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A32296 Reports of special cases touching several customes and liberties of the city of London collected by Sir H. Calthrop ... ; whereunto is annexed divers ancient customes and usages of the said city of London. Calthrop, Henry, Sir, 1586-1637. 1670 (1670) Wing C311; ESTC R4851 96,584 264

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after the delivery of the Bill shall make Summons to the Tenants demand by witness of two Free holders men of the City that they be at the Guild Hall the Saturday next following to see the Recogni●ance if they will against which Saturday the Defendant may sue the next Friday before together and summon the Jury and so afterwards against the Saturdayes from fourteen dayes to fourteen dayes at his will and so may the Tenants sue if they will for their celiverance and the gathering of the Pannels of such Juries shall be done by the Sheriffs and their Ministers or by the Mayor and Aldermen if any of the parties will require it upon any reasonable cause in such sort as is used in Assize of Fresh-force and in such Assizes of Mort d'ancest the parties may be assigned as at the Common Law and the Tenant may vouch to warrant within the City and also in Forreign County if the Vouchee have no Lands within the City and if the Tenants plead release bearing date in Forreign County or other Forreign matter that cannot be tryed within the City or that the Vouch to warrant in Forreign Counties he that hath nothing within the City then at the Suit of the party shall cause the Record to come into the Kings County by Writ directed to the Sheriff and Coroner and there shall such Forreign Pleas and Forreign Vouchers be tryed and determined and sent back again to the said Sheriffs and Coroners to go forward and proceed according to the custome of the City and continuance shall be made in such Assizes upon the causes proceeding and upon other causes reasonable and when the Assizes shall be determined and Judgement given then the same Assizes shall be ingrossed and entred upon Record by the said Sheriffs and Coroners and afterward sent to the Guild-Hall to remain there of Record according to the Order of Assize of Fresh-force hereafter following Assizes of Novel Disseizen called Fresh-force in London THe Assizes of Novel Desseizen called Fresh force of London and Tenements and Rents within the City of London of Disseizins made within 40. weeks are holden and determinable before the two Sheriffs and the Coroner of the said City in common every Saturday in the Guild-Hall except certain times wherein the Assize cannot be holden for reasonable cause and the process thereof is such viz. when any man is grieved and that he be disseized of his Free-hold within the said City or the Suburbs of the same he shall come to any Hust holden at the Guild-Hall or for default of Hust in the Chamber of the Guild-Hall in the Assembly of the Mayor and Aldermen any Munday and shall make there a Bill and the Bill shall be such viz. A de B. queritur versus ss C. de D. de libero tenemento suo in parochia de E. in Suburb London And the same Bill shall be inrolled and upon that shall be made another Bill containing all the matter of the first Bill by the common Clark of the City making mention of the title of Hust or of the day of the Assembly of the Mayor and Aldermen and then the Bill shall be sent to the Sheriffs or to either of them to do process and right unto the parties and then although the Bill be served the Wednesday then next following that is to say the Minister of the Sheriffs to whom the Bill is delivered shall summon the Tenant or Tenants named in the said Bill of Assize by the view of two Freemen of the City and that of the Tenants from whom the rent is supposed to be issuing and then it shall be said to the Tenants that they keep their day at the Guild-Hall the Saturday then following at their peril and the names of those which are summoned shall be endorsed upon the backside of the Bill and then may the Plaintiff sue to have the Assize gathered and the Jury summoned against such Saturday or against other Saturday after at his pleasure and so may the Tenants sue for their deliverance if they will and such summons shall be made the Friday before the said Saturday and the Array of the Pannels of the Juries shall be made by the Sheriffs or their Ministers or by the Mayor and Aldermen if any of the parties upon reasonable cause shall require it Also the same Assizes shall be pleaded and recorded for the greater party also as elsewhere at the Common Law and if release bearing date in Forreign County bastardy or other forreign matters which cannot be tryed within the said City be alledged in such Assizes then the Plaintiff may sue and cause to come the Record in the Kings Court that the matter may be tryed as the cause requireth and when the matter is there determined the process shall be sent back to the said Sheriffs and Coroners or to their Successors to proceed forward before them according to the custome c. And you must note that there is no discontinuance in such Assizes neither is any mention made in the Record of the dayes betwen the Assizes taken and the day that the Assize shall be taken or Judgement given if it be not by necessary cause or that such Assizes be adjourned for special causes and when the Assizes are taken before the Sheriffs and Coroners as before is said and Judgement be given then shall such Assizes determined be entred of Record and afterwards shall be carried into the Chamber of the Guild-Hall to remain there in the treasury upon Record And note that no man may enter into any Tenements within the said City by force nor any Tenants hold by sorce and armes in disturbance of the peace De Curia Majoris London Custumis Civitatis ejusdem Diversis Casibus terminalibus in eadem Curia Curia Majoris of the said City of London is holden by the custome of the same City before the Mayor and Aldermen for the time being in the Chamber of the Guild-Hall or in Hust and that from day to day and there are treated determined and discussed the Pleas and matters touching Orphans Apprentices and other businesses of the same City And there are redressed and corrected the faults and contempts of those which do against the custome and ordinance of the City as well at the suit of the parties as by Enquest of Office and in other sort by suggestion according as the causes require and there they use to justifie Bakers Victuallers and Trades-men and and to treat and ordain for the Government of the City and for keeping the Kings peace and other necessary points of the City and according as the time requireth Item the Officers and Ministers of the said City being found faulty are to be cleared before the Mayor and Aldermen as well at the Suit of the parties by Process made as otherwise according to the discretion of the said Mayor and Aldermen Item the said Mayor and Aldermen use there to hold and determine Pleas of Debt and other
or the party and afterwards are sent by Writ to the Exchequer or any other the Kings places with their Causes the same Prisoners after they are delivered in the Kings Court ought to be sent to the said City to answer to the parties and stay there for their deliverance Item those which have Tenements within the said City shall not be sufferd to strip or waste their Tenements Demeasne nor to pull them down in deforming or defacing of the City unless it be to amend them or build them up again and any that doth it or beginneth to do it shall be punished by the Mayor and Aldermen for the offence according to the custome of the City Item if Walls Penthouses or other Houses whatsoever within the said City stretching to the High street be so weak or feeble that the People passing by mistrust the peril of some suddaih Ruine then after it is certified to the Mayor and Alderman by Mason and Carpenter of the City sworn or that it be found in the Wardmore that the danger is such then the same Mayor and Aldermen shall cause the parties to be warned to whom the same Tenements belong to amend them and repair them so soon as conveniently he may and if after such warning they be not amended nor begun to be amended within fourty dayes then next following then shall the said Tenements be repaired and amended at the cost and charges of the said City untill the costs be fully levied of his Goods and Chattels or other his Tenements if ●eed be Item if any House be found within the said City or the Suburbs of the same covered with Straw Reed or Thatch he to whom the House belongeth shall pay to the Sheriffs for the time being fourty shillings and shall be compelled to take away the same covering Item if any House within the said City be burning so that the flame of the Fire be seen out of the House he which dwelleth in the said House shall pay to the Sheriffs forty shillings in a red Purse Item the Mayor Aldermen and Sheriffs and all other Officers and Ministers of the said City are to be chosen by the same City viz. At the time when the Mayor should be chosen the commons of the same City shall by custome be assembled in the Guild Hall and the same commons shall make election of two honest men of the said City of whom the one shall be Mayor and the names of the said two honest men shall be carried before the Mayor and Aldermen which are for the time within the Chamber of the Guild-Hall And then the one of them shall be chosen to be Mayor by the said Mayor and Aldermen by way of Screame and the said Mayor so newly chosen the morrow after the Feast of Simon and Iude shall be presented before the Bacons of the Exchequer at Westminster or in their absence to the Constable of the Tower and afterwards shall be presented to our Sovereign Lord the King himself according to the content of the Charter of the said City and the said Mayor shall have the Government of the said City under the King for the year following and the said Mayor shall take fifty Marks a year for the of Co●n and fifty Marks in time of Peace of the Merthants of Anzens Corby and Neele according to the ancient Orders thereupon made and every Mayor shall hold his general Court at the Guild Hall the Munday after the Feast of the Epiphany and then shall be assembled all the Aldermen of the same City and all the Constables Scavengers and Beadles shall be sworn anew well and faithfully to do their office during the time they shall be Officers and the Wardmotes held by the Aldermen and the default found shall be then delivered up by the said Aldermen in writing and the default found in the Wards shall be enquired and examined and the Mayor for the time being by custome of the same City for maintainance of the Peace and for the quiet of the City hath authority to arrest and imprison the disturbers of the Peace and other malefactors for rebellions or lewd expences and other defaults according to their discretion without being appeached or afterwards impleaded for the same Item No Mayor shall be chosen within the said City before that he hath been Sheriff of the same City a year before Item The Mayors of London which have been for the time are accustomed to have their Sword born upright before them within the said City and without the putting the same down in the presence of any except the King and that Sword is called the Kings Sword Also the Sheriffs of London are chosen by custome of the said City on St. Matthews day in the Guild-Hall viz the one shall be chosen by the Mayor and the other by the Commons and the said Sheriffs shall afterwards be sworn within the said Guild-Hall and the morrow after St. Michal presented into the Exchequer by the Constable of the Tower according to the form of the Charter of the City as is aforesaid and the same Sheriffs shall have Free Election of all their Officers and of their Farmours and Bayliffs as well within the City as the County of Middlesex and of the Goalers of the Prisons within the said City at their will and the same Sheriffs pay and are Accomptants yearly to the Kings Exchequer for the Farm of the said City and County of Middlesex according to the form of the said City and Charter and by reason of that Farm the said Sheriffs ought to have the ancient Tolls and Customes of Merchandizes coming into the City and going out of the same and Forfeitures Fines and Amerciaments and all other commodities of ancient time belonging to their Office And no Merchandizes shall pass out of the City by Land nor by Water by Cart Horse nor Portage by men without a Warrant sealed by the said Sheriffs and Forreigners must pay for their Issue according to the ancient custome Item The Aldermen every year are elected at the Feast of St. Gregory and sworn and presented to the Mayor and the said Aldermen are chosen by men of the same Ward which Aldermen ought to keep their Wardmotes Item Upon the death of the Alderman of any Ward the Inhabitants in the Ward are to chuse a new Alderman for their Ward whom they think good and are to certifie the Lord Mayor of their choice who is to declare the same to the Court of Aldermen at their next meeting and then to give the Ward notice of their liking of the choice but if it be an easie and quiet Ward then by order either the Lord Mayor or eldest Knight on the Bench is to have the same Ward as Alderman thereof yet the Election is in the Ward absolute of themselves whom they will chuse THE COMMISSION AND ARTICLES OF THE WARD-MOTE INQUEST By the MAYOR To the Alderman of the Ward 1. VVE charge and command you that upon St.
words of the Decree wherefore the Party Leassee having expressed himself that this twenty five pounds by the year shall be paid in name of a Fine and Income And the Decree it self shewing that by reason of a Fine or Income less rent is reserved it may not be said that this twenty five pounds by the year shall be a rent within the meaning of the Decree when there is a rent of five pounds also reseserved beside this Income Secondly this Decree made in 37. H. 8. being penal unto the Citizens of London because it inflicteth imprisonment upon him upon his non-payment of his Tythe according to the rent reserved and being also in advantage of the Ministers of London because by vertue of this Decree the Minister is to have according to the rate of 2. sh 9. d. in every twenty shillings where anciently he had but 2. s. 6. d. it is no reason to extend it by equity and to construe that to be a rent within the intent and meaning of the Decree which of it self is a Fne or Income Thirdly there never hauing been above the rent of five pounds by the year reserved upon any Lease made it cannot be taken to be any covin or collusion When the ancient rent is reserved insomuch that now so much as the Law requireth is done and besides where the Common Law or Statute Law shall take notice of a Fraud it ought to be in case where the thing in which the Fraud or deceit was supposed is formerly in being for a Fraud may not be committed to a person or thing not in being Fourthly it is to be reserved so that if no rent at all had been reserved there might not any more have been demanded but only according to the rate of the rent which was last reserved for the houses wherefore the ancient rent of 5. l. being here reserved it cannot be that within the intent and meaning of the Decree there can be more rate-Tythes demanded then according to that rent And besides the very words of the Decree intimates that there is no fraud within the meaning of the Decree but only where by reason of the Fine or Income there is not rent at all reserved or a less rent then was anciently reserved wheresore in the Case at the Barre the old rent being reserved there may be no fraud at all As to the sixth and last part which is who shall be Judge of the payment of Tythes for houses in London and the remedy for the recovery of them It is apparent out of the words of the Decree that the Mayor of the City of London is Judge and is to give order concerning them and Suit is not to be made in the Ecclesiastical Court for them and if it be a Prohibition is to be granted insomuch that the party grieved resorteth unto another Judge then the Statute hath appointed But if the Mayor do not give aid within two moneths after complaint made or do not give such aid as is fitting then resort is to be made unto the Lord Chancellour of England who hath three moneths given him for ending of the said Cause Whereunto is annexed divers ANCIENT Customs AND USAGES Of the said City of LONDON Newly Re-printed LONDON Printed for Abel Roper at the Sun against St. Dunstans Church in Fleet-street 1670. DIVERS ANCIENT CUSTOMS AND USAGES OF THE City of LONDON IN Plato Ferre in Hustings London viz. That all the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Rents and Services within the City of London and the Suburbs of the same are pleadable in the Guild-Hall within the said City in two Hust of which one Hust is called Hust of a Plea of Land and the other Hust is called Hust of Common Pleas and the said Hustings are kept in the Guild-Hall before the Mayor Sheriffs and other of the said City every week upon Munday and Tuesday that is to say Munday to enter demands and to award Non-Suits and allow Essovnes and on Tuesday to award defaults and to plead saving at certain times and Festival dayes and other reasonable causes on which times no Hust may be kept by Custome of the said City Nota quod Hust of Pleas of Land must be kept one week apart by it self and the Hustings of Common Pleas one week by it self at the said days yet the Inrolements of the said Hust make mention only of Munday Hust of Pleas of Land IN Hust of a Plea of Land are pleaded Writs of Right Patent directed to the Sheriffs of London in which Writs there are such process by custome of the said City viz. The Tenant or Tenants at the first shall have three Summons to the Tenants delivered at three Hust of Plea of Land next following after the livery of the Writ not demanding the Tenants at any the Hust aforesaid And after the three Summons ended three Essoynes and other three Hust of Plea of Land then next following and at the next Hust after that three Essoyns if the Tenants make default Process shall be made against them by Grand Cape or Petit Cape after appearance and other Process as at the Common Law And if the Tenants appear the Demandants shall declare against the Tenants in nature of what Writ they will except certain Writs which are pleadable in the Hust of Common Pleas as shall hereafter be shewed without making protestation to sue in nature of any Writ and the Tenants shall have the view and shall be Essoyned after the view at the Common Law And shall also have the Tenants Essoyned after any appearance by the custome of the City And although one such Writ be abated after view by exception of Joyntenants or other exception dilatory and although the same Writ be restored the Tenants by the custome of the said City shall have the view in the second Writ notwithstanding the first view had And if the parties plead to Judgement the Judgement shall be given by the mouth of the Recorde● and six Aldermen had wont to be present at the least at every such Judgement given and every Beadle by advise of his Ald●●man against every Hust of Pleas of Land shall cause to be summoned twelve men being Freeholders of the best and most sufficient of his Wa●d to come to the Guild Hall to pass an Enquest if need be if there be so many men of heritage within the same Ward And if the parties pleading come to an Enquest then shall the Enquest be taken of landed men being Freeholders of the same Ward where the tenements are and of other three Wards nearest adjoyning to the place where the Terants are so that four men of the same Ward where the Tenants are shall be swo●n in the same Enquest if there be to mary And no damages by the custome of the City are recoverable in any such Writ of ●ight Patent And the ●●ques● may pass the same day by such common summons of the Beadle if the parties be at Issue and the Juiors do
come otherwise Process shall be 〈…〉 the Jury to come at the next Hust o● Pleas of ●ard by precept directed from the Major to the Sheriffs and the Sheriffs shall be ministers by commandement of the Major to serve the Writs and do the execution of the same albeit the original be directed to the Major and Sheriffs in common and you shall understand that as well the Tenants as Demandants may appoint their Attorneys in such Pleas. And if the Demandants plead against the Tenants in the nature of a Writ of Right and he parties come to a Jury upon the meer Right then shall the Jury be taken of twenty four in the nature of a grand Assize as alwayes the custome requireth that six of the Ward be of the Jury of twenty four And the Tenants in all such Writs may vouch to warrant within the said City and also in Forreign County if the Vouchers be not Tenants within the same City And if the Tenants in such Writs vouch to warrant in Forreign County In this Case Process cannot be made against the Voucher by the Law of the City Then shall the Record be brought before the Justices of the Common Pleas at the suit of the Demandant and then Process shall be made against the Vouchee And when the Voucher shall be ended in the same Court then all the Parol shall be sent back again into the Hust to proceed further in the Plea according to the custome of the City and certain Statutes And also if the Tenants in such Writ plead in Bar by release bearing date in Forreign County or Forreign matter be pleaded that it cannot be tryed within the City then the Defendant shall cause the Process to come into the Kings Court to try the matter there where it is alleadged as the matter is there found the proceeding shall be sent back again into the Hustings to proceed further therein as the Case requireth And all that time the Suit shall cease in the Hust as hath been heretofore And also it hath been heretofore accustomed that a man may say in Hastings of Pleas of Land to have execution of Judgement given in Hust in nature of Scirefacias without Writ And you must note that any such Summons made to the Tenants in a Writ of right Patent is made two or three days before such Hust or the Sunday next before the same Hust If Erroneous Judgement be given in the Hustings of London before the Major and Sheriffs it shall be reserved by Commission out of the Chancery directed to certain persons to examine the Record and Process If Erroneous Judgement be given before the Sheriffs in London the Defendant may sue a Writ of Error before the Mayor and Sheriffs in the Hustings Hustings of Common Pleas IN Hust of Common Pleas are pleadable Writs called Ex gravi querala to have execution of the Tenants out of Testaments which are enrolled of Record in the Hust Writs of Dower unde nihil habet Writs of Gavelets of Customes and Services instead of Cessavit Writs of Error of judgment given before the Sheriffs Writs of Waste Writs of Participatione faciend among partners Writs of Quid juris clamat per quae servitia and other the Writs which are closed directed to the Mayor and Sheriffs and also Replegiaries of for goods and distresses wrongfully taken These are pleadable before the Mayor and Sheriffs in these Hust of Common Pleas by plaint without Writ And not as before that the Sheriffs are Ministers to do the office of ferving these Writs and Replegiaries by the Majors Preceps directed to the same Sheriffs And the Process is thus FIrst in the Writ of Ex gravi querela warning before hand shall be given to the Tenants two or three dayes before the Hust or the Sunday be o●e as in Plea of Land And so shall be done of all other Summons touching the same Hust And if warning be given and testified by the Sheriffs or his Ministers the Tenants may not be essoyned and if the Tenants make default at the same warning testified then the Grand Cape shall be awarded And if they appear they may be essoyned at the view And hereupon all other Process are made plainly as is said in a Writ of Droit Patent in the Hust in a Plea of Land In a Writ of Dower unde nihil habet the Tenants shall have at the beginning three Summons and one Essoyn after the three Summons and after these shall have the view one Essoyn and the Tenant in such Writ of Dower shall have the view although they enter by the husband himself demanding the same albeit he died seized and also the Tenants may vouch to warranty and after be essoyn●d after every appearance and all other Process shall be made as in a Writ of right in the Hust of Pleas of Land aforesaid And it the Demandant recover Dower against the Tenant by default ●o by judgement in Law in such Writ or Dower And the same wife of the Demand●nt alledgeth in Court of Record that her husband died seized Then the Major shall command ●he Sheriffs by Precept that they cause a Jury of the vi●inity where the Tenants l●e against the next Hust of Common Pleas to enquire if the husband died seized and of the value of the ●enements and of the damages and 〈◊〉 recover by verdict the damages shall be enqui●ed by the same J●y In a Writ of Gavi●et the Ten●nts shall have three 〈◊〉 and three Essoynes and they also shall have tha● view they may vouch to 〈…〉 and Forreign And they shall be essoyned and shall have other exceptions and all other Process shall be made as in a Writ of Right c. But if the Tenant make default after default then the Defendant shall have Judgement to recover and hold for a year and a day upon this condition that the Tenant may come within the same year and a day then next following and make agreement for the Arrearages and find Surety as the Court shall award to pay the rent or the services faithfully from thenceforth and shall have again his Tenements and within the same year and day the Tenant may come in Court by Scire fac and shall have again his Tenements doing as aforesaid and if the Tenant come not within the year and the day as is aforesaid then after the year and the day the Defendant shall have a Scire fac against the Tenant to come and answer whether he can say any thing why the Defendant ought not to recover the Tenements quite and clearly to him and his Heirs for ever and if the Tenant come not to shew what he can say then Judgement shall be given that the Defendant shall quite recover the Land for ever according to the Judgement called Shartford by custome of the same City In a Writ of waste process shall be made against the Tenants by Summons Attachment and distress according to the Statute in that behalf made
Ancestours although the same Ancestors held elsewhere out of the City of any other Lordship by what service soever and the same Mayor and Aldermen ought to enquire of all the Lands Tenements Goods and Chattels within the same City pertaining to such Orphans and the Lands Tenements Goods and Chartells within the same City pertaining to such Orphans to seize and safely keep to the use and profit of such Orphans or otherwise to commit the same Orphans together with their Lands Tenements Goods and Chatels to other their friends upon sufficient Surety of Record in the Chamber of the Guild-Hall in convenient sort to maintain the same Orphans during their minority and to repair their Lands and Tenements and safely to keep their Goods and Chattels and to give good and true accompt before the said Mayor and Aldermen of all the profits of the same Infants wen they come to age or be put to a trade or married at the advice of the said Mayor and Aldermen and that in all cases if it be not otherwise ordained and disposed for the same Orphans and their Lands Tenements Goods and Chattels by express words contained in the same Wills of their Ancestors and no such Orphans may be married without consent of the said Mayor and Aldermen And in like sort where Lands Tenements Goods or Chattles within the same City are devised to a Child within age of a Citizen of the same City his Father living and the same Child be no Orphan yet by custome of the same City the said Lands Tenements Goods and Chattels shall be in the custody of the Mayor and Aldermen as well as of an Orphan to maintain and keep the said Lands Tenements c. to the use and profit of the said Infant and shall give good and true accompt for the same as is aforesaid And note that where a Citizen of the same City hath a wife and children and dieth all debts paid this Goods shall be divided into three parts whereof the one part shall come to the dead to be distributed for his Almes the other part shall come to his wife and the third part to his children to be equally parted amongst them notwithstanding any device made to the contrary and for the same the wife or children or any of them may have their recovery and suit to demand such Goods and Chartels against the Executors or Occupiers of the same Goods and Chattels before the same Mayor and Aldermen by plaint Item by ancient custome of the said City it was not lawful to any Stranger or Forreigner to sell Victuals or other Merchandizes to any other Stranger or Forreigner within the same City to self again nor to any such Forreigner or Stranger to sell Victuals or any other Merchandize within the said City by retail Item by ancient custome of the said City of London the Citizens and Ministers of the same City are not to obey any Commandment or Seals except the Commandment and Seal of our Sovereign Lord the King immediate neither can any of the Kings Officers make any Seisure or Execution within the said City nor within the Franchises of the same by Land nor by Water except only the Officers of the City aforesaid Item touching the Judgements given in the Sheriffs Court in Actions personal or in Assizes taken before the Sheriffs and Coroners by custome of the said City the parties against whom such Judgements are given may sue a writ of Errour directed to the May or Aldermen and Sheriffs to reverse the said Judgements in the Hust and if the Judgements be found good yea though the same Judgements be affirmed in the Hust yet the same party may sue another writ of Error directed to the Mayor and Sheriffs to cause the Record to come before the Justices assigned at Saint Martins le Grand as hath been heretofore done But if any party by such Judgemenn given before the said Sheriffs be convict in Debt or Damages and is therefore committed to Prison until he hath made agreement with the party and afterwards pursueth a Writ of Error to reverse the Judgement in the Hust where although the Judgement be affirmed and the same party will sue a-another Writ of Error to reverse the same Judgement before the Justices assigned at Saint Martins as is aforesaid yet nevertheless the same which is so in person must not be delivered out of Prison by ancient custom of the same City by means of any such Writ of Error until he have found sufficient Sureties within the said City or laid in the money into the Court to pay him that recovered the same if in case that the Judgement be afterwards affirmed And in case that such Writ of Errour be sued to reverse any Judgement given in the Hust before the Justices assigned at Saint Martins le Grand and it be commanded by Writ to safe keep the parties and to cause the Record and Process to come before the same Justices then shall the parties be kept as the Law requireth But no Record may be sent before the same Justices but that the Mayor and Aldermen shall have fourty dayes respite by appointment of the same Justices after first Sessions then to advise them of the said Record and of the Process of the same and at the first Sessions of the Justices after fourty dayes shall the said Process and Record be recorded before the same Justices by mouth of the Recorder of the said City And of Judgements given before the Mayor and Aldermen in the Chamber of the Guild-Hall according to the Law Merchant no Writ of Error is wont to be sued Item by ancient custome of the said City all the Liberties and Priviledges and other customes belonging to the said City are usually recorded by mouth and not to be sent or put elsewhere in writing Item the Citizens of London by custome of the City ought not by any Writ to go out of the City in any sort to pass upon an Enquest Item the Wife after the death of her Husband by custome of the City shall have her Frank Bank viz. a woman after the death of her husband shall have of the Rents within the same City whereof her husband died seized in Fee And in that Tenement wherein the husband and she did dwell together at the time of the death of the husband the woman shall have to her self wholly the Hall the principal chamber and the cellar wholly and shall have the use of the Oven the Stable Privy and Yard in common with other necessaries thereunto belonging for her life and at that hour that she is married she loseth her Frank Bank and her Dower of the same saving her Dower of other Tenements as the law requireth Item every Freeman of the said City using Trade may by custome of the same City take an Apprentice to serve him and learn him his Art and Mystery and that by Indenture to be made between him and his said Apprentice which Indenture shall be examined and
enrolled of Record before the Chamberlain of the Guild-Hall and such Apprentice may bind himself or his friends may put him to a Trade by their Indenture if he be of convenient age at the discretion of the Chamberlain or Mayor and Aldermen if need be And no Apprentice by custome of the said City may be bound for less term then seven years and the Indenture must be enrolled within a year after the making thereof upon a certain penalty set down And after that such Apprentice hath well and sufficiently served his term he shall be made a Freeman of the said City without other redemption whereas no other may come by the Freedome without redemption except those which are born within the said City of what country soever they be under the obeysance of out Sovereign Lord the King by custome of the said City are also Free by their birth having respect to the Priviledges of the Freedome As those which have been Apprentices or otherwise been made Free by redemption and Women under Covert Bath using certain Crafts within the City by themselves without their Husbands may take Maides to be their Apprentices to serve them and teach them their Trade which Apprentices shall be bound by their Indenture of Apprentiship to the Husband and the Wife to learn the Wives Trade as is aforesaid And such Indenture shall be enrolled as well as the other And note that any one having such Apprentice may sell and devise his said Apprentice to whom he will being of the same Trade as well as his Chattel Item the Thames-water so far as the bounds of the Freedom of the City doth stretch is parcel of the City And the same Water and every Appurtenances within the said Franchize hath alwayes been governed by the same City as parcel of the same City as well the one part of the Water as the other And the Sheriffs of London for the time being have alwayes used to do arrests and executions at the suit of the parties in the said Water of Thames viz. from the East-side of the Bridge of London to Recolv and from the West part of London Bridge to Stanes Bridge Item the Sheriffs of London ought by custome of the City to have the forseiture of all Fugitives and Felons goods whatsoever as well within the said City as the Water of Thames in and of their Farm which they pay yearly to the King Item by custome of the City no attaint is maintainable nor lieth within the City Item by Ancient custome of the same City no man dwelling within the same City can be taken nor led out of the City by colour or claim of villenage before the matter be discussed by order of Law Item if a Freeman of the said City coming or going with merchandize elsewhere out of the same City be constrained to pay Toll or other custome or that his Goods be arrested or carried away wrongfully without reasonable cause and not delivered again by the Governour of the Town when complaint in made and it be sufficiently testified by credible men then if afterwards the Goods or Merchandizes of him that did the wrong or the Goods or Merchandizes of any other of the same Town where the wrong was done be found within the City of London it is the custome at the suggestion of the property to arrest such Goods and Merchandizes by the Officers of the City and to detain them in the name of a Withermam until agreement be made with the said Freeman for his damages sustained in that behalf except always reasonable answer be alledged by one other party Item the Citizens of London in ancient time ordained a House called the Tonne in Corn-hill whereunto the Constables Beadles and other Officers and men of the City did accustome to bring Trespassours of the Peace married men and women found in Adultery and Chaplains and other Religious men found openly with common women or married women in suspicious places and after to bring them before their Ordinaries Item the City of London hath co●usance of Pleas by the Kings Chartes and the use is that no Freeman of the said City shall implead another Freeman of the same City elsewhere then in the same City where he may recover within the said City upon pain of losing his Freedome Inem he which is Mayor of London for the time shall have an Hanap o' or a Golden Tanker at the Coronation of every King with other priviledges belonging to the said Mayor and City at such Coronation of the King by ancient custome of the same City Item the customes is that the Kings chief Butler shall be chief Coroner of the City of London which Coroner useth by Writ to substitute another in his place who is called Coroner before whom the Indictments and Appeales within the said City are taken and in whose name the Records are made and all the Indictments and Appeals within the said City are taken before the two Sheriffs and Coroners joyntly and the Juries taken for the death of any man upon view of the Corps are gathered out of the four Wards neerest and summoned by the Beadles of the same Wards and all other Juries to be taken before the Sheriffs and Coroners in common ought to be taken and summoned by the Sheriffs and their Officers Item heretofore where any Thief in New-Gate did appeal another Thief being in another Goale that Thief in the other Goal is to be sent by Writ unto New-Gate to answer to the same Appeal and to be at his delivery there And in the same sort if a Thief being in another Goal do appeal another being in New-Gate or any other within the said City the same apeallated must be brought by Writ to the same Goale of New-Gate to maintain his said Appeal And no Thief being in New-Gate taken with the manner ought to be sent elsewhere with the manner for his deliverance but only to have his deliverance before the Mayor of London and other Justices assigned for the said Goal of New-Gate Item because the Burrough of Southwork and place of common Stewes on the other side of the Water of Thames are so hurtful to the City of London and Theeves and other malefactours are often coming thither and many times after their Thefts and Fellonies done within the said City they fly and retire out of the same City unto the Stewes and into Southwark out of the Liberties and Power of the City and remain there doing mischief watching their time to come back and do mischief there the Officers of the said City have used always to pursue and search such Theeves and ill doers in the same Stewes and Town of South-wark as well within the Liberty as without and bring them to New gate to stay there for their deliverances before the Justices as well for open suspition as at the Suit of the party Item the Prisoners which are condemned or arrested within the said City and are committed to Prison at the Suit
hath three great commodities that is to say Air for his Health Light for his profit prospect for his pleasure may not be taken away no more then a part of his House may be pulled down whereby to erect the next House adjoyning And with this resolution agreeth the Case of Eldred reported by Sir Edw. Cook in his Ninth Report fol. 58. where he sheweth the ancient form of the Action upon the case to be quod messuagium horrida tenebritate obscuratum fuit but if there be hinderance only of the prospect by the new erected House and not of the Air not of the light then an Action of the case will not lye insomuch that the prospect is only a matter of delight and not of necessity As to the second it was resolved by the opinion of the aforesaid Judges that the custome of London will not enable a man to erect a new House upon a void space of ground whereby the ancients lights of an old house are stopt up for first the owner of the old house having possession of a lawful easment and profit which hath been belonging unto the house by prescription time out of mind of man may not be prescribed out of it by another thwarting custome which hath been used time out of mind of man but the latter custome shall rather be adjudged to be void and Prescription against a Prescription will never be allowed by the Law 2. It may well be that before time of memory the owner of the said void piece of ground granted unto the owner of the House to have his Windows that way without any stopping of them the which being done and continued accordingly hath begotten a prescription the which may not be defeated by the Allegation of a general custome and with this resolution doth agree a case adjudged Trin. 29. Eliz. Rot. 253. in the Kings Bench whereupon an action upon the case brought by Thomas Bloond against Thomas Mosley for erecting of a House in the County of the City of York whereby the ancient lights of his House were stopped up The Desendant did plead a Custome for the City of York as there is here for the City of London and adjudged that the Custome was naught whereupon the Plaintiff had his Judgement But if the Houses had been new erected Houses or otherwise Windowes had been newly made Windows in that ancient House the erection of that new House upon that void space of Ground would have been lawful notwithstanding that the Windows and Lights be stopped up for it shall not lie in the power of the owner of the ancient House by setting out his new Windows to prevent him that hath the void peice of Ground from making the best benefit of it As to the third point it was conceived that if the new house be only erected upon the ancient foundation without any inlargement either in Longitude or Latitude howsoever it be made so high that it ●oppeth up the lights of the old house yet he is not subject unto any action because the law authorizeth a man to build as high as he may upon an ancient Foundation and it is no reason to foreclose a man from making his house convenient unto his estate and degree by building up higher when there is no other impediment but only some windowes which are built out over his house and agreeing to this seemeth the old book of 4. E. 3. 150. to be where an Assize of Nusans was brought for erecting his house so high that the light of the Plaintiff in the next adjoyning house was disturbed by it and the Plaintiff upon the opinion of Herl Chief Justice did not proceed in the Assize but let it fall to the ground but if the new builded house exceeded the ancient foundation whereby that excess is the cause of stopping up of lights then is he subject unto the action of him whose light is stopped up as it may appear by 22. H. 6. 25. And in the case at the Bar Judgement was given for the Plaintiff because he had brought his action for building of a new House upon a void piece of ground by which his Windows were stopt up And Keeme the Defendant only justifieth by the Custome the erection of the House upon an old Foundation and upon the void piece of ground the which is not any answer at all unto that which the Plaintiff layeth unto the charge of the Defendant Touching the Custome of Citizens leaving that Trade whereunto they have been Apprentices seven years and betaking themselves to other Trades IOhn Tolley having been an Apprentice in London by the space of seven years unto a Wool-Packer after the seven years expired is made a Freeman of London afterwards he leaveth the Trade of a Wool-Packer and betaketh himself to the Trade of an Vpholster and doth exercise that Trade by many years whereupon one Thomas Allen an Informer doth exhibit an Information in the Court of the Mayor of London as well for the King as for himself upon the branch of the Statute made in the fifth year of the late Queen Elizabeth cap. 4. whereby it is enacted That after the first day of May next ensuing it shall not be lawful unto any person or persons other than such as now do lawfully use or exercise any art Mystery or manual occupation to set up c. any such occupation now used or occupied within the Realm of England or Wales except he shall have been brought up seven years at the least as an Apprentice in manner and form aforesaid nor to set any person on work in such Mystery Art or Occupation being not a Workman at this day except he shall have been an Apprentice as aforesaid or else having served as an Apprentice as is aforesaid shall or will become a Iourney-man or hired by the year upon pain that every person willingly offending or doing the contrary shall forfeit and lose for every default fourty shillings for every moneth And he sheweth that Iohn Tolly the now Defendant hath exercised the trade of an Upholster by the space of fourty moneths whereas he was never an Apprentice to that trade by the space of seven years contrary unto the aforesaid Statute whereby the said Thomas Allen doth demand the forfeiture of eighty pound unto the King and himself whereof he the said Allen doth require the one moyety according to the form of the said Statute And this Information being removed out of the Court of the Mayor of London by Certiorari into the Kings Bench the said Iohn Tolley doth plead a special Plea in Bar shewing that there is a custome of London which hath been used time out of mind of man That every Citizen and Freeman of London which hath been an Appretice in London unto any trade by the space of seven years may lawfully and well relinquish that trade and exercise any other trade at his will and pleasure And sheweth further That all the Customes
Commonalty for payment of the said sum at a certain day and thereupon is enlarged The four hundred Marks are not paid at the day whereupon the Mayor and Commonalty affirm a Plaint against him in London for the said Debt The Defendant obtaineth a Habeas Corpus to remove the body and the cause into the Kings Bench upon a supposition that he was to have the Priviledge by reason of a Priority of Suit in the Kings Bench and upon returne of the Habeas Corpus all this matter appeared unto the Court and it was moved by Sir Henry Mountague now Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench then one of the Serjeants of the King and Recorder of London that a Procedendo might be granted whereby the Major and Commonalty might proceed against him in the Court at London It being a customary Suit meerly grounded upon the custome of London But that was denied by Sir Edward Cook Chief Justice and the whole Court because by the Law Chamberlain having cause of Priviledge by reason of the Priority of Suit against him in the Kings Bench might not be re-manded but he was to answer in that Court Whereupon the Major and Commonalty did declare against him upon the said Obligation in the Kings Bench. Secondly it was moved that the action upon this obligation might be laid in some indifferent County and not in London forasmuch as the Trial there must be had by those that were Parties unto the Action it being brought by the Mayor and Commonalty But Sir Edward Cook and the Court would not upon this surmise take away the benefit which the Law giveth to every Plaintiff upon a transitory action wich is to lay it in whatsoever County he will And if there be any such cause as is surmised then after Plea pleaded he may make an allegation That the City of London is a County in it self and that all the Citizens there are Parties to the Action which is brought whereby there may not be an indifferent Trial. And upon this surmise the Court shall order the Trial to be in a Forreign County The which was done accordingly and so the matter proceeded The Case of the Merchant-Adventurers KIng Edward the third in the year of his reign by Letters Patents doth incorporate certain persons by the name of the Merchants-Adventurers of England and doth give power unto them to transport white Clothes into divers parts beyond the Seas restrayning them from carrying over Woolls The Merchants-Adventurers do trade beyond the Seas and continue the transposing of Clothes white until the 29. of August in the tenth year of his Majesties Reign that now is At which time the King by his Letters Pattents doth encorporate the Earl of Sussex late Lord Treasurer of England Sir Thomas Vavasour Sir Stephen Soam William Cockayn and others by the name of The Merchants Adventerers of the new trade of London with full power authority to transport dyed and dressed Cloths into divers parts beyond the Seas with a restraint prohibiting all the Old Merchants-Adventurers which did not joyn themselves unto this new Company to tranport any under the forfeiture of them and also inhibiting the New Merchants from transporting any Clothes but such as are died and dressed And after three years passed they having power during that time to transport 36000 white Clothes And there being a refusal of the Old Merchants Adventurers to surrender up their Patent The King bringeth a Quo Warranto against divers of the Merchants of the old Company by particular names to know by what Warrant they do without Licence of the King transport Clothes white undied and undressed beyond the Seas The Merchants upon the return of the Quo Warranto do make their appearance And an Information being exhibited gainst them by Sir Fr. Bacon Knight now Lord Chancellour of England and then Attorney General unto his Majesty cometh into the Kings Bench and moveth the Court that the old Merchants Adventurers might have a short day the next ensuing Term to answer unto the Information exhibited against them Insomuch that the new Company of Merchants Adventurers standing at a gaze as being uncertain of what validity the old Patent would be did slack to transplant the Diers and other Tradesmen out of the Low-Countries into England being necessary Instruments for the puting in Execution of this design because there were not here in England those that were able to Die and Dress in that manner that the Low-Country men did And so there was in the interim a stop of the current of Merchandizing with our Cloth the which being the principal Commodity that we had here in England the Fleece that causeth it may well and aptly have the term of The Golden Fleece and there being a stop made of the traffiquing and trading with these clothes it is as dangerous unto the Politique Body of the Commonwealth as the stop of a Vein could be to the natural Body for as by the stop of a Vein the Blood is debarred of his free passage and so of necessity there must be a Consumption by the continuance of it follow unto the body natural So traffique being the Blood which runneth in the Veins of the Commonwealth it cannot be but that the hinderance of it by any long continuance must breed a Consumption unto the State of the Commonwealth Wherefore to open this Vein which was as yet somewhat stopped and to give a more free passage unto the Blood he was a Suitor unto the Court on the behalf of the Company of the New Merchant-Adventurers that the Court would give expedition in this Case for they conceived that if this new design might take its full effect as it was intended it could not be but of necessity there must a great benefit redound to the Commonwealth For first Whereas our State groweth sick by reason of the many idle Persons which have not means to be set on work this Dying and Dressing of Cloths within our Kingdome would give sufficient imployment unto them all whereby there should be a cure to the lazy Leprosie which now overspreadeth our Commonwealth Secondly Whereas now we send out clothes White and the Low-Country-men receive them of us and Dye them and Dress them and afterwards transport them unto forreign parts making a wonderful benefit to themselves both in point of profit and likewise in respect of maintaining their Navy whereas if the Clothes were Died and Dressed by our selves we might reap that matter of gain and also be Masters of the Sea by strengthening our selves in our Shipping Thirdly Whereas there happeneth often a confiscation of all our Clothes and much disgrace and discredit lighteth upon our Nation and our Clothes by the abuse of the Low-Country-men in stretching them a greater length than they will well bear when they Dye and Dress them now it should be prevented when they should never have the fingering of them to put that abuse in practice Wherefore this Patent made by
King Edw. the 3. bereaving the King and Commonwealth of these great benefits and commodities is against the Law and so ought to be repealed And day was given accordingly to put in their Plea At which time many of the old Merchants-Adventurers being willing that trial should be made whether the benefit intended unto the Commonwealth might be compassed did shew to their obedience unto the King and desire of the good of their Country Surrender up their Patent into the hands of his Majesty since which time it being found by experience that the project had not that success which they expected and likewise Cloth and Wooll lay dead because there was no vent for them abroad The King according to his power reserved unto him in his Patent by which he erected and created the new Company of Merchants Adventurers of London did make repeal and revocation of the said New Patent and new Company and did redeliver unto the old Merchants their Patent confirming it and likewise by another Charter did enlarge the Liberties and Priviledges of the old Merchants by reason of which Grace of the King the old Company of Merchants-Adventurers of England are reestablished in that estate wherein they formerly were and they do now trade again as formerly they did to the great content of the Subject and benefit of the King and Country Certifying Indictments upon Certioraries IOhn Forner Iohn Evans and divers others being Indicted before Sir Thomas Hayes Lord Mayor of London Sir Henry Mountague Serjeant unto the King and Recorder of London Sir Thomas Lowe and divers others by vertue of a Commission granted unto them a Certiorari was directed unto them as Justices of Peace out of the Kings Bench for the certifying the said Indictment upon which Certiorari no return was made whereupon a second Certiorari was awarded unto the said Commissioners commanding them to certifie the said Indictment upon a pain upon which Certiorari a return was made in this manner That is to say that King H. 6. in the 23. year of his Reign by his Letters Patents bearing the same date did grant unto the Mayor Aldermen and Sheriffs of London that they should not be compelled upon any Writ directed unto them to certifie the Indictments themselves taken before them but only the Tenors of them the which they have done accordingly and Exception being taken unto this Return for the insufficiency of it it was resolved by Sir Edward Cook Chief Justice of the Kings Bench Sir Iohn Crook Sir Iohn Doddridg and Sir Robert Haughton that the return upon the reasons hereafter following was insufficient For first the Letters Patents being granted unto them by the name of the Mayor Aldermen and Sheriffs of the City of London warranteth only the not certifying of Indictments taken before them as Mayor Aldermen and Sheriffs of London and where the Writ is directed unto them by that name and they do not excuse them in Case where the Writ is directed unto them as Justices of Peace and where the Indictments are taken before them as Justices of Peace by virtue of the Kings Commission And howsoever the Mayor and Aldermen are Justices of Peace by Charter yet insomuch that they are distinct powers return made by them by the name of Mayor and Aldermen where the Writ is directed unto them as Justices of Peace will not be good Secondly there being a Resumption made by Act of Parliament in 28. H. 6. whereby all Lands Tenements Grants Rent and Fees granted since the first day of his Reign were resumed the Letters Patents made in 23. H. 6. unto the Mayor and Commonalty are annihilated and made void and so no hold may be taken of them and the Statute made in 1. Edw. 4. cap. 1. only confirmes those priviledges not heretofore revoked and repealed by Act of Parliament or otherwise and howsoever there be a Charter made by H. 7. in the first year of his Reign whereby restitution was granted of this priviledge yet no advantage may be taken of it because it was not spoken of upon the return and the Court may not intend it Thirdly the Letters Patents of the King being the sole ground and foundation to make the return good are not sufficiently returned unto the Court insomuch that it was said upon the return only that the King by his Letters Patents did grant unto the Mayor Commonalty and Sheriffs of London that they should not be compelled to certifie the Indictments themselves but it doth not appear that they were sealed with the Grand Seal and if they were not sealed with that Seal the Letters Patents may not be of any validity in Law howsoever they were sealed with the Exchequer Seal or Dutchy Seal in respect of which they may well be called the Letters Pattents of the King Fourthly the use hath alwayes been to remove Indictments and the Record of them upon a Certiorari awarded out of the Kings Bench and there was never any denial made of it before this time and in 5. Ed. 6. where a Certiorari was directed unto them for the removing of an Indictment of a Woman which was Indicted for being a common Whore the Indictment was certified in obedience unto the Writ although in the end of the return they shewed their Charter and prayed that it might be remanded because it was an Indictment only warrantable by the custome of the City and not by the Common Law And the Court was of opinion in the return at the Bar to have imposed a Fine and to have awarded a third Certiorari but it was stayed and the second return was amended Concerning Orphans Portions THe custome of London is that if any Freeman deviseth and or other Legacies of goods unto an Orphan that then the Mayor and Aldermen have used to take the profits of the Land and to have the disposition of the Legacies until such time as the Legatees shall attain unto the age of twenty one years or otherwise being a woman should be married and if the disposition of the profits of the Lands or of the personal Legacies were declared by the Testator in his Will that then the Mayor and Aldermen have used time out of mind of man to convent the person trusted by the Will of the Testator before them and to compel him to find Sureties for the true performance of the Legacies according to the Law of the Realm and the Will of the Testator and if they refuse to find Sureties then it is lawful to imprison them until they find Sureties The Widow of a Freeman of London dwelling in Middlesex bequeathed a Legacy of a thousand pound unto her Daughter after all Debts and Legacies paid and upon condition that she should not marry without the assent of her Executor and maketh a Freeman her Executor and dieth The Executor is convented before the Court of Mayor and Aldermen and required to put in Sureties unto the Chamberlain of London according to the
Custome for the payment of a thousand pound according unto the time limited by the Will and according to the Will aforesaid The Executor denieth to find Sureties whereupon he was committed to prison and a Habeas Corpus being awarded out of the Court of Kings Bench to have the Body of the Executor together with the cause all this matter appeareth upon the return And now it was moved by Richard Martin late Recorder of London then an Apprentice of the Law that the return was insufficient and so the Executor ought to be enlarged First in regard that the ground of the imprisonment was the Custome of London and the custome is against the Law and void insomuch that it enforceth an Executor to find Sureties for the payment of a Legacy according unto the Will where the law requireth that debts be paid before such time as Legacies be performed and the Law giveth an election unto the Executor to pay which of the Legacies he will in case there be not sufficient to pay all the debts and legacies of the Testator but this exception was disallowed by the said Court insomuch that the custome of London appeareth by the return to be that he shall find Sureties for the performance of the Legacies according unto the Law of the Realm and the Will of the Testator So as if the Executor had not sufficient to pay debts and legacies he hath the same power and liberty after such time as he hath found Sureties as he had before Secondly except on was taken because it appeared by the return that the Devisor was a woman and also only the Wife of a Freeman and not a Free-woman and she is not within the custom of London which only speaketh of a Freeman But this exception was over-ruled for a woman being a Free-woman within the Statute of Magna Charta cap. 29. which enacteth that no Freeman shall be taken or imprisoned c. but by the lawful judgement of his Peers So that she being a Barroness or Countess shall be tried by her Peers upon an Indictment preferred against her she shall also be reputed a Freeman within this custome Secondly the Wife of a Freeman having the liberty and priviledge to Trade in the City and so able to take benefit by it she shall also be bound by the customes of it Thirdly howsoever she was dwelling out of London at the time of the Will made she is a Freeman within the compass of the custome Fourthly it was objected that this custome of London concerning Orphans was an antiquated custome and had not been put in use by many years and therefore ought not now to be put in ure to take away the liberty of a man and especially also because the life of a custome is the usage but this exception was over-ruled for this custome is dayly put in Ure The custome in not removing body and cause upon Habeas Corpus A Petition being affirmed in London by one Hill a Citizen and Freeman of London against another Citizen and Freeman of London upon a Bond of a hundred pound a Summons is awarded against the said obliged and the pretext being returned that he hath nothing whereby he may be summoned within the City upon a Surmize made by Hill the Obligee that one Harrington a Citizen and Freeman of London is indebted in a hundred pound unto the first Obligor a Summons is awarded according to the custome of London of Forreign Attachments for the warning of Harrington who is warned accordingly whereupon Harrington procureth a Habeas Corpus for the removing of his body together with the cause into the Kings Bench upon which Writ a return is made in this manner that is to say That London is an ancient City and that time out of mind of man the Mayor Aldermen and Citizens of London have had Conusans of all manner of Pleas both real and personal to be holden before the Mayor Altermen and Sheriffs of London in London and that in no action whatsoever they ought to remove the cause out of London into any other Court and do moreover shew a confirmation made by R. 2. in the seventh year of his Reign of all their customes and so for this cause they had not the body here nor the cause And exception being taken to the insufficiency of this return it was agreed and resolved by the whole Court of Kings Bench that this return made was ill for common experience teacheth that the usual course is and alwayes hath been that upon Habeas Corpus the body together with the cause have been removed out of London into the Kings Bench and likewise upon Certioraries awarded out of the Kings Bench. Records have been certified out of London into that Court for Justice being to be done unto the Citizens of London as well in that Court as in the 〈…〉 proper Court the Court of London being an inferiour Court unto the Court of Kings Bench where the King is supposed to sit in person ought to yeild bedience unto the Writs awarded out of that Court as the Supetiour Court but if the cause should be such that there should be a failer of Justice in the Kings Bench upon the removing of the cause because it is only an action grounded meerly upon the custome of London then a return made of the special matter will be warrantable or otherwise if the return be made that the custome of London is that no cause which is a meer customary cause wherein no remedy can be had but only in London according unto the custome of London may well be allowed so as the cause specially be returned into the Court whereby it may appear unto the Court that it is such a cause which will not bear action at the Common Law for it is usual in the Kings Bench that if the cause returned unto the Court upon the Habeas Corpus appear to be such a cause as will bear an action only by the custome and not at the Common Law the Court will grant a Procedendo and send it back again to London as if the cause returned appear to be an action of Debt brought upon concesit se solvere or to be an aaction of Covenant brought upon a Covenant by word without any specialty for these be meer Customary actions which cannot be maintained but by the custome of London and therefore that shall be remanded for if the Kings Bench should retain these causes after such time as they are removed and should not remand them there would be failing of Justice and the Judges of the Kings Bench in the person of the King do say Nulli negabimus nulli vendemus nulli differemus justitiam and the reteining of these causes would be a denying of Justice wherefore they do grant a Procedendo and remand it The case concerning payment of Tythes in London RIchard Burrel being seized in his Demesne as of Fee of a House called Green Acre a Shop and Ware-house in
and if the Tenant come and plead then he shall have an Essoyn and so after every appearance and if he make default at the Grand Distress then shall Commandment go to the Sheriff by the Mayors precept that the Sheriff shall come to the place wasted and shall enquire of the waste and damages according to the Statute and that they return the same at the next Hust of Common Pleas and the Plaintiff shall recover the place wasted and the treble damages by the Statute In a Writ of Error of Judgement given in Court before the Sheriffs in Actions personal and in Assizes of Novel Desseizen or Mortdanc taken before the Sheriffs and the Mayor shall make a Warrant to the Sheriffs to cause the Record and Process to come at the next Hust of the Pleas and that they cause the parties to be wa●ned to hear the Record and after the Record and Process be in the Hust although the Defendant come by warning or make default the Errors shall be assigned and there the Judgement shall be affirmed or reserved as the Law requireth And it is to be noted that by custome of the same City that when a man is condemned in debt or attaint of damages in any action personal before the Sheriffs and bringeth such a Writ of Error he which b●ingeth the Writ must before he be delivered out of Prison find sufficient Sureties of men resident within the City to be bo●nd before the Mayor and Sheriffs to pay the money or to being in the body taken in case the Judgment be affirmed and in like sort is to be done where damages are recovered in Assize before the Sheriffs and Coroners In a Writ of Replegiari the process is such that if any one take a Distress or other sole thing within the said City he which oweth the goods may come to one of the Sheriffs and shall have a Minister at the Commandment of the Court to go to the party that took the goods and if he may have the view to praise them by two honest men and then shall a plaint be made in the Sheriffs paper-Office in this wise T. S. queritur versus I. L. de averus suis injuste Capt. in Dominio suo vel in libero Tenemento suo in ●arochia Sancti c. And the same party shall then find two sufficient Sureties to sue and make return of the Goods or the p●ice thereof in case the return be awarded and so shall have deliverance and the Parties shall have a day prefixed at the next Hust of Common Pleas and then at the next Hust of Common Pleas the Sheriff shall make a Bill containing all the matter and the plaint and shall carry the Bill to the same Hust and there it shall be put upon the file and the parties shall be demonded at what day the one or the other may be essoyned of the common Essoyn and if that day the Plaintiff maketh default return shall be awarded to the Avowant and return in such case is awardable three times by the custome of the City and the third time not reprisable and at that time the Avowant maketh default then it shall be awarded that the goods remain to the Plaintiff viz. that the goods remain without any recovering and if it be that the Sheriff cannot have view of the Distress taken then he shall certifie it into the said Hust and there shall be awarded the Wetherum and upon that process shall be made and if the parties come and Avowry be made and pleaded to the Judgement or to the Issue of the inquest then shall Judgement be given or process to cause the Jury to come as the case requireth and the parties may be Essoyned after appearance and if the party claim property in the Distress and then certifie the same in the Hust and the process shall be made by precept made to the Sheriff to try the property c. And although the party be essoyned of the Kings service in a Replegiare and at the day that he hath by Essoyn make default or bringeth not his Warrant he shall not be cleared of damage In a Writ of Particepat faciend to make partition between Parceners of the Tenants in London the Writ closed shall be directed to the Mayor and Sheriffs containing the matter according to the form of such Writ and the parties shall be warned by precept from the Mayor directed to the Sheriff and the Tenants may be essoyned and if they come they may plead their matter and if they make default the Writ of Partition shall be awarded by default and every Beadle of the said City by the advise of his Alderman against every Hust of Common Pleas shall cause to be summoned twelve men being Free-holders of the best and most sufficient of his Ward to come to the Guild-Hall aforesaid and to pass in Juries if need be if there be so many men landed in the said Ward and the Juries shall be taken as before is said in the Hust of Plea of Land And note that Writs of Exigent are taken out of the Hust as well in Hust of Common Pleas as of Pleas of Land but those Exigents that are taken in the one Hust are not to be sued in the other Hust and at the fifth Hust the Utlaries and Weyneries shall be given in full Hust before the Mayor and Aldermen by the mouth of their Recorder and also all Judgements which are given in the Hust shall be given in the same manner and the Exigent after every Hust shall be enrolled and sent into the Chamber of the Guild-Hall aforesaid And you must note that all Amerciaments incident to the said Hust pertain to the Sheriffs of the said City and that the Aldermen of London shall be su●moned to come to the Hust and oug●● by custome of the City to be summon by one of the Sheriffs Officers sitti●● upon a horse of a C. s. price at least Assize of Mort d'Ancest in London THe Assizes of Mort d' Ancest a● holden and determinable before the Sheriffs and Coroners of London o● the Saturdayes from fourteen days t● fourteen days at the Guild Hall for which the Process is this viz. he that wil● have such Assizen shall come in the Hust or into the Assembly of the Mayo● and Aldermen in the Chamber of the Guild Hall any Munday as is said in the Assize of fresh force and shall make a Bil● containing the form of the Assize o● Mort d'ancest according to the case an● that Bill shall be enrolled and after the common Clerk shall make another B●● containing all the matters of the fin● Bill making mention of the title of the Hust or of the day of the assembly of the Mayor and Aldermen and this Bill shall be sent unto the Sheriffs or either o● them to serve according to the custom and whi●● Bill shall be served by any Serjeant or other Minister of the Sheriffs viz. the land Serjeant the Wednesday next
Actions personal whatsoever by Bill as well among Merchants and Merchants for Merchandize as also between others that will plead by Process made against the parties Item the Mayor and Aldermen or the Mayor and Chamberlain of the said City take before them in the said Chamber Recognizances of Debt of those that will of what summes soever And if the day of payment be missed then he to whom the Recognizance is made out of this Record shall have execution of all the Debtors Goods and of the moyety of his Lands within the said City and it is taken as at the Common Lawes Item Pleas of Debt according to the Ordinance called the Suit of Smithfield are determinable only before the Mayor and Aldermen according as is more plainly set down in the Ordinance thereupon made Item the Assizes of Nusance are determinable by plaint before the Mayor and Aldermen and that plaint shall be served by the Sheriff the Wednesday against the Friday and then the Mayor and Aldermen ought to proceed in Plea according to that which is set down in the Act of Assize and Nusance in the said City Item the Mayor and Aldermen have alwayes used to set down penal Acts upon Victuals and for other governance of the City and of the peace according to their discretion and advice and proclaim the same Ordinance within the said City open●y to be kept in the Kings name and of the City upon that penalty set down and shall levie all those penalties of those which do contrary to the Ordinance aforesaid Item the Mayor and Aldermen have alwayes used and may by custome of the same City cause to come before them the offenders which are taken within the said City for Lies and false Nuses noised abroad in disturbance of the Peace Makers and Counterfeiters of false Seales and false Evidences and for other notorious deceits known to them which they shall find faulty of such malefactours by confession of the parties or by enquest and then take them and punish them by the Pillory or other chastisement by imprisonment according to their discretion Item the Mayor and Aldermen have alwayes accustomed and may by custome of the said City change Process abbridge delayes in actions personal as well before themselves as in the Sheriffs Courts and to make new Ordinances touching personal Pleas which Ordinances they understand to be reasonable and profitable for the people Item you must note that all the City of London is held of our Soveraign Lord the King in Free Burgage without the same City and of all the Lands and Tenements Rents and Services within the same City and the Suburbs of the same are well in Reversion as in Demesne are devisable by Usage of the said City so that men and women by Usage of the same City may devise their Tenements Rents and Reversions within the said City and Suburbs of the same to those whom they will and of what Estate they will and they may also devise new rent to be taken of the same their Tenants in such sort as best shall seem unto them by their Testament and by their last Will and those which are Freemen of the same City may devise their Tenements to Mortmain as appeareth by the Kings Charter to that effect made Item He which holdeth Tenements joyntly with others may devise that which belongeth to him without any other separation but Infants within age can make no devise nor woman under covert barn cannnot devise their Tenements by leave of their Husbands nor in any other sort during the coverture 49. 7. 325. per. Cur. Also the Husband cannot devise Tenements to his Wife for any higher Estate then for term of life of his Wife neither can the Wife claim any further Estate upon pain of losing the whole neither can the Husband devise the Tenements in the right of his Wife nor the Tenements which the wife and the husband have joyntly purchased but if the Husband and Wife have Tenements joyntly to them and the Heirs of the Husband the same Husband may devise the Reversion and all the Testaments by which any Tenements are divised may be inrolled in the Hust of Record at the suit of any which may take advantage by the same Testaments and the Testaments which are so to be inrolled shall be brought or caused to be shewn before the Mayor and Aldermen in full Hust and there the said Will shall be proclaimed by the Serjeant and then proved by two honest men well known which shall be sworn and examined severally of all the circumstances of the said Will and of the Estate of the Testator and of his Seal and if the proofs be found good and true and agreeing then shall the same Will be inrolled upon Record in the same Hust and the Fee shall be paid for the Inrolment and no Testament nuncupative nor other Testament may be inrolled of Recod unless the Seal of the party be at the same Will but Wills that may be found good and true are effectual albeit they are not inrolled of Record Item Testaments within the said City ought by custome of the same City to be adjudged effectual and Executors have respect to the Wills of the Testators albeit the words of such Wills be defective or not accordidg to the Common Law Item Where Reversions or Rents be devised by Will inrolled in the Hust of Record the same Reversions and Rents after the death of the Testator are so Executed that those to whom such rents are devised may distrain for the rent and make avowry and those in reversion may sue a Writ of Waste at their will without any Attornment of the Tenants and may plead by the same Inrolment if need be although they have not the same Testament and the same custome taketh place for Deeds of Land inrolled in the Hust of Record and such Inrolments have been alwayes used so that the Wills are proclaimed and proved in full Hust as is aforesaid and Deeds indented and other Writings sealed may be accepted and the knowledging and confession of women may be received before the Mayor and one Alderman or before the Recorder and one Alderman or before two Aldermen for need as well out of the Court as in so that the same Charters Indentures and other writings so acknowledged be afterwards entred and inrolled in any Hust and the Fees paid as the Order is Item where a man hath devised by his Will enrolled certain rent to be taken of his Tenants within the said City without a cause of distress yet by custome of the said City he to whom the devise is made may distrein and avow the taking for the rent behind and in the same sort it shall be done for Amerciaments Rents called quit-rents within the said City Item the Mayor and Aldermen which are for the time being by custome of the same City shall have the Wards and marrying of all the Orphans of the said City after the death of their
the other in Westminster the said Officers shall be chosen according to the custome of that City and the rates paid according to the custome of that City in all other Parishes or places upon every Tuesday or Wednesday in Easter week The Constables Church wardens and Overseers for the Poor Surveyors of the Highwayes of every Parish aforesaid giving notice and calling together such Inhabitants of their Parishes as have born the like Offices they or the greater number of them shall appoint two that are Tradesmen in their Parishes to be Scavenger for the Streets c. of each Ward to continue for a year who shall perform the office upon pain of twenty pound but upon refusal others shall be chosen the same penalties to be levied and imployed for mending the Streets and Wayes of the same Parish by distress and sale of the offenders Goods and imprisonment by default by warrant as aforesaid Within twenty days after election of such Officers a Tax or pound rate shall be made by the Inhabitants of every Parish which being confirmed by two Justices of the Peace shall be quarterly paid upon demand by the Officers appointed and upon refusal levied by distress and sale of the Goods by warrant from two Justices of the Peace and for lack of distress by imprisonment of the offender not being a Peer until payment Provided all Actions against persons for executing this Act shall be laid in their proper County and the Defendant may plead the general Issue and recover double cost if wrongfully vexed By the same Statute no Hackney Coachman licensed shall take for his hire in or about the City of London and Westminster above 10. sh for a day reckoning 12. hours to the day and not above 18. d. for the first hour and 12. d. for every hour after and no Gentleman or other person shall pay from any of the Inns of Court or thereabouts to any part of St. Iames or Westminster above 12. d. and the same rates to the same places or thereabouts back again and from any of the said Inns of Court or thereabouts to the Royal Exchange 12. d. to the Tower of London Bishopsgatestreet Algate or t●ereabouts 18. d. and so from the said places to the Inns of Court and the like rates from and to any place of like distance and if any Coachman shall refuse to do act or exact more for his hire then thereby limited he shall for every offence forfeit 10. sh FINIS Trinterm 7. Jac. Rex Rot. 1490. Kings-Bench The pleading of this case see in the New-Book of entries fol. 20 21. Quest 1. Three commodities of lights by a Window Air by Health light by profit pleasure by prospect Cook 9. Rep. Eldred case Vide Hobarts Reports Robins of B●ns 131. Quest 2. 3. Quest A new house built upon an old foundation without enlargement either in longitude or latitude though never so high built shall not be taken to prejudice the Neighbour Hill 12. Jac. in Banco Rep. Information upon the Stat. of 5. Eliz. 4. concerning Manualoccu● pations c. The custome of L pleaded in Bar Quest 1. Quest 2. Sel. Rat. 1. 2. Quest 4. Rat 1. Rat. 2. Rat. 3. Rat. 4. 9. H. 3. cap. 9. Quest 5. Rat. 1. 2. 3. Rat. 4. Quest 6. Sol. ● Quest 7. Sol. Mich. 12 Jac. Rs. In Banco Rs. Quest 1. Mich. 39 40. Eliz Paramoreversus Pain Quest 2. Quest Mich. 37 38. Eliz. Rot. 414. Ea. Term. 9. Iac. Rex Roll. 163. Kings Be. you should read Frances all the way Counsel● 5. in the case Judges 8 Four of the Judges for the Defendant Rat. 1. 22. H. 6. 4. Rat. 2. 21 H. 6. 30 ● 1 E. 4. 50. Rat 3. 3 Eliz Dy 100. 26. Eliz. the Lord Mordants Case Rat 4. Rat. 5. 35. H. 6. 3. Rat. 6. 33. Ass Parl. 7. Rat. 7. Rat. 8. Rat. 9. Three Judges of Contrary opinion ●t 1. 2. 8. H. 42. 4. Sir H. Calthrops report and opinion 1. What prisage is 6. E. 3. 5. 20. Ric. 2. Rot. Pat. 28. E 1. Rot. Pat. Fleta Lib. 2. cap. 22. 20. R. 2. Rot. Pat. 2. The ground of paying the K. prisage 3. When prisage is due Sir Ed. Crook Sir John Doddridge 6. R. 2. 46. Kenniston 4. Whether the King may grant or discharge Prisage 41. Elix 15 E 4. Rot. Pat. 5. Grant to a body politique for the benefit of bodies natural 39 E. 3. 21. 21 E. 4. 55. 6. Whatpersons are discharged by the words of the Charter 1. Sort. Citizens of five sorts 2. Sort. 3. Sort. 28. Ass Par. 25. 28. Ass Pat. 18. 4. Sort. 5. Sort. 7. What Wines are discharged of prisage 1. H. 8. cap. 5. 1. Benefits of having Woollen Cloth Died and dressed in England 2. 3. Hill 12. Jac. Rex K. Bench. Rat. 1. 2. Past all Resumption 3. 4. Hill 13. K. Bench. Rat. 1. Pasc 14. Jac. Chan Customary actions to be tried only in the place where the custome lieth Pasc 15. Jac. K. Bench. Upon rent of a Mess let at an ancient rent of 5. l. per. an And a fine to be paid by 3● l. per. ann Quest 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Quest 1. What the Parson may by Law demand for houses in London Fitz. Herb. nat brev fol. 53. 34. Eliz. Dawsons case K. Bench. 2. 11. Report sol 16. 3. What was anciently paid for houses in London to the Parson And how these payments grew Niger Bishop of London's Constitution 13. H. 3. 30. E. 3 i. 30. L. 3. 3. Tho Arun Arch-bish of Cant. 13. R. 2. Pope Innocent 5. H. 4. Pope Nich. 31. H. 6. Linwood fol. 146. Submission to the Lord Chancellour and Privy-Councel 27. H. 8. 21. cap. 37. H. 8. decree cap. 12. Which decree by the Act ought to have been enrolled in Chancery in six Moneths but search hathbeen and it is not found 4. Whether the Fine paid by 25. Per. An. b● a rent within the words of the decree 5. Whether the 25 perann thus Covenanted to be paid for fine be lent within the intent of the decree 1. Arguments on Ministers part Argument on the Citizens part 3. Error Fitzz 23. S. Fitzz 24. S. This is now altered by the Stat. of 32. H. 8. ca. I. of Wills Ward-mote Inquest for a year Inquest dying Non appearance Watch Light Visard Common Councel Constables Scavengers Beadle Raker Roll of names Constable Roll. Inholder Lodger Sojourner Search New-comers Frank-pledge Beadle Fire Streets Hucksters of Ale and Beer Measures Scaled Strange born Streets Vagarants Jury-men Harlots Articles Commons Dinners Banquetting Fire and Candle c. Recreation Peace Outlaws Traitots Fellons c. Thames Congregations Riotör Barrator Peace Hue and Cry Hucksters Receivers of Apprentices Artificers c. Inholder Taverner Victualer Curfue Bauds Maintainers of Quarrels Strumpet Adulterer Witch Scold Hot-house Thames Ditches Streets c. Channel Hogges Kine Oxen Ducks Persons Indited in one Ward flying into another Colouring forraign Goods Forreign buying and seling Freemen not resident Orphans Wards Marringes Officers Boteman Feriour Purprestures Pent-houses Jetties Stalles c. Way Water course Pavements Regrators Forestallers Price of Victual Hay Victuals unwholesome price Measures unsealed Weights and Measures Inholder brown Baker House Tile Leaper Beggar Bakers Brewers Painted visage Candle light Wood. Country Cheese Butter Freemen to shew their Copies Melting Tallow Appraisers Beam Clothes Carmen Buildings divided houses Inmates Hawkers Freedome Collectors Women Receivers of Servants Privies Vagabons Poor Legacies Drunkard Whoremonger Sabbath Jesuite Seminary Priest Secular Priest Popish Recusant Cozenes c. Mass Roman Catholick Religion Assembly monthly making of Presentments