecting to haue the same againe at the end of the terme in as good plight and in such sort as it was when he first did deliuer and lend it And therefore if the particular tenant during the continuance of his estate doe commit any wast in the same land he cannot deliuer it againe at the end of his terme in such plight and sort as at the first he did receiue and borrow it but by the wast the perpetuall profit of the land is impaired and therefore of so much in value hée in the reuersion or remainder is disherited And for the preuention thereof by the statute of Marlebridge it was ordained St. 52. H. 3. 24. That Farmors during their termes shall not make wast sale or exile of houses woods or men nor of any thing belonging to the Tenements which they haue in farme without they haue speciall graunt in writing making mention of a couenant that they may doe it And to the intent that condigne punishment might bée prouided and inflicted vpon such as should be transgressors and oppressors in these cases of Wast by the statute of Gloucester it was enacted St. 6. Ed. 1. 5 That a man shall haue an action of Wast in the Chauncerie against him which is tenant by the courtesie of England The tenants forf which cōmitteth wast or otherwise tenant for terme of life or for terme of yeares or against a woman which holdeth in Dower and he which shall bée attainted of Wast shall forfeit the thing wasted and besides shall pay treble so much as the Wast shall be taxed and after by the statute of Westminster the second the same was in a sort confirmed St. 13. E. 1. 14 and the said action of Wast was againe giuen against the foresaid tenants by the courtesie in dower for terme of life or yeares and also ordained to extend against Gardens And by the same statute the proces to be vsed in the said action of Wast was assigned to be Summons Attachment and Distresse and if the party defendant doe not appeare at the distresse then a writ shall be awarded to the Shirife to inquire of the wast by the oathes of twelue men And because diuers persons did let their lands to others sometime for terme of life or anothers life and sometime for terme of yeares and after the said tenants did graunt their estates which they had in the same Lands and Tenements to others to the intent that they in the reuersion viz. their lessors their heires or assignées should not take knowledge of their names and yet the first lessees did continually occupie the said Lands and tooke the profites to
for without the glasse it is not a perfect house The same Law is of Wainscot whether it bée affixed to the house by the lessor or by the lessée or whether it bée fastened by great nayles or small nayles or by screwes or yrons put through the postes or wals or by any other meanes yet if it bée taken away it is Wast and the Tenant of the house shall bée punished for it by action of Wast for it is made parcell of the house as séeling and plastering of a house is For the sayd Furnace Bench Table Doore Glasse 20. H. 7. 13. 21. H. 7. 26. and Wainscot are made parcell of the inheritance of the house as the Wals Beames and Transomes bee and they shall discend to the heire of the house and not accrue to the executors Neither shall they bée forfeited by Vtlarie nor attached in an Assise as Chattels may But if in any of the cases aforesaid the Tenant doe repaire the house or thing wasted 20. E 3. Wast 32. 22. H. 6. 58. 28. H. 6. 2. 38. Ass p. 1 42. Ed. 3. 22. and make it so long so broad so high and in such and so good sort as it was when his estate did begin before any action of Wast shall bée brought against him therefore then no action of Wast is maintenable against him for that cause Notwithstanding if any house wall couered or c. were ruinous at the time of the beginning of the Tenants estate 22 H. 6. 18 21. Ed. 4. 39. and after the Tenant doe pull it downe and build it againe though it bée not so large as it was before yet is it no Wast neither is the Tenant punishable therefore by an action of Wast for that he had not béen punishable therefore if hée had suffered it wholly to decay and not haue builded againe any part thereof If Wast bée committed in seuerall principall parts of a house 4. Ed. 3. 32. 8. Ed 2. Wast 112. 12 Ed. 3. Wast 108. 127. he in the reuersion or remainder thereof may by an action of Wast recouer the whole house for this dispersed Wast As in like case if Timber Trées of Oake Ash or Elme bée felled in seuerall parts of a Wood or Close hée in the reuersion or remainder may by an action of Wast recouer against the Tenant the whole Wood or Close for this dispersed Wast To procéede according to the wordes of the Writ with Wast in Woods Wast in woods If the Lessée for yeares Lessée for life Tenant in Dower Plo. Com. 470. 3. E. 6. Dyer 65. 7. H. 6. 40 21. H. 6. 46 14. H. 4. 12. or c. doe sell or fell Oakes Ashes or Elmes béeing of twenty yeares growth and aboue the value of thrée shillings foure pence this is Wast and punishable by an Action of Wast For those Trées of that age will endure long bée méete for Building and bée parcell of the inheritance of him in the reuersion or remainder 27. H. 6. Wast 8. 29. H. 8. Dyer 36. Co. li. 4. 64 and notwithstanding the said lease or any other particular estate for life assured the same trees be the leassors and not the leassees though the leassor cannot fell them or graunt or sell them to any other without consent of the tenant for that the said tenant hath the loppe and maste of them and shade for his cattell And likewise if the boughes or braunches of any of the same trées beeing of the said age of twentie yeares bée cut downe by the tenant the same is also wast for they in like sort may serue for building But if a house with certaine ground be assured to a tenant for terme of yeares life or c. whereupon Oake 7. H. 6. 40. 41. Ed. 3. Wast 82. Ash or Elme aboue twentie yeares of age be growing if the same house doe fall in decay during the said terme the said tenant of his owne authoritie without the assignement of the Leassor may fell sufficient of the said Oake Ashe or Elme to repaire the same house for the Law hath ordained that one commoditie or parcell of the farme demised shall help to maintaine the other And so the tenant if hee will may fell timber to repaire the house though the same were in decay at the time of his entrie Notwithstanding 12. H. 8. 1. 7. H. 6. 40. 29. H. 8. Dyer 36. 49. E. 3. 1. 42. Ed. 3. 22. 11. H. 4. 31. 9. H. 4. Wast 59. 9. H. 6. 66. if hee bée so disposed hee may permit the same house which he so found in decay to bee vtterly ruinated and fall downe for hée need not keepe the house in other repaire than he receiued it But if the tenant doe giue or sell any timber or fell more for any of the vses aforesaid than is necessarie and sufficient or doe fell any timber to build a newe house where there was none vpon the ground before then he may bee punished therefore by an Action of wast And the same Law is of a Copieholder who can fell no timber but to repaire his houses which hee holdeth by copie of Court Roll. The felling of Maples Sallowes Willowes Hornebeams Crabtrees 46. E. 3. 17. Hasils Thornes or such like is no wast for that they will not continue long nor serue for building And therefore they are accounted seasonable wood and are lawfully to bée felled by the termor and to bée spent vpon the same ground for house-bot 12. H. 8. 1. plough-bot hedge-bot fold-bote or fire-bote which the Law doth allowe to the termor for yeares or life And the tenant may fell Oakes Ashes or Elmes for any of the purposes aforesaid 21. H. 6. 46. if there be no vnderwood growing vpon the same ground to be imployed to those vses By the custome of some countrie where wood is plentifull Oakes Ashes and Elmes vnder twentie yeares groweth be called vnderwood 11. H. 6. 1. Lib. Intr. 617. or seasonable wood and may be felled by the termor for any of the vses aforesaid and so may wrangles aboue twentie years growth which are neuer like to prooue timber or méete for building but in some other countries where wood is scant it is otherwise Felling of seasonable wood 40. E. 3. 25. Fitz. N.B. 59. which is vsed to bée cut euery seauen tenne fiftéene or twenty yeares is no wast Neither is it wast for the tenant to fell and take dotards or to take windfalles wherein there is no timber for they bee the tenants to vse and spend as is aforesaid 7. H 6. 40. Co li. 4. 64. Fit N.B. 59 29. Ed. 3. 33. But windfalles wherein there is any timber bée the Leassors And so is the timber of a house which doth decay and fall downe during the terme the Leassors vnlesse the tenant will reedifie the same house and imploy the said timber in the building thereof againe Though the felling of Willowes or other such like
made of tinne or pewter within any part of this Realme vpon paine of forfeiture of tenne pounds to the vse of the K. and I. to be recouered by A.I. wherein no W.E.P. and also vpon paine of forfeiture of the same pewter or tinne so wrought in whose handes soeuer it be found or taken A pewterer shall not goe to dwell in an other realme and no persons borne within this Realme occupying the said craft of Pewterers shall resort into any strange countries there to teach or exercise the said craft of pewterers vpon paine to loose the priuiledge and benefit of an English man 17 Because complaint was made in Parliament that Linnen Drapers Woollen Drapers Haberdashers Grocers and Mercers dwelling in the Country out of cities boroughs towne corporat and market townes did not only occupie the art and mysterie of the said Sciences in the places where they dwelt but also came vnto the said cities boroughes townes corporat and market townes and there sold their wares and tooke away the reliefe of the inhabitants of the said cities market townes c. to the great decay oppression and vtter vndoing of the inhabitants of the same For the reformation whereof Oppression of inhabitants of market townes by a Statute made Anno 1. 2. P. M. it was enacted St. 1. 2. P. M. 7. That no person dwelling in the Countrie any where within England out of any cities boroughs townes corporat or market townes shall sell or cause to be sold by retaile any woollen cloth linnen cloth Haberdash wares Grocerie wares or Mercerie wares at or within any of the said cities boroughs townes corporat or market townes or within the suburbs or liberties thereof except it be in open faires vpon paine of forfeiture for euery time so offending the summe of vj. s̄ viij d and the whole wares so sold profered and offered to be sold contrarie to the intent of this Act whereof one moitie shall be to the King and the other moitie to him or them that will seise or sue for the same in any of the Kings Courts of Record by A.B. P.I. or otherwise wherein no W.E.P. c. But this shall not be hurtfull to any persons that bring any of the said wares to any of the said cities market townes c. to be sold by whole sale in grosse and not by retaile but euery of them may lawfully sell the same by whole sale in grosse and not by retaile as they might haue done before Neither shall this Act extend to any persons that dwell in the Country out of any of the said cities boroughs c. but euery of them at any time when he shal be frée of any of the guildes or liberties of any of the said cities market townes c. and dwell within any of them shall or may sell or cause to be solde any of the wares aforesaid by retaile Neither shall this Act be preiudiciall to the priuiledges of the vniuersities of Oxford Cambridge or either of them And it shall be lawfull to all persons to sell or cause to be sold by retaile or otherwise all linnen or woollen cloth of their owne making Cloth of their own making in euery Citie Borough Towne corporat and Market Towne as fréely as they might haue done before St. 25. H. 8. 13 18 It appeareth by the words of the stat of An. 25. H. 8. That for one man to get and take into his hands diuers farmes which were ordained prouided habitations and liuings for diuers men Or for one man to get into his possession many pastures or walkes for shéepe by the occupying wherof seueral persons before had liued was accounted a most grieuous heinous oppression to tend to the high displeasure of almighty God to the decay of hospitalitie to the diminishing of the kings people to the let of cloth making whereby many poore people did liue and to turne incline to the vtter desolation destruction of this realme for the redresse whereof by the same statute it was ordained That no person or persons shal receiue or take in farme for terme of yeres life or at will by indenture copy of Court Roll or otherwise any more houses or tenements of husbandry wherunto any lands are belonging in town village hamlet or tything within this realme aboue the number of two such holds or tenements and no manner of person shall haue or occupie any such holds so newly taken to the number of two as is before expressed Oppression by taking of seuerall farmes except he or they be dwelling within the same parishes where such holds be vpon paine of forf for euery wéeke that he or they shall haue occupy or take any profits of such holds 3. s̄ 4. d. whereof the one moity shal be to the king the other to the party that wil sue for the same in any of the K. Courts by A.B.P.I. or otherwise within one yéere next after such offence cōmitted St. 4. H. 7. 16 And by the stat of An. 4. H. 7. it was established That if any person doe take any seuerall farmes more then one of any manors lands tenemēts parsonages or tythes within the isle of Wight Taking of farmes in the isle of Wight whereof the farme of them altogether shal excéed the summe of x. markes the lessée shall forf to the king for euery such taking xl l. St. 25. H. 8. 13 19 And for the reasons last specified the said stat of an 25. H. 8. did also ordaine That no person shall kéepe occupy Oppression by kéeping of many shéepe or haue in his possession in his owne proper lands nor in the grounds of any other which he shall haue or occupy in farme nor otherwise haue of his owne proper cattell in vse possession or property by any manner of meanes or couin aboue the number of two thousand shéepe at one time within any parts of this realme of all sorts kinds alwais accounting 6. score to the hundred and 10. such hundreds to the thousand vpon paine to forf for euery shéepe that any person shall haue or keepe aboue the number limitted by this act 3. s̄ 4. d. to the king and such as will sue for the same by A.B.P.I. in any court of Record wherein no W.E.P. c. So that the suit be commenced for the king within thrée yéeres for a subiect within one yéere next after the offence committed But lambes Lambes vnder the age of one whole yéere and as much as shal be from the time of the falling of them vnto the feast of the Natiuity of S. Iohn Baptist shal not be taken for shéepe prohibited by this statute St. 25. H. 8. 13 If any person hauing shéepe of his owne happen to be made executor or administrator to any person which had shéep at his death Shéepe comming by executorship or mariage or happen to be maried to
that he did cause some lawfull punishment to be inflicted vpon certaine of them for their crimes notwithstanding all these or such like misdemeanors be neither Treason nor Felony by the Law but a Riot and yet in respect of the basenesse of the parties which committed this wrong of the cause for the which they put it in practise of the worthinesse of the person and of his place vpon whom it was executed of the barbarous course taken in the performance therof of the perillous exāple giuen to other malefactors these riotors deserue to bée censured with a much sharper punishment then the former For as there be no bounds obserued by leud and wicked persons of their outrages so be there no certaine means or limits assigned of their punishments but the said most honourable Court of estate may draw forth his Maiesties sword of iustice and first punish the said offences according to the particuler lawes and statutes prouided therfore and then euery person transgressing by himselfe according to the circumstance of his demerits as partly may appeare by the statute of anno 3. H. 7. St. 3. H. 7. 1. which expresseth some parts of the authority giuen to the Lords of the said Court and more by a branch of the statute of Magna Charta whereby it is enacted St. 9. H. 3. 14 That euery fréeman shall be amerced viz. punished for reasonable cause according to the quantity of his offence And further by the statute of Anno 33. H. 8. St. 33. H. 8. 1 which giueth the lords of the said Court of Starre-chamber authority to punish those who by counterfeit letters or tokens shall get other mens goods into their hands by imprisonment setting vpon the pillory or other corporall paine whatsoeuer except death ❧ Treasons 1 CRimen lesae Maiestatis What is Treason in our English tongue called Treason is a great offence done to the Maiesty of gouernement and the peace of the land which the wisdome of this Realme hath from age to age so much hated and abhorred that they haue persecuted those that were guiltie therin with most violent and vntimely death and with extreame and seuere tortures they haue ordained that an offendor therein shall be hanged and cut downe aliue that his bowels shall bée cut off and burned in his sight that his head shall bée seuered from his bodie that his quarters shall bée diuided asunder and disposed at the Kings pleasure and made food for the birds of the aire or the beasts of the field and that his wife and children shall be thrust out of his house and liuings that his séed and blood shall be corrupted that his lands and goods shall be confiscated and as by the statute of 29. H. 6. 1. it is ordained of the Traitor Iohn Cade he shall be called a false Traytor for euer And as our respectiue and considerat forefathers haue deuised to yéeld vnto those grieuous offendors Legem talionis and to teare their bodies lands and goods who doe practise to rent and pull asunder this Maiestie of gouernement by destroying the head or such as are like to be the principall succéeding members thereof or by diuiding the bodie into parts or by weakning the force and strength thereof or by subuerting the chiefe Magistrats of iustice or by counterfeiting staining or blemishing of the peculiar and royall Ensignes Cognisances and Sinewes thereof so haue they béene carefull and prouident that there should be no greater number of those dreadfull sharpe and bitter lawes than vrgent necessitie for the preseruation of that Maiestie of gouernment required And because it was in former times greatly doubted and ofttimes called in question amongst the Sages of the Realme and learned in the lawes which offences were by the common law high Treason and which not and which were petit Treason and which not and seuerall men were of seuerall opinions therein and to the intent that al future ages might know and be more vigilant to eschew the penalties thereof King Edward the third at his Parliament begun at Westminster the thirtéenth day of Ianuarie St. 25. E. 3. 2 in the 25. yere of his raign at the request of his Lords and petition of his Commons made a declaration thereof in manner as hereafter followeth viz. It is high Treason where a man doth compasse High treason or imagin the death of our Soueraigne Lord the King or of our Ladie the Quéene his wife or of their eldest sonne and heire or if a man doth deflower the Kings wife or the Kings eldest daughter being vnmaried or the kings eldest sonne and heires wife or if a man doe leuie warre against our Lord the king in his Realme or be adherent to the kings enemies in his Realme giuing to them aid and comfort in his Realme or else where and thereof be probably attainted of open deed by people of their owne condition And if a man do counterfeit the Kings great Seale or his priuie Seale or his money which offences Bracton doth terme Crimen falsi And if a man bring false money into this Realme counterfeit to the money of England knowing the money to be false Bracton de Corona cap. 3. to marchandise or make paiment in deceit of our Lord the King and his people And if a man kill the Chauncellor Treasurer or the Kings Iustice of the one Bench or the other Iustices of Eire and of Assises and all other Iustices assigned to heare and determine beeing in their places doing their Offices And it is to bée vnderstood that in the cases aforesaid it ought to bee adiudged Treason which extendeth to our Lord the King and his royall Maiestie And of such Treason the forfeiture of the escheat doth appertaine to our Lord the King as well of the lands and tenements holden of others as of himselfe And moreouer there is another manner of Treason Petit treason that is to say When a seruant killeth his Master or a wife her husband or when a secular or religious man killeth his Prelat to whom he oweth faith and obedience And such manner of Treason giueth the escheats to euery Lord of his owne fée And because many other cases of like Treason may happen in time to come which a man cannot thinke of nor declare at this present It is accorded that if any other case supposed to be treason that is not before specified doth happen of new before Iustices the Iustices shall stay without proceeding to iudgement of Treason vntill the case be declared and shewed before the King and his Parliament whether it ought to be adiudged Treason or other Felonie And in case any man of this Realme doe ride armed openly or secretly with people armed against another for to kill or rob him or to take and detaine him vntill he hath made fine and ransome to be deliuered it is not the King or his Counsels wil that in such case it shall be adiudged Treason but it shall be
or if any person or persons to whom the sayd othe by any Commission or Commissions shall be limited or appointed to be tendered refuse to take or pronounce the said othe in manner and forme aforesaid that then the partie so refusing and being thereof lawfully indicted or presented within one yeare next after such refusall and conuicted or attainted at any time after according to the lawes of this Realme shall suffer and incurre the daungers penalties paines and forfeitures ordained and appointed by the Statute of Prouision and Praemunire made An. 16. R. 2. St. 16. R. 2. 5. And also if any of the persons aboue named and appointed by this Act to take the othe aforesaide doe after the space of thrée moneths next after the first tender thereof The second refusall of the Othe high Treason the second time refuse to take and pronounce or doe not take and pronounce the same in forme aforesaide to be tendered That then euerie such offendor and offendors for the same second offence and offences shall forfeit loose and suffer such like and the same paines forfeiture iudgement and execution as is vsed in cases of high treason No corruption of blood or forfeiture of dower But no attainder by force of this Act shall extend to make any corruption of blood the dis-heriting of any heire forfeiture of dower nor to the preiudice of the right or title of any person other than of the offendor during his her or their naturall liues onely c. But forasmuch as the Quéene is otherwise sufficiently assured of the faith and loyaltie of the Temporall Lordes of her high Court of Parliament Therefore this Act shall not extend to compell any temporall Lord of or aboue the degrée of a Baron of this Realme Temporall Lords discharged of the Othe to take or pronounce the Othe aforesaide nor to incurre anie penaltie limited by this Acte for not taking or refusing the same Prouided alwayes that no person shall be compelled by vertue of this Acte to take the Othe aboue mentioned at or vpon the second time of offering the same according to the forme appointed by this Statute except the same person hath béene is or shall bée an Ecclesiasticall person that had hath Who only shal take the Othe vpon the second tender or shall haue in the time of one of the Raignes of the Quéenes father brother or sister or in the time of the Quéenes Maiestie her heires or successors charge care or office in the Church Or such person or persons as had hath or heereafter shall haue any office or ministerie in any Ecclesiasticall Court of this Realme vnder any Archbishop or Bishop in any the times or raignes aforesaide Or such person or persons as shall wilfully refuse to obserued the orders and rites for diuine seruice that bee authorized to be vsed and obserued in the Church of England after that he or they shal be publikely by the Ordinary or some of his Officers for Ecclesiasticall causes admonished to kéepe and obserue the same Or such as shall openly and aduisedly depraue by wordes writings or any other open fact any of the rites and ceremonies at anie time vsed and authorized to be vsed in the Church of England Or that shall say or heare priuate Masse prohibited by the Lawes of the Realme And all such persons shall be compellable to take the Othe vpon the second tender or offer of the same and incurre the penalties for not taking the saide Othe and none other 16 Because diuers seditious and euill disposed people haue lately procured and obtained to themselues from the Bishoppe of Rome and his Sée diuers Bulles and Writings the effect whereof hath béene and is to absolue and reconcile all those that will be contented to forsake their due obedience to the Quéene and to yéelde and submit themselues to the vnlawfull and vsurped authoritie of the saide Bishoppe and his Sée and by colour of the saide Bulles and Writings haue by their lewd practises and perswasions so farre wrought that sundry simple and ignorant persons haue béene contented to be reconciled to the saide vsurped authoritie and and to take Absolution at the handes of the aforesaide subtile practisers whereby there hath growen disobedience in many to absent themselues from diuine seruice and thought themselues discharged from all allegeance to her Maiestie whereby vnnaturall Rebellion hath ensued For redresse whereof and to preuent great inconueniences that might ensue by a Statute made Anno 13. Elizab. 2. it was enacted St. 13. El. 2. That if any person or persons shall vse or put in vre in any place within this Realme Giuing or taking absolution by any bulles from Rome or any the Quéenes dominions any bull writing or instrument written or printed of absolution or reconciliation obtained from the Bishop of Rome or any his successors or from any other person or persons authorized or claiming authoritie by or from the said Bishoppe his predecessors or successors or Sée of Rome Or if any person or persons shall take vpon him or them by colour of any such bull writing instrument or authoritie to absolue or reconcile any person or persons or to graunt or promise to any person or persons within the Realme or any other the Queenes Dominions any such absolution or reconciliation by any speach preaching teaching writing or any other open déede Or if any person or persons within this Realme Obtaining of bulles from Rome or any the Quéenes Dominions shall willingly receiue and take any such absolution or reconciliation Or else if any person or persons haue obtained or gotten since the last day of the Parliament holden Anno 1. Elizab. or shall obtaine or get from the said Bishop of Rome or any his successors or Sée of Rome any manner of bull writing or instrument written or printed containing any thing matter or cause whatsoeuer or shall publish or by any waies or meanes put in vre any such bull writing or instrument Then all and euery such Act and Acts offence and offences shall be déemed and adiudged to be high treason and the offendor and offendors therein their procurers abettors and councellors to the fact and committing of the saide offence or offences shall be déemed and adiudged high traitors to the King and the Realme and being thereof lawfully indicted and attainted according to the course of the Lawes of this Realme shall suffer death and forfeit all their lands hereditaments c. and cattells as in cases of high treason by the Lawes of this Realme ought to be lost and forfeited c. All and euery ayders The forfei●●res of Ay●●rs Main●●inors c. after the offence comforters or maintainers of any of the saide offendor or offendors after the committing of any of the saide actes or offences to the intent to set foorth vpholde or allow the dooing drexecution of the saide vsurped power iurisdiction or authoritie concerning the premisses or any part thereof
the Kings Bench for that he did beate a woman great with childe with two children An̄ 3. Ass pl. 2. M. 1. E. 3. 24 so that one of the children died presently and the other was borne baptised and had a name of Baptisme giuen and within two daies after that childe also died by the hurt it receiued by the foresaid beating this was adiudged no felonie for the reasons aforesaide But if a woman being deliuered of a childe doth presently kill it before it be baptized Fit cor 418 M. 2. El. Di. 186. this is felony in her though the childe had no name of Baptisme because the childe was in rerum natura before it was killed and it is knowen by whom and what meanes that childe came to his death 40 If a man doe beate or otherwise hurt another whereby hée dieth In homicide the p●rty must die within a yeare and a day it is requisite to make it Homicide Fit cor 303 that the partie doe die within a yeere and a day next after the batterie or hurt done Or else the Lawe will not adiudge it homicide or that the partie stricken did die of that beating or hurt And the same Lawe is if poison be giuen by one man to an other whereby hée dieth the Lawe will not construe it to be murder vnlesse the partie doe die within a yeere and a day next after the poison receiued 41 As a man may commit felonie in killing of an other Homicide by felo de se so he may commit felonie in killing of himselfe and then the Law doth aptly call him felo de se for though Homicide is most fitly and commonly termed where one man doth kill an other yet the same phrase may in good congruitie of speach be well applied to one that killeth himselfe for there is an Agent and a Patient a killer and one slaine and both in one and the selfe same person And though there may be many causes why a man may kill himselfe as there be many and seuerall humours opinions distractions and fantasies in men yet most cōmonly he becommeth felo de se Bracton de coro ca. 31. feloniously killeth himselfe who being guilty of any grieuous crime is apprehended for the same or vehemently suspected or accused thereof or being wearie of his life for extreamitie of paine or pouertie as being not able to kill his enemie or to be reuenged of him according to his desire doth therefore kill himselfe c. which felon of himselfe shall forfeit to the King his goodes chattells reall and personall Plow com 260. 261. Fitz. Cor. 362. 301. 426. and debts but not his lands for the Lawe doth so greatly fauour inheritance that it shall not escheate without attainder indéede Neither shall his wife forfeit her dower nor his blood shall be corrupt And the reason why the King shall haue the goodes chattels and debts of felo de se forfeited vnto him The cause of the forfeiture of felo de se is for that the King hath lost a subiect and the same subiect hath broken the Kings peace in killing of himselfe and giuen an euill example to his people and hath fled from and escaped the triall of the Lawe and he himselfe was the cause why he could not be tried by the Lawe Co. l. 5. 110. But the goodes of felo de se be not forfeited vntill his death be presented and found of Record And therefore those goods cannot be claimed by prescription And if felo de se be cast into the Sea or a great Riuer or so secretly buried that the Coroner cannot haue the sight of his body and by thgt meanes can not enquire thereof Then all such Iustices of Peace and Oier and Determiner which haue authoritie to enquire of felonies shall enquire thereof An Enfant or Lunatike killeth himselfe 42 If an Enfant furious or frantike man doe drowne Bracton de coron ca 31 21. H. 7. 31 Fitz. cor 244. Co. li. 1. 99. Plow com 260. or otherwise kill himselfe hée shall not forfeit his goodes c. because he wanteth reason and iudgement And if a man that is lunatike doe strike himselfe with his knife or other weapon and after doth recouer and notwithstanding dieth of the same stroke that himselfe did giue within one yéere and a day after the stroke giuen yet he shall not be adiudged felo de se nor forfeit his goods or any thing therefore for the Lawe doth respect what he was at the beginning when hee gaue himselfe the stroke which was the cause of his death and not what he was when he died For if a man that is frantike from day to day doe kill himselfe he shall not forfeit his goods But the Lawe is otherwise if a man doe kill himselfe who is frantike but at certaine times Fitz. coron 324. viz. per lucida interualla Killing of him selfe in the stead of an other 43 If a man doe strike an other to the ground and then draweth his knife to kill him and the defendant lying vpon the ground draweth his knife to defend himselfe H. 44. Ed. 3 44. and the assailant is so hastie to kill the defendant that hee falleth vpon the defendants knife and so is slaine In this case the assailant is felo de se for he had an intention to kill though not himselfe yet the defendant And so as the death intended by him was by his hast transferred from the defendant to himselfe so is the name of a murderer transfered to felo de se 44 If a lease of lands be made to the husband Plow com 258. and the wife for the terme of certaine yeares and the husband goeth into the water and drowneth himselfe in this case Forfeiture of lease made to felo de se and his wife after the death of the husband shal be found by the Coroner vpon the sight of the dead body and the title of this land shal be likewise found by an inquisition taken before commissioners authorised thereunto the foresaid lease and whole terme of yeeres shal be forfeited to the King and the wife shall haue no part thereof for this forfeiture shall haue relation to the husbands going into the water whereupon the drowning did ensue at the which goeing into the water hée had the whole interest of the lease in him so to dispose that hée might haue aliened the whole interest thereof from his wife and this going into the water wherupon this drowning and death did ensue was a forfeiture or alienation in law of the terme and was as much in construction of the law as if hée had then aliened the whole terme to the King And the finding of the death of this man before the Coroner vpon the sight of the bodie and the finding of the title of this lease before Commissioners bée equiuolent to a iudgement that might haue béene giuen against him in his
the house fearing that they will enter his house and rob him doth cast out vnto them mony or plate which the felons do take and then depart this is robbery for it is in construction of the law taken from the person of a man and for feare 9. E. 4. 26. 29 If one lye in the high way to rob passengers Robbery in will but not in déed and draweth his sword against a man that trauelleth the same way and commaundeth him to deliuer his purse whereupon the same party encountreth him is too strong for him and apprehendeth him or leuieth Huy and Cry and the offendor is thereby taken yet this is no Robberie nor Felony for there was no act done though there was an intent and will to robbe Quia voluntas non reputabitur pro facto 30 Burglary is What is Burglary when one or more persons do in the time of peace breake a house a Church a Wall a Tower or Gatehouse in the night with a felonious intent to robbe kill a man or commit some other Felonie for the which Burglarie the offendor shal be hanged Fit cor 264 22. Ass p. 95 though he take nothing away But that breaking of the house must bee to commit some Felonie For if the offendor be indicted for the breaking of a house to beat some person that is but Trespas 13. H. 4. 8 but if it be to kill another then it is Felony And if a man bée indicted for the breaking of a Close to kill or robbe another it is not Burglarie 1. M. Dy. 99. 31 If a man doe breake a house and doe not enter into it Breaking a house but not entring then it is no Burglarie for a man was indicted Quod burglaritèr fregit ecclesiam in nocte intrauit ad depraedandum bona parochianorum in eadem existentur sed nihil abstulit and this was adiudged Burglary for that the party indicted did enter 32 Burglary cannot be committed in the day but in the night No Burglary in the day for all the indictments of Burglary be Noctantèr fregit St. 39. El. 15. for though by the statute of 39. Eliz. the benefit of Clergie is taken away from any person conuicted for the felonious taking away in the day time of any money or goods of the value of fiue shillings or vpwards in any dwelling house or out-house although no person shal be in the same at the time of the said felony committed and so that offenceis made as penall as Burglary by the losse of the benefite of Clergie yet is it not Burglary for it may be committed in the day time the penaltie of loosing of his Clergy is not inflicted vnlesse the money or goods taken away be of the value of fiue shillings or vpwards Breaking a dwelling house where no person is 33 If a man hath a mansion house Co. li. 4. 40. and he and his family doth vpon some cause goe forth of the house and in the meane time one doth come and breake the house in the night to commit felony this is Burglary For although the owner nor any of his family were in the house yet it is his mansion house for the words of an appeale or indictment of Burglarie be Domum mansionalem ipsius A. B. fregit And in like sort if a man haue two houses and doth inhabite sometime in one of them and some other time in another and hath a familie or seruants in them both and in the night when the seruants be out of the house felons doe breake the house this is Burglarie for that the house is broken ❧ Felonies by Statute ANd now hauing expressed which bee felonies by the common Law it resteth that I declare which be felonies by Statute with the reasons and causes why the same statutes were made so farre as I may be warranted by the same statutes And as in Treasons I began with those Treasons which did concerne the K. and his chiefe magistrates of iustice So in reporting of such lawes and statutes as haue béene made for the supply of some defects at the common Law I will begin with a statute which indeuoreth to restraine such as practise or confederat to destroy the king or his chiefe officers attending on his person or estate 1 For as much as by quarrels made to such as haue béene in great authority office and of counsell with the kings of this Realme hath ensued the destruction of the kings and thereby the vndoing of this Realme so as it hath appeared euidently when compassing of the death of such as were of the kings true subiects was had the destruction of the prince was imagined therby and for the most part it hath growne and béene occasion by enuie and mallice of the kings owne houshold seruants And for that by the lawes of this land if actuall déeds were not had there was no remedy for such false compassings imaginations and confederacies had against any lord or any of the kings Councell or any of the kings great Officers in his houshold or Steward Treasurer Controller and so great inconueniences did ensue because such vngodly demeanor was not straitly punished before that an actuall déed was done for the remedy whereof by a statute made An. 3. H. 7. 14. Conspiring to destroy the king or any lord c. it was ordained St. 3. H. 7. 14. That the Steward Treasurer and Controller of the kings house for the time being or one of them shall haue full authority and power to enquire by xij sad men and discréet persons of the Checke Roll of the kings honourable houshold if any seruant admitted to be his seruant sworne and his name put into the Checke Roll of houshold whatsoeuer he be seruing in any maner office or roome reputed had and taken vnder the estate of a lord make any confederacies compassings conspiracies or imaginations with any person or persons to destroy or murder the king or any lord of this realme or any other person sworne to the kings Councell Steward Treasurer Controller of the kings house that if it be found afore the said steward for the time being by the said xij men that any such of the kings seruants as is abouesaid hath confedered compassed conspired or imagined as abouesaid that he so found by the inquiry be put thereupon to answere And the Steward Treasurer and Controller or two of them haue power to determine the same matter according to the law And if he be put in triall that then it be tried by other xij sad men of the same houshold Challenge And that such misdoers haue no challenge but for mallice And if such misdoers be found guilty by confession or otherwise that the said offence be iudged felony and they to haue iudgement and execution as felons attainted ought to haue by the common law 2 For that vnlawfull and forcible violence and also detestable aduowtrie were committed in
to the next Sessions for the Peace and Gaole deliuerie next ensuing after the sayd yeare And if any such person retained depart within the yeare Departing without licēce without the licence of him that so retained him then to be indicted tried and iudged as a felon and not to haue the benefit of his Clergie 33 By a Statute made Anno 31. Elizab. St. 31. El. 4. it was established Imbeciling the K. Armor c. That if any person or persons hauing at any time hereafter the charge or custodie of any Armour Ordnance Munition Shot Powder or Habiliments of Warre of the Quéenes her heires or successors or of a Victuals prouided for the victualing of any Souldiers Gunners Mariners or Pioners shall for any lucre or gaine or wittingly aduisedly and of purpose to hinder or impeach her Maiesties seruice imbecile purloyne or conuey away any the same Armour Ordnance Munition Shot or Powder Habiliments of Warre or Victuals to the value of twentie shillings at one or seuerall times then euerie such offence shall bée adiudged Felonie and the offendor and offendors therein to be tried procéeded on and suffer as in case of Felonie The suit within a yere after the offence But none shall bée impeached for any offence against this Statute vnlesse the same impeachment bée prosecuted or begun within a yeare next after the offence done And this Act nor any attainder or attainders of any person or persons for any offence made felonie by this Act shall in any wise extend or bée interpreted to make the offendor or offendors to forfeit any lands tenements or hereditaments any longer than during his or their life or liues or to make any corruption of blood to any the heire or heires of any such offendor or offendors No corruptiō of blood or forf of dower or to make the wife of any such offendor to loose or forfeit her dower or title of dower of or in any lands tenements or hereditaments or her action or interest to the same Proofe in discharge of the offendor any thing in this Act c. notwithstanding And such person or persons as shall be impeached for any offence made felonie by this Statute shall by vertue of this Act bee receiued and admitted to make any lawfull proofe that hée can by lawfull witnesse or otherwise for his discharge and defence in that behalfe any law c. notwithstanding Cutting downe of Powdike 34 By a Statute made Anno 22. H. 8. and reuiued Anno 2. 3. St. 22. H. 8. Ph. Mar. it was ordained That euerie peruerse and malitious cutting downe and breaking vp of any part or parts of the dike called new Powdike in Marshland in the Countie of Norffolke and the broken dike otherwise called Oldfield dike by Marshland in the isle of Ely in the Countie of Cambridge or of any other banke béeing parcell of the Rinde and vttermost part of the causey of Marshland aforesaid made for the defence and saluation of the sayd countrey of Marshland at euerie time and times from henceforth committed and done otherwise than in working of the sayd bankes or dykes for the fortifying repayring and amending of the same shall bee taken reputed and adiudged Felonie And the offendors and doers of the same and euerie of them shall bée adiudged and reputed felons And the Iustices of Peace of the sayd Counties of Norffolke and Cambridge within the sayd isle at euerie of their Sessions within the same isle and Counties to be kept shall haue power to cause inquirie to bée made of euerie such offence so at any time in forme aforesayd hereafter to bée done and committed and to award like Proces against euerie of the sayd offendors with like iudgement and execution of the same if they or any of them bée found guiltie by verdict or otherwise as the sayd Iustices haue vsed to do vpon other felonies being felonie by the common law Taking the othe for the Kings title 35 By a Statute made Anno 3. Iac. 4. it was enacted St. 3. Iac. 4. That euerie subiect of this Realme that after the tenth day of Iune next comming shall goe or passe out of this Realme to serue any forreine Prince State or Potentate or shall after the sayd tenth day of Iune passe ouer the Seas and there shall voluntarily serue any such forreine Prince State or Potentate not hauing before his or their going or passing taken the othe viz. That our Soueraigne Lord King Iames is lawfull and rightfull King of this Realme c. before the officer thereunto appointed shall be a felon And if any Gentleman or person of high degrée or any person or persons which hath borne or shall beare any office or place of Captaine Lieutenant or any other place charge or office in Campe Armie or Companie of Souldiers or Conductor of Souldiers shall after go or passe voluntarily out of this Realme to serue any such forrein Prince State or Potentat before that he and they shal become bound with two such suerties as shall be allowed of by the officers by this Act limited to take the said bond vnto the K. his heires or successors in the summe of xx.l. of currant English money at the least bound not to be reconciled nor to make conspiracie with condition to the effect following he shall be a felon viz. That if the within bounden c. shal not at any time thē after be recōciled to the pope or sea of Rome nor shal enter into or consent vnto any practise plot or conspiracie whatsoeuer against the Kings Maiestie his heires and successors or any of his or their estate and estates realms and dominions but shall within cōuenient time after knowledge therof had reueale disclose to the K. Maiestie his heires and successors or some of the Lords of his or their priuie Counsell all such practises plots and conspiracies then the said Obligation to be void St. 43. El. 13 36 By the stat made Anno 43. El. it was ordained Forcible carrying any person out of Cumberland c. That whosoeuer shall at any time hereafter without lawfull authoritie take away any of the K. subiects against his or their will or wils and carrie them out of the counties of Cumberland Northumberland Westmerland and the Bishopricke of Durham or to any other place within any of the said Counties or detaine force or imprison him or them as prisoners or against his or their wills to ransome them or to make a prey or spoyle of his or their person or goods vpon deadly fewd or otherwise Or whosoeuer shal be priuie consenting aiding or assisting to any such taking detaining or carrying away of any such person or persons as aforesaid Or whosoeuer shall take receiue or carrie to the vse of himselfe or wittingly to the vse of any other any money corne cattell or other consideration commonly called Blacke mayle for the protecting or defending of him or
them or his or their lands tenements goods or chattels from such thefts spoyles and robberies as is aforesaid Or whosoeuer shall giue any such money corne cattel or other consideration called Blacke mayle for such protection as is aforesaid Or shall wilfully and of malice burne or cause to be burned or aid procure or consent to the burning of any barne or stacke of corne or grain within any of the said Counties or places aforesaid shal be of the said seueral offences or any of them indicted lawfully conuicted or shall stand mute or shall challenge peremptorily aboue the number of xx before the Iust of Assises I. of Gaole deliuerie I. of Dier and Terminer or I. of peace within any of the said counties at some of their generall Sessions within some of the said counties to be holden shal be adiudged reputed and taken to be as felons and shall suffer death without any benefit of Clergie Sanctuarie or Abiuration and shall forfeit as in case of felonie St. 1. Ed. 2. 37 By the stat of An. 1. E. 2. it was ordained in this maner viz. Touching prisoners breaking of prison Breaking of prison the K. doth will and command that none which from henceforth doth breake prison shall haue iudgement of life and member for the breaking of prison onely except the cause for which hee was taken and imprisoned do require such iudgement if he should haue been conuicted thereof according to the law and custom of the Realm though in times past it hath beene otherwise vsed ❧ Principall and Accessorie 1 HAuing treated sufficiently of Treasons Homicides and other Felonies and shewed how many of euerie of them there be I am now to write of those that be culpable therein and to declare which be the chiefe and most grieuous offendors in those crimes whō the law doth terme adiudge Principals and which be but Abettors Procurers and Receiuers whom the law doth brand mark with the name of Accessories and which of those be Accessories before the offence committed and which after in what cases one of them shal be arrested imprisoned appealed indicted arraigned or attainted before the other and in what not when the acquital of the one shall discharge the other and when not and where the punishment of the one shal be greater than of the other and where not And in this title to begin with the greatest highest offence The law doth hold it a rule infallible 3. H. 7. 10. that in High Treason there is no Accessorie No accessorie in high treasō for all the aduisers counsellors persuaders and assistants therein be Principals as much as if they were actors or doers so that whatsoeuer offence doth make a man Accessorie in Felonie the like maketh him Principall in High Treason But in Petit Treason there is oftentimes a Principall and an Accessorie as there is in Homicide Robberie and other Felonies Accessorie before the offence committed 2 There be two sorts of Accessories in Felonie whereof the one is Accessorie before the felonie committed and the other is Accessorie after the offence done As if one hire procure or commaund another to commit a Felonie 10. Ed. 4. 14. but is not present when the other doth it this procurer or commaunder is Accessorie before the offence committed But otherwi●e it is if hee bee present at the time of the felonie committed for in that case he is Principal 4. H. 7. 18. 7. H. 4. 27. And in some case one may be appealed as Principall and Accessorie in one Appeale Procurement of felonie 3 If one bée present at the death of a man 4. H. 7. 18. 13. H 7. 10. Plo. Com. 100. and moueth another to strike and kill him by this meanes hée is principall though hée did strike no stroke as well as hée that killed him For the blowes of h●m that did strike him bée in construction of law the blowes of him which commaunded him when hée was present for if the commaunder had sayd nothing the man slaine had not béene killed 21. Ed. 4 71. 4 If one be present at the killing of a man Cōming purposely to a manslaughter and commeth thither for that cause although he at that time doth not moue another to strike or kill him neither doth any thing yet hée shall bee adiudged principall For when diue●s doe come to doe an euill act Bro. Cor. 171. Kel fol. 161 Pl. Com. 98 and one alone doth it and the others bée present abetting him or readie to aid him in the fact they bée principals to all intents as fully as hée who did the act for the presence of the other is a terrour to him that was assaulted and the occasion that hée durst not defend himselfe for when one doth see his enemie and diuers of his companions comming to assault him 13. H. 7. 10. and they all doe draw their swords and doe enuiron him and one onely doth strike him so that hée dyeth thereof the others shall be adiudged as great offendors as hee who did strike him for if the others had not béene present peraduenture hée would haue desended himselfe and haue escaped for the number of the others that were present and also readie to strike him was a great feare vnto him and an abatement of his courage and a cause to make him dispaire of his defence and so the occasion of his death And though but one man gaue the blow which was the cause of his death yet the law will adiudge it the stroke of them all giuen by the hands of that one man and to bée in each degrée as penall to th●m all as if they all had holden their hands at one time vpon that sword or staffe and giuen him his deadly wound Fitz. Cor. 309. 5 If one béeing present at the killing of a man doth nothing A will to assist a felon but would haue aided his companion if the partie that was slaine had made any resistance Fitz. Cor. 314. 350. 433. 11. H. 4. 13. hée shall thereby bee adiudged principall For all those which come in companie in any place where any assembly is gathered that an euill fact is committed bée it Homicide Robbe●●e or other Trespasse euery of them shall bée adiudged a principall actor though they stand by and doe not hurt As if one come with others to doe a diss●●●●● and a man is killed by another and hee therein did nothing Fitz. Cor. 314. 350. notwithstanding hee shall bee adiudged principall though hée came not to any such purpose because hée came to doe an vnlawfull act 6 If one chaunce to bée present when another is slayne In company but not consenting to a felony or when any other felonie is committed and doth not come in companie with the felons neither is of their confederacie although hée doth not make any resistance or disturbe the felon or leuie Huy and Crye yet he is
dammages In appeale the acquitall of the principall is not the acquitall of the accessorie for if he will recouer dammages he must be tried notwithstanding the acquitall of the principall But some doe thinke that he shall recouer dammages by the acquitall of the principall without being further tried or otherwise it would ensue that the Court should admit an accessorie where there had béene no principall which were inconuenient ❧ Breaking of Prison and Rescous BY the common Law of this Realme if a man had béen imprisoned and broken the prison hée should haue béene hanged for what cause soeuer he had béene imprisoned yea although it had béene but for trespasse Which great enormitie was redressed by the statute of Anno 1. Ed. 2. intituled St. 1. Ed. 2. De frangentibus prisonam the wordes w●●reof be these Touching prisoners breaking of prison our Lord the King doth will and commaund that none which from hencefoorth doe breake prison shall haue iudgement of life and member for the breaking of prison onely except the cause for the which he was taken and imprisoned doth require such iudgement if hée should haue béene conuicted thereof according to the lawe and custome of the Realme though in times past it hath béene otherwise vsed And therefore it is to be considered who is a prisoner and what is breaking of prison Who is a prisoner according to the meaning of the foresaide Statute Euery person who is vnder arrest for felony is a prisoner aswel being out of the Gaole as within So that if hée be but in the Stockes in the stréete or out of the Stockes in the possession of any that hath arrested him 1. Ed. 3. 17. 1. M. Di. 99 and doth make an escape that is a breaking of prison in the prisoner for imprisonment is none other but a restraint of libertie 2 Though the letter of the stat of An̄ 1. Ed. 2. 1. H. 7. 6. 25. Ed. 3. 42 1. Ed. 3. 17. be touching prisoners breaking of prison A stranger breaketh prison yet if a stranger do breake the prison he is within the compasse of this statute for that by the common lawe this was a breaking of prison in a stranger and felonie in him at that time and is felonie also at this time in the prisoner that escapeth by force of such breaking of prison by a stranger although before the said Statute it was not felony in the prisoner Letting a prisoner escape 3 If a Gaoler or any other which kéepeth a prisoner vnder arrest doe let him goe at libertie this is not felonie in the prisoner because it was no breaking of prison in the Gaoler But all the felonie in this case resteth in him who did let the prisoner escape and that is by a voluntary escape and not by breaking of prison which is felony in him that suffered him to escape 2. Ed. 3. 1 4 If by the negligence of the Gaoler or any other which hath the prisoner vnder arrest the prisoner doe escape Negligent escape this is felonie in the prisoner that doth escape for that the prisoner in making of escape did breake the prison but it is not felonie in him out of whose custodie he did escape 5 To breake prison is intended aswell of a Rescous made of a prisoner Rescuing of a prisoner as of breaking of prison 1. H. 7. 6. As if a prisoner be vnder arrest for felony and a stranger will feloniously take him out of the possession of him that hath arrested him this Rescous is a breaking of prison and is felonie as wel in the partie which escapeth as in him that made the Rescous and so was it by the common law Fi. Cor. 333 6 If a stranger disturbe the arresting of a felon Disturbing of arrest that manner of Rescous is not felonie for the letting of a felon escape which is not arrested for felony is not felonie but if the felon had beene taken and arrested and after rescued this had béene felonie 2. Ed. 3. 1. 1. H. 7. 6. 7 If the Sherife returne a Rescous The Sherife returneth a Rescous of a felon taken out of his possession or doe returne an escape that the prisoner escaped from him this wil not serue as an indictment to put the partie to answer thereunto for that it is contrarie to the Statutes of 25. Ed. 3. 28. Ed. 3. 42. Ed. 3. St. 25. E. 3. 4 St. 28. E. 3. 3 St. 42. E. 3. 2. which haue ordained That none shall be imprisoned or put out of his fréehold without an indictment or presentment before Iustices or some matter of Record or by due Proces or by writ originall which the Sherifes returne is not S. Indictments 19. 2. Ed. 3. 1. 8 It is no difference whose prison the offendor doth breake viz. Whos 's the prison broken must be whether it be the Kings prison the Lords of a fraunchise or any other persons for whose soeuer it be the offendor is within the compasse of this statute though it was otherwise before the Statute Britton viz. it was not felonie vnlesse he had broken the Kings prison 9 If one be attached taken for trespasse Attachment for trespasse and he which is attached doth ecape or is rescued by a stranger this is no felonie but trespas for that the Statute saith St. 1. E. 2. Except the cause for the which he is taken and imprisoned doth require such iudgement But yet the fine shal be according to the qualitie of the person to whom the rescous is made according to the time and place whē where it is done 22. Ed. 3. 13 A Iustice sitting in iudgement arresteth an offendor And therfore if a Iustice assigned shall arrest a man that maketh a fraie before him and a stranger doth rescue him by force whereof the prisoner escapeth in this case as wel the prisoner as he that made the rescous shal be disherited and shal suffer perpetuall imprisonment for that the attachment of such a Iustice was the attachment of the King himselfe in the iudgement of the law But if such a Iustice make an arrest when he is out of his place then such an arrest and escape is but fineable nor of any other effect but as if the Sherife or some other officer had made the arrest 1. H. 7. 6. 10 If a mā be rescued at the gallows or as he is in going to executiō this is within the compasse of this Statute Rescous after iudgement for the words of the Statute shal be intēded aswell in the preter tence as in the present tence viz. as well of iudgemēt giuen as of iudgement to be giuen for the cause for the which he was taken and imprisoned did require such iudgement The imprisonment and not the attainder respected 11 It is not material whether the prisoner which did escape was 1. Ed. 3.17 or
supposed is and was conuersant within the countie whereof the indictment or appeale maketh mention but the like proces shal be made against such indicted or appealed person as hath béene vsed 62 And because after the making of the sayd Statute of Anno 8. H. 6. some intending to defraud the sayd Statute did sue to remooue such appeales and indictments out of the hands of the Iustices or Commissioners aforesayd into the Kings bench and elsewhere by Certiorari or otherwise vnknowne to the partie so indicted and therupon sued the proces vsed at the common law before the making of the said Statute in the Kings Bench and elsewhere after the remoouing therof to the great impouerishment of diuers the kings subiects Therefore by the Statute made Anno 10. H. 6. St. 10. H. 6. 6 it was enacted Proces vpon an indictment or appeale remoued into the K. bench That if any such indictments taken before any Iustices of peace or any other hauing power to take such indictments or appeales or other Iustices or Commissioners in any county franchise or libertie of England shal be remoued into the Kings Bench or elsewhere by Certiorari or otherwise then after such remoouing before any Exigent awarded vpō any such indictment or appeal in form aforesaid taken immediatly after the first writ of Capias vpon euery such indictment or appeale awarded and returned another writ of Capias shall bee awarded directed to the Sherife of the countie wherof he that is indicted or appealed is or was supposed to be conuersant by the same indictment or appeale returnable in the K. Bench at a certaine day contayning the space of thrée moneths from the date of the said last writ of Capias according to the maner and forme that the I. of peace and others ought to haue done before such remouing And if any Exigent be awarded vpon any such indictment or appeale after such remouing against the forme aforesaid or any outlawrie thereupon pronounced as wel the same Exigent as the outlawrie and euery of them shal be void In the Appeale he must be supposed to be of a forrein County 63 The foresaid stat of 8. H. 6. doth not take place St. 8. H. 5. 10. but where by the Appeal or by the Indictment it is precisely supposed that the defendant was dwelling in a forrein county for if he be supposed to be dwelling there by an Aliàs dictꝰ it is out of the compasse of the stat 1. E. 4. 1. As in an appeal or indictment in the county of Middlesex against A.B. in comitatu tuo yeoman alias dictum A.B. de C. in comitatu Sussex yeoman Because that which is supposed by the Aliàs dictꝰ is not trauersable nor materiall And likewise it is in an appeale or indictment against I. of S. in comitatu H. nuper de L. in comitatu K. nuper de R. in com̄ T. An appellée dwelling in no place certaine 64 If a man be appealed to be dwelling in no place certaine the day of the Appeale commenced but in this maner Fitz. Proces 192. viz. nuper de S. in comitat̄ L. and nuper de B. in comit̄ T. then proces shal be awarded into all the counties whereof he is so supposed to be of late dwelling Proces into a County Palantine 65 The foresaid stat of 8. H. 6. hath ordained That after the first Capias St. 8. H. 6. 10 another Capias shal be awarded to the Sherife of the county whereof he which is so indicted is or was supposed to be dwelling by the same indictment And therefore if an appeale or indictment be exhibited against one in the countie of M. naming him of D. in the county of Chester or of some other place which is a countie Palantine In this case no proces can be awarded vpon this Stat. which may be directed to the Sherife according to the words of the Statute But proces shal be awarded vpon this statute to the prince or his lieutenant 19. H. 6. 2 31. H. 6. 11. for it is in like mischiefe and the statute is generall in all the Realme which doth bind as well those which be of a Countie Palantine as others But if they of the Countie Palantine will not serue and returne the writ directed to them vpon this statute then without further delay the Exigent shall be awarded otherwise the party should be infinitly delaied Proces against principal accessory 66 The foresaid Proces specified in the before rehearsed stat of 8. H. 6. shal extend as well to accessories as to principals sauing that the Exigent as to the accessories shall be staied vntill the principals be outlawed And that by the Statute of West 1. the words whereof be these St. 3. E. 1. 14 Because men haue vsed in some counties to outlaw such persons as be appealed of commandement force aide or escape within the same terme that they do outlaw him which is appealed of the fact it is ordained that none shal be outlawed for an appeale of commandement force ayd or receit vntill he that is appealed of the déed be attainted so that one law shal be thereof through the whole Realme But the appellant shall not let to attach his appeale at the next countie against them as well as against the appellées of the déed But the Exigent against the Accessorie shal stay vntill the appellée of the déed be attainted by outlawrie or otherwise And Britton Britton doth affirme That as soone as the principals be outlawed the Exigent shal be awarded against the accessories St. 3. E. 1. 14 67 The before rehearsed statute of West 1. séemeth onely to extend to Appeales commenced by bill The stat of W. 1. extēdeth onely to Appeals commenced by bil for in an Appeale commenced by writ it appeareth not vntill the declaration made thereupon that there bée any accessories in the Appeale but for any thing contained in the writ all doe appeare to be principals 43. Ed. 3. 17. and for that cause the Exigent is awarded against them all at one time And therefore the plaintife must be aduised how he doth pray the Exigent and against whom for if he do pray the Exigent against them all he is therby concluded after to count against any of them as accessories for the law intendeth that he must take knowledge which were accessories and which not And therefore in that case he should haue staid the demaunding of the Exigent against them vntill the principals had béene attainted And that is the difference betwéene the principals and the accessories as touching the time of the awarding of the Exigent 68 If an Appeale be brought against diuers and one doth appeare plead In Appeale one doth appeare and another makes default yet proces shall be continued against the residue But if hee which appeareth doth plead in abatement of the Appeale or matter in barre which proueth that the Appeale
plead that the plaintife is outlawed 17. Ass p. 26 11. Ass p. 27 18. E. 3. 35 Fi. Cor. 3 or is attainted of Treason or Felony or otherwise is disabled to maintaine an appeale as if a woman doe bring an appeale of the death of her husband and the defendant doth plead that she and her said husband were neuer accoupled in lawfull marriage or that she hath married another husband Or that the appeale was not cōmenced within the yeare day after the offence committed Or that the appellant hath an elder brother liuing to whom the appeale is giuen Fit cor 384 387. not to the plaintife And all those matters which shal be a barre to the plaintife to bring the appeale shall also be a barre to the K. to take any aduātage against the appellée vpō the same appeal for in all these cases it may appeare that the appeale was cōmenced without cause grounded vpon false insufficient matter And the king shall be in no better condition than the appellant for the defendant is arraigned vpon the declaration of the appellant and yet it is otherwise where the Appeale was at the first grounded vpon sufficient and true matter But in all the cases aforesaid though the king can take no aduantage of the Appeale against the defendant yet he may compel him to answer to an indictment of the same felonie for that by these pleas the defendant is not discharged of the felonie though he be discharged of the Appeale S. Approuers 15. 17. 18. 19. No appeale of Treason 97 If an act which was murder felony or other offence by the cōmon law be after made treason by stat then one doth offend in the same no Appeal wil lye against him therefore for that no Appeale will lye of High or Petit Treason And therefore whereas wilfull poysoning was wilfull murder by the common law and after by the stat of 22. H. 8. 9. the same was made high treason and ordained that the offendor therein should be boyled to death which stat was sithence repealed by the stat of 1. Ed. 6. 12. 1. M. yet during the said stat of 22. H. 8. in force the sonne and heire of a man poysoned brought an appeale against a woman for poysoning her husband and because the offence was then high Treason M. 33. H. 8. Dyer 50. and no appeale will lye of Treason the appeale was adiudged not maintanable And yet by the ancient lawes of this realme as Bracton affirmeth the accusor might haue pursued an appeale of high Treason against the defendant or party accused Bracton de coron̄ c. 3 and the defendant might haue thereunto pleaded not guilty and waged battell with the accusor But that Law is sithence altered ❧ Indictments What an Indictment is 1 AN Indictment of Treason Felony Trespas or other offence is an inquisition taken and made by twelue men at the least thereunto sworne whereby they doe find and present that such a person of such a name and sirname dwelling in such a place of such a County and of such a degrée hath committed such a Treason Murther Rape Burglarie Robberie Felony Trespas or other offence at such a place vpon such a day and in such a manner against the Kings peace his Crowne and Dignitie and contrary to the Lawes of this realme and so it is an accusation by the Iury of the offendor and an information of the Court from whence they receiue their charge of his offence and of all such necessary circumstances thereof and in such certaintie that thereupon the same Court may procéed to the triall or arraignement of the party accused if he be present or otherwise may award Proces against him to appeare and to make answere thereunto if he be absent And because this Indictment and accusation doth sometime concerne the life or member of man sometime his liberty sometime his fame and credite sometime his Lands and Tenements and some other time his Goods Cattels Therefore the Law hath a speciall regard that the procéedings therein may be effected with all sinceritie and vpright dealing and doth carry a vigilant and watchfull eye not onely vpon the Iurors which are returned and sworne in those Enquests that they may be men of integritie sufficiencie and indifferencie but also vpon Shirifes and Baylifes of Liberties who haue authoritie to returne the same Iurors for she hath prouided by seuerall Statutes That they shall take no Indictments by Commissions procured at their owne sute but in their Turnes That they shall hold their Turnes St. 28. E. 3. 9 St. 31. E. 3. 14 St. 13. E. 1. 13 St. 1. E. 3. 16 and take Indictments but in conuenient and vsuall times That they shall take Indictments by twelue men at the least and then by Roll indented That they shal take their Indictments by men of good name credit and sufficient of estate St. 1. R. 3. 4 St. 1. E. 4 3. That they shall bring their Indictments and Presentments found and made in their Turnes to the Iustices of Peace of the same Countie that they may award Proces against those that be indicted and set fines vpon them That Iurors impanelled to make inquiries St. 11. H. 4. 9 shall be lawfully returned by shirifes or baylifes of Franchises without the denomination of any other person That Panels returned by the Shirife to make inquiries St. 3. H. 8. 12 St. 3. H. 7. 1 may be reformed by the Iustices and that one Enquest may be impanelled and charged to inquire of concealements of offences made by another Enquest So that the Law hath prouided that Indictments may be found by men of worth and vpon iust causes And as touching Commissions because in times past Shirifes of diuers Counties by vertue of Commissions generall Writs graunted vnto them at their owne sute for their priuat gaine did take diuers Enquests to indict people at their owne pleasures Commissions to shirifes to take indictments and then tooke fines and ransomes of them to their owne vses and after set at liberty the parties and neuer brought the same persons so indicted before the Kings Iustices to be deliuered there according to the forme of Law It was therefore by a Statute made Anno 28. Ed. 3. St. 28. E. 3. 9 ordained That all such Commissions Writs should be from thenceforth repealed and that none such should be at any time after graunted By force of which Statute the Shirife is restrained to make any inquirie by Writ or Commission The shirife may inquire of Felonies But yet by vertue of his office he may at this day make inquirie in his Turne of Felonies obseruing such orders as by the statutes hereafter limitted be expressed St. 9. H. 3. 36 2 Whereas by the statute of Magna Charta it was ordayned That no Shirife or his Baylife shall hold his Turne by Hundreds but twice in the yeare in
any person before made béeing by force of the foresaid statute of 11. H. 4. in shirifes and bailifes of Franchises seuerall great extortions and oppressions were done in diuers Counties of this Realme by subtilty and vntrue demeanor of shirifes and their ministers to many persons by making and returning at euery Sessions holden within the said Counties for the body of the shire names of such persons as for the singular gaine of the said shirifes and bailifes would be wilfully forsworne by the sinister labour of the said shirifes and their ministers By reason whereof by their couin and falsehood many true and substantiall persons were diuers times wrongfully indicted of Murthers Felonies and other misbehauiours to the vtter losse of their liues goods and lands and sometime also by the labor of the said shirifs great Felonies and Murthers were concealed and not presented by the said persons partially returned by the same shirifs or their ministers to the intent to compell the offendors to make fines and giue rewards to the said Shirifes and their ministers For the preuention of which enormities by a stat made Anno 3. H. 8. it was established St. 3. H. 8. 12 That all panels to be returned which bée not at the suit of any party Panels for indictments reformed by the Iustices that shall be made and put in by euery shirife and their ministers before any I. of Gaole deliuery or I. of Peace whereof one to be of the Quorum in their open Sessions to inquire for the king shal be reformed by putting to and taking out of the names of the persons which so be impanelled by euery shirife and their ministers by the discretion of the same Iustices before whom such panels shall be returned And the same Iustice and Iustices shall commaund euery shirife and their ministers in his absence to put other persons in the same panels by their discretions And the same panels so reformed by the said Iustices be good and lawfull And if any shirife or any of their ministers at any time do not returne the same panels so reformed then euery such shirife or minister so offending for euery such offence shall forfeit xx l. the one halfe to the king and the other to him or them that will sue for the same by action of Debt at the common law or Bill c. wherin no W.E. or P. shal be allowed and the kings pardon shall be no barre against the party or parties that shall sue the same 9 It is to be thought that by force of the statutes before rehearsed sufficient honest and indifferent Iurors were returned by the shirifes of Counties or that the Panels by them returned were reformed by the Iustices so that if any defect were committed in Indictments or in concealing of offences or offendors then the same was in the Iury which were charged for the body of the Shire to make inquirie for the searching forth of the truth whereof and for the punishment of the said offendors according to their demerites by a statute made Anno 3. H. 7. it was ordained St. 3. H. 7. 1 That the Iustices of peace of euery Shire of this Realme for the time being may doe to take by their discretion an enquest Enquest to inquire of concealments whereof euery man shall haue Landes and Tenements to the yearely value of forty shillings at the least to inquire of the concealements of other Enquests taken before them and before other of such matters and offences as are to bée inquired and presented before Iustices of Peace whereof complaint shall be made by Bill or Bils as well within Franchise as without and if any such concealement be found of any Enquest had or made within the yeare after the same concealement euery person of the same Enquest shall bée amerced for the same concealements by the discretion of the same Iustices of Peace the said amerciaments to bée assessed in plene Sessions 10 For as much as seuerall persons vpon great grounds of vehement suspitions as well of high Treasons petit Treasons and misprision of Treason as of Murthers were many times sent for from diuers Shires and places of this Realme and other the Kings Dominions to the Kings great charges to be examined before the Kings Councell vpon their offences to the intent that conuiction or declaration of such persons should spéedily ensue as the merits of their cases should require And albeit that after great trauaile taken in the examination of such persons it appeared to the said Councell by confession witnesse or vehement suspect that such persons were rather guilty of such offences whereof they were examined then otherwise yet neuerthelesse such offendors so examined by the course of the common Lawes of this Realme must be indicted within the Shires or places where they committed their offences and also tried by the inhabitants and fréeholders of such Shires and places although by their confessions or by sufficient witnes their offences were certainely knowne to the Kings Councell By reason whereof besides the trauaile of the Kings Counsell the King was often put to great charges in remaunding such persons to the countries where they offended there to bée indicted and tried of their offences And sometimes the inhabitants and fréeholders of the Shires or places where such offences were done were compelled to appeare out of their shires or places for such causes to their great charges for the triall or declaration of such offences And sometime by occasion of the charges for remaunding such offendors to be indicted and tryed by the course of the common Law such offendors did lye still in prison and were forgotten whereby many times by the helpe of their confederats they escaped vnpunished to the great courage and euill example of euill doers For the reformation whereof by a statute made Anno 33. H. 8. it was enacted St. 33. H. 8. 23. That if any person or persons being examined before the Kings Councell or thrée of them vpon any manner of Treasons misprision of Treasons or Murthers doe confesse any such offences or that the said Councell or thrée of them vpon such examination shall thinke any person so examined to be vehemently suspected of any Treason misprision of Treason or Murther then in euery such case by the Kings commaundement his Maiesties Commission of Oyer and Terminer vnder his great Seale shal be made by the Chancellor of England to such persons Indictments and trials where the king will and to such Shires and places as shall bée named and appointed by the Kings Highnesse for the spéedie triall conuiction or deliuerance of such offendors Which Commissioners shall haue authoritie to inquire heare and determine all such Treasons misprisions of Treasons and Murthers within the Shires and places limitted by their Commission by such good and lawfull persons as shal be returned before them by the Shirife or his ministers or any other hauing power to returne Writs and Proces for that
but only they that were taken for the death of a man by the cōmandement of the K. or his Iust or for the forest therefore by the stat of W. 1. viz. 3. E. 1. it was ordained St. 3. E. 1. 15 That prisoners which before were outlawed Who are mainpernable and who not and they which haue abiured the realm prouers and they which be taken with the maner and such as haue broken the K. prison théeues openly defamed knowne and such as be appealed by prouers so long as the prouer doth liue except he be of good fame and such as be taken for burning of a house feloniously done or for false mony or for counterfeiting the Kings Seale Or persons excommunicat taken at the Bishops request or for a manifest offence or for treason touching the King shall be in no wise mainpernable by a common writ nor without writ But souch as be indicted of larceny by enquests taken before Sherifs or Bailifs by their office or of light suspition or for petit larceny that amounteth not aboue the value of xij d. if they were not guiltie of some larceny before or guiltie of receit of théeues or felons or of commandement or force or of aid in felony done or guilty of some other trespas for which one ought not to loose life or member And a man appealed of an approuer after the death of the approuer if he be no common théefe nor defamed shal be let out by sufficient suertie whereof the Sherife will be answerable and that without giuing any part of their goods Bailement by the Sherife If the Sherife or any other let one go at large by suertie St. 3. E. 1. 1● which is not repleuisable if he be Sherife Constable or any other Bailife of fée which hath the kéeping of prisoners and is thereof attainted he shal loose his fée and office for euer And if the Vndersherife Constable or Bailif of such as haue fée for kéeping of prisoners do it contrary to the will of his Master or any other Bailife being not of fée they shal haue iij. yeres imprisonment and make fine at the K. pleasure Withholding of prisoners repleuisable Whosoeuer doth withhold prisoners repleuisable St. 3. E 1. 15. after they haue offered sufficient suerty shal pay a grieuous amerciamēt to the K. he that doth take any reward for the deliuerance of such shall pay double to the prisoner and also a grieuous amerciament to the King 6 By the foresaid Stat. of West 1. 15. it doth appeare that in foure cases a man was not mainpernable at the common law In what cases no mainprise at the common law viz. they that were taken for the death of a man or by the Kings commandement or of his Iustices or for the forrest Touching the death of a man it is intreated of before And as concerning the Kings commandement this is intended the Kings commaundement The kings commandement by his owne mouth or by his councell which is incorporat to him doe speake with the Kings mouth and by authoritie from him Or otherwise if those words should be taken his generall commandement it may be said that euery Capias in a personall action is the Kings commandement for it is Precipimus tibi quod capias c. and yet in that case the defendant is repleuisable by the common law And as touching the Iustices commandement The Iustices commandement this shall be intended their absolute commandement for if it be their ordinary commandement he is repleuisable by the Sherife sauing in certain cases prohibited by the statute 7 Because in times past diuers persons that were indited of felonies robberies larcenies did remoue the same inditements into the K. Bench there yéelded themselues prisoners were presētly bailed by the marshals of the same Bench and after did lie in wait to kill or misuse their inditors And also for the certain persons appealed of felonie after the Exigent awarded did yéeld themselues in the K. Bench St. 5. Ed. 3. 8 then were let to baile by the marshals of the said bēch for the preuention whereof it was enacted by a statute made an̄ 5. E. 3. The marshall of the Kings bench shall baile no prisoner That such inditées and appellées shal be safely and surely kept in prison according to the charge which the said marshals shal haue of the Iustices And the marshals of the K. Bench shal not baile any felons but shal kéep them in prison and shal not suffer them to go wandring abroad by baile nor without baile And if any such prisoner be found wandring out of prison by baile or without baile that be proued at the K. suit or the parties the marshals which shal be found guilty thereof shal be halfe yeare imprisoned ransomed at the Kings pleasure And the Iustices shal inquire therof when they sée cause And if the marshals suffer the prisoner to escape by their assent they shal be at the law as before time they haue bin And so it appeareth by this Stat. that imprisonment by commandement of a Iustice was not sufficient to restraine bailement in all cases where bailement was not prohibited by the law A Iustices ordinarie cōmandement and absolute vntil the foresaid Stat. of an̄ 5. E. 3. was made and that is to be intended of an ordinarie commandement of a Iu. for if he doe giue an absolute commandement the prisoner is not baileable As if the Iustice command one to prison without shewing cause why he doth so command or for misdemeanor done in his presence or for some other cause which lieth in the discretion of the Iustice more than in his ordinary power 8 The fourth cause why a man is not repleuisable by the common law is the forrest St. Char. Forest 16. for whereas by the Statute of Charta forestae made an̄ 9. H. 3. and confirmed by King E. 1. The king did graunt for him and his heires that of trespasses committed in his Forrests of vert and venison that the Forresters in whose Bailiwickes such trespasses should be committed should present the same trespasses at the next Swanimot before the Forresters Verderers Regardors and Agistors and other ministers aforesaid by the oathes as well of Knights as others wise and lawful men and not suspitious of the parts next adioyning and néerest where those trespasses shal be so presented and where the truth may best and most certainly be inquired of and the same truth being once found out those presentments by the common assent and agreement of all the Officers aforesaid shal be solemnely written sealed with their seales And if any inditement be made in other manner it shal be accounted void And because the chiefe wardens of Forrests did not obserue the said order but that diuers people were disherited ransomed and vndone by the chiefe wardens of the Forrest on this side Trent and beyond and by other
Peace of the same Countie where such offendors shall happen to be shall vpon his or their corporall Oath before the Iustices of the Peace in the open Quarter Sessions of the same Countie where such offendors shall then bée or at the Assises and Gaole Deliuerie of the same Countie before the Iustices of the same Assises and Gaole Deliuerie abiure the Realme of England and all other the Quéenes Dominions for euer vnlesse her Maiestie shall licence the parties to returne and thereupon shall depart out of the Realme at such Hauen or Port and within such time as shall in that behalfe be assigned and appointed by the said Iustices before whom such abiuration shal be made vnlesse the same offendor bée letted or staied by such lawfull and reasonable meanes or causes as by the common lawes of this Realme are permitted and allowed in cases of abiuration for felonie And in such cases of let or stay then within such reasonable and conuenient time after as the common law requireh in case of abiuration for felony as is aforesaid And the Iustices of peace before whom any such abiuration shall happen to be made as is aforesaid shall cause the same presently to be entered of Record before them and shall certifie the same to the Iustices of Assises and Gaole deliuerie of the said Countie at the next Assises or Gaole deliuerie to be holden in the same countie And if any such offendor which by the tenour and intent of this act is to be abiured as is aforesaid shall refuse to make such abiuration as is aforesaid or after such abiuration made shal not go to such hauen and within such time as is before appointed from thence depart out of this Realme according to this present act or after such his departure shall returne or come againe into any the Qu. Realmes or Dominions without her speciall licence in that behalfe first had and obtained Then in euery such case the person so offending shal be abiudged a felon and suffer as in case of felonie without benefit of Clergie If any person or persons that shal at any time offend against this act shall before he or they be so warned or required to make abiuration according to the tenour of this act repaire to some parish Church on some sonday or other festiuall day and then and there heare diuine seruice and at Seruice time before the Sermon or reading of the gospel make publike and open submission and declaration of his and their conformity to her Maiesties lawes and statutes as in this act is hereafter declared appointed That then the same offendor shall thereupon be cléerely discharged of and from all the penalties and punishments inflicted or imposed by this act for any of the offences aforesaid Prouided that no Popish Recusant or seme couert shal be compelled to abiure by vertue of this act Prouided also that euery person that shall abiure by force of this act or refuse to abiure being thereunto required as is aforesaid shal forfeit and loose to her Maiestie all his goods and cattels and all his lands tenements and hereditaments during his life only and no longer But his wife shal not loose her dower neither shall his blood bée corrupt S. Felonie by stat 9. 17 By a statute made an̄ 35. El. 2. St 35. El. 2. intituled an act for the restraining of Popish Recusants to some certaine place of abode it is ordained Popish Recusants shall abiure the Realme That Recusants not conforming themselues to the obedience of the lawes of this realme in comming to the Church to heare diuine seruice which shall not vpon the request of two Iustices of peace or Coroner of the same countie abiure the realm and depart for the same and not returne without the Queenes licence shal be adiudged felons and suffer and loose as in case of felonie without benefit of Clergie S. Fel. by St. 10. St. 3. E. 1. 10 18 By the stat of West 1. made an̄ 3. E. 1. it is enacted Abiuration of a Trespasser That he which committeth trespasse in parkes or ponds shall abiure if hee cannot find suretie no more to doe the like offence But that abiuration is not for felonie neither shal he forfeit his lands or goods Pleading not guiltie HAuing made mention of one of the pleas which a prisoner brought to the barre to be arraigned of Treason or Felonie doth plead viz. of the Confession of the offence and shewed how many sorts of Confessions of felonie the law doth take notice of by what meanes she doth procéed against the parties confessing I am now to treat of a second or one other plea that the prisoner vpon his arraignment doth plead in his own defence which is the plea of Not guiltie For when a prisoner by an appeale or an Inditement is charged with treason or felonie he may estrange himselfe from the offence if he will and ioyne the same issue which the defendant oft times doth in an action of trespasse some other personall actions viz. he may plead and take for his issue Not guiltie This plea of not guiltie is the most common and vsual plea Pleading not guilty the most common plea. that he which is arraigned of treason or felonie hath to plead vpon an inditement or an appeale and it is the plea whereunto euery person that is arraigned shall be enforced vnlesse it be in speciall cases viz. where he hath matter of Iustification or matter in Law to plead And this plea of Not guiltie doth tend to the fact that is to the felony and therefore it receiueth great fauour in Law 7. Ed. 4. 15. 4. H. 6. 15 4. H. 7. 5. 10. H. 4. 4. 9. H. 4. 2. for the Law doth allow this plea to him who is arraigned after he hath pleaded in abatement or barre of the appeale or inditement so that his barre doe not comprehend such matter as doth confesse the felonie as a Release of the appellant or the Kings pardō And that plea he shall haue also though one of his pleas were matter in law for though those pleas doe require diuers trials 29. Ed. 3. 91. 22. E. 4. 39. 27. As p. 3 14. Ed. 4. 7 yet in fauour of life hee shall haue both those pleas as well as he shall haue when he doth plead matter triable by the Bishop or by Record viz. and moreouer not guiltie Which pleas he shall haue notwithstanding he doe not conclude moreouer not guiltie that is to say Pleading not guilty after other pleas he shall come time enough to plead not guiltie after the matter triable by the Bishop or by Record is found against him And the manner of pleading in all those cases is to plead his plea and to pray allowance thereof and ouer to the felonie not guiltie Vpon the plea of not guilty no coūcel allowed 2 Vpon this plea of onely not guiltie the partie indited shall not haue coūcell
of the same shall for any the offences aforesaid committed within the realme of Scotland or for being accessory to the same forfeit any lands tenements or hereditaments either frée copie or customary hold neither shall the blood of such offendor be corrupted nor the wife lose her dower yet neuerthelesse the said offendors shall forf to his Ma. his heires and successors their goods chattels and credits whatsoeuer A like Act made in Scotland 11 And forasmuch as it is intended St. 4. Iac. 1. that an Act like vnto this shal be ordained in the realme of Scotland for the tryall and punishment of offendors being his Ma. natural born subiects of the same realm which shal commit any of the offences aforesaid within the realme of England or the dominions therof and shall after escape or returne backe into Scotland therefore be it enacted that vpon complaint made by any of his Ma. subiects of the realm of England to any of the Iust of Assise Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer or gaole deliuerie or Iust of the peace within the precincts of their seueral commissions respectiuely being naturall borne subiects within the realme of England concerning any such offences committed by any his subiects of the realme of Scotland within the realme of England in case where the offendor is returned into the realm of Scotland as aforesaid the said Iust or commissioner shal haue full power and authoritie Binding the complainant or witnesses to giue euidence in Scotland to bind ouer as well the said party complaining or prosecuting as any witnesses that he shall desire to produce so as their reasonable charges be first tendred vnto them by recognisance in a conuenient sum to his Maiesties vse to prosecute and giue in euidence within the realme of Scotland wherein if default shal be made and the same proued by certificat or otherwise before the Lord Treasorer Chauncellor and Barons of the Exchequer or any of them in the Exchequer chamber and a decrée there made that the same recognisance shall stand forfeited then the court of Exchequer shall thereupon procéed for the leuying of the debt of the said recognisance as if it were adiudged forfeited by the course of the common law St. 4. Iac. 1. 12 On the other part Scottish men repairing into England to giue euidence shal be frée frō arresting euery of his Maiesties subiects of the realme of Scotland either party grieued or witnesse which shall prosecute in any the cases aforesaid within the realme of England and therby shall haue occasion to make his repaire hither either voluntarie or by the like bond as is before expressed on the part of the realme of England shall haue and enioy priuiledge and immunitie from all maner of arrests concerning all offences or other causes as well capitall as others committed done or occasioned before he shall come into England as aforesaid except treason or wilfull murder so long as he or they shal be necessarily going comming or abiding within the said realme of England for the prosecution of the sayd offendors St. 4. Iac. 1. 13 Prouided neuerthelesse The offence shal be laid where it is done that euery such offence so committed as aforesaid shal be laid and alledged in the indictment or other declaration to be done and committed in the realm of Scotland according to the truth of the fact and not in the counties where the trial is limited to be had and made as aforesaid any thing in this Act formerly contained to the contrarie notwithstanding St. 4. Iac. 1. 14 Prouided He that is once tried shall not be eftsoones called into question that if any of his Maiesties subiects of the realme of Scotland shall bee proceeded with and tryed in the Realme of Scotland vpon the prosecution of any party grieued and vpon euidence in open court for any offence done or committed within the Realme of England that no such person shal be eftsoons called into questiō or procéeded with for the same fact within the realme of England but that it shal be lawfull for euery such persons to plead and alledge for himselfe vpon his arraignment that he was formerly lawfully acquited conuicted or attainted of the same offence within the realme of Scotland and that thereupon all further procéeding shal stay vntill the Court haue sufficiently informed themselues by certificat from the realme of Scotland or by any other good wayes and meanes of the truth of the said allegations which if they shall find true the said person shal be forthwith discharged of all further impeachment or procéeding St. 4. Iac. 1. 15 No naturall borne subiect of the Realme of England None shal be sent out of England to receiue his triall or the Dominions of the same shall for any High Treason Misprision or concealement of High treason Petit treason or any other whatsoeuer offence or cause committed within Scotland be sent out of England where he is apprehended to receiue his triall vntill such time as both Realmes shall be made one in lawes and gouernment St. 4. Iac. 1. 16 At all such tryals the Iurors then and there sworne The Iurors shall allow of or reiect the witnesses or the greater part of them who in respect of the great trust and charge which must now be layd vpon them are by vertue of this Act as before appeareth to be persons of better conditions and qualitie than the law required heretofore for Iurors in tryal of like offences shall haue in their power and election according to their consciences and discretion vpon their othes to receiue and admit onely such sufficient good and lawfull witnesses vpon their othes either for or against the partie arraigned as shall not appeare to them or the greater part of them to be vnfit and vnworthy to bée witnesses in that case either in regard of their hatred and malice or their fauour and affection either to the party prosecuting or to the partie arraigned or of their former euill life and conuersation Triall by Péeres 17 Prouided that if the offendor in any the cases aforesaid St. 4. Iac. 1. shall be a Péere of the Realme then his tryall therein shal be by his Péeres as is vsed in case of Felony or Treason and not otherwise 1 Triall of him which woundeth a man in one county whereof he dyeth in another S. Principall c. 16. 2 Triall of a felonie committed in one countie and accessorie thereunto in another S. Principall c. 17. 18. 3 Triall of Treason Misprision of Treason and Murders where the King will S. Indictments 10. 4 Indictments and trials of Treasons committed out of the Realme S. Indictments 11. ❧ Challenge 1 WHen the prisoner standing at the barre hath pleaded not guiltie and that the same issue is to bée tryed betwéene the King and him or the appellant and him the law doth allow him to challenge viz. calumniari to take exception vnto or to
many aliens then shall there be put in such enquests or proofes as many aliens as shall be found in the said Townes or places which be not thereto parties as afore is said and the remnant of denizens which be good men and not suspitious to the one party or to the other At the common Law before this statute and the statute of 27. Ed. 3. St. 27. E. 3. 8 this Triall per medietatem linguae might haue béene obtained by the Kings graunt as if the King had graunted to a company of aliens M. 22. Ed. 3. 14 viz. of Almaines Frenchmen c. that when any of them was impleaded the one halfe of the Enquest should haue béene of their owne language and after to make that a generall Law the statute of 27. Edw. 3. was made But séeing that statute did not remedie the mischiefe where the King was party the before rehearsed statute of 28. Edw. 3. was prouided which maketh mention generally of aliens therefore it is not materiall of what Nation those aliens are which shall be of the Enquest so that they be aliens though they be of another Nation then the party to the suit is And because this Statute was ordained for the benefit of aliens and of none but of aliens and for that there were in this Realme of long time assembled some strangers together with many English vagrant Rogues and Vagabonds calling themselues Egyptians which by their counterfeit spéeches apparell and behauiour could hardly be discerned one from the other Therefore by a Statute made Anno 22. H. 8. St. 22. H. 8. 10. it is enacted That if it happen any outlandish person calling himselfe an Egyptian Egyptians or any such stranger to commit within this Realme any Murther Robbery or Felony and thereof to be indicted and arraigned and to plead not guilty or any other plea triable by the Countrey then the Enquest that shall passe betwéene the King and such party shall be altogether Englishmen And by another Statute made Anno 1. 2. Ph. Ma. St. 1. 2. P. M. 4. it was ordained That if any of the said persons called Egyptians which shall bée transported or conueyed into this Realme of England or Wales doe continue within the same by the space of one moneth that then hee or they so offending shall by vertue of this act bée adiudged a Felon and Felons and shall suffer death losse of lands and goods as in cases of Felony and shall vpon the triall of him or any of them be tried by the County and the inhabitants of the County or place where he or they shall be apprehended or taken and not per medietatem linguae and shall loose the benefit of Clergy and Sanctuary And whereas the words of the foresaid Statute of 28. Edw. 3. be That in all manner of Enquests and proofes which are to bee taken c. those words are not to be construed of an Indictment for that may be taken all of Denizens though it doe concerne an Alien But the Statute is to be intended of such Enquests where the party is admitted to his challenge and so he is not vpon an Indictment for the party which is an alien may vpon his arraignement haue the said challenge in the array 21. H. 7. 32. to shew that in the pannel there is not medietas linguae according to the statute for he hath none other remedie being defendant But if hée were plaintife it should bée otherwise for then before the Venire facias awarded hée must suggest that he is an Alien and pray Proces to summon the Iurie De medietate linguae according to the Statute and further hée must surmise in what parts beyond the seas hée was borne Lib. Int. to the intent that men of the same countrey may bée of his Enquest if they may bée had and if they will not signifie that before the Venire facias awarded hée shall not suggest it after neither shall he challenge the Array or Polles for that cause séeing it was his folly M. 22. E. 3. 20. that hée tooke not the benefit of the Statute in due time and specially when hée knew himselfe to bée an Alien And whereas the words of the foresayd Statute of 28. Edw. 3. bée That are not parties nor with the parties in contracts pleas or other quarrels whereof such Enquests or proofes ought to bée taken By these words it doth appeare that the makers of this Statute would that the parties should haue their Challenges to the Polles in those sayd cases And therefore though they haue not expressed but certaine cases which induce hatred or malice yet by the mentioning of them it séemeth that they intended to allow all Challenges which doe induce fauour or otherwise And the foresaid Statutes of 27. Edw. 3. 28. Edw. 3. doe onely extend where there is but one onely of the parties to the suit an alien for if they be both aliens the Enquest shall be all of Englishmen and not de medietate linguae vnlesse the plea be depending before the Mayor of the Staple 21. H. 6. 4. and both the parties be Marchants of the Staple or officers of the Staple in which case then by the Statute of 27. Edw. 3. 8. the Enquest shall be all of aliens If an alien be indicted of high Treason Treason P. 3. 4. P. M. ●● y. f. 144 St. 1. 2. P. M. ●0 Dyerf 304 he shall not haue his triall per medietatem linguae but the triall shall be according to the due order course of the common Lawes of this Realme And if a Scot be indicted of Felony he shall not haue his triall per medietatem linguae A Scot. for that a Scot was neuer accounted an Alien but rather a Subiect Challenge for want of sufficient fréehold 4 There is another Challenge vpon cause viz. for want of sufficient Fréehold which is a Challenge of the Polles and this Challenge was giuen by the Statute of 2. H. 5. St. 2. H. 5. 3. which doth ordaine That no person shall be admitted to passe in any Enquest vpon tryall of the death of a man or in any Enquest betwéene party and party in plea reall or in plea personall whereof the debt and dammages declared doe amount to forty markes aboue all charges if the same person hath not Lands and Tenements of the yearely value of fortie shillings aboue all charges so that he be challenge for that cause by the party And because many Marchants aliens and other aliens which neither had nor could purchase any Land in this Realme were greatly discontented with the foresaid Statute of 2. H. 5. and were ready to depart this Realme for that the same Statute did take away or was expounded to diminish the chiefe force of the before mentioned Statute of 28. Edw. 3. 13. and by that meanes to abridge aliens of their Trials in most cases per medietatem
thereunto not guilty the Iury may find that one of them committed the felony by the procuremēt of the other but that he which was the procurer was not present at the cōmitting of the felony 3 And as a Iury may giue a speciall verdict to attenuate an offence The verdict more penall then the Indictment and to make it lesse penall then is contained in the Indictment as in the cases aforesaid so may they by a speciall verdict aggrauate the offence more then the Indictment did As a man was indicted and arraigned for the stealing of linnen Cloth to the value of two shillings whereunto the prisoner pleaded not guilty Fi. Cor. 115 and the Iury found that he did rob the owner of the linnen cloth to the value of x. s. and further that he tooke it from the person of a man whereupon hée was adiudged to be hanged 4 When a man is indicted of the death of another man before the Coroner Where a Iury shall find who killed the dead man vpon the sight of the body slaine and after is acquite the Iury which acquited him must find one that killed him 14. H. 7. 2. 13. E. 4. 3. 22. As p. 39 7. Eli. Dyer 238. or els the meanes whereby he came to his death and if they find that I.N. killed him this shall serue for an indictment against I.N. for it is certaine that there is such a person dead séeing the Coroner did sée him and so recorded it and therfore the maner of this persons death must not cease to be tried vntill it be found But it is otherwise where the prisoner is indicted before other Iustices because notwithstanding such an indictment it may be there was no such person dead for the body was not séene by the Iustices before whom that indictment passed as in the other case it was by the Coroner and therefore their record in that case touching the death of a man cannot be of so great force as the coroners is vnles it be where the death of the man is notorious and generally knowne then if he which vpon an appeale or indictment of the death of that man is arraigned 21. E. 3. 17 pleadeth not guilty is by the Iury found not guilty the Iury shal be charged to inquire who killed him as a man was indicted and arraigned for the killing of another man who thereunto pleaded not guilty and the Iury found him not guilty and because the man was knowne to be killed in the presence of many the Iustices charged the Iury to inquire and find who killed him 37. Ass p. 13 and thē they found that the same man which was killed was in a Tauerne and drunken and fell vpon his owne knife by mischance and so was the cause of his owne death ❧ Clergie What Clergy is 1 CLergie is an auncient liberty of the holy Church and it is when a priest or one within holy orders or any other in whō there is no impossibility to be a priest is arraigned of Felony before a secular Iudge hee may pray to haue his Clergy which was as much before the statute of 18. Eli. St. 18. Eli. 6. as if he had prayed to be dismissed of the temporall Iudge and to be deliuered to the Ordinary to purge him of that offence and now sithence that statute it is as much as if he should pray after the burning in the hand to be enlarged and deliuered out of prison And it appeareth by the statute of Articuli Cleri made Anno 9. Ed. 2. St. 9. E. 2. 15 That a Clerke ought not to be iudged by a Temporall Iudge nor any thing may be done against him that concerneth his life or dismembring of him and though this priuiledge had his beginning from the Cannon Law and not from the common Law of this Realme yet it hath bin confirmed by diuers parliaments and the temporall Iudges haue so fauorably vsed it that they haue graunted it to all that can read although they be no priests nor within holy orders which is more then the Cannon Law requireth for the Cannon Law expecteth no more then that it shal be graunted to priests and such as be within holy orders Where no Clergy by the common Law 2 None of them in whom there is any impediment to be Priest can by the common Law haue the priuiledge of Clergy as he that is blind or maimed or one such as by no dispensation by the Lawes of the Church can be Priest can haue the priuiledge of Clergy Fi. Cor. 461 Neither can any woman haue the priuiledge of Clergy Committer of Sacriledge 3 He that hath committed Sacriledge Fi. Cor. 120 283. 257 26. As p. 1● 27. Ass p. 42 shall not haue the priuiledge of clergy by the common Law if the Ordinary do refuse him the secular Iudge do assent to his refusall and yet it is otherwise if the Ordinary will clayme him for a Clerke and receiue him But if one that hath committed Sacriledge be arraigned of another felony then of that Sacriledge for the which he doth pray his Clergy and doth read well and the Ordinary knowing that he hath committed Sacriledge or some other grieuous crime doth refuse him the said offendor shal be hanged 21. Ed. 4.21 though the Ordinary doth not shew to the Iudges the cause of his refusall S. Br. 24. Fi. Cor. 233. 26. Ass p. 19 4 If one that is a priest or within holy orders hauing not the habit or tonsure of a clerke Habite or tonsure of a clerk do demaund his clergy if the Ordinary do refuse him for it he shal be hanged 9. E. 4. 28. so shall he be if the court do refuse him for that cause though the Ordinary do not refuse him S. Br. 5. 5 He that had his clergy once Clergy allowed but once should haue had it againe by the cōmon law and so oft times but by the stat of 4. H. 7. St. 4. H. 7. 13 it was enacted That euery person not being within orders which once hath béen admitted to the benefit of his clergy being eftsoones arraigned of any such offence shall not be admitted to the priuiledge of his clergy And euery person so conuicted for murther shal be marked with an M. vpon the brawne of the left thumbe and if it be for any other felony he shal be marked with a T. in the same place of the thumbe and those markes to be made by the gaoler openly in the court before the Iudge before the person be deliuered And after by the stat of 28. H. 8. 32. H. 8. St. 28. H. 8. 1. St. 32. H. 8. 3 it was enacted That such as be within holy orders shall be and stand vnder the same paines dangers for their offences and be vsed and ordered to all intents as other persons not being within holy orders shal be 6 He that killeth a
euidence against him they vsed to bring forth the prisoner and to arraigne him of the principall fact and if hée pleaded or saide that hée was not guiltie thereunto then an Enquest of Clerkes was charged And if by the saide Enquest of Clerkes he was found not guilty of the same offence then he was set at libertie and if hée were found guiltie he was disgraded There be two sorts of Clerkes whereof the one is a Clerke conuict and the other is a Clerke attainted A Clerke conuict A Clerke conuict is hée who praieth his Clergie before Iudgement be giuen against him of death and hath his Clergie allowed vnto him such a Clerke before the Statute of 18. Elizab. might haue made his purgation sauing in certaine especiall cases As a common thiefe could not make his purgation Fi. Cor. 247 notwithstanding that hée were but a Clerke conuict for it is better for the common wealth to haue such an incorrigible person continually to remaine in prison than to goe at libertie to doe more hurt Fi. Cor. 417 And likewise a Monke that was a Clerke conuict should haue béene deliuered to his Abbot to haue remained in the Abbey continually without making his purgation Fi. Cor. 109 147. And also in an appeale if the Defendant had béene conuict by verdict and had enioyed his Clergie as a Clerke conuict he should not haue made his purgation for if hée had made his purgation then the Plaintife in the appeale should haue recouered his goodes without cause for that by the purgation it doth appeare that hée was not guiltie of the felonie A Clerke attainted Clerke attainted is he who praieth his Clergie after Iudgement of felonie giuen of him Such a Clerke could not haue made his purgation for that when he was condemned of felony by iudgement hée could not contrarie to that Iudgement be purged thereof that iudgement remaining in force and therefore there was none other remedy for him but to purchase the Kings pardon or else hée must haue remained in prison during his life And whether this Iudgement of death did follow either vpon Confession before the Coroner Clergie after Confession vpon abiuration or before the Iustices vpon his arraignement or vpon triall by verdict of twelue men if this iudgement were once giuen hée should not after make his purgation And though after his confession of the felony and before Iudgement giuen against him thereupon he doth pray his Clergie he shall haue it and might haue made his purgation for that the confession being before a secular Iudge who is not his Iudge is voide And for that cause the statute of Articuli Cleri cap. 16. doth ground St. 9. E. 2. 16 That an approuer Approuer shall haue the benefit of his Clergie and yet he hath confessed his offence before a secular Iudge And it is not to be interpreted that the benefit of this Statute is to be extended onely to saue the approuers life and not to set him at libertie by making his purgation for then hée should haue but part of the benefit of Clergie and not the whole which is contrary to the saide Statute of Articuli Cleri If an approuer had waiued his appeale holden him to his Clergie he should haue made his purgation Fi. Cor. 128 because the Temporall court doth dismisse him as a man in whom it hath no iurisdiction which waiuer of the appeale did not waiue the confession that hée had made before 27. H. 6. 7 13. E. 4. 3 Fi. Cor. 56 247 And though an approuer in some Cases should not haue made his purgation yet that was in such cases onely where he did not pray his Clergie vntill Iudgement was giuen against him of felonie If one that shall abiure the Realme for felony had come againe into the Realme without the Kings licence whereupon he was taken and brought to the Barre and that it was demaunded of him whie hée should not be put to death and he had demaunded his Clergie and that was allowed yet he should not haue béene deliuered to the Ordinarie but sent to prison againe Fi. Cor. 155 vntill hée had obtained the Kings pardon For Clergie would haue serued him for the felonie but not to excuse the contempt which he made by comming againe into the Realme without the Kings licence But it had béene otherwise if he had prayed his Clergie at the time when he fled to the Church By the entrie into the Roule of the Court which made mention of the prisoners deliuerie to the Ordinarie In whom rested the making of purgation it appeareth that the making or not making of purgation did rest much in the Temporall Court and not in the Ordinarie for if he were not to make his purgation then the entrie was Quod talis commissus est Ordinaria absque purgatione facienda and if hée were to make his purgation then the wordes Absque purgatione facienda were omitted and in all cases where the Temporall court had determined that purgation did not lie as in the case of Clerke attaint or such like if the Ordinarie had admitted the prisoner to haue made purgation and thereby set him at libertie Escape for suffering purgation he should haue bin charged with an escape for the authority whereby he was committed to prison was temporall and he receiued him from the temporall court or otherwise the Ordinary could not haue retained him in prison And therefore the temporall court had somewhat to doe with setting him at libertie out of prison If one had béene conuicted of diuerse felonies and had béene admitted to his Clergie in that case hée ought to haue made purgation for them all But the force of the foresaide Lawes Fi. Cor. 232 touching committing of clerkes to the Ordinary and making of purgation is alterd by the before mentioned statute of Anno 18. Eliz. St. 18. El. 6 whereby it was enacted That euerie person and persons which shall be admitted and allowed to haue the benefit or priuiledge of his or their Clergie shall not thereupon be deliuered to the Ordinarie as hath béene accustomed but after such Clergie allowed and burning in the hand St. 4. H. 7. 13 according to the statute in that behalfe prouided shall forthwith be enlarged deliuered out of prison by the Iustices before whom such Clergie shall be graunted that cause notwithstanding Clergie allowed without deliuery to the Ordinarie Prouided neuerthelesse that the Iustices before whom any such allowance of Clergie shal be had shall and may for the further correction of such persons to whom Clergie shall be allowed detaine and kéepe them in prison for such conuenient time as the same Iustices in their discretions shall thinke conuenient so as the same doe not excéede one yeeres imprisonment Any lawe or vsage heretofore had to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding ❧ The Kings Pardon THe Kings Pardon is a barre to an Indictment
not any release of the appellants made vnto him or any such other matter in discharge of the appeale for he shall come time enough to shew that when the appellant doth appeare vpon the Scire facias And the appellée may haue a Scire facias against the appellant though in the Charter there be not this clause viz. ita quod stet rectus in curia Fi. Char. 17 19 An appeale was brought against a principall and accessorie Non-sute doth not aide an appellee that is outlawed the principall was pursued to an Outlawrie whereupon an Exigent was awarded against the Accessorie returnable at a certaine day at which day the Plaintife was Non-suit in his Appeale and then the Principall came with a Charter of Pardon and prayed allowance thereof for that the plaintife was Non-suite which would not bée graunted by the Court for that the non-suit did not ayde him seeing the appeale was determined before against him by the Outlawrie 20 A man beeing arraigned of felonie pleaded not guiltie 8. Ed. 4. 29 and beeing demanded how he would be tried he shewed forth the Kings protection The Kings protection and said that the same was a sufficient discharge for him and would make none other answere whereupon the Iustices agreed that he should be put to his penance viz. to his paine for t dure And yet at another time Fi. Cor. 239 one béeing found guiltie of felonie shewed the Kings Charter which did not containe any pardon but onely that the King had retained him to goe with him into Gascoigne that was allowed and the Iustices did surcease to procéed any further against him Pardon of a felonie before it was committed 21 A. was indicted for that he did the 13. day of February Plo. com 401. an̄ 13. Regin̄ Eliz strike B. whereof the said B. died the 18. day of Iune then next following A. vpon his arraignmēt pleaded the generall pardon by Parliament by which all felonies offences misdemeanours c. in the act not excepted which might bée pardoned before and vntill the 14. day of February were pardoned released and discharged against the Quéene and auerred that neither hee nor the said offence were excepted in the said pardon and praied to be discharged And he was discharged by the said pardon for that the wound giuen by the prisoner was the cause of the felonie the giuing of which wound was an offence misdemeanour against the Crowne the which was pardoned by the Act of Parliament and by that meanes all acts ensuing vpon the same offence were pardoned ❧ Standing mute or answering indirectly AT some time he that is arraigned of felonie is so farre both from making confession of the felonie whereof he is indited and also of pleading not guiltie thereunto that hee will make no answer at all but stand mute of malice and euill will or otherwise plead such matter which is no answer to the felonie whereof hée is arraigned or such a peruerse plea which is no direct answer to the offence whereof he is indited Stand mute or not answering directly Or if he doe answer to the offence yet he will so conclude his plea that the same plea can haue no triall Fi. Cor. 233 283 359 4. Ed. 4. 11 Kel fol. 70. In all which cases he shall be put to his penance for contemning the law and refusing of the ordinarie triall deuised by the law that is to say he shall be put to paine grieuous and durable otherwise tearmed to paine fort dure and as it is commonly tearmed he shal be pressed to death Which paine is called grieuous for that it is so heauie and weightie that hée is not able to endure it and it is called durable because the offendor shall neuer haue ease or reliefe of it but shall die in it 2 The paine grieuous and durable was not at the common law but Felons refusing lawfull triall ordained by the Statute of Westminst 1. made an̄ 3. Ed. 1. St. 3. E. 1. 12 whereby it was enacted That notorious felons openly knowne of euill name who will not put themselues vpon enquests of felonies which men doe prosecute before the Iustices at the Kings suit shal be put in hard and strong prison as they which refuse to be tried by the law of the Realme But this is not to be intended of prisoners which be taken for light suspition By which Statute it doth appeare that none shal be adiudged to this paine if there be not euident or very probable matter to conuince him of the offence whereof he is arraigned or otherwise that he is a notable théefe or openly known to be of an euil name which the Iudge ought strictly to examine before hee procéed to iudgement against him ●●nnance on●● vpon an indictment and not vpon an appeale 3 The iudgement of pennance is only to be giuen when a prisoner is arraigned at the Kings suit and not where he is arraigned at the parties suit 21. Ed. 3. 18 for the words of the Statute be and will not put themselues vpon enquests of felonies which men do prosecute before the Iustices at the Kings suit and therefore in an appeale prosecuted at the suit of the party the iudgemēt of pennance viz. of paine grieuous durable shall not be giuen but another iudgement that is to say that the offendor shal be hanged And an offendor shal haue this iudgement of pennance at the K. suit 40. Ass p. 40 although that suit be begun before his due time viz. within the yeare after the offence committed where the king ought to haue taried vntill the yeres end for the interest of the party who was to pursue his appeale within the yeare Pennance for piracie 4 If a man be indicted and arraigned before Commissioners to heare and determine for Piracie and Robbery committed vpon the sea 7. El. Dyer 242. and he wil stand mute and not answere directly he shall haue iudgement of pennance viz. of painefort dure and that is by force of the statute of Anno 28. H. 8. St. 28. H. 8. 15. which hath ordained That all Treasons Felonies Robberies Murthers and confederacies committed vpon the Sea or in any other Hauen Riuer Créeke or place where the admirall hath or pretendeth to haue iurisdiction shal be inquired heard cried determined and iudged in such shires places in the realme as shal be limitted in the kings Commission or Commissions to be directed for the same in like forme as if any such offences had béene committed vpon the land And such Commissions shal be had vnder the great Seale directed to the Admirall or his Lieutenant and Deputy and to thrée or foure such other as shal be appointed by the Lord Chancelor as often as néed shal require to heare and determine such offences after the common course of the laws of this land vsed for Treasons Felonies Robberies Murthers and
enquest of twelue women before the Iustices 22. As p. 71 25. Ed. 3. 42. 12. As p. 11 23. As p. 2. Fitz. Cor. 240. 253. who being then sworne to examine and trie the trueth shall take that woman into a chamber and search and trie whether she be quicke with childe or not and if she be found to be quicke with childe then execution of her shall be staied vntill she shall be deliuered But if shée be not quicke with child she shal be hanged presently for it will not auaile her to be yong with childe And yet whether shée be with child or not Iudgement shall not be delayed but shal be presently giuen against her that she shal be hanged but only the execution of that iudgement shal be stayed If after she is repried and deliuered of her childe and before the next Gaole deliuerie she be with child againe though she be quicke with childe execution shall not be staied but she shal be put to execution presently And yet in that case the truth of the matter being inquired of and found the shirife marshall or gaoler which had the custodie of her shal be fined for kéeping her so slackly that shée had the company of a man 13 If a man attainted of felonie be adiudged to be hanged Fi. Cor. 335 and the sherife doth carrie him to the place of execution and doth hang him and he breaketh the Rope and falleth downe before he be dead A man hanged falleth downe before he be dead In this case the sherife must take him and hang him againe for his iudgement is that he shal be carried to the place of execution and there be hanged vntill he be dead And so vntill he be dead the iudgement is not fully executed ❧ Forfeiture AFter an offendor is attainted of treason or felonie A felon shal forfeit lands and goods and hath had iudgement of death hée shall presently thereby forfeit his goods and also his lands sauing in certaine cases hereafter expressed though it be not mentioned in the iudgement And notwithstanding there is a difference betwéene treason and felonie concerning the forfeiture of lands yet touching the forfeiture of goodes they be all one for they shall be forfeited to the King St. 17. Ed. 2 16 as it appeareth by the Statute intituled Prerogatiua Regis which hath ordained That the King shall haue all the goodes of felons which be condemned and which be fugitiue wheresoeuer they be found and if they haue any fréeholde it shall be forthwith seised into the Kings hands and the King shall haue the profites thereof by the space of a yéere and a day and the land shall be wasted and destroyed in the houses woodes and gardeins and in all things belonging to the same except men of certaine priuiledged places And after the King hath had the yeare day and waste the land shall be restored to the chiefe Lord of the same Fée vnlesse that before hée redéeme the same yéere day and waste of the King by payment of a fine But there is a custome in the countie of Gloucester that after a yeare and day the lands and tenements of felons in that Shire shall reuert and be restored to the next heire to whom they ought to haue descended if the felonie had not béene committed And in Kent in Gauelkinde the Father to the Bough the Sonne to the Plough there all the heires males shall diuide their inheritaunce and likewise women but women shall not make partition with men And a woman after the death of her husband shall be endowed of the moitie And if a woman doe committe fornication in her widdowhoode or take any husband she shall loose her Dower 22. As p. 96 Fit forfeiture 35. 2 A man being indicted before the Coroner of the death of an other man Forfeiture of goods and if it be further found by the same indictment that hée did flie for the said felonie although after he be acquitte of the same felonie 7. Eli. 35. Dy. 238. Co. l. 5. 109 and notwithstanding that the Enquest which did acquitte him doe say that he did not flie for the felonie yet his goodes shall be forfeited to the King For the King shal take holde of that Record which is most for his benefit and that is the Coroners Record And in like sort if one that is indicted of felonie Fitz. forf 32. Fi. Cor. 290 344. is acquitte thereof by verdict Flying for felonie if the Iury which did acquitte him will say that he did flie for the felonie he shall forfeit his goodes which he had at the time of the verdict giuen which being an auncient lawe of this Realme is grounded vpon this reason that notwithstanding his acquitall of the felonie yet he is to be suspected of the felonie for the vehement presumption which is risen of him as well in respect of his flying away as by the indictment And though the Enquest which did finde that he fled for the felonie be as touching that part of their verdict but an Enquest of office yet it is not trauersable because it is onely touching goodes for the which goodes no trauerse against the King is allowed by the Lawe for the Lawe doth accompt goodes inter minima de minimis non curat lex And though goods be in comparison of mans life or his lands in the eie of the Lawe called and accompted Minima yet they be not of so small value or so little to be regarded but the Iudge or the Coroner ought with all due circumspection foresée that the Iurie be not vpon ignoraunce or small euidence seduced to finde an vntrueth to the vtter vndooing of the partie indicted or accused Fi. Cor. 308 338. And in like sort if a man be indicted and arraigned of felonie and it is found by the Enquest or the Coroners Roll that hée fledde for the felonie he shall forfeit his goodes though hée hath the Kings pardon of the felonie for the charter of pardon doth containe the presumption of him that he is guiltie of the felonie An accessorie fled for the felonie 3 If a man be indited before the Coroner as accessorie to the death of an other man and it be found that he fled for the felonie 4. H. 7. 18 in this Case hée shall forfeit his goodes if hée were accessorie before the felonie committed But if it be found before the Coroner that hée was accessorie to the felonie after the offence committed and that he fled for the felonie hée shall not forfeit his goodes for the Coroner hath no authoritie to meddle with any that was accessorie after the homicide committed but onely with such by whose meanes the dead man was slaine or who were the causes of his death which the accessorie after the offence committed could not be And therefore when hée indicted one for receiuing of a murderer and that he fled this inditement of the receipt of the
Lord shall haue a Writ of Escheat and where he may enter 52 The forme of a Writ of Escheat 53 The kings remedy for lands escheated vnto him An office for those lands which doe escheat for Felony 54 The wiues forfeiture of title of Dower 55 What the appellee that wageth battell shall forfeit 56 A Rent-charge pro consilio not forfeited 57 The forfeitures of an outlaw Corruption of Blood Fol. 239. 1 Corruption of Blood salued by Parliament only 2 Where corruption of blood shall preiudice tenant by the courtesie 3 The eldest sonne attainted during his fathers life 4 Where attainder but no corruption of blood Restitution of stolne goods Fol. 240. 1 Restitution of goods vpon Fresh suit 2 What conuiction shal be sufficient to giue the owner restitution of his goods 3 Where the owner shall haue restitution 4 Before whom and by whom inquirie of Fresh suit is to bee made 5 Restitution vpon attainder by indictment Damages in Appeale Fol. 242. 1 The punishment of the appellant and the abettors when the appellee is acquit No Essoine for the appellant in an appeale of death 2 The appeale must bee commenced vpon malice 3 The statute of 13. Ed. 1. extendeth to all Felons 4 The defendant in an appeale acquited by battell 5 Where the accessarie in an Appeale shall recouer dammages 6 Where the defendant is said to acquit himselfe in due manner and where not 7 Acquitall at the Kings suit is only in appeale 8 What Iustices may inflict the penaltie vpon the Appellant 9 The dammages for seuerall persons assessed seuerally 10 Where the appellant shall pay a fine to the king 11 In what cases inquiry shall be made for the abettors 12 What pleas the abettors may plead 13 Proces against the abettors Nonsute in the proces against the abettors 14 A writ against the abettors by the appellee 15 Procurers of indictments for suits in spirituall courts A Writ of Conspiracie Fol. 245. 1 In what case a Writ of Conspiracie doth lye 2 Conspiracie maintenable vpon an acquitall in an indictment or appeale 3 The indictment must be false which giueth the Writ of Conspiracie 4 Conspiracie doubtfull whether true or false 5 The conspirators do become indictors A Iustice of Peace A giuer of Euidence 6 Who be conspirators 7 A Conspiracie must bee by more then one Where only one shal be charged in Conspiracie 8 No Writ of Conspiracie against the Husband and the Wife 9 The forme of the Writ of Conspiracie 10 The writ of Conspiracy for the accessarie 11 Barres in a writ of Conspiracie 12 Iudgement in Conspiracie A villanous iudgement 13 Inquiry of Conspiracie by Iustices 14 Inquiry of Conspirators at the kings or parties suit 15 Procurers of an indictment or an appeale in a forraine county 16 An offence supposed to bee done in a place where there is none such The Coroner and his authoritie and dutie in Felonies c. Fol. 249. 1 The office and duty of a Coroner 2 The Writ de Coronatore Eligendo 3 Who shall be Coroners and by whom they shal be chosen 4 Whether Coroners ought to be knights 5 Causes to remoue a Coroner 6 Where a Coroner shall haue fee and where not 7 What things Coroners shall inquire of 8 A Coroner shall execute his Office in his owne person A C●●oner shall see the dead body A body buried taken vp againe 9 A Coroner must presently doe his office 10 A Coroner shall onely enquire of the death of a man A man slaine in an arme of the Sea A Coroner concealing or not apprehending a Felon 11 The force of a Coroners Record Which Coroners Record shall be preferred Abiuring before the Coroner Confession of breaking of Prison before the Coroner 12 Who ought to appeare vpon the Coroners Inquisition 13 The Coronour with the Sherife may take Appeales 14 Stopping vp of a place of daunger by the Coroners commaundement 15 Where the presence of all the Coroners is requisite and where but some one of them 16 The Coroner must record the euidence and bind the party to giue it 17 Inquiry of a man slaine within the Kings House and Verge 18 One man Coroner of the Kinges House and the Countie Who shall be Judge in Treason and Felony Fol. 253. 1 The King ought not to bee iudge in Treason or Felony What men of condition Iudges ought to be 2 None shall make Iudges but the King 3 Iudges vpon the arraignement of the Peeres of the Realme 4 Iudges of offences that are done in the Kings Pallace 5 Iudges of Conspiracies made to destroy the King or any Lord c. 6 Iudges within the Verge 7 Iudges of Treason committed out of the Realme 8 Iustices of Gaole deliuerie Iudges in Felony 9 Iudges of Nisi prius Iudges in Felony c. 10 Speciall commissioners Iudges at the arraignement of a Murderer 11 Iudges of piracie or offences done vpon the sea 12 Iustices of Peace Iudges in Felony 13 The Lord of a Mannour Iudge in Felony Infangtheefe Outfangtheefe 14 A Felon first executed and then iudged FINIS