Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n justice_n peace_n session_n 1,454 5 10.8701 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A68314 A table of all the principall matters and wordes conteined in the booke Of the office of iustices of peace compiled by Master Lambard digested and contriued vnder apt titles, obseruing the alphabeticall order / deuised by Christopher Powell of Graies Inne, gent. Powell, Christopher, of Gray's Inn. 1583 (1583) STC 15164a.5; ESTC S4731 8,809 16

There are 4 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

A TABLE OF ALL the principall matters and wordes conteined in the Booke of the Office of Iustices of Peace compiled by Master Lambard digested and contriued vnder apt Titles obseruing the Alphabeticall order Deuised by Christopher Powell of Graies Inne Gent. A Abittration Fol. 450. ¶ Accessaries Howe many sortes of them 257. Who be accessaries 258 259 260. By receiuing of fellons 397. ¶ Action Brought before the Iustice of Peace 408. ¶ Addition In Informations 406. In Inditementes 63 87 388. ¶ Affray The difference betwéene Affray and an Assault 134. The deriuation thereof 134. The dutie of the lookers thereon 140. The dutie of an Officer that séeth or ●esireth it 141. Made vpon an Officer 143. The Officer may commaunde assistance c. 143. ¶ Agnus Dei other Romish superstitions 197 319. ¶ Alehouses 266. 494. Sée forfaiture ¶ Ambition augmenteth the number of Iustices of Peace 37. ¶ Amerciaments In countie courtes 272. Of such as make default at the Sessions 303. One Iustice may not amerce his companion 294. ¶ Apparance Who ought to appeare at the Sessions 294. ¶ Apparell 373. 379. 469. Appeales before the Iustices of peace at the Sessions 406. ¶ Apprentices seruauntes and labourers 191 370 371 372. Sée more in Laborers ¶ Approuements 449. ¶ Archerie 378. ¶ Arrest Without request 99. Without warrant 100. The Iustice refuseth to binde him after arrest 100. What arrest is 100. What persons may be arrested 102 The ende thereof 102. Howe it may be discharged 103. After a Supersedeas 108. Made by the seruantes of the Iustices 181. Sée Gaole ¶ Aristotles counsell in making lawes 63. ¶ Arraignment Of a prisoner after dismission 437. The diuersitie betwéene Arraignment and Trauerse 445. Whereof it commeth 476 ¶ Armie and how manie men make an armie 183. ¶ Armour 379. 380. ¶ Assault what it is 135. Sée more in Battery ¶ Assise of bread and ale 357. ¶ Assise of fewell 200. ¶ This worde Att taken for after 486. ¶ Attachement against a Iustice 108. ¶ Auerrment May not be taken against a record and why 71. Sée more in Trauerse B ¶ Badgers Drouers c. 496. ¶ Bailement Difference betwéene bailement and mainprises and Repleuin 247. and whereof they be deriued 247. What fellons are bailable 250. What persons are bailable 252. Manslaughter bailable but not murder 255. Accessaries to fellonies are bailable 257. Of him that is acquit within the yeare 261. A rule concerning bailementes 261. What Iustices may baile prisoners 261. The forme of the bailementes 264. ¶ Bayliefs must attende the Sessions 303. ¶ Bailifes of liberties 337. ¶ Bakers 357. ¶ B●rrat●● defined 342. ¶ Bastardi● 270. ¶ Batterie By a Constable 138. By the Seruaunt of his Master or Dame 372. In defence of himselfe or an other 138. ¶ Beggars childe 496. See more in Roagues ¶ Bigamie 451. ¶ Bill of exception 438. ¶ Borowhead Borsholder and Tythingman 15. ¶ Bowestaues 470. ¶ Bowyers 378. ¶ Bracton reduced the Lawe into Latine 4. ¶ Brasse and Pewter 499. ¶ Breache of the peace and yet no breache of the band 139. Wherein it consisteth 123. Without a multitude 132. Against the Person and howe many degrées thereof 134. ¶ Bridges 374. ¶ Brewers 353. 357. ¶ Buckstalles Dearchayes and Stalking 506. ¶ Buggeries 324. ¶ Burgessor what it is 221. ¶ Burglarie 221. 327. ¶ Burning of houses 221. 327. ¶ Butchers 353. ¶ Buttes to shoote at 378. C. ¶ Calues and Kyne 351. ¶ Cambridge for Canterburie 50. ¶ Cappes must be worne 373. ¶ Captaines 380. ¶ Cattell 350. 351. ¶ Certificate Of an Inditement of Fellonie 47 238. By one out of Commission 238. It is in nature of a declaration 239 For him that shal bee bounde Apprentice 273. Of a Recognissaunce 297 Howe it must be made 413. By whom it must be sent 414. To the Iustices of Peace 476. Triall by certificate 435. Challenge of the Iurours 306. ¶ Champertor defined 342. ¶ Charge at the Sessions The auncient order thereof 311. The diuision thereof 312. The maner thereof 313. Of Ecclesiasticall causes 317. 318. 319. c. Of laie causes 323. ¶ Chastisement lawefull by them which haue ciuill or naturall power or auctoritie 136. Sée Husbande ¶ Cliuage 173. ¶ Church and Churchyarde Those that repayre not to the Church 322. 323. Church robbers 323. Fighting in Churches or Church-yards 323. Faires and Markets in Church-yards 323. ¶ Cicero his aduise to Iudges 65. ¶ Clergie If the Ordinarie be present 450. Taken from Curpurse 221. ¶ Clerke of the peace His Office and Dutie 301. His fées 338. 339. His nomination 302. ¶ Clerke of the Iustice 339. ¶ Clerke of the Market 339. ¶ Cloth lynnen and woollen 245. 271. 368. ¶ Cohertion defined and why it is vsed 67. ¶ Commission of the Peace For diuerse Shires 24. Forme thereof 39. When it was first deuised 46. It hath not any certaine tenor or forme 48. 52. Diuided into thrée partes 49. How it may be suspended or determined 74. It shall not be shewed 296. Exceptions taken to it 51. 52. 53. 54. 56. 185. 186. 187. ¶ Condition For the good abearing 131. Of the Recognissance of the peace 122. Of the Recognissaunce to indite a fellon committed 207. Of the bonde for an Alehouse kéeper 267. ¶ Confession of two sorts 426 ¶ Congruence Recognissance taken by congruence 186. Processe awarded 416. Heare and determine 440. ¶ Coniuration Felonie 320. ¶ Conspiracie Punishment thereof 68. 69. Against a Iustice of peace 385. 508. Vpon Incormation 405 The Iudgement therein 69. 202. ¶ Conseruators of the Peace Who they are at the common lawe 11. Ordinarie by prescription election ortenure 16. Extraordinarie 18. They had no iurisdiction but cohertion onely 66. ¶ Constable His auctoritie by the common Lawe 15. What Fellons he may baile 15. His fine for a voluntary escape 144 Hee must obey the Iustices warrant 72. ¶ Conuenticles of what sorts they be 173. ¶ Corne. 202. 350. Transported 353. 496. ¶ Coroners Their offices at the Sessions 302. ¶ Countie Courtes When they be holden 422. Plaintes in them 201. ¶ Crosbowes handguns 203 ¶ Curriours 362. ¶ Castos Rotulorum Nominated by the Lorde Chauncelor 31. 299. His attendance vpon the Iustices 57 His office and auctoritie 295. The gift of the office 299. ¶ Curpurse 325. ¶ Cutting out of tongues 324. D. ¶ Death Of him which procured an Arrest 103. Of the Prince 120. Of the Recogniser 121. Of him at whose suite the Recognissaunce was taken 121. Of the Sureties 121. Of the Iustice before restitutiō 154. ¶ Demurrer 437. ¶ Deputie A Iudge of Recorde may not make a deputie 71. ¶ Difficulties arising before the Iustices of peace 55. 454. ¶ Discontinuance of processe By newe Commission 77. ¶ Discretion Defined and howe it must be vsed 63. 428. 438. E. ¶ Ecclesiasticall causes Which are treasons misprisions of treason fellonies in ecclesiastical causes 317. 318. 319. 320. Sée more in Fellonie and treason ¶ Egges of wildfowle 351.
venire facias 163. ¶ Iudgement What things are required therein 453. Arbitrarie 454. Prescribed 456. In conspiracie 69. ¶ Iurours and Iuries Which be not probi legales homines 304. Per quos rei veritas c. 305. Shall haue action against the Sheriffe 305. Iuries general and particular 306 De Circumstantibus 307. Not sworne 308. The number of them 308. Their concealements 309. ¶ Iustices of the Peace and Quorum Who they be and why so called 3. Why they were ordained 7. 10. 20. When they tooke that name 24. Chiefe Iustice termed Capitalis Iustitia 3. Why Iustices of the Quorum were chosen 55. Diuersitie betwéene Iustices by Commission and Patent 28. By whose auctoritie they bee appoynted 26. 39. They are conseruatours of Riuers 190. 191. The nomination of them 29. Their oath 57. 491. 61. 59. What lands they ought to haue 30. 34. What manner of men they ought to be 32. 35. Howe many must bee in euerie countie 36. When their power ceaseth 79. They bee ouerladen with statutes 38. Their power comprehended in thrée clauses of the Commission 49. Their power limited and absolute 63. Their iurisdiction cohertion 65. Howe many may hold a Sessions of the peace 291. They be Iudges of Recorde 69. 72. Iustice of the peace afterwardes made Duke Earle c. 79. The power of one Iustice alone 82 131 140. When they bee but ministers and when Iudges 83. Whether a Iustice may make a precept retornable before himselfe 98. Their rewardes and fées 276 277. The power of two Iustices of the peace 227 246. They haue no power out of their owne counties 156. Howe they take knowledge of causes at the Sessions 289. Sée Notice and oth and sée wages ¶ Iustices in byre 79. K ¶ King Ed. the 3. depriued his father 9. Hee first created wardens of the peace 7. King Ina his laws against théeues 183. L ¶ Labourers and seruantes Put away or departing before the ende of his terme 191. 371. Their Testimoniall of departure 371. Refusing to serue 370. Not reteinable for lesse than one yeare 370. Vndertaking worke and not finish it Their Wages 371. 371. Beating their maisters or dames 372. Sée Apprentices ¶ Larcenie 222. 325. ¶ Lay causes Which are Treasons petie Treasons felonies in lay causes 323. 324. 325 326 327. c. Sée more in Treason ¶ Leather Ingrossing thereof to sell it againe 305. Searchers and Sealers thereof 364. Howe it must be tanned 360. 361. ¶ Leete 440. ¶ Licence to eate flesh 388. To begge 244. For Badgers Drouers c. 496. ¶ Liueries 186. 191. ¶ Loggwood 245. M ¶ Mainprise Sée Bailment ¶ Mayhme Howe it may betried 429. ¶ Manslaughter The definition thereof 212. No breach of the peace 139. The sortes thereof 213. By necessitie 214 215. By misaduenture 216. By dooing of an vnlawefull act 216. ¶ Masse 319. ¶ Meane Actes Betwéene the making of the commission and notice thereof 77. ¶ Metonymia 3. ¶ Misprision of treason Sée Ecclesiasticall causes and Lay causes ¶ Mittimus The forme testifying the holding with force 161. What it must conteine 203. To sende the prisoner to the Gaole 208. ¶ Multitude What number it is 133. ¶ Multiplication of gold or siluer 328. ¶ Murder What it is the deriuation therof 212 255. Execution varying from the iudgement is murder 213. To kill an outlawed person 213. To kill one attainted in a premunite 213. Iustices of Peace may take enditementes thereof 392. Sée more in fellonie ¶ Musters 380. N ¶ Names of dignitie There be thrée degrées of them 387. ¶ Newes 197. 397. ¶ Next Iustices The exposition thereof 239 ¶ Noble Who be so accompted 437. ¶ Notice Iustices of Peace must giue notice of their insufficiencie 342. The olde commissioners must haue notice c. 77. O ¶ Obligation Touching the king and the forme thereof 111. ¶ Office of the Iustices 438. ¶ Officers and their misdemeanors Sée Trespasse ¶ Ordinarie His dutie at the sessions 303. Is not Iudge but minister 451. ¶ Originall writs The forme of them by Glanuill Bracton and at this day 4. ¶ Othe Of the supremacie 61. Of the Quéene at her coronation 6. Of a Iustice of Peace Sée Iustices of the peace When Iustices were first sworne 58. Taken by Dedimus potestatem 59. By whom it was first made 61. Of him that demaundeth suretie of peace 92. Of the sureties for their habilities 109. Of the Iudge to excuse a fault 507. Of the informer against one suspected of fellonie 209. Of the examinate 210. 434. All betwéene 15. and 60. yeares must be sworne to the peace 185. P ¶ Pardon 438. ¶ Partriches and Phesantes 348. 200. ¶ Peace The signification thereof 4 5 6 7. Taken for protection or defence 6. Inwarde and outwarde peace 5. Statutes for mainteining thereof 9. The conseruation thereof wherein it standeth 82. ¶ Penall lawes 187. ¶ Periurie 321. 495. ¶ Petit Treason If the seruant kil his maister or the wife her husband 323. Sée treason ¶ Plaintes in countie courtes 201. ¶ Popes power must not be extold 318 493. ¶ Populus conteineth all the Laitie 7. ¶ Poore people Register booke of them 103. Citie or Towne surcharged with poore 244. Refusall to giue to the poore 269. How the money giuen to the poore is bestowed 274. They must be set to worke 373. ¶ Power of the Countie What that is 232. Howe long it must attende 233. ¶ Preachers Disturbers of them shal be arrested 198. 245. ¶ Precept Sée warrant ¶ Premunire If any promise obedience to the sea of Rome 318 319. ¶ Presentment What it is and whereof it commeth 383. It discereth from an inditement 383. Made by a Iustice 403. By a Constable 404. By searchers for making tile 404. Sée Trauerse ¶ Prisoners Collection in Churches for their reliefe 372. Taxation for reliefe of them 496. ¶ Proclamation To remoue a force 166. ¶ Processe Vpon information 404. 425. Vpon a riot recorded 235. Whereof it is named 415 The power of making Processe 416. In whose name it must be 416. Vppon an inditement of trespasse 418. Vpō the statutes of highwaies lyueries maintainance archerie and vnlawfull games 419. Vppon the statutes of labourers 420. Into other shires 421 424. Into seuerall shires 422. Vpon treasons and fellonies 423. In a Léete 440. ¶ Proheme of the Author 1. ¶ Prophesying To the intent to stirre vp rebellion 320. Howe long her maiestie shall liue 320. ¶ Punishmentes Eight sortes of them 67. Why they are ordeined 67. Three sortes at this day 68. Of Iustices at the common lawe 506. By ignorance of the Iustices 507. For embeaseling rasing or altering of Recordes 507. For taking money to doe his office 508. For procuring one to bee indited 508. Punishmentes by statutes 508. and sée forfaitures ¶ Purueiours 340. 496. Sée felonie R ¶ Rape 324. ¶ Recognissance Taken by prescription for the peace 13. By Iustices of Assise 13. By the Sherife 13. By the Iustices
of Gaole deliuerie 13. By the steward of the Marshalsie 14. Who may take it 73. The circumstances which be requisite in taking of it 109. What matter it most comprehendeth 112. The forme thereof 113. It can not be cancelled after a release 119. 122. Of an informer against a suspected person 206. ¶ Recorde It must be in writing 235. What it is 70. It lyeth inscrinio pectoris 70. Supersede as is a Recorde 73. Of a Riot 236. Recording of a Riot 242. Of the Peace 297. Day to bring it in 437. Of Gaole deliuerie 298. ¶ Regrator defined 349. ¶ Release Of the partie to him that is arrested for the peace 103. Of the Iustice 118. 120. Of the partie 118. 120. Of the Quéene 119. Of an other Iustice 120. Of the suretie of good abearing 131. ¶ Repleuin Sée Bailement ¶ Request Before arrest 99. ¶ Restitution of possession The right or title is not materiall 150. To a Termor or Coppie holder 152 Without complaint 152. To none but him which had actual possession 152. Of a Common or Rent 153. Death of the Iustice before Restitution 154. Double or crosse restitution 155. To one Ioyntenant alone 155. To whom it may be made 155. Vpon the writ of Restitution 156. The warrant to make Restitution 164. ¶ Returne Of a Supplicauit 115. Of the writ of proclamation 169. Of a Certiorari 116. ¶ Reward and punishment of Iustices of Peace 276. 277. Sée Punishments ¶ Riot Defined and whereof it commeth 175. Things common and considerable in Riots 176. 177. The power of one Iustice therin 180. 181. The degrées thereof 182. Oppression thereof by 2. Iustices 228. When the Iustices must recorde Riots 236. Inquirie and certifying of Riots 237. The maner howe to recorde it 242. The inquirie and forme therof 421. ¶ Riuers 190. ¶ Roagues and vagabonds Aboue 14. yeares of age shall bee brought before the Iustices 192. They shal be set to worke 274. After they be marked fall againe to rogish life 332. Pretending skill in Palmestrie telling of destinies c 344. Giuing reliefe or harbouring them 345. ¶ Robberie defined 219. Sée Felonie ¶ Robbertsmen Are mightie théeues 185. S. ¶ Sacrament of the Lordes Supper 274. ¶ Salmons 191. 352. ¶ Sanctuarie 202. ¶ Scauage or Sheuage 339. ¶ Schoolemaster which commeth not to the Church 323. ¶ Seneca His reason why punishment is vsed 67. ¶ Sermon 310. ¶ Seruaunts Sée Labourers and Apprentices ¶ Sessions of the peace The description thereof 286. The stile thereof 441. Whereof they be grounded 288. The sommons to the sessions 289. 300. Holden by one Iustice 292. Where they shal be holden 292. Generall principall open or quarter Sessions 474. Howe many there be 479. When they ought to be holden 481 Howe long they shall continew 492. What matters are referred to the quarter sessions 293. Speciall sessions 50. ¶ Sewers Commissioners of Sewers 275. ¶ Sheepe 369. ¶ Shirife Must attende the Iustices 57. 303. Sée trespasse ¶ Showmakers 363. ¶ Soldiours 195 331 381. Sée felonie and horses ¶ Sta●re Chamber The best guide direction for Iustices of Peace 175. ¶ Statutes Made pro bono pacis quieto regimine populi 51. Belonging to Iustices of Peace Sée the latter table ¶ Subpena 411. ¶ Subsidie 246. ¶ Supplicauit How the Iustice shall returne it 115. Execution thereof 110. Called in olde time breue de minis 83. Sée Suretie ¶ Supersedeas To discharge a Precept 104. The forme thereof 105. Out of the Quéenes court 108. To discharge the Sommons of the Sessions 292. After a Certiorari 411. To stay processe of outlarie 423. To discharge the good habearing 131. It dischargeth apparance 120. Suretie of peace What it is 83. Without request 86 Newe suretie after breach of the peace 86. 122. By the procurement of a Iustice 86. Refused by the Iustice 87. For whome and against whome 87. 88. For what cause it may be required 91. Against an impotent man 93. What men the sureties must bee 109. By gage or pledge 110. By obligation 110. How it may be discharged See Release Supersedeas ¶ Suspition Howe it is conceiued by Bracton 127. A warrant to arrest one vpon suspition 189. ¶ Swearing Sée Othe T. ¶ Tanners Sée Leather ¶ Tauerne keepers 496. ¶ Testimoniall 192. 244. 269. Sée Beggars and Licence ¶ Thirdeborowes Who they be and why so called 15. ¶ Tillage They that haue the Demesnes of Religious houses must kéepe tillage 368. 369. ¶ Tile making 195. 365. ¶ Tithes 270. ¶ Tolle 369. ¶ Trauerse Of an Inditement with force 159. Of the Recorde of a Iustice 181. 234. 236. What it is and the deriuation thereof 438. Of a Presentment 440. ¶ Treason To extoll forrein power 317. 318. To refuse the othe of her Maiesties Supremacie 317. To disswade her Subiects from obedience 318. For the seruant to kill his master c. 323. Which is inquirable by the Iustices 52. Punisheable by one Iustice 53. Sée Ecclesiasticall causes and Lay causes and Petit Treason ¶ Trespasses and Misdemeanors inquirable by the Iustices of Peace at the Sessions For assault and beating 333. Of the Escheator 334 Of the Sheriffes and their Ministers 335. 336. Of the Gaoler 336. Of the Coroner 337. Of the Ordinarie 337. Of the Parson or Vicar 338. Of the Clerke of the Peace 338. Of the Iustices Clerke 339. Of the Clerke of the Market 339. Of any Iurour 343. For giuing Ly●eries to Companies 343. ¶ Triall By Confession 426. By Discretion 428. Vpon Examination 451. By Certificate 434. By Trauerse 436. By Péeres 436. ¶ Troupe of men howe many 183. ¶ Truce defined 82. ¶ Turne of the Sheriffe When it must be holden 400. V. ¶ Venatoribus for viatoribus 51 ¶ Venite facias To enquire of forcible entrie 162 Tot Matronas 450. ¶ Vessels 358. 359. ¶ Victuals and Victualers 186. 353. ¶ Vis defined by Tullie and Bracton 9. ¶ Vnlawfull assemblie Of women or Infants 179. What it is 175. Of Iurours 180. Of a Corporation 180. Notice thereof within 24. howres 273. ¶ Vnlawfull games 194. ¶ Vnder shirife Hath none authoritie in the presence of the high Shirife 236. ¶ Vsurie 348. ¶ Vtlagarie Vpon inditementes 417. W ¶ Wages of the Iustices Howe they are to be leauied 466. Howe many shall haue wages 505. ¶ Wainlinges 493. ¶ Warrant Must be obeyed 72. 101. The forme thereof vpon a Supplicauit 84. By worde to finde suretie 93. The forme thereof in english 94. What matter it must comprehende 96. The date thereof 96. To whom it may be directed 97. To sommon the sessions 290. Howe and by whom it may be executed 97. Shewed by the officer 98. Retornable before the same Iustice 98. To arrest one in an other countie 100. To make restitution 164. ¶ Watches 185. 341. ¶ Watermen 204 404. ¶ Waxe 199. 366. ¶ Weapons which be forcible 168. ¶ Weares 191. ¶ Weights and Measures 537. 339. ¶ Wood. 271. ¶ Woolles 332. 351. 368. ¶ Wynes 356. Y. ¶ Yarne ●5● FINIS Imprinted at London for Rafe Nevvberie 1583.
¶ Egyptians 198. 332. ¶ Enditements Before one warden of the Peace onelie 22. What an Enditement is and whereof it commeth 383. Difference betwéene it and a presentment 383. They must be perused by the Iustices 384. They may be amended 384. When they must be cōmenced 385. Ioynt and seuerall 386. 414. Fine things requisite in them 386. Name and Surname in Enditements 386. Additions in them 63. 87. 388. Place wherof the partie is or was 388. Alias dictus 389. Day and yeare when the offence was committed 389. Place and Countie wherein the offence was done 391. Computation of the yeare of our Lorde God 390. Name of the person to whom the offence was done 392. Of the goods of the Church 393. Goods of the Person 393. Goods of a corporation 393. Goods of Executors 393. Enditement quod A. furatus est runicam cuiusdam Ignoti 393. Coate Armour in a Churche 393. Grauestone 394. Goods bayled 394. Name and value of the thing taken 394. Of things liuing or dead Diuersitie 394. Precij non ad valentiam c contra c. 395. Coyne and money 395. The maner of the fact c. 396. Accessarie 397. The nature of the Offence c. 397. For taking of Trées 398. Of Mayhme 399. Contra formam Statuti 399. In the Sheriffes turne 400. 417. In Léetes 401. For killing of a Hart 401. Discontinuance of processe of the Inditements 416. ¶ Enquirie Vpon forcible Entries 163. Enquire and not determine 410. ¶ Epiloge 510. ¶ Errour 55. ¶ Escape Of him which made an assray 144. ¶ Escheator 344. Sée Trespasse ¶ Estoppell by confession 427. ¶ Estreates Controlled by the Iustices 202. Howe they must bee leuied 464. 467. For the wages of the Iustices 466. ¶ Example Euill examples oftentimes doe followe of good Lawes 37. 429. ¶ Examination Of Fellons 205. 208. Of Attorneys and women couert 210. Of Somners and viewers 210 The triall thereby 431. ¶ Execution For the Queene 458. For the Informer 469. ¶ Extortion of Fees 337. 338. 339. 340. Sée Trespasse F. ¶ False Imprisonment Sée Arrest ¶ Fewell 200. ¶ Fellons Reserued till the Gaole deliuerie 295. ¶ Fellonie In the Sonne which caried his sicke Father into the colde 398 So called a fellaeo animo 213. In doing execution after Certiorari 412. Not triable before the Iustices of Peace 446. To conceale hunting in the night 193. 328. To kill one attainted in a Premunire 213. In Phisician or Surgean vnskilfull c. 217 In the mother that killeth her new borne childe 217 Poysoning 218. 324. Robbing 220. 325. Breaking of houses 220. Burning of houses 221. 222. 327. For stealing his owne goods 223. Taking of Pigeons or young Goshawkes 224. Taking domestical pullin 224. Taking fruite trées or corne not growing 225. Clipping of sheepe and taking the skinnes 214. In a Carier 225 To take Plate out of a Tauerne 226. In the guest that stealeth the shéeres 226. In seruants that steale away goods deliuered to them 226. 326. Coniuration and sorcerie 320. Church robbing 323. Killing one by chance medley 324. Cutting out tongues and pulling out of eyes 324. In committing buggerie 324. In the Gaoler 324. Rape 324. Taking violentlie away Maide Widowe or wife 324. Cutpurse and Boothrobber 325. In the Purueyor 325. 326. For unbeaseling of Hawkes 326. For enlarging one endited of treason 327. For destroying or taking of castels 327. For multiplication of golde or siluer 328. For conueying shéepe out of the realme the seconde time 328. For slaunderous deuises against her maiestie 329. In a rebellious assemblie 329. Souldiour departeth without licence 331. Counterfaite Egyptians 198. 332. In Roagues after burning in the eare 332. Fellonies omitted in the charge 332. Sée more for fellonies in Murther and manslaughter Fines For the Quéene 459. The Sherife is accomptable for all fines 460. Imprisonment for the fine 460. Whereof it commeth 460. Difference betwéene a fine and amerciament 460. By whom it must be assessed 461. At the kinges will and pleasure 462. They ought to be reasonable 463. They must be assessed openly 463. ¶ Fish and fishermen 271 352 353 354 355. ¶ Flax and hempe Who must sowe hempe séede 369. ¶ Flesh Forbidden in Lent 356. Licence to eate it 338. ¶ Forcible entrie The statutes thereof 145 146 147. Forcible reteyning 145. Without putting out of the Tennant 152. Of a common or rent 153. What it is 153. To an vse and agréement thereto 153. What Iurours ought to enquire thereof 154. Not punishable 156. Holding out with force after thrée yeares possession 156 157. The fine thereof and by whom it shal be assessed 160. 171. Vpon the statute of Northampton 165. Force of weapons 168. ¶ Forfaiture By the Iustice of peace for not giuing notise to the Lord Chaunceller of their insufficiencie of lands 34. Of a recognissance for the peace Sée breach of the peace Of a recognissance by an alehouse kéeper 420. The mitigation thereof 463. Of the goods of him that killeth one Se Defendendo 216. By Iustices of peace vpō statutes 278 279 280. at the common law and statutes 508 509 510. ¶ Forestalling and forestallers What a forestaller is 349. 202. ¶ Foure Cardinal vertues 313. ¶ Fresh sute To arrest an Affraior 143. After a robberie 185. ¶ Fry of fish 191. 352. ¶ Furtum Definition thereof by Bracton 223 G ¶ Gaole Who may make a gaole of his owne house 143. Whither the partie arrested shal be sent 100. 143. ¶ Goldsmythes and gilding 365. ¶ Good abearing Wherein it consisteth 124 125. c. Granted by one Iustice alone 128. 266. The forme of the precept 129. The forme of the Recognissaunce 130. See more in Suretie H. ¶ Habeas Corpus 422 ¶ Harnesse Who is bounde to kéepe harnesse 233. ¶ Hares traced 348. Haruest time 372. ¶ Hawke embeaselled 326. ¶ Hawkes egges 347. ¶ Hawking in Corne. 201. 348. Hay and Oates 370. ¶ Highwayes Superuisors of them must present c. 204. Who must appoint ouerseers of the workes for repayring of them 375. Changing of an hie way 245. Money giuen for repayring of them 274. Inquirable in the Sessions 494. No bushes within 200. foote of them 341. ¶ Horses and Mares Sold or exchaunged within Scotland 328. Conueied beyond Sea 381. Vnder 14. handefuls hie 381. 433. Vntolde for after buying 369. Put away by Souldiers 381. ¶ Horsebreade 370. ¶ Hospitall 269. ¶ Hunting 193. See fellony ¶ Husband May ch●stise his wife 136. 137. May haue suretie of peace against his wife 88. ¶ Hue and Crie 341. I. ¶ Ina King 183. ¶ Inditements Sée Enditements ¶ In Festo The exposition thereof 390. ¶ Information By priuate persons 404. The processe thereupon 404. ¶ Informor and promotor 340. 495. 469. Sée Othe ¶ Ingrosser What is the signification thereof 349. ¶ Inholder Must sell no litter 370. Must bake no horsebreade 369. Must sell victuals reasonably 353. Inrollements 199. ¶ Inter pares non est potestas 294. ¶ Issues vpon the