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A39466 An exact abridgment of all statutes in force and use from the beginning of Magna Carta until 1641 / by Edm. Wingate of Grayes-Inne, Esq. ; with a continuation, under their proper titles, of all acts in force and use, untill the year 1666, and alphabetically digested under apt titles ; whereto is annexed four tables directing to the several matters and clauses throughout the said statutes.; Laws, etc. England and Wales.; Wingate, Edmund, 1596-1656.; Manby, Thomas, of Lincolns-Inn. 1666 (1666) Wing E906; ESTC R33346 579,794 810

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Here if the Assise pass for the disseisee he shall recover treble dammages against the Patentee XX. Stat. 4 H. 5.8 If any make forcible entry into lands by way of maintenance the Chancellor of England shall grant a special Assise without suing to the King and if the disseisor shall be attainted thereof he shall suffer one whole year's imprisonment and restore double dammage to the party grieved XXI Stat. 6 H. 6.2 The pannels of Assises shall be arrayed and an indented Copy thereof delivered by the Sheriff to the Plaintiffs Tenants and Defendants six days before the Sessions if they demand the same also Bailiffs of Franchises shall make their returns thereof to the Sheriff at the like time upon pain to forfeit each of them Sheriff or Bailiff 40 l. XXII Stat. 11 H. 6.2 In an Assise if the Sheriff be named a disseisor by Collusion to the end the Writ may be directed to the Coroner and the Assise secretly awarded by the tenant's default upon the Plaintiff's averment thereof and if it shall also be found by the Assise to be so the Justices shall abate the Writ and grievously amerce the Plaintiff XXIII Stat. 21 H. 8.3 The Plaintiff in Assise may abridge his plaint of any part whereunto a barr is pleaded without prejudice to the residue Attaint I. VVest 1. cap. 37. 3 E. 1. An Attaint is granted in Plea of Land Free-hold or any thing touching Free-hold II. Stat. de attinctis 13 E. 2. In Attaint if the first Jurors which shall be living appear not at the first grand distress or be returned to have nothing by their absence there shall be no delay made of the other Jury See Rast Attaint 2. III. Stat. 1 E. 3.6 In a Writ of Trespass an Attaint shall be granted by the Chancellor without speaking to the King as well upon the principal as upon the dammages IV. In all cases of Attaints the Justices shall not let to take the Attaints for the dammages not paid V. Stat. 5 E. 3.6 Nis● prius shall be granted in Attaints but ●o essoin or protection and five daies by the year shall be given before the Justices of the Common Bench at least VI. Stat. 5 E. 3.7 Writs of Attaint shall be granted as well in pleas of trespass moved without Writ as by Writ before Justices of Record if the dammages adjudged do exceed 40 s. VII Stat. 28 E. 3.8 An Attaint shall be granted as well upon a Bill of trespass as upon a Writ of trespass without having regard to the quantity of the dammages VIII Stat. 34 E. 3.7 An Attaint shall lie as well in plea real as personal and it shall be granted to the poor who shall affirm that they have nothing whereof to make fine saving their countenance without fine and to all others by easie fine IX Stat. 9 R. 3.3 He in the reversion shall have an Attaint or Writ of Error upon a false verdict found or an erroneous Judgment given against the particular tenant X. If the oath be found false or the Judgment erroneous and the tenant still in life he shall be restored to his possession and issues and the reversioner to the arrearages but if he be dead or be found of Covin with the demandant the reversioner shall have all yet the tenant may traverse the Covin by Scire facias out of the Judgment or Writ of Attaint if he please XI Stat. 13 R. 2.18 Upon a false verdict given before the Mayor and Bailiffs of Lincoln an Attaint shall be sued in the King's Bench or Common-Pleas and the Jury shall be of the County of Lincoln returned by the Sheriff of the said County XII Stat. 3 H. 5.5 By letters Patents of H. 4. the name of Bailiffs of the City of Lincoln being translated to Sheriffs lest it might be douted which Sheriff ought to return the Jury in Attaint the former Statute of 13 R. 2.18 is explained and confirmed XIII Stat. 11 H. 6.4 The Plaintiff in Attaint shall recover against all the Jurors Tenants and Defendants the costs and dammages which he shall sustain by delay otherwise in that suit XIV Stat. 15 H. 6.5 No Sheriff Bailiff or Coroner in Writs of Attaint of Plea of Land or of Deeds concerning Lands of the yearly value of 40 s. or more or of goods or chattels personal worth 40 s. or more shall impannel any but such as inhabit within their Bailiwicks and have free-hold or inheritance not ancient Demesne within the five Ports or Gavel-kind worth 20 l. per annum and shall not return against them less issues then 40 s. at the first Writ of distresses 10 s. at the second and double afterwards in pain to forfeit 100 l. to the King and as much to the Plaintiff And none but persons of that worth shall be impannelled upon Attaints if challenge thereof be made by the Plaintiffs XV. If any of the Defendants plead a forein plea and fail thereof the Justices shall give Judgment against them as if the Grand Jury upon the Articles of the Writ had passed against them Howbeit the rest of the Defendants shall not be prejudiced thereby neither shall this Act extend to Cities or Boroughs XVI If there shall not be in the County under the degree of a Baron enough of that worth to fill the pannel then shall the said Officers impannel and return the most sufficient persons there under that worth upon the like pain XVII Stat. 18 H. 6.2 Owners of Inheritance or Free-hold lands in Gavel-kind of 20 l. per annum may also be impannelled upon Attaints notwithstanding the Statute of 15 H. 6.5 XVIII Stat. 11 H. 7.21 None shall be impannelled upon a Jury in London except he have lands and tenements or goods and chattels worth 40 marks and if the trial be for lands or debt or dammages amounting to 40 marks or above his real or personal estate shall be worth 100 marks and the Jurors defect herein is a principal challenge XIX The issues of the Jurors for default of appearing shall be at the first summons 12 d. at the second 2 s. and double afterwards and the issues lost in the Mayor's Court shall accrue to the Mayor and Commonalty and those lost in the Sheriff's Court to the Sheriffs XX. An Attaint may be sued by Bill in the Hustings of London upon any false verdict given in any of the Courts of that City And thereupon the Mayor shall award a Precept to every Alderman to present either by themselves or their Deputies unto the said Mayor at the next Hustings the names of four indifferent and discreet Citizens out of each of their Wards each of them being worth in estate 100 pounds at least out of which the Mayor and six Aldermen or more shall impannel 48 whom the Mayor shall cause to be summoned together with the Tenants or Defendants in the Attaint to appear at the next Hustings and if upon default of appearance or otherwise there shall need a Tales the pannel
runneth not it shall be directed to the Sheriff of the County next adjoyning thereunto VIII By this Writ the Sheriff shall make three Proclamations at three several days viz. twice in full County and once at the general Sessions that the defendant shall yield himself unto him and it shall have the same day of return with the Exigent IX This Writ shall be delivered of record to the Sheriff or his Deputy who shall duly execute the same in pain of amerciament and the officer that makes the Exigent shall also make the writ of Proclamation for which his fee is 6 d. X. All outlawries otherwise obtained are null and may be voided by averment without suing of any writ of errour XI Stat. 1 E. 6.10 The Statute of 6 H. 8.4 shall be observed in Wales and in the County and City of Chester as well as in other parts of the Realm of England XII The Sheriff of Wales and of Cheshire and Chester shall have Deputies in the King's Bench and Common Place as other Sheriffs have and upon like penalties XIII All processes against any outlawed person in Wales shall be directed to the Sheriffs in Wales as immediate officers to the King's Bench and Common Pleas and may be delivered of Record to their said Deputies in Court and shall be duly executed and returned by those Sheriffs upon the pain above limited who shall also for a false or non-return forfeit 5 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XIV This Act shall not infringe any franchises and liberties in Wales otherwise then by the true meaning thereof is provided Nor yet of any Lord Marcher there but that they and their heirs may injoy the same liberties as before XV. Stat. 5 6 E. 6.26 The like Statute is made for the County Palatine of Lancaster save onely that all processes against any outlawed person there shall be first directed to the Chancellor of that Dutchey who shall thereupon make like writs and processes to be sealed with that seal and directed to the Sheriff of that County Palatine as heretofore hath been used XVI Stat. 31 El. 3. In every action personal where an exigent shall be awarded a writ of proclamation shall be also awarded and issue out of the same Court of the same teste and return with the exigent and shall be delivered of Record and directed to the Sheriff of the County where the defendant at the time of the exigent was dwelling and shall contain the effect of the same Action XVII The Sheriff shall thereupon make three Proclamations viz. one in a full County another at the Sessions and the last one moneth at least before Quinto exact by vertue of the said exigent at or near the Church or Chappel-door of the Parish where the defendant was dwelling at the time of awarding the same exigent upon a Sunday after Divine service and Sermon or in case there be no Sermon after Divine service And if he dwell in no Parish then in the Parish next adjoyning his place of abode and all outlawries otherwise had shall be void XVIII The officer for making the exigent and Proclamations may take such fees for the same as are limited by the Statute of 6 H. 8.4 and the Sheriff for making the Proclamation at the Church-door shall have 12 d. XIX In real actions after summons upon the land 14 days at least before the return thereof Proclamation of the summons shall be made upon a Sunday in form aforesaid in the Parish where the land lies which Proclamation shall be returned with the name of the summoners XX. If the summons be not so proclaimed no Grand cape shall be awarded but an Alias and Pluries summons until a summons and Proclamation be duly made according to this Act. XXI Before allowance of a writ of errour or reversing of an outlawry by plea or otherwise the defendant in the original action shall put in bail to appear and answer the Plaintiff and also to satisfie the condemnation if the Plaintiff begin his suit before the end of two terms next after the allowance of the said writ or avoiding the Outlawry ☞ Extortion * I. West 1 26. 3 E. 1. No Sheriff or other Officer of the King shall take any reward to do his office but shall be paid by the King and if they do so he shall render the double and be punished at the King's will II. West 1.27 3 E. 1. Clerks shall not commit extortion in pain to lose the service of their Master for one year III. West 1.29 3 E. 1. Officers Cryers of fee and Marshals of Justices in Eyre shall not commit Extortion in pain to render the treble and to be otherwise punished at the King's will IV. Stat. 28 H. 6.5 Merchants being distrained or arrested by Officers of the Custom for undue charges and impositions may have their general actions of trespass against such offenders and shall in that case recover 40 l. dammages if they pursue their actions within two moneths V. If they pursue them not within that time any other may do it by Action of Trespass also wherein they shall also recover 40 l. dammages to be divided betwixt the King and such prosecutor Fairs and Markets I. THe Statute of Winchester cap. 6. 13 E. 1. Fairs and Markets shall not be kept in Church-yards II. Stat. 2 E. 3.15 No person shall keep a Fair longer then he ought to do in pain to have it seized into the King's hand until he have made fine for so doing III. Every Lord at the beginning of his Fair shall cry and publish how long it shall indure in pain to be grievously punished IV. Stat. 5 E. 3.5 Merchants after the Fair ended shall close their shops and sell no ware then after in pain to forfeit to the King the double value of the ware so sold whereof the prosecutor shall have a fourth part V. Stat. 27 H. 6.5 Fairs and Markets shall not be kept upon Ascention day Corpus Christi Whitsunday Trinity-sunday the Assumption of the Virgin Mary All-saints Good-friday nor any Sundays the four Sundays in Harvest onely excepted in pain to forfeit the wares so shewed to the Lord of the Franchise there VI. Howbeit they may be kept within 3 days next before or after the said days Proclamation thereof being made before-hand which is to be certified without fine or fee to the King And such as have by special grant sufficient days before or after the said Feast may keep them their full number VII Stat. 17 E. 4.2 No Steward of a Pipowder's Court shall hold plea upon any Action unless the Plaintiff or his Attorney in the presence of the defendant do first swear that the matter of the Declaration was done within the jurisdiction and time of the Fair. And yet the defendant may nevertheless profer an issue against such oath and if it be tried or the Plaintiff or his Attorney refuse to swear the defendant shall be discharged VIII If any
money shall be collected half-yearly within 6 days after the same shall grow due and acquittances shall be given by the Officers collecting it which shall be good discharges for the same and distress and sale of the goods of the party in case of non-payment rendring the overplus after the duty paid and necessary charges for levying it XIII Constables and other such officers shall pay in the money collected within 20 days to the High-Constables of the several hundreds and limits and shall have 2 d. in the pound for collecting the same and shall deliver in writing to the High-Constables the names of such persons as have paid and such as have not paid the same XIV The High Constables shall pay the moneys by them received within 10 days unto the High-Sheriffs deducting one penny in the pound for their pains and deliver the several returns which they received from the Constables aforesaid and the Sheriffs shall return the moneys received and the names of the defaulters into the Exchequer deducting 4 d. in the pound 3 d. whereof to the Sheriff for his pains and 1 d. to the Clark of the Peace which the said Clerk may recover by Action of debt XV. Proviso making the Sheriffs of London and Middlesex Surrey for that Burrough of Southwark and all other Sheriffs of Cities and Towns being Counties Collectors within their limits and the Constables and other Officers to deliver duplicates to the said Sheriffs and they enabled to levy the said moneys and give acquittances without fees and within 40 days to pay the same into the Exchequer with the names of defaulters where no distress is found deducting as to other Sheriffs and Clarks of Peace and the Officers of the Exchequer shall discharge persons paying without fees and issue and process against such as fail of payment where no distress can be found XVI This Revenue shall be duely answered into the Exchequer and shall not be lyable to or charged with any gift or grant and any Non obstante to the contrary shall be void and the grantee an accomptant to the King and the Court of Exchequer injoyned to issue out process accordingly XVII If any Action be brought against any persons for execution of any thing within this Act they may plead the general issue and upon Non-suit discontinuance or verdict against the Plaintiff the Defendant shall recover treble Costs XVIII Increase and decrease of Hearths and Stoves shall in like manner be accounted and returned by duplicates in writing into the Exchequer and there discharged upon decrease without farther pleading XIX No prosecution for any arrearages of this duty unless suit be commenced within 2 years after they become due XX. Proviso that no person who by reason of poverty is exempted from usual taxes be charged with any duties in this Act. XXI Proviso for exempting from payment all houses under 20 s. value per annum upon certificate by the Minister and Overseers of the poor to the 2 next Justices of the Peace XXII Proviso That none shall accept or procure any gift pension or grant from the King of this Revenue upon penalty to forfeit double the value thereof one moiety to be to the use of the poor to be recovered by the Church-wardens of the Parish the other Moiety to him that will sue for the same XXIII Proviso not to charge Blowing houses Stamps Furnaces Kilns private ovens nor Hospitals or Almeshouses not having 100 l. per annum of endowment XXIV The occupier of the Hearth for the time being shall be charged his Executors and Administrators and not the Landlord XXV No person indebted to the King for any the said duties shall be priviledged as a debtor to sue in the Exchequer or assign to the King any such debt XXVI Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 23. Certain Impositions upon Beer Ale and other liquors for the increase of the King's revenue during his Life See the Statute at large XXVII The same setled upon the King his heirs and successors for ever Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 24. XXVIII Stat. 15 Car. 2. ca. 14. Every inhabitant occupier of any house lodging c. shall upon notice after next Mich. Sessions give a true accompt in writing under his hand to the Constable of all the Hearths and Stoves in such house c. who shall with 2 other inhabitants of the Parish in the day time enter into such house and upon his own view compare and see if the same be truly made and indorse the said Account to what he finds upon his view and return the same to the High Constable together with a book or roll fairly written with 2 Colums one containing the names of the persons and number of hearths and stoves chargeable by the said Act the other the names of the persons and number of Hearths and Stoves not chargeable which being received and compared shall within 6 days be transmitted to the 2 next Justices of the Peace who are impowred to examine the said High-Constables and other Officers concerning the truth and faithfulness of their actings in the premisses which being done the said Justices are within 10 days to transmit the same to the Clark of the Peace who within 20 days is to engross the same to be kept in the County and within 2 moneths to engross and return duplicates signed by himself and 2 Justices of the Peace into the Exchequer XXIX Penalty for omitting to return every Hearth upon the occupier 40 s. XXX Constables and Officers neglecting their duty shall forfeit 5 l. XXXI High Constables neglecting to perform their duties 10 l. XXXII Constables and Officers changing or leaving their offices for that year are notwithstanding enabled and required to perform the duties in relation to the premisses and for every day they shall neglect to gather the moneys due shall forfeit 20 s. and such as shall gather and distrain for the same may call to their assistance any 2 sufficient Inhabitants XXXIII Sheriffs may appoint Deputies under the Seal of their Offices or their own hand and seals for collecting the said duties XXXIV Provided the Lord Treasurer and Chancellor of the Exchequer may give further allowance to the Clarks of the Peace for their pains in engrossing and returning duplicates into the Exchequer XXXV Stat. 16 Car. 2. ca. 3. Reciting the said defects in the former Acts. Enacted that the King his heirs and successors may make officers for receiving and collecting the duties upon Fire-hearths and Stoves by the former Acts and for viewing and numbring the same and for inspecting and examining the several Rolls Certificates and Returns made and to be made into the Exchequer in pursuance of the said Acts or any other thing belonging to the same which Officers accompanied with the Constable or Tything-man Treasurer or under-Treasurer or other publick or proper Officers of the Place who are required to attend upon this occasion in all Parishes and places where there are no Constables Tithing-men or other publick Officer
granted to end the quarrel and that as well in the Exchequer as elsewhere XIII Stat. 14 H. 6.1 Justices of Nisi prius have power to give their Judgments in cases of Felony and Treason as well upon acquital as attainder and thereupon also to award execution XIV Stat. 18 El. 12. The chief Justice of England upon issue joyned in the Kings Bench or Chancery and the chief Justice of the Common Pleas and chief Baron of the Exchequer upon issues joyned in their several Courts or in their absence two other Justices or Barons are made Justices of Nisi prius for the County of Middlesex and may sit in Westminster-Hall or in the Exchequer within the term or four days after for the trial of issues joyned in the said Courts respectively and triable in Middlesex aforesaid to prevent interruption of proceeding in the said several Courts during the term and for the better ease of the Free-holden of Middlesex Upon which trials Tales shall be granted and all other proceedings shall pass as upon Writs of Nisi prius triable elsewhere in the Country Non-plevin I. Stat. 9 E. 3.2 None shall lose their Land by reason of Non plevin Non-suit I. Stat. 2 H. 4.7 Where before Justices of Assise the parties are adjourned for some difficulty in law upon the matter found in this case the Plaintiff shall not be non-suited albeit the verdict passe against him Non-tenure I. Stat. 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.16 By the exception of Non-tenure of parcel no Writ shall abate but only for the quantity of the Non-tenure which is alledged Northumberland I. Stat. 23 H. 6.7 The Sheriff of Northumberland shall gather no more Head-pence there in pain of 100 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor Norwich * I. Stat. 33 H. 8.16 None shall buy within Norwich or the County of Norfolk any Worsted yarn spun in the said City or County but such as shall work it or cause it to be wrought in Norwich or elsewhere within the said County in pain to forfeit for every pound thereof otherwise imployed 40 s. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor II. None shall convey beyond Sea any Worsted-yarn spun in England in pain to forfeit 40 s. for every pound to be divided as aforesaid III. Stat. 1 E. 6.6 The Statute of 33 H. 8.16 is made perpetual IV. Hat-makers dwelling in Norwich may buy Worsted-yarn called Middl usse yarn as they have used to do notwithstanding the Statute of 33 H. 8.16 so as they imploy it in Hat-making within the said City V. Stat. 56 E. 6.24 None shall make Mats Coverlets or Dornecks by himself or others or use any of those mysteries in Norwich or Norfolk unless he be admitted so to do by the Major Recorder Steward and two Justices of Peace of that City or by four of them or have been apprentice to the said Mystery by the space of seven years VI. None shall make any Hats Dornecks or Coverlets in Norfolk but only in some Corporate or Market-Town there in pain to forfeit for every six Felts 10 s. for every Coverlet 3 s. 4 d. and for every six yards of Dornecks 6 s. 8 d. VII This Act shall not extend to the Inhabitants of Pulham in Norfolk VIII The Major Recorder Steward or Justice of Peace that takes a reward for admitting any to work shall forfeit 5 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor IX Stat. 1 2. P. M. 14. An Act for the making of Russets Sattens Sattens reverses and Fustians of Naples at Norwich and not elsewhere by which Act there is a Corporation made for that purpose and divers Articles concerning the same See the Act at large X. Stat. 39 El. 22. An establishment of the Bishoprick of Norwich and the possession thereof against a pretended concealed title made thereunto See the Statute at large ☞ Nusance I. West 2.24 13 E. 1. A Writ of Nusance shall be grantable as well against the Alienee as against the party that levied it and when it is against the party himself the Writ shall be Questus est nobis A. quod D. injuste c. Levavit domum murum mercatum alia quae sunt ad nocumentum c. But when against the Alien the Writ shall be Questus est nobis A. quod B. C. Levav●runt c. II. Stat. 6 R. 2.3 All Writs of Nusance called Vicomtiels shall be made at the election of the Plaintiff according to the old form or in the nature of Assizes determinable before the Justices of the one Bench or other or the Justices of assize to be taken in the County of the place assigned Oath I. SEe Magna Charta printed by Richard Tottle Anno Domini 1556. fol. 164. and 166. the Oaths of the King the Bishops the Kings Counsellors Escheators Sheriffs Majors and Bailiffs See the Oath Ex Officio Courts and Jurisdictions Ecclesiastical Numb IV. And see Title Quakers Numb I. Obligations I. Stat. 38 E. 3.4 Whereas divers people be bound in another Court out of the Realm by Instruments or otherwise it is accorded that all penal bonds in the third person be void and holden for none Odio Atia I. West 1.11 3 E. 1. Forasmuch as many being indicted of Murder and guilty thereof by favourable inquests taken by the Sheriff and by the Kings Writ of Odio Atia are replevied until the comming of the Justices in Eyre It is provided that from henceforth such Inquests shall be taken by lawful men chosen out by the oath of twelve men of whom two at the least shall be Knights who by no affinity with the Prisoners or otherwise are to be suspected ☞ Officers and Office I. Stat. 12 R. 2. The Chancellor Treasurer Keeper of the Privy Seal Steward of the Kings house the Kings Chamberlain the Clerk of the Rolls Justices of the Benches Barons of the Exchequer and all others called to name and ordain Justices of Peace Sheriffs Escheators Customers Controllers or any other Officer or Minister of the King shall be firmly sworn that they shall not name or ordain any Officers or Ministers for any gift or brocage favour or affection And none which pursueth by him or by other privily or openly to be in any such office shall be put in the same or any other but that they make all such Officers and Ministers of the best and most lawful and sufficient men in their judgments and knowledg II. Stat. 14 R. 2.10 No Customer Controller Searcher Weigher or Finder shall have any such Office for term of life but only during the Kings pleasure notwithstanding any Patent or grant to the contrary III. Stat. 17 R. 2.5 No Searcher Gauger Aulnager Finder or Weigher of Wools or other Merchandize Collector of Customs and Subsidies or Controller shall have their several Offices for ●●erm of life or years But such Offices shall remain in the Kings 〈◊〉 and under the governance of the Treasurer with the assent of the
they be that choose them Also Citizens and Burgesses shall be resiant in and free of the Cities and Boroughs for which they are chosen XI Stat. 6 H. 6.1 Knights of the Shires and Sheriffs against whom any Inquest of Office for undue Elections are found before the Justices of Assize shall have their answer and traverse thereunto and shall not be damnified thereby until they be duly convict thereof according to Law XII Stat. 8 R. 6.1 The Clergy called to the Convocation by the Kings Writ together with their Servants and Familiars shall fully use and enjoy such liberty or defence in coming tarrying and returning as the great men and Communalty of the Realm called to Parliament do or ought to enjoy XIII Stat. 8. H. 6.7 The election of Knights of the Shire shall be made by the more voices of people dwelling in the Counties having each of them Land or Tenements of the yearly value of 40 s. besides Reprises also the Knights so chosen shall be resiant within the same Counties XIV The Sheriff hath power to examine upon Oath the choosers how much they may expend by the year XV. If the Sheriff be found by Inquest and also attainted before Justices of Assize to have done contrary to this Act he shall forfeit 100 l. to the King and suffer a years imprisonment without Bail and in that case the Knights so returned shall lose their wages XVI He that cannot expend 40 s. per annum shall have no voice in the election of Knights for the Parliament and hereafter in every Writ issued out for that purpose mention shall be made of this Ordinance XVII Stat. 10 H. 6.2 A chooser of the Knights of Parliament must be resident and have free-hold worth 40 s. per annum besides Reprises within the same County XVIII Stat. 23 H. 6.11 The Sheriff in the next County Court after he shall have received the Writ for assessing the wages of the Knights of Parliament shall make Proclamation that the Coroners chief Constables Bailiffs and all others that will appear at the next County Court to assess the same wages at which last County the Sheriff and the other Officers shall be present in proper person in pain that every one that makes default shall forfeit 40 s. and then the Sheriff shall in full County assess every Hundred by it self and every Town in each Hundred by it self so as the sum assessed upon all the Hundreds exceeds not the entire charge of the County nor that assessed upon all the Towns in each Hundred exceeds not the sum charged upon the Hundred in which they be XIX The Sheriff or other Officer which levies more then is so assessed shall forfeit 20 l. to the King and 10 l. to the Prosecutor for the recovery of which 10 l. the said prosecutor shall have a Scire facia● and if the Defendant make default or appear and is afterward convict he shall recover the said 10 l. to his own use over and above the said 20 l. and besides treble damages for his costs of suit XX. The Sheriff shall levy the said Assesments as speedily as may be after they are so assessed and shall deliver them to the Knights XXI Justices of both Benches Justices of Assize Goal-delivery and Peace have power to hear and determine these abuses as well at the suit of the King as of the party XXII This Assessment shall not be levied but only in places where it hath been formerly levied and hereafter in every Writ for the levying of such wages this Act shall be inserted XXIII Stat. 23 H. 6.15 The Statutes of 1 H. 5.1 and 8 H. 6.7 shall be kept in all points XXIV The Sheriff after the receipt of the Writ shall deliver a precept under his Seal to every Mayor and Bailiff or Bailiffs or Bailiff where no Mayor is of the Cities and Burroughs within his County reciting the Writ and commanding them if it be a City to choose by Citizens of the same City Citizens and if a Burrough Burgesses to come to the Parliament And such head-Officers shall lawfully return such precept to the same Sheriff by Indenture betwixt them of such Elections and of the names of the Citizens and Burgesses so chosen and thereupon the Sheriff shall make a good return of every such Writ and also of every such return made by the said Head-Officers XXV If the Sheriff aforesaid do contrary to this Act or any other formerly made for the election of Knights Citizens and Burgesses the Sheriff shall incur the pain contained in the said Stat. of 8. H. 6.7 and besides shall forfeit to the person so chosen and not duly returned 100 l. more to be recovered by action of debt by the said person so chosen against the said Sheriff his Executors and Administrators or in his default by any other prosecutor in which Action no Essoin c. shall be allowed And if such Head-Officers shall make a false return they shall forfeit 40 l. to the King and 40 l. more to the person so chosen and not returned to be recovered by such person or other prosecutor in manner aforesaid XXVI The Sheriff that maketh not due election of Knights betwixt the hours of 8 and 11 in the forenoon and a good true return in manner aforesaid shall incur the pain of 100 l. to the King and as much to any that will sue for the same XXVII The party grieved shall commence his Action within three moneths after the beginning of the Parliament and in his default the prosecutor may then take it XXVIII If any Knight Citizens or Burgess returned by the Sheriff be put out and another put in his place the person so put in if he take the place upon him shall forfeit 100 l. to the King and as much to the person so put out who shall have an Action of debt for the same if he commence his Suit within three months after the beginning of the Parliament XXIX The Knights of the Shires shall be notable knights of the same County for which they are choser or else notable Esquires or Gentlemen born in the same Counties and such as are able to be knights but none shall be such a knight which standeth in the degree of a Yeoman or under XXX Stat. 6 H. 8.16 No Knight Citizen Burgess or Baron of any of the Cinque-ports shall depart from the Parliament without the licence of the Speaker and Commons in Parliament assembled to be entred upon Record in the Clerk of the Parliaments Book in pain to lose their wages XXXI Stat. 33 H. 8.21 The Kings Royal assent by his Letters Pattents under the Great Seal and signed by his hand and notified in his absence to the Lords and Commons assembled in the Upper House is and ever was of as good strength and force as if the King were personally present and had publickly assented thereunto XXXII Stat. 35 H. 8.11 Whereas Knights and Burgesses of Parliament in England and Wales have used to
made upon hearing of the cause 20 s. And for every other Certificate or Report of any order made upon petition or motion onely 10 s. To be paid by the party that takes out the Report or Certificate And if any master directly or indirectly receive any money see reward or promise otherwise or for any other matter in this Act then as aforesaid every such Master after legal conviction to be disabled from the execution of his office and forfeit to the party grieved so much money as he shall take contrary to this Act and moreover 100 l. one moiety to the King and the other to the party grieved that shall sue for the same And several Tables of the said Fees to be set up in the said office and in the Chappel of the Rolls that all parties may take notice thereof See Clerks of the Chancery Chelsey I. Stat. 7 Ja. 6. A College shall be erected at Chelsey and a trench shall be made to convey water from the river of Lee to London to maintain the same Chester and Cheshire I. Stat. 1 H. 4.18 If any inhabitant of the County of Chester commit murther or felony in another County process shall be made against him to the Exigent in the County where the offence was done and if he then flie into Cheshire the Exigent or Outlawry shall be certified to the Officers of Cheshire who shall thereupon take the offender and seize his lands and tenements and goods and chattels for the Prince's use the King shall also have his year day and waste likewise his lands and goods in other Counties shall remain forfeit to the King and other Lords having thereof Franchise The like process and proceeding shall be also had against the offender in battery or trespass so committed and his goods and chattels shall be forfeited to the King Prince or Lords respectively as aforesaid ☞ II. Stat. 27 H. 8.5 Justices of the Peace Quorum and Gaol-delivery are to be nominated and made in Chester and Wales by the Lord Chancellor or Keeper of the Great Seal of England in like manner as within the Realm of England which Justices shall certifie their extracts and the severall Sheriffs make their accounts as in the said Statute is directed III. The Justices and Clerks of the Peace shall have like fees as in England and inferiour Officers shall be attendant to the Justices ☞ IV. Stat. 32 H. 8.43 Sessions shall be kept by the Justices for the time being in the County of Chester twice in the year onely viz. at Michaelmas and Easter-Sessions and the old order of keeping the County-daies shall cease V. Stat. 33 H. 8.13 The Sheriff of the County of Chester shall keep his County-Court monethly in the Shire-Hall of the said County VI. The Justicer or his Deputy may keep their two Sessions at what time of the year they please so they cause them to be proclaimed 15 days before VII Stat. 34 H. 8.13 The County of Chester shall have two Knights and the City of Chester two Burgesses for the Parliament VIII No Writ of Course in the nature of a Protection shall be granted in the County Palatine of Chester IX Stat. 2 E. 6.31 All Recognisances of Statutes-Merchant c. acknowledged before the Mayor of Chester shall be good in Law X. Stat. 43 Eliz. 15. Fines may be levied before the Mayor of the City of Chester for lands lying there XI A Dedimus potestatem may be granted by the Mayor of Chester to take the acknowledgment of a fine XII Howbeit Fines taken before the Mayor may upon errour be reversed before the High Justice of the County Palatine of Chester Chimney-money Vid. Title King n. 8. Chirographers I. Stat. 2 H. 4.8 The Chirographer or his Deputy shall take but 4 s. for a fine in pain to forfeit his Office be judged before the Court suffer a year's imprisonment and pay treble dammages to the party grieved to be recovered before the Justices of the same Court Church-yard I. Stat. Nè rectores prosternant Arbores in coemeterio 35 E. 1. Parsons of Churches shall not cut down trees growing in the Church-yards unless for the necessary repair of the Chancel or in charity of the body of the Church See Title Fighting and quarrelling And see Arrests num 1 2 3. Citation I. West 2.43 13 E. 1. Hospitallers and Templers shall draw none into suit before the keepers of their privileges neither shall their keepers cite any to the prejudice of the King or Crown * II. Stat. 23 H. 8.9 None shall be cited to appear out of the Diocess or peculiar jurisdiction where he or she dwelleth except by some Ecclesiastical or other person within the Diocess or other jurisdiction whereunto he is so cited for some offence or cause committed or omitted contrary to right or duty or upon an appeal or other lawful cause or when the Judge dares not nor will not cause him to be cited or is any way party to the suit or at the instance of the inferiour Judge to the superiour where the Law civil or Canon doth allow it and all this in pain to forfeit double dammages to the party grieved and 10 l. to the King to be divided betwixt him and the prosecutor III. The Arch-bishop may cite for heresie in any Diocese within his Province upon consent or neglect of the Bishop or Judge there IV. This Act shall not restrain the jurisdiction of the Prerogative Court for Probate of Testaments V. The Ecclesiastical Judge shall take but 3 d. for a Citation upon the pains aforesaid Clap-board I. Stat. 35 El. 11. For every six tun of Beer exported the same Cask or as good or 200 of Clap-board fit to make Cask shall be imported or if they be transported into Ireland 200 of Shaffold-board which Clap-board or Shaffold-board by a Stranger shall be left here before the Beer be exported but by a Subject shall be left here or provided within four moneths after II. The Clapboard shall contain 3 foot 2 inches at least in length and the Cask shall be entred at the Custom-house III. The same Law for strangers that transport fish in Cask and the penalty of breaking their Laws is the forfeiture of the Beer Fish and Cask IV. None shall transport any Wine-cask with Beer or Beerager or Wine-cask shaken except for victualling of a Ship or other vessel or some of her Majestie 's Garrisons beyond sea in pain to forfeit 40 s. for every tun of Cask so transported V. This Act shall not prohibit the transportation of Herrings in Cask ☞ Clergy I. West 1.2 3 E. 1. A Clerk convict for felony and delivered to the Ordinary shall not be enlarged without due purgation II. Stat. De Bigamis 5. 4 E. 1. Bigamus shall not be allowed Clergy III. Artic. Cleri 15. 9 E. 2. A Clerk flying into the Church for felony shall not be compelled to abjure IV. Artic. Cleri 16. ● E. 2. The privilege of the Church being demanded
within ten years after such imperfections removed XIX All Actions upon the Case other then for slander actions for accompt other then such as concern Merchandize Actions or Trespass Debt Detinue Trover and Replevin shall be commenced within three years after this present Session of Parliament or within 6 years after the cause of such actions or suit and not after XX. All actions or trespass of Assault Battery Wounding and imprisonment shall be commenced within one year after this session or within four years after the cause of suit and not after XXI All actions upon the Case for words shall be commenced within one year after this present session or within two years after the words spoken and not after XXII Provided that if in any such actions judgment be given for the Plaintiff and the same be reversed by Error or a Verdict pass for him and upon motion in arrest of judgment it is given against him or if the Defendant be outlawed in the suit and after reverse the outlawry in these cases the Plaintiff his Heirs Executors or Administrators may commence a new Action within a year after such judgment reversed or given against the Plaintiff or outlawry so reversed and not after XXIII The right of Action in the cases abovesaid is saved to an infant Feme covert non compos mentis a person imprisoned or beyond Sea so as they commence their suits within the times above limited respectively after their imperfections removed Linne I. Stat. 26 H. 8.9 An Act for the repairing of the Town of Linne See the Statute at large ☞ Linnen Cloth * I. Stat. 28 H. 8.4 No person whatsoever shall put to sale any piece of Doulas or Lockeram unless the just length be expressed thereupon in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof to be divided betwixt the King and the seiser * II. Stat. 1 El. 12. None shall use any means whereby Linnen Cloth shall be deceitful or made worse for use in pain to forfeit the same to suffer a moneths imprisonment and to be fined by the Justices before whom he shall be condemned III. Justices of Oyer and Terminer and of Assize and Justices of Peace or any three of them 1 Quo. have power to hear and determine these offences ☞ IV. The Informer that shall at the next Sessions of the Peace after the seiser to be kept in the County where such seiser is made or before two Justices 1 Qu. make due information of the offence and seiser or procure the Offender to be there indicted and be bound by recognizances before the said Justices to pursue the same matter with effect and give evidence as of right appertaineth and pay the one moiety of what he recovers to the Sheriff or other accomptant for the Queen's use shall have the other moiety for his paines V. The Justices before whom these offences are tried shall by estreat certifie the forfeiture into the Exchequer See more title Mannufacture num III. Livery and Ouster le main I. Stat. De escheatoribus 29 E. 1. Where by Inquests taken before the Escheator upon the King 's writ returned it is found that nothing is holden of the King the Escheator shall be immediatly commanded by the King 's writ out of the Chancery to put from his hands the Lands so taken into the King's hands and if the Escheator have received any profit thereof he shall restore it Howbeit if the King's title may afterwards be made appear by remembrances in the Chancery Exchequer or elsewhere the Lands shall be reseised and the mean profits answered to the King and in such case Scire sacias shall issue out against the party to shew cause why they should not be reseised Vide Artic. super Cart. 28 E. 1. cap. 19. To the like effect as to the Ouster le main and rendring the mean profits when there is no cause of seisor II. Stat. 28 E. 3.4 Where the King's tenant after he hath had livery hath been charged with rents and other paiments become due after such livery for part of the time pro rata hereafter the Escheator shall be charged with the Casual and continual prosits which happen before the livery pro rata according to the time and the tenant shall receive certain paiments of rent c. which happen after the livery without any abatement thereof pro rata for the time ☞ Liveries of Companies and Retainers * I. Stat. 1 R. 2.7 None shall give liveries for maintenance of quarrels or other conspiracies in pain of imprisonment and grievous forfeiture to the King And the Justices of Assize shall diligently inquire of such as gather together in Fraternities for such purposes and shall punish them according to their demerits London I. Stat. de Gavelet 10 E. 2. The Lords of Rents in London may recover them by a writ of Gavelet in their Hoystings and in default thereof the Lands in demesne II. Stat. 28 E. 3.10 The Mayors Sheriffs and Aldermen of London shall cause errours defaults and misprisions there to be redressed in pain to forfeit for the first default 1000 marks for the second 2000 marks and for the third to have the franchise and liberty of the City seised And their defaults herein shall be inquired of by Inquests of Kent Essex Sussex Hertford Buckingham and Berks as well at the King's suit as of others that will complain III. The Maior Sheriffs and Aldermen being indicted shall be caused by due process to come before the King's Justices assigned thereunto out of the City and there shall be made to answer as well to the King as to the party grieved and their trial shall be by forein Inquests as aforesaid whereupon if they be attainted the said pain shall be levied upon them and the Plaintiffs also shall recover treble damages IV. In the prosecution of such suits the Constable of the Tower or his Lievtenant shall execute all processes in the City which process shall be by attachment distress and exigent and in the King's case the exigent shall be awarded after the first Capias returned but after the return of the third Capias at the suit of the party V. If they have lands out of the City process shall issue against them in the Countie where such lands be by attachment and distress VI. Every of them that appear shall answer particularly for himself as well at the peril of him that is absent as of himself VII This Ordinance shall extend to all other Cities and Boroughs throughout the Realm Howbeit the Inquests in such cases shall be taken by foreign people of the Counties wherein such Cities and Boroughs are scituate and the pains to beset upon them shall be adjudged by the Justices thereto assigned VIII Stat. 1 H. 4.15 The penalties of 1000 and 2000 marks imposed by the Statute of 28 E. 3. shall not be limited to a certainty but the penalties shall from henceforth be left to the discretion of the Justices thereunto assigned in
have allowed them viz. the Knights 4 s. and the Burgesses 2 s. a day or more during the Parliament and their reasonable time of comming to and returning from the Parliament together with their costs of Writs and other ordinary fees and charges by this Statute it is ordained that the Sheriffs of all the 12 Shires in Wales and the County of Monmouth shall have power to levy the said fees of the Inhabitants of those Shires and Counties and shall pay them to the Knights within two Moneths after the said Knights shall have delivered unto them their Writs de solutione feodi Militis Parliamenti in pain to forfeit 20 l. to be recovered by bill plaint c. and to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor and for every month that such default is made after the said two moneths 20 l. more to be levied as aforesaid The Head-officers also of the Cities and Burroughs in the said twelve Shires and County shall levy and pay their Burgesses wages and fees within the like time after the writs De solutione feodi Burgens Parliam delivered unto them upon the like pains to be levied of the goods and chattels of such Head-officers XXXIII The Inhabitants of the Cities and Boroughs in the said Shires and County which having no Burgesses of their own use to contribute towards the wages of the Burgesses of the Shire-Towns shall have warning by Proclamation or otherwise from the Head-officers of the said Towns to come and give their voices at the electing of the Burgesses of such Shire-Towns XXXIV Two Justices of Peace in each of the said Shires and County have power to tax every City and Burrough in the several Counties where they inhabit respectively towards the wages of the Burgesses within the Shire-Towns which taxes shall be again rated upon the Inhabitants of each such City and Burrough by four or six discreet and substantial Burgesses there and then levied and paid by the Head-officers unto the Burgesses of Parliament for the said Shire-Towns in manner and form aforesaid and upon the like pains XXXV Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 1. The Parliament begun the 3. of Nov. 16 Car. 1. declared to be dissolved And the Lords and Commons now sitting declared to be the two houses of Parliament XXXVI The Parliament begun at Westm 3. of Nov. 1640. declared to be Dissolved and that there is nor can be any legislative power in either or both Houses of Parliament without the King XXXVII Tumultuous and disorderly preparing Petitions Remonstrances to the King and Houses of Parliament having been a great occasion of the late Wars and calamities It is Enacted That no person hereafter shall sollicite or procure any Petition complaint Remonstrance Declaration or other address to the King or both or either Houses of Parliament for altering of matters established by Law in Church or State unless the matter thereof have been first consented unto and ordered by three or more Justices of the County or by the major part of the Grand Jury of the County or Division of the County where the same matter shall arise at the publick Assizes or general Quarter-Sessions Or if in London by the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Commons in Councel Assembled XXXVIII Provided this Act be not intended to hinder any persons not exceeding 10 in number to present any publick or private grievance or complaint to any Members after election and during continuance of the Parliament or to the King for remedy therein nor to any address to the King by all or any the Members of Parliament during their sitting XXXIX Stat. 16 Car. 2. cap. 1. The Act in 16 Car. 1. Entituled An Act for preventing of Inconveniencies hapning by long intermissions of Parliament Being in derogation of his Majesties just Rights and Prerogative inherent to the Crown for calling and assembling Parliaments Repealed And declared That Parliaments shall not be intermitted or discontinued above three years at the most and to be assembled and called oftner if need require Parson Vicar and Parsonage I. Stat. 14 E. 3. Stat. 1.17 Parsons Vicars Wardens of Chappels and Provost-Wardens and Priests of perpetual Chanteries shall have their Writs of Juris utrum of lands and tenements rents and possessions annexed and given perpetually in Almes to Vicarages Chappels or Chanteries and recover by other Writs in their case as far forth as Parsons of Churches and Prebends Partitions and Parceners I. Statutum Hiverniae 14 H. 3. If land descend to several Coparceners they shall all hold of the chief Lord of the Fee and not one of another This is the usage in England and shall also be observed in Ireland II. Prerog Reg. 5.17 E. 2. If one inheritance that is holden of the●ing in chief descend to many Parceners all the heirs shall do homage to the King and that Inheritance shall be divided amongst those Heirs so that every of them after shall hold their part of the King III. Stat. 31. H. 8.1 Joynt-tenants and tenants in common of any inheritance in their own right or in the right of their wives in any Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments may be compelled to make Partition by Writ De partitione sacienda as Coparceners are compellable to do and this Writ shall be pursued at the common Law IV. Provided that after such Partition made they shall have aid one of another and of their heirs to deraign warranty and to recover for the rate as Coparceners use to have V. Stat. 32. H. 8.32 Joynt-tenants and Tenants in common that have inheritance or free-hold in any Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments shall also be compellable to make partition by the said Writ to be pursued upon their case Howbeit such partition shall not be prejudicial to any but the parties to such partition their Executors and Assigns Passage and Arrivage I. Stat. 8. H. 6.27 Any of the inhabitants of Tewksbury in Com. Gloucestr may have an action of debt according to the Stat. of Winchester to recover against the communalty of the Forest of Dean and Hundred of Bledislow and Westbury though no Communalty recompence for robberies and wrongs done them upon Severn Also the goods of any private person may be taken upon an Execution awarded against the Communalty Any person may arrest and imprison the offenders and he whose goods are taken in execution may have an action of trespass or debt against the offender II. Stat. 9 H. 6.5 All persons shall have free passage in Severn with Flotes and Drags and all other Merchandize goods and chattels and if any be disturbed he shall have his remedy by action at the common Law III. Stat. 19. H. 7.18 Another stricter Statute for the free passage of Severn See the Statute at large IV. Stat. 23 H. 8.12 None shall interrupt the passage upon the banks of Severn or take or ask any tax or toll for the same in pain of 40 s. to be divided betwixt the King and the party grieved V. Stat. 26 H. 8.5 Justices
addition whereby the party may be known Neither shall any issues go forth against any person otherwise returned in the Original Pannel or Tales LXXIII No Sheriff Bailiff or other shall ●●●ie any Issues so estreated of any other person then of such as by the estreat ought of right to be charged therewith in pain that every Clerk who shall write or deliver or procure such estreat to be delivered or put in ure and every other person offending contrary to the meaning of this Act shall forfeit 5 Marks to the Queen and as much to the party grieved to be recovered by Action of debt c. LXXIV Justices of Oyer and Terminer Assize and Peace have power to hear and determine the offences aforesaid and to issue forth Process for the levying of the said forfeitures ☞ LXXV Stat. 27. El. 12. Every Under-Sheriff before he intermeddles with his Office shall before one of the Justices of Assize or the Custos Rotulo●um of the County or two Justices of the Peace there 1. Qu. take the oath of Supremacy which see in Crown and also the Oath hereafter written in pain to forfeit treble damages to the party grieved if he commit any Act contrary to the said Oaths or either of them LXXVI The Form of the other Oath is as followeth LXXVII J. A. B. shall not use nor exercise the Office of Under-Sheriff corruptly during the time that I shall remain therein neither shall or will accept receiv● or take by any colour means or device whatsoever or consent to the taking of any manner of see or reward of any person or persons for the empannelling or return of any Eaquest Jury or Tales in any Court of Record for the King or betwixt party and party above two shillings or the value thereof and such fees as are allowed and appointed for the same by the Laws and Statutes of this Realm But will according to my power truly and indifferently with convenient speed impannel all Jurors and return all such Writ or Writs touching the same as shall apportain to be done by my duty or office during the time that I shall remain in the said Office So help me God LXXVIII No Bailiff of Franchise Deputy or Clerk of a Sheriff or Under-Sheriff shall intermeddle with their several Offices before they have taken the said Oaths as aforesaid altering onely the termes of the Office in pain to forfeit 40 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor LXXIX Justices of Assize and Justices of Peace in Sessions have power to hear and determine the defaults and offences aforesaid and upon conviction to award process accordingly ☞ LXXX Stat. 29. El. 4. No Sheriff Under-Sheriff Bailiff of a Liberty or any of their Deputies shall either directly or indirectly take more for serving an Extent or Execution then after 12 d. for every pound under 100 l. and 6 d. for every pound above 100 l. in pain to forfeit treble damages to the party grieved and besides 40 l. betwixt the Queen and the prosecutor LXXXI This Act shall not extend to fees of Executions within Cities or Corporations LXXXII Stat. 43. El. 6. If any Sheriff or other taking upon him to break Writs do make any warrant for summons or upon any Writ Process or suit or for any arrest or attachment of body or goods against any person to appear in any of the Queens Courts not having the Original Writ or Process warranting the same upon complaint thereof to the Justices of Assize of the County where the offence was committed or the Judges of the Court out of which the Process issued the party so offending and all procurers thereof shall be sent for before the same Justices or Judges by attachments or otherwise and shall be examined upon their oaths concerning the same LXXXIII If the offence shall be confessed or proved by sufficient Witnesses the said Justices or Judges shall forthwith commit the offender to the Goal of the County or Court where he shall be examined from whence he shall not be enlarged until he have paid the party grieved 10 l. and all his Costs and Damages to be assessed by the same Justices or Judges and likewise 20 l to the Queen LXXXIV Stat. 21. Iac. 5. A Quietus est shall be a sufficient discharge for a Sheriff unless he be questioned within four years after the grant thereof LXXXV Every Officer or Minister that shall send out or cause to be sent out any Writ or Process or by whose default any Writ or Process shall be sent out contrary to this Act shall for every such offence forfeit and pay to the party grieved 40 l. and his costs and damages to be recovered by Action of debt c. LXXXVI Stat. 14. Ca. 2. Ca. 21. The unnecessary charges and tedious attendance in passing the accompts of Sheriffs being very burthensome it is Enacted that Sheriffs shall not keep Tables for receipt of any other then their own Family or Retinue nor shall send any Presents to any Judge of Assize nor give any gratuity to any Officer nor have more then 40 Men-servants nor under 20 in any County in England nor under 12 in Wales upon forfeiture of 200 l. for every default Proviso this clause not to extend to the Sheriffs of Middlesex and London nor Westmerland nor any Sheriff of a City and County or Town and County LXXXVII Sheriffs within England shall not be charged to answer any illeviable seisure Farm Rent Debt or other thing whatsoever which was not writ in process to them to be levyed and the persons Lands and Tenements of which the same is levyable particularly expressed but shall be discharged without Petition Plea or other trouble or charge whatsoever LXXXVIII All seisures made before 1 Jac. R. 1. and yet remaining upon the Sheriffs accompts and all seizures and debts pardoned are discharged and to be left out of their Accompts and no process to issue for levying the same nor any other Rent or Farm not particularly set forth or which hath been unanswered for 40 years past And all other dead Farms and seisures and all desperate illeviable and unintelligible debts shall be removed out of the annual Roll and Sheriffs charge into the exannual Roll there to remain until revived and made answerable by Commission LXXXIX The several remembrancers shall enrolle and certifie the Ingroser of the great Roll all debts chargeable upon Sheriff by their Returns into the Exchequer upon Writs of fieri fac levari fac Capias and other process and all Fines and Amercements upon Sheriffs already set before the first of Febr. 1662. And all Debts Fines and Amercements hereafter set before the first day of the next Terme after return of such Fines and Amercements set that so they may be charged and comprehended within the Quietus est upon pain of 40 l. upon the Officer for every default the one moyety to the King the other to the party grieved And none shall be Sheriff except he
execution of this Law in pain of 5 l. and to be bound to the good behaviour VII None shall transport such a Rogue out of Ireland Scotland or the Isle of Ma● being born in any of these places in pain to forfeit 20 s. to the use of the poor where he lands And if any then shall be hereafter found in England or Wales they shall suffer punishment and be conveyed the next way home as aforesaid or in case they came by Sea to the place where they landed from whence they are to be transported at the charge of that County to the place from whence they came VIII No impotent poor person shall pass to the Bath or Buxton without being licensed to pass by two Justices of Peace where they dwell and provided with relief both for their journey and abode there and shall also return within the time limited by their license in pain to be reputed and punished as Rogues and the City of Bath or Town of Buxton shall not be chargeable with any such IX Justices of Peace of the Counties shall not intermeddle in Cities or Corporations but only the Officers of the same who shall have like power there as the said Justices have in Counties X. This Act shall not extend to restrain the power which the City of London hath in the Government of Saint Thomas Hospital in Southwark or to prejudice any jurisdiction or inheritance of John Dutton of Dutton in the County of Chester Esquire XI The forfeitures and fines which shall accrue by this Act other then that above otherwise limited shall be imployed for the maintenance of houses of Correction or the relief of the poor where the offence shall be committed at the discretion of the said Justices of Peace and may be levied by warrant under the hands and seals of two Justices of Peace by distress and sale of goods And here the confession of the offender or proof by two witnesses before two such Justices shall be sufficient conviction XII Two Justices of Peace one of Quorum shall have full power to hear and determine all causes which may come in question by reason of this Act. XIII The Lord Chancellor or Keeper for the time being shall have power to make Commissioners to enquire of money given towards the erection or maintenance of houses of Correction stocks for poor or other such like uses XIV A Seafaring-man suffering shipwrack not having wherewithal to relieve himself and having a Testimonial under some Justice of Peace his hand and seal near the place where he landed declaring the time and place of his landing the place of his dwelling or birth unto which he is to pass and the time limited for his passage may in the direct way home and within the time so limited for his passage ask and receive necessary relief without incuring the penalties of this Act. XV. This Act shall not extend to children under seven years old nor to glass-men which travel without begging by licenses under the hands and seals of three Justices of Peace one Quorum of the County through which they travel XVI Stat. 39 El. 17. Wandring Souldiers and Mariners and all others wandring as Souldiers or Mariners which will not settle themselves to work or have not a Testimonial under the hand of some one Justice of Peace near the place of their landing setting down the place where they landed the place whither they are to pass and the time of their passage or having a Testimonial exceed the time therein limited above fourteen days or counterfeit Testimonial or produce one which they know to be counterfeit shall in all these cases suffer as Felons without benefit of Clergy XVII Justice of Assize Goal-delivery and of Peace in their Sessions have power to proceed against these offenders as in case of Felony without Clergy unless some sufficient man allowed by the Justices will enter into Recognisance of 10 l. to the Queen to retain the offender for one whole year and to bring him to the next Sessions of Peace and Goal-delivery after the year ended And if he within the year depart that service without license he shall afterwards suffer as a Felon without Clergy XVIII Souldiers and Mariners which fall sick in their passage home shall be excused though they exceed the time limited in their Testimonial so that they perform this Act in convenient time after their recovery XIX If when they come home they cannot get work the two next Justices upon their complaint shall take order that they may be provided of work or otherwise shall tax the whole Hundred for their relief untill work may be had XX. The Souldier or Mariner licensed by a Justice of Peace to whom he shall make his poverty known having not wherewith to bear his charges home may ask and take relief so it be in his direct way home and within the time limited by his license XXI These offences shall cause no corruption of blood XXII Stat. 1 Jac. 7. Noble Personages shall authorize none to go wandring abroad and Glass-men shall be reputed and used as Rogues notwithstanding the Statute of 39 El. 4. XXIII Instead of banishing an incorrigible Rogue or committing him to the Gallies as was ordained by 34 El. 4. he shall in open Sessions be branded in the left shoulder with a burning iron having a great Roman R. upon it as broad as a shilling And from thence shall be sent to the place of his last dwelling if that cannot be known to the place of his birth After which time if he offend again he shall suffer as a Felon without benefit of Clergy XXIV Every person that seeth or knoweth any Rogue to beg shall convey or cause him to be conveyed to the next Constable or Tything-man in pain of 18 s. to be levied and imployed as the forfeitures of 39 El. 4. and in default thereof then by the Lord of the Leet or his officer in like manner as the persons authorized by the said Statute should have levied and imployed the same And here also if the Constable or Tything-man do not punish him according to that Statute he shall forfeit 20 s. to be also levied and imployed as by the same Statute is appointed XXV This Act shall not prejudice the jurisdiction or inheritance of John Dutton of Dutton in the County of Chester Esquire XXVI Stat. 7 Jac. 4. There shall be an house of Correction provided in every Shire to set Rogues and other idle people to work XXVII The Justices in Sessions shall from time to time appoint a Governour for the said house who shall have power to set such Rogues and idle people to work and to punish them by moderate whipping or putting fetters or gives on them which rogues and idle persons shall not be chargeable to the Country nor have other allowance than what they shall deserve by their own labour XXVIII The said Justices shall at least twice every year within their several divisions and oftner if
2.3 Merchants and Workers of clothes called single Worsteds may transport Bolts thereof whither they please except to the Kings Enemies paying the Customes and Subsidies due for the same without paying the duties of Calais So as under colour thereof they transport no double Worsteds half double Worsteds Worsteds ray or Motley in pain to forfeit the same * II. Stat. 7 E. 4.1 The Worsted-weavers in Norwich shall yearly upon Monday after Pentecost choose four of the same craft to be their Wardens for that City and likewise those of the County of Norfolk shall then also choose four of the same craft there to be their Wardens for the said County which Wardens shall take their oaths before the Mayor of Norwich and the Steward of the Dutchy of Lancaster if the Steward be then resident in the said County otherwise before the Mayor alone III. The said Wardens have power for the year next ensuing to survey the Workmanship of the Artificers of that craft whether or no they work well and make their work of good stuff and likewise to make Ordinances for the amendment of the said Worsteds and craft All which Ordinances shall be obeyed and kept by the said Artificers in pain to be punished by four of the said Wardens either in City or County respectively calling to them six other such Artificers at the discretion of the said Mayor and Steward or one of them IV. Also the lengths and bredths of Pieces of Worsted are here set down For which see the Statute at large V. No Lambs-wooll shall be put in Worsteds And the said Wardens have power to seize all such clothes and stuff being defective VI. The Mayor and Stewards aforesaid have power to hear and determine all offences committed against the said Ordinances and at convenient times to call together the said 12 Artificers to be sworn to make search of the stuff and work wrought and made by the said Wardens and if they be found defective either in their office or work to punish them as other Artificers VII The Wardens have also power to make such search in the Counties of Suffolk and Cambridg as well as in Norwich and Norfolk VIII Defective Worsteds shall be forfeit viz. in Norwich the one half thereof to the Mayor there or in Corporations or other places to the chief Officers or Lord of the Mannor and the other half to the said Wardens And Worsted-weavers shall set their proper marks woven upon their Stuffs in pain to forfeit them to the King IX The faid 8 Wardens shall yearly upon Munday next after Corpus Christi assign one two or more places in Norwich and as many in Norfolk and certain days by the week to the end that the Worsteds to be put to sale that year may be brought before the said Wardens to be searched and if they find them well made they shall set a mark thereupon without fee that the buyer may know which are well searched wrought and made of good stuff But if they shall find them defective the said Mayor and Steward or one of them shall impose such correction for such default as to them shall seem meet And the price of every piece of Worsted sold not marked shall be forfeited by the first seller thereof X. All Mayors Bailiffs and other Officers shall be aiding and assistant to the said Wardens in their search as often as they shall be required by the said Wardens or any of them so to do XI Stat. 11 H. 7.11 Citizens of Norwich may take to apprentice the son or daughter of any person XII Stat. 5 H. 8.4 None shall dry calander any Worsteds in pain to forfeit for every piece 5 l. Neither shall any wet calander any Worsteds unless he have served 7 years as an apprentice in that Trade and be approved by the Mayor of Norwich and the two Masters of that Craft in Norwich or Norfolk upon the like pain of 5 l. for every piece calandred contrary to this Act. Which said forfeitures shall be divided betwixt the King and the said Masters of the Craft of wet calandring XIII Stat. 14.15 H. 8.3 A long Statute for Worsted-weaters in Yarmouth and Linne The Election Oath and Authority of a Warden for Yarmouth Every person shall mark his Worsteds Sayes c. with his several marks The Election Oath and Authority of a Warden for Linne Every Worsted-weaver in Linne shall be an English-man born and shall have his proper mark A Warden of Norwich or Norfolk shall come to Lynne when there is no Warden there and his allowance by the day of his charge in coming thither What names or additions the parties grieved shall use in their actions whereupon the particular bodies of the Wardens or Inhabitants may be put in execution Clothes marked by Wardens of Linne or Yarmouth may be lawfully put to sale What apprentices Worsted-weavers in Linne and Yarmomth may take This Statute shall not be prejudicial to the Mayor of Norwich or the Wardens there None shall sheer dye or calander any Worsteds Sayes c. save only in Norwich Neither shall any such Stuffs be transported before they be so shorn dyed and calandred See the Statute at large XIV Stat. 25 H. 8.5 The Statute of 5 H. 8.4 is made perpetual and none that dieth Worsteds Stamins or Sayes shall use to calander them in pain to forfeit for every Piece 40 s. to be divided into three parts whereof the King is to have one the Mayor of Norwich another and the Prosecutor the third Wreck I. West 1.4 3 E. 1. Where a man dog or cat escape alive out of the Ship neither the Ship or other vessel nor any thing therein shall be adjudged wreck but the goods shall be saved and kept by the Sheriff Coroners or the Kings Bailiffs and delivered to the Inhabitants of the Town where the goods are found so that if any within a year and a day sue for those goods and after prove that they were his at the time of the Shipwrack they shall be restored to him without delay But if not they shall be seized by the said Sheriff Coroners or Bayliffs for the Kings use and shall be delivered to the Inhabitants of the Town who shall answer before the Justices for the Wreck belonging to the King II. Also where the Wreck belongeth to another he shall have it in like manner and if any be attainted to have done otherwise he shall suffer imprisonment make fine to the King and yield damages also III. If a Bayliff do it and it be disallowed by his Lord the Bayliff shall answer for it if he have whereof but if not the Lord shall deliver his Bailiffs body to the King IV. Prerog Reg. 11. 17 E. 2. The King shall have wreck of the Sea Whales and great Sturgeons taken in the Sea and elsewhere throughout the whole Realm except in places priviledged by the King Writs and abatements of Writs I. West 2.24 13 E. 1. Pars inde Where in
Artificers that will sue for the same * VII Stat. 13 Eliz. 14. The Statute of 12 E. 4. confirmed VIII All Merchant-strangers bringing wares from the East-parts as well as from the 27 Hanse-towns shall be bound by the said Statute of 12 E. 4.2 under the pains therein contained to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor Brass Laten Copper Bel-metall Pewter c. * I. Stat. 19 H. 7.6 None shall sell or change Brass save onely in open Fairs and Markets or in their own houses except they be desired by the buyer of such wares in pain of 10 l. II. None shall cast or work brass or pewter but according to the goodness of metal wrought in London in pain to forfeit the one moiety thereof to the King and the other to the finder III. Hollow ware of pewter called Lay-metall shall be wrought after the assise of Lay-metall in London and shall be marked in pain to forfeit the said wares or being sold the price thereof which shall be divided as aforesaid IV. None shall use in the selling of brass or pewter any false beams or weights in pain to forfeit 20 s. to be divided as above and in case he be not able to pay it he shall be by the Head-officer committed to the stocks till the next Market-day and then stand upon the Pillory V. Searchers of brass and pewter in every City and Borough shall be appointed by the Head-officers of the same and in every County by Justices of Peace at their Mich. Sess and in default of searchers in Cities and Boroughs any other person skilful in that Mystery by over-sight of the Head-officers may take upon him the search of defective brass which shall be equally divided as aforesaid VI. Stat. 4 H. 8.7 The Stat. of 19 H. 7.6 is confirmed And besides it is enacted that in Cities and Boroughs search of defective tinn and pewter shall be made by the Wardens of the Craft of Pewterers and in Towns where no Wardens are searchers shall be appointed by the Head-officers there which said defective ware shall be forfeited and divided as in the former Statute VII Stat. 25 H. 8.9 None shall buy or take by way of exchange any wares made of tinn or pewter out of the Realm in pain to forfeit them and also the value thereof in money VIII Officers may search and seize wares brought into this Realm contrary to this Act. IX No stranger born shall work any pewter or tinn in England in pain to forfeit the same X. No Pewterer shall teach his Trade in a forein Nation in pain to lose the priviledge of an Englishman XI Licenses and Placards to wandring Braziers and Pewterers shall be void XII The penalty of 10 l. mentioned in 19 H. 7.6 and those likewise of this present Act shall be equally divided betwixt the King and the finder XIII Stat. 33 H. 8.4 The Statute of 25 H. 8.9 is made perpetual XIV None shall withstand the search of brass tinn pewter c. in pain of 5 l. to be divided as in the former Statute XV. Stat. 33 H. 8.7 None shall convey out of this Realm Brass Copper Laten Bell-metal Pan-metal Gun-metal or Shrooff-metal clean or mixed Tin and Lead onely excepted in pain to forfeit the double value to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XVI The landing thereof in forein parts shall be tried and determined in the County where it was shipped XVII None shall transport such metall from one part of the Realm to another before he hath acquainted the Customer where the Ship is with the true weight thereof and also give him bond to the King's use of the double value thereof with condition to land it in some part of the Realm in pain to forfeit the same in manner and form aforesaid and shall also within eight moneths after bring from the Customer of the place where he lands it a certificate of the landing thereof which Customer shall give him or his Factor such certificate without delay XVIII The Customer that makes a false certificate in such case shall lose his place and the value of the goods so concealed XIX If the goods be diminished by tempest enemies or pirates upon due proof thereof made to the Customer by the party his executor or c. his bond shall be re-delivered or otherwise discharged XX. Stat. 2 and 3 E. 6.37 The penalty of 10 l. for every thousand weight is added to the forfeiture of the double value of metall transported contrary to the Stat. of 33 H. 8.7 XXI Also 10 l. for every thousand weight shall be added to the double value of the goods and the total thereof put into the Bond to be made to the Customer according to the Stat. of 33 H. 8.7 which Bond if it want a date the Customer shall forfeit his place and the value of the goods shipped XXII If any Officer of the Ship suffer any such metall to be shipped and do not disclose it within three days he shall forfeit the double value thereof or if any Customer or searcher having notice thereof do not seise it to the King's use he shall lose his office and the value of the metall XXIII None shall lade such metall but where there is a Customer in pain to forfeit 10 l. and the metall XXIV The forfeitures are to be divided betwixt the King and prosecutor XXV The Statute of 33 H. 8.7 in all points not altered by this is confirmed Breakers of Leagues and Truce I. Stat. 2 H. 5.6 In every port beside the Cinque-ports there shall be a Conservator of the Truce worth in land 40 l. per annum at least who by the King's Letters Patents and the Admiral 's Commission shall have power to enquire of by inquest and inflict punishment for offences done upon the Sea against Truce and false conducts in like manner as the Admirals have heretofore used to doe Howbeit the death of a man is reserved to the Admiral II. The Conservator hath power to award processes against the offenders viz. Capias and Exigent wherein the additions of the parties indicted shall truly be inserted and also by himself or his Lievtenant to hear and determine differences betwixt party and party concerning Truce and false conducts III. The Conservator shall have two men learned in the Law joyned in Commission with him as his associates and both he and they shall be sworn to take no fee gift c. save of the King onely and if any be offered them that they forthwith discover it to the King or his Councellor in pain of imprisonment and fine IV. The Conservator shall be resident upon the place where he is appointed Conservator and shall have for his fee 40 l. per annum at least and a Seal of the King 's proper for his Office V. Every Master of a Ship and Owner too if he be present shall before he departs the Port be sworn before the Conservator not to attempt any
no Essoin Protection or Wager of Law shall be allowed See more under the Title of Calves and Cattel And see Tanner n. 25. Also see Title Victuallers Butler of the King I. Stat. 25 E. 3. cap. 21. The Steward of the house and Treasurer of the Wardrobe shall give notice how much wine shall be taken by the Butler or his Lievtenant in every Port which number shall not be exceeded II. A Certificate shall be made by the Mayor and Bailiffs there under their seals by Indenture betwixt them and such takers of wine to the said Steward and Treasurer how much wine is so taken III. If the Butler or his Lievtenant take more wine or any reward or delay any by colour of his office as by arrest he shall forfeit double dammages to the party grieved lose his office be imprisoned and be ransomed at the King's will * IV. Stat. 43 E. 3.3 The King's Butler or his Lievtenant shall take no more wine then he shall be commanded in pain to be imprisoned and ransomed at the King's will and after ten days the merchant may sell the residue notwithstanding their arrest ☞ Butter and Cheese I. Stat. 3 H. 6.4 The Lord Chancellor may grant licence under the Great Seal to any to convey Butter and Cheese to any other place besides the Staple which then was of Calais II. Stat. 18 H. 6.3 Butter and Cheese may be conveyed to any place out of the Realm being in the King's amity without licence * III. Stat. 3 and 4 E. 6.21 None except Inholders and Victuallers in their houses shall buy any Butter or Cheese to sell again save onely by retail in open Shop Fair or Market and so not above a Wey of Cheese or a Barrel of Butter at one time without fraud in pain to forfeit the double value to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor * IV. Stat. 21 Jac. 22. The Statute of 3 and 4 E. 6.21 and so much of the Statute of 5 and 6 E. 6.14 as concerns the buying and retailing Butter and Cheese which see in Fore-stallers shall not extend to the retailers of Cheese in London Westminster or Southwark having served seven years in that Trade not uttering above four wey of Cheese or four barrels of Butter at one time without fraud V. Justices of Peace in Sessions have power to restrain the retailing of Butter and Cheese during which restraint those that rerail shall be liable to the penalties of 3 and 4 E 6.21 and 5 and 6 E. 6.14 * VI. Stat. 14 Car. 2. ca. 26. Every kilderkin of Butter shall contain 132 pound the Cask 20 l. the Firkin 56 of good butter the Pot 14 pound besides the Casks and Pots and Farmers shall use no fraudulent dealings in packing weighing with unwarrantable weights mixing old bad and decayed butter with new or whey butter or unreasonably salting the same and a cask of butter shall be of the same sort upon pain of forfeiture of the value of the butter false packed and six times the value of what shall be wanting in weight VII Cheesemongers and others selling butter shall deliver the full quantity of Kilderkins Firkins Casks and Pots and the due quality thereof and none shall repack butter for sale upon forfeiture of the double value for such repacking VIII Farmers and others shall pack their butter in sufficient and well-seasoned Casks which shall be marked with the first letters of the Christian-names and Surnames of the sellers and the weight of the butter upon penalty of forfeiture of 10 s. for every 100 weight of butter not so marked IX Potters shall mark their pots with their names and the weight of the Pot and set the first letter of their Christian name and Surname at length upon pain for every default 12 d. and farmers shall not sell butter packed in other pots upon pain of 2 s. for every default X. Offences against this Act shall be heard and determined in the Sessions of the Peace for the County City or liberty where committed by action of Debt Indictment Information or Presentment and one half of the penalty to the poor of the Parish where the offence is committed to be paid to the Church-wardens or Overseers the other half to the Prosecutor XI All Suits upon this Act shall be commenced within 4 months after the sale of such butter Cables Halsors and Ropes I. Stat. 21 H. 8.12 AN Act for true making of Cables Halsors and Ropes in Burport and within five miles thereof See the Statute at large * II. Stat. 35 Eliz. 8. None shall make or cause to be made any Cables of old stuff which shall contain seven inches in compass in pain to forfeit four times the value of every Cable so made neither shall any tar or cause to be tarred any Halsors or other Cordage made of old stuff being of lesser Assise nor put the same to sale in pain to forfeit the treble value of every such Cable Halsor or other Cordage of lesser Assize then seven inches made and tarred as aforesaid III. The said forfeitures are to be divided betwixt the Queen and the prosecutor ☞ Calves and other Cattel I. Stat. 3 and 4 E. 6.19 No Cattel shall be bought but in open Fair or Market and those not sold again in the same Fair or Market in pain to forfeit the double value II. No Butcher shall buy any Cattel and sell the same again alive in pain to forfeit them * III. Stat. 2 and 3 P. and M. 3. He that keepeth above 120 sheep or 20 beasts upon every pasture-ground apt for Milch-kine and not commonable shall yearly for every 60 sheep or 10 beasts keep one Milch-cow and for every 120 sheep or 20 beasts rear up one Calf in pain to forfeit for every Cow or Calf not so kept or reared 20 s. viz. the one half to the King and Queen and the other to the prosecutor if he commence his suit within one year after the offence committed IV. Justices of Peace in Sess have power to hear and determine the breach of this Statute V. This Act shall not binde such as keep sheep or feed beasts onely for their own provision VI. Stat. 7 Jac. 8. The Statute of 2 3 P. and M. 3. shall also extend to grounds which since the said Act have been or shall be made several See more Title Butchers Cambridge and Cambridge-shire I. Stat. 34 35 H. 8.24 An Act for the assurance of certain lands to John Hinde then Serjeant at Law and his heirs paying yearly 10 l. toward the charges and wages of the Knights of the Parliament for Cambridge-shire for ever II. Stat. 35 H. 8.15 An Act for paving the streets in Cambridge See these Statutes at large ☞ Captains and Souldiers I. Stat. 5 R. 2.10 The Covenants of such as shall serve the King in his Wars or Embassies shall be recorded in the Exchequer as also the repeal of their retinue to the end a just account may be
until the next Quarter-Sessions at which the more part of the Justices may allow him a pension which the Treasurers shall pay him quarterly until it shall be revoked or altered by the said Justices And this allowance to him that hath not born Offices shall not exceed 10 l. to an Officer under a Lievtenant 15 l. to a Lievtenant 20 l. XXX When Souldiers or Mariners arrive far from the place where they are to receive relief the Treasurers there shall give them relief and testimonial whereby they may pass from Treasurer to Treasurer until they shall come to the place required and this shall be done upon the bare Certificate of the Commander and Captain although they have not as yet obtained any allowance thereof from the said Muster-master or Receiver general of the Muster-rolls XXXI The Treasurers shall register their Receits and Disbursments and enter the names of the parties relieved and also the Certificate by warrant whereof the disbursments are made the Muster-master also or Receiver aforesaid shall register the names of the parties and the Certificates by him allowed and the Treasurer returning or not allowing the Muster-master's Certificates shall thereupon subscribe or endorse the cause of his disallowance XXXII Justices of Peace in Sess have power to fine a Treasurer that wilfully refuseth to give relief which any two of them appointed by the rest may levy by distress and sale of goods XXXIII A Souldier or Mariner that begs or counterfeits a Certificate shall suffer punishment as a common Rogue and shall lose his pension if he have any XXXIV The surplusage of this contribution shall be imployed by the more part of the Justices in Sessions upon charitable uses according to the statutes made for relief of the poor and punishment of Rogues XXXV In Corporations the Justices there shall put this Act in execution and not the Justices of the County and shall be liable to fines as well as other Justices if they misuse their power therein and shall appoint a Collector of this tax which shall have the power and be subject to the penalties limited by this Act to High-Constables of the Counties XXXVI The forfeitures accruing by this Act shall be imployed as the surplusage abovesaid or otherwise kept in augmentation of the stock as the more part of the Justices in Sessions shall direct XXXVII When out of the County where the party was prest a fit pension cannot be satisfied it shall be supplied by the Counties where he was born or where he last dwelt by the space of 3 years XXXVIII This Act shall not prohibit the City of London to make a tax if need require differing from that above limited so that no Parish pay above 3 s. weekly nor above or under 12 d. weekly one Parish with another XXXIX Stat. 13 Car. 2. ca. 6. The command and disposing of the Militia and 14 Car. 2. ca. 3. all the forces by Sea and land and Forts and places of Strength declared to be in the King and neither or both Houses of Parliament can or ought to pretend any power to levy war offensive or defensive against the King his Heirs or lawful Successors Provided this Act be not taken to extend to give or declare any power for transporting or compelling any of the subjects to march out of this Kingdom otherwise then by the Laws thereof ought to be done XL. Stat. 14. Car. 2. ca. 3. The same again declared and that the King his Heirs and Successors may issue forth Commissions of Lievtenancy for the several Counties and places of England and Wales and town of Berwick upon Tweed impowering them to call together persons and them to arm and form into Regiments and lead and conduct and employ them as his Majesty shall direct as well within the several Counties and places where they be commissionated as into other Counties for suppressing all Insurrections Rebellions and Invasions XLI The Lievtenants impowered to commissionate Officers and to present the names of such persons as they shall think fit to be Deputy-Lievtenants and upon the King's approbation to give them Deputations accordingly which his Majesty his Heirs or Successors may notwithstanding displace XLII In absence of the Lievtenants the Deputy-Lievtenants o● any two of them may train exercise and lead persons so armed to the intents hereafter expressed XLIII The Lievtenants or Deputy-Lievtenants the major part of them being 3 at least may charge persons with horse or foot-arms where their estates lie not exceeding the limitations in the Act viz. 1. None to be charged with horse unless he have a revenue of 500 l. per annum or 6000 l. in goods or money 2. None to be charged with foot-arms not having 50 l. per annum or 600 l. in goods nor shall he be charged with horse and foot in the same County 3. None that find or contribute towards a horse shall find any foot-arms and two or three may be joyned in finding an horse-arms 4. No person not having 100 l. per annum shall be contributary to a horse-arms 5. The Lievtenants and Deputy-Lievtenants or any three of them impowered to hear and redress complaints and examine witnesses upon oath 6. Two shillings per diem shall be allowed an horse and 12 d. per diem a foot-souldier 7. The Lievtenants or any three Deputy-Lievtenants may set rates for furnishing ammunition or other necessaries not exceeding in any one year a fourth part of 70000 l. 8. In cases of Invasion or Insurrection every souldier is to be provided of one moneth 's pay but no person to be charged further until the said moneth 's pay be reimbursed him 9. Lievtenants Deputy-Lievtenants and Chief-officers may charge horses carts and carriages for ammunition allowing 6 d. a mile to every cart with 5 horses and 1 d. the mile for a horse 10. Mutineers may be punished by mulcts not exceeding 5 s. or imprisonment not exceeding 20 days 11. The Lievtenants or 3 Deputy-Lievtenants may impose and levy penalties not exceeding 20 l. upon every person charged and refusing to furnish arms and imprison any person that shall imbezil arms until satisfaction and fine any horse-armes not appearing upon summons 20 s. and any foot-arms 10 s. and upon persons charged and not sending in their horses upon summons 5 l. to be levied by distress and sale of the offender's goods 12. And for discovering the abilities of persons chargeable and misdemeanours in hindrances of the service the Lievtenants or any 3 Deputies may examine any person upon oath other then the parties assessed and accused XLIV The Lievtenants may appoint Treasurers and clerks who are to account for money received every six moneths and to certifie the same to the King 's Privy councel and duplicates thereof to the Quarter-Sessions XLV Deputy-Lievtenants shall obey and execute the directions of the Lievtenants XLVI The Lievtenants or any two Deputy-Lievtenants may imploy any persons with the assistance of a Commission-Officer and Constable or other Parish-officer to
Commissioners for paving and mending the streets who are enabled to call the Commissioners for Hackney-coaches to accompt for the same VI. All Fines Rents Forfeitures and Penalties due to the Commissioners upon this Act shall be levied by distress by Warrant under the hands and seals of any 5 of the Commissioners and for want of distress by Imprisonment of the persons untill satisfaction Coals I. Stat. 16 17 Car. 2. cap. 2. After the 6th of March 1664. all sorts of Sea-coals brought into the River of Thames and sold shall be sold by the chaldron containing 36 bushells heaped and according to the bushell sealed for that purpose at Guild-hall London and so proportionably II. All other Coals commonly sold by weight after 112 pound to the hundred upon pain of forfeiture of all the Coals otherwise sold or exposed to sale by any Woodmonger or retailer of Coals and the double value thereof to be recovered in any Court of Record or by complaint to the Lord Mayor of London and Justices of the Peace within the City and liberties or any two Justices of the Peace of the several Counties where such Coals shall be exposed to sale who upon due pro of upon oath may convict the offenders and give Warrant under their hands and seals for levying the forfeitures one half to the person complaining the other half for the poor or repairing high-ways within the same parish or any other adjoyning parish by their direction or Warrant III. The said Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen of London and Justices of Peace in their several Counties or any 3 of them whereof one of the Quorum may set rates or prices upon such Coals to be sold by retail allowing competent clear profit to the retailer IV. If any ingrosser or retailer refuse to sell as aforesaid they may appoint officers or other persons to enter into any Wharf or Place where such Coals are stored and if refused taking a Constable force entrance and sell the said Coals at such rates rendring the money to the ingrosser or retailer necessary charges deducted This Act to continue 3 years next and to the end of the next session of Parliament and no longer V. Provided no person be sued upon any other Act for the same offence and that the general issue may be pleaded by the defendant to any action upon this Act and upon verdict for the def or that the plaintiff be nonsuit to have dammages and double costs VI. Provided that no person having any interest in any Wharf used for receiving or uttering Coals or trading by himself or in any others name in engrossing or selling Coals shall intermeddle in setting the prices thereof Collectors I. Stat. 18 H. 6.5 None appointed to be a Collector of a fifteen in a City or Borough shall be also Collector in the same County unless he may dispend in the County out of such City in lands 5 l per annum above all reprises II. Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 18. An Act for relief of Collectors of publick money and their assistants and deputies Commission and Commissioners I. Stat. 42 E. 3.4 Commissions of Inquiries shall be made to the Justices of the one Bench or the other Justices of Assize Justices of Peace with others of the most worthy in the Countrey save in the Office of the Escheatorship II. Stat. 4. H. 4.9 If any be distrained by Writ out of the Exchequer for not returning a Commission which never came to their hands the Chancellor of England calling to him some of the Justices and the chief Baron if need be hath power to give remedy therein III. Stat. 7 H. 4.11 Commissioners not receiving a Commission shall be discharged thereof upon oath IV. The Barons of the Exchequer have power to administer the oath and to discharge them thereupon V. The Barons of the Exchequer and the Justices of either Bench have also power by Dedimus potestatem to receive such oaths in the Country and the Justices shall make certificate thereof into the Exchequer and thereupon also the Barons shall discharge the Commissioners their heirs executors and land-tenants VI. Such oaths are not to be taken but in case of Commissions of Oyer and Terminer and of inquiry and certifying onely Common Pleas. I. Magna Charta 11. 9 H. 3. Common Pleas shall not follow the Court but shall be holden in some place certain II. Artic. super Chart. 4. 28 E. 1. Common Pleas shall not be holden in the Exchequer contrary to the form of the Gre● Charter Common Prayer See Religion Conditions I. Stat. 32 H. 8.34 Grantees of Reversions may take advantage of conditions and covenants against Lessees of the same lands as fully as the Lessors their heirs or successors might have done II. Lessees may also have the like remedy against the grantees of Reversions which they might have had against their lessors or grantors their heirs or successors all advantage of recoveries in value by reason of any warranty in Deed or Law by Voucher or otherwise onely excepted Confirmation I. Marlbr 5. 52 H. 3. The Great Charter and that of the Forest shall be duely observed and inquired of before the Justices in Eyre and the Sheriffs in their Counties and the offenders shall be grievously punished by the King II. Stat. 25 E. 1. cap. 1 2 3 4. The Great Charters are confirmed judgments given against them shall be void they shall be read in all Cathedral Churche●● and Excommunication shall be pronounced against the breakers of them III. Artic. super Chart. 1. 28 E. 1. The Great Charter and that also of the Forest shall be duly observed IV. They shall be read four times in the year in a full County-Court viz. at the Counties after Mich. Christm Easter and St. John Baptist V. There shall be three Knights or other substantial men chosen by the Commonalty in every County to hear plaints concerning the Charters and to determine them without such delay as is used at the Common Law but they shall not in their proceeding prejudice the Common Law or the Charters VI. They shall have their power by the King 's Writ under the Great Seal and the Sheriffs and Bailiffs shall be attendant upon them VII Stat 1 E. 3.1 The Great Charter and that of the Forest shall be duly kept and put in execution See Ann. 2.4.5.10.14 28.31.36.37.42 45 E. 3. cap. 1. 50 E. 3. cap. 2. and Ann. 1.2 Stat. 2.5.6 Stat. 1. cap. 1.7 cap. 2.8 12 R. 2. cap. 1. also Ann. 1.2.4.7.9 13 H. 4. cap. 1. likewise Ann. 4 H. 5. cap. 1. VIII Stat. 10 E. 3.1 All Statutes not repealed shall be kept and put in execution See also 28.36.37 38 E. 3. cap. 1. and 1.2 Stat. 2.35.6 cap. 1.7 cap. 2.8.9 12 R. 2. cap. 1. and 15 R. 2. cap. 1. and 1.2.4.7.9 13. 4 H. 5. cap. 1. IX Stat. 42 E. 3. If any Statute be made contrary to Magna Charta or Charta de Foresta it
power to examine the Customers in that case and to punish them if they finde them faulty But note that these two last Statutes are now out of use * V. Stat. 5. 6 E. 6.19 None shall give or take any more for the exchange of coin then the true value thereof amounteth unto in pain to forfeit the mony so exchanged or suffer one years imprisonment and to be fined at the King's pleasure and the said forfeiture is to be divided betwixt the King and seizer or prosecutor Eschequer I. Stat. Scaccarii 51 H. 3. All Bailiffs Sheriffs the Justices of Chester Receivers of Wards and Escheats and other Officers shall account in the Exchequer to the Treasurer and Barons there and all Sheriffs Farmers Bailiffs of Franchises and others that ought to come to the profer of that Court the Monday after Mich. and the Monday after the Utas of Easter shall then pay in their Farms Rents and Issues and upon default they shall there remain until payment or agreement made for the same and in case of absence they shall be amercied II. Then also shall the Sheriffs and Bailiffs pay in their summons of the Exchequer and be then also ready to make account for the things aforesaid and if the Bailiffs fail to do it their bodies shall remain in Ward of the Sheriffs and the Sheriff shall levy the King's debts by himself or his own Bailiffs where the Bailiffs of the Franchises fail to do it III. The Justices of Chester shall have day to accompt from year to year in Quind Paschae and the Bailiffs thereof in the Monday of Easter Utas IV. All Sheriffs except of Westmerland Lancaster Worcester Rutland and Cornwal shall keep all Wards and Escheats belonging to the King and shall be answerable for the issues thereof in the Exchequer at the terms aforesaid and at their turns they shall finde office of such things as belong to the King and which are not used to be found before the Escheaters with as little grievance of the people as may be And shall seize such Escheats as fall to the King in fee and shall without delay certifie the King thereof V. The King shall assign three able persons to survey and finde yearly the Wards and Escheats aforesaid which the Sheriffs shall let to farm for the King 's best advantage VI. The Sheriff of Cumberland shall be Escheater in Westmerland and Lancaster the Sheriff of Nottingham in Rutland the Sheriff of Glocester in Worcester and the Sheriff of Devonshire in Cornwal and shall safely keep the King's Wards and Escheats in those Counties and at the terms aforesaid shall be answerable for the issues thereof in the Exchequer as well as for those of their own Counties VII The said Surveyors shall approve and mannage the King's demesnes and shall be answerable for the issues thereof and the Farmers shall be chargeable to the principal Approvers and they in the Exchequer yearly the Munday after Ascention day VIII Also the Collectors of the Custom of the Wooll shall account and pay yearly in the Exchequer at the two Terms aforesaid IX The Keeper of the King's Wardrobe shall also account yearly at the feast of S. Margaret X. The Treasurer and Barons shall prefer the taking of these accounts before any other business to be heard in Court except it concern the King 's own debt XI One Sheriff shall not be received to accompt during anothers account nor until the first acconntant hath paid all his mony XII The Constable Marshall Chamberlain and other that are of fee in the Exchequer shall present to the King such as are of good fame to execute their offices and for whom they will answer XIII No Deputy-officer without the licence of the Treasurer and Barons shall be there received unless he be sworn and if he commit any trespass and be not able to satisfie the punishment inflicted his superiour shall be answerable for it XIV The Officers of the Wool-staple shall make oath to certifie the Treasurer and Barons or some of them or if need require the King himself of all defaults and offences committed in the Woolstaple XV. About the feast of S. Margaret and before the close of the Exchequer search shall be made whether any Sheriff or Bayliff have failed to account that year and if any be a remembrance thereof shall be made in the Roll and if it be a Sheriff his account shall be first heard after Michaelmas but if a Bayliff he shall be summoned or distrained to account at a certain day XVI The Surveyors of the King's works shall be chosen by the oath of 12 men and of such as may best attend that Office and are sufficient to answer the King if need be and shall swear that they bear lawful witness and if the Treasurer or Barons suspect the sale allowances of charges or the like the truth thereof shall be inquired and he that is attainted shall answer the King as much as the allowances amounteth unto shall suffer a year and forty dayes imprisonment and be further punished at the King's pleasure and the Surveyors shall be also punished for their consent and here he that concealed any thing wherewith he is chargeable shall be punished as well as he that admitted such false allowances XVII All Justices Commissioners and others shall deliver into the Exchequer yearly after Michaelmas the estreats of fines and amerciaments taxed before them and the Exchequer shall estreat them out in the summons to all Counties except the estreats in Eyre which shall be delivered immediately after the Eyre made XVIII Stat. de Rutland 10 E. 1. From henceforth the bodies of Shires shall not be written in several Rolls but in a certain annual Roll by themselves which shall be read every year upon the accounts of Sheriffs XIX The remanents of the ferms shall be written by later dates in the annual Rolls and the Sheriffs shall be charged therewith in which remanents Liveries Alms assigned and other allowances if Sheriffs have had any of the issues of their Bailiwicks by the King's Writs shall be allowed and to the end the King may not be abused in such allowances the Treasurer and Barons shall certifie the Chancellor the due allowances and the Writs of allowances shall be made according to such certificate XX. Also in those annual Rolls shall be written the Sheriff's terms the profit of Counties the ferms of Serjeanties Asserts Cities Burrows Towns and other ferms whereof there is answer yearly made in the Exchequer In them likewise shall be written all debts determined gross debts and all other debts that seem to be clear Howbeit new duties shall not be written therein but those debts whereof there is hope of payment and whereof the Sheriff is answrable and debts found in the originals XXI Of dead ferms and desperate debts whereof there is no hope one roll shall be made intituled Comitatus and shall be read yearly upon the Sheriff's account and the debts there
to be made and also 5 l. for every moneth he shall so continue II. None shall make sell or cause to be made or sold any thing of Felt but Hats nor any cap of any wollen cloth not knit nor dye or cause to be dyed any Cap with bark or swarfe but onely with Copperas and Gall or with Woad and Madder III. None shall full in any Mill any Cap until it be first well scoured and closed upon the bank and half thicked at least in the foot-stock IV. The Master and Wardens of Haberdashers in London calling to them one of the Company of Cappers and another of the Hat-makers shall have power to search in London and within three miles round all Cappers and Hatters and to punish them that offend by fines or othewise as they do other offenders in that Company The like also shall be done by Mayors and other Head-officers in other Cities and Corporations elsewhere V. No Hat-maker shall retain above two apprentices at once take any for less time then seven years in pain to suffer for every apprentice otherwise taken a moneths imprisonment without bail and every such taking shall be void and the party so taking shall be from henceforth disabled to have any more apprentices then one VI. This Act shall not restrain a Felt or Hat-maker to imploy his own children nor extend to the making of Hats with Worsted yarn in Norwich * VII Stat. 1 Jac. 17. The forfeitures and penalties given by the Statute of 8 El. 11. and also by this present Statute shall be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor VIII None shall make or cause to be made any Felt or Hat unless he hath served seven years as an apprentice in Felt-making neither shall he retain any other then Journey-men who have lawfully served in that art and apprentices lawfully bound to the same nor have above two apprentices at once nor those for less time then seven years in pain to forfeit five pounds for every moneth he offends contrary to this Statute IX None shall retain in the art of Hat or Felt-making any person born out of the King's Dominions in pain to forfeit five pounds for every moneth he so continues him X. This Act shall not prohibit parents lawfully excercising the said art to imploy their sons in their own houses so that they be bound apprentices by Indenture for 7 years which may not expire until they attain the age of 22 years XI Felt-makers at the time of this Statute and their servants may so continue albeit they have not served seven years as apprentices ☞ Havens Harbours and Rivers I. Stat. 2 H. 6.15 None shall fasten Trinks or other Nets over Rivers to the destruction of the frie of fish and disturbance of the common passage of vessels in pain to forfeit 5 l. to the King Howbeit they may use them in seasonable times so they draw them as other fishers do their nets without fastning them as aforesaid And here every man's right of fishing is saved II. Stat. 4 H. 7.15 The Mayor of London and his successors shall have the like conservation and authority in all the issues breaches and ground overflown as far as the water ebbeth and floweth grown out of the River of Thames as touching the punishment for using unlawful nets and engines as he hath within the same River * III. Stat. 23 H. 8.8 27 H. 8.23 Two several Acts were made to the same effect for preservation of the Havens and Ports of Plimouth Dertmouth Tinmouth Falmouth Fowet and other Ports in Devon and Cornwall and that none should labour in Tinworks neer the fresh Rivers of those Havens and those who labour in Tin-works should prevent the falling of stones and gravel into those Havens upon a forfeiture Also if any should be troubled in the Stannery for executing this Act such suite should be void ☞ and if any should be imprisoned by the Stannery he should be discharged by a Justice of Peace saving the liberties of the Stanneries See the Statutes at large * IV. Stat. 23 H. 8.18 No Fish-garthes or other engines shall be set in Owse or Humber and with what nets men shall fish there See this Statute at large * V. Stat. 27 H. 8.18 If any person do or procure any thing to be done to the annoying of Thames making of shelpes there by mining digging casting of dung rubbish or other thing therein or otherwise howsoever Or convey away any boards stakes timber-work pillers or other things from the banks or walls thereof except it be to repair them or undermine any banks or walls there to the damage of the said River he shall forfeit for every such offence 5 l. to the King and the Mayor and Commonalty of London to be recovered by the said Mayor and Commonalty VI. This Act shall not restrain the taking of ballast for ships in the shelpes neer the Thames nor to carry away the gravel earth or rubbish found in the said shelpes See also this Statute at large VII Stat. 31 H. 8.4 The Mayor and Bailiffs of Excester may break all weares and other lets in the River of Exe and shall pay to the owners and Fermors of so much ground as they shall digge the rate of 20 years purchase or so much as shall be adjudged by the Justices of Assize in the County of Devon See this also at large * VIII Stat. 34 H. 8.9 None shall cast or unlade out of any ship or vessel in any Haven Rode Channel or River flowing or running to any Port Town City Burrough or other Town any ballast rubbish gravel or other wrake or filth but onely upon the land above the full Sea-mark in pain of 5 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor IX Stat. 27 El. 20. It shall be lawfull for the Mayor and Commonalty of Plimouth to dig a trench 6 or 7 foot broad through all grounds lying betwixt Plimouth and any part of the River of New for conveying that River thither and to repair it and to do all other things necessary for the same they paying the owners and farmers of the grounds so to be digged the value thereof to be assessed by two Justices of Assize Howbeit that water shall not be conveyed through any Orchard Garden or to the hindrance of any Mill without the owners consent X. Stat. 27 El. 21. An Act concerning Oxford Haven in Suffolk XI Stat. 27 El. 22. An Act for making a new channel from the City of Chichester to the suburbs there See these two last Statutes at large XII Stat. 3 Jac. 18. An Act for the making of a new trench to convey the water from Cadwell and Amwell to London XIII Stat. 4 Jac. 12. An Act for the explanation of the Stat. of 3 Jac. 18. and to give power to the Mayor and Commonalty of London to convey the said water in a trunk or vault XIV Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 27. An Act for repairing of Dover Harbour
are not compellable to keep their Sessions above twice in the year notwithstanding the Statute of 12 R. 2.10 yet may they keep them oftener if need be at their discretions XVIII Stat. 18 H. 6.14 None except men learned in the Law or inhabiting Corporations shall be Justices of Peace unless their Lands be worth 20 l. per annum XIX If any be put into the Commission not having Lands to that value and do not within one moneth after notice thereof acquaint the Lord Chancellor therewith or do fit or make any warrant by force of such Commission he shall forfeit to the King 20 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XX. Stat. 3 H. 7.1 Justices of Peace shall at the next general Sessions certifie recognizances taken for keeping the Peace where if the party being called do not appear those Recognizances shall be certified into the Chancery King's Bench or Exchequer XXI Stat. 4 H. 7.12 The King commandeth all Justices of Peace diligently to exercise their office to the end that his people by that means living in peace and injoying their own husbandry may flourish He also chargeth all both poor and rich that shall suffer any grievance from others wherein a Justice of Peace may intermeddle that they forthwith make complaint thereof to the next Justice of Peace and having no remedy there to the Justices of Assize if it be not long before their coming into that Country but if it be then to the Chancellor for the time being and then the King will send for the Justice so neglecting his duty and in case he shall finde him guilty thereof will cause him to be put out of the Commission and otherwise punished according to his demerits and this Statute shall be proclaimed at every Quarter-Sessions in pain that every Justice there present when it is not so proclaimed shall forfeit to the King 20 s. XXII Stat. 2. 3 P. M. 18. A new Commission of the Peace or Gaol-delivery for the whole County shall not be a supersedeas to a former like Commission granted to a City or Town-Corporate being no County Keeper of the Great Seal of England I. Stat. 5 El. 18. THe Authority Preheminence and advantages of the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal and of the Lord Chancellor are declared to be the same to all intents constructions and purposes King I. Stat. 13 Car. 2. ca. 1. What shall be High Treason against the King during his Majestie 's life Vid. Title Treason num XXXIX II. If any person or persons during the King's life shall maliciously and advisedly publish or affirm the King to be an Heretick or a Papist or that he endeavours to introduce Popery or shall maliciously and advisedly by Writing Printing Preaching or other speaking express publish utter or declare any words sentences or other thing or things to incite or stir up the people to hatred or dislike of the person of his Majesty or the established goverment then every such person being legally convicted shall be disabled to have injoy or exercise any place office or promotion ecclesiastical civil or military or any other imployment in Church or State other then his Peerage and shall likewise be lyable to such further punishment as by the Common laws and Statutes of the Realm may be inflicted in such cases III. If any person shall maliciously and advisedly by writing printing preaching or speaking publish declare or affirm that the Parliament begun at VVestminster the 30th of Novemb. 1640. is not dissolved or not determined or that it ought to be in being or that there lies any obligation upon him or any other person from any Oath Covenant or Engagement to endeavour a change of Government or that both or either houses of Parliament have a Legislative Power without the King or any words to the same effect Such persons so offending shall incur the Penalty of a Praemunire mentioned in the Statute of 16 R. 2. IV. The Solemn League and Covenant declared an unlawful Oath and to have been illegally imposed upon the Subjects And all Ordinances of either or both Houses of Parliament for imposing Oathes Covenants or engagements levying Taxes raising forces or armes without the King's assent or by Commission were and are and shall be void Provided the said Ordinances and Orders may be made use of according to the Act of Indemnity 12 Car. 2.11 V. Provided no person be prosecuted for any offence in this Act other then High Treason unless it be by order of the King his heirs or Successors under their sign Manual or of the Privy Council directed to the Attorney general or some of the King's Council for the time being nor unless such prosecution be within six moneths and the Indictment within three moneths after such prosecution VI. Proviso for privilege of debate in Parliament touching repealing or altering of Laws or redressing publique grievances VII Provided no person be indicted arraigned condemned convicted or attainted for any Treasons or Offences aforesaid but by Testimony of two lawful witnesses upon oath brought in person face to face who shall openly avow upon oath what they have to say against the person accused concerning the Treason or offences contained in the said Indictment unless the party shall willingly without violence confess the same VIII Provided no Peer be tryed for any Offence against this Act but by Peers and every Peer convicted of any Offence against this Act be disabled during life to sit in Parliament unless his Majesty shall please to pardon him and upon pardon granted to any Peer or Commoner convicted of any Offence against this Act the party pardoned shall be restored to all intents and purposes as if never convicted IX Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 10. For setling an additional Revenue upon the King for better support of his Crown and dignity Every dwelling house and other edifice and all lodgings and Chambers in the Inns of Court Inns of Chancery Colledges and other societies that are or shall be within England VVales and Town of Barwick other then hereafter excepted shall be charged with the annual payment for every Fire-hearth and Stove 2 s. per annum and payable at Michaelmas and our Lady-day by equal parcels half yearly for ever X. Owners and occupiers of such houses and chambers shall give a true account thereof in writing of all the Hearths and Stoves in them to the Constables and Tithing-men within their several Parishes and Constables and other such Officers shall require an account of them of all Hearths and Stoves in their Houses and in default may enter and view the same and for every false return the party offendng shall forfeit 40 s. XI The said Constables and other such Officers shall deliver the accounts of their Returns at the next quarter-Sessions after the last of May 1662. And the Justices of the Peace shall cause the said accompts of Hearths to be enrolled and a duplicate thereof returned into the Exchequer XII The said Hearth
whereunto title is made is lawful X. Proclamations shall be made at the Assizes of the Statutes made against Maintenance Champerty Embracery and unlawful retainers XI The offenders against this Act shall be prosecuted within one year ☞ Malt. I. Stat. 17 R. 2.4 Malt made in the Counties of Huntingdon Cambridge Northampton and Bedford and brought to London for the provision of the Court and City shall be well cleansed from dust and other filth and Mayors Bailiffs and Wardens of Towns and places where it is sold have power to make search and to see such defaults redressed * II. Stat. 2 E. 6.10 None shall imploy less time in the making and drying of Malt except in the moneths of June July and August then three weeks and in those moneths less then 17 days nor put to sale any Malt mingled of good and bad in pain to forfeit for every quarter so put to sale 2 s. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor III. None shall put any Malt to sale before by treading rubbing and fanning it he shall have conveniently taken out of every quarter half a peck of dust or more in pain to forfeit 20 d. for every quarter otherwise sold to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor IV. Justices of Peace in Sessions and Stewards in Leets have power to hear and determine these offences as well by presentment of twelve men as by information of two witnesses V. Bailiffs and Constables of Towns and places where faulty Malt is made or mingled as aforesaid have power to make search for it and being found with the advice of a Justice of Peace to make sale thereof at their discretions VI. None shall be punished by this Act who onely maketh Malt for his own provision nor unless the Action be prosecuted within one year ☞ VII Stat. 39 El. 16. Justices of Peace in Sessions have power at their discretions to restrain the superfluous number of Malsters and also of the buyers of Barley to be converted into Malt. VIII If any person shall be convicted by the testimony of two Witnesses or his own confession to have disobeyed the restraint aforesaid they shall suffer three days imprisonment without bail and shall there remain untill they shall before some Justice of Peace become bound by recognizance in 40 l. to obey the said restraint IX Justices of Peace in the County shall not execute this Law within Corporations but onely the Justices and chief Officers of the same Corporations X. Such as have Barly of their own growing tith-corn or rent-corn may convert it into Malt notwithstanding this Statute XI Malsters shall not meddle with the execution of this Act. XII Stat. 3 Jac. 11. When Malt is at 16 s. the quarter Beer may be transported to the King's Allies in Cask And the impost shall be 8 s. and the Custom 18 d. for a subject but for a Stranger 10 s. and 22 d. half peny XIII This Act shall not infringe the Statute of 35 El. 11.1 Jac. 25. or any other Statute made for the bringing in of Clapboard Cask or Scaffold board Manufactures * I. Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 13. An Act prohibiting importation of forein Bone-lace Cutting Imbroidery Fringe Bandstrings Buttons and Needle-work II. Justices of the Peace may cause search to be made for any of the said Wares imported contrary to this Act. See the Act at large III. Stat. 15 Car. 2. cap. 15 Stat. 3. Any person Native or Alien may freely set up or use the trade of breaking or dressing of Hemp Flax making of Threed Twine or Nets for Fishery or of Storing of Cordage and the trade of making any fort of Tapistery IV. All foreiners bonâ fide using the said trades in England Wales or Barwick by 3 years and taking the oathes of Allegiance and Spuremacy before 2 Justices of the Peace next dwelling who are impowred hereby to administer the same shall enjoy all previledges as natural born subjects V. All foreigners which shall exercise any the said trades by vertue of this Act shall not pay any other taxes or impositions then as natural born subjects unless they use Merchandise into foreign parts in which case they shall pay such customs as Aliens for 5 years next ensuing and no longer Merchants Merchandise I. Magna Charta 30. 9 H. 3. Merchant-strangers shall have safe conduct of coming into going out of and remaining in England to buy and sell without being exacted upon by excessive tolls except in time of war if they be of our enemies Countrey And albeit they be so yet so long as our Merchants be used well there they shall have the like usage here II. Stat. 9 E. 3.1 Merchant-strangers may freely buy and sell within the Realm without disturbance except they be alien enemies III. If any disturbance or abuse be offered them or any other Merchant in a Corporation and the Head-Officer there do not upon request provide remedy the Franchise shall be seised into the King's hand and the disturber being thereof attainted shall answer double damages to the party grieved suffer one years imprisonment and be ransomed at the King's will IV. If the disturbance be out of a Franchise and the Lord there or his Bailiff Constable or other Chief Ruler do not upon request provide remedy he shall being attainted thereof render double damages to the party grieved and the disturber being also thereof attainted shall also suffer one whole years imprisonment and be ransomed at the King's will V. Howbeit Merchants-aliens shall carry no wines out of this Realm VI. This Law shall be strictly observed throughout the Realm notwithstanding any Charter Franchise or Custom to the contrary saving to the King his due Customs VII The Chancellor Treasurer Justices assigned by commission to hold pleas and others by special commission from the King shall have power to hear and determine these misdemeanors VIII Stat. 14 E. 3. Stat. 2.2 All Merchants except enemies may safely come into England with their goods and Merchandize tarry and return paying the customs and subsidies IX Franchises and free customs reasonably granted to Cities Towns and Burroughs are saved X. Stat. 25 E. 3. Stat. 4.2 The Statute of 9 E. 3.1 is confirmed and all Statutes Charters Letters Pattents Proclamations Commandements Usages Allowances and Judgments to the contrary are repealed and made void XI All Merchants may freely sell their commodities without challenge or impeachment of any Officer or other notwithstanding any franchise grant or custom to the contrary XII The King may assign Justices to inquire of such as offend this Law and to inflict punishment upon them according to the said Statute of 9 E. 3. XIII Any that will sue against any such offender may have a writ out of the Chancery for that purpose XIV Stat. Stapul 27 E. 3. Stat. 2.2 A safe conduct is granted to Merchant-Strangers except alien enemies to come and dwell in this Realm and to return when they please as also to sell their
of Peace in the Counties of Glocester and Sun merset in Sessions shall bind Keepers of Ferriers over Severn by Recognizance with good Sureties that they shall not transport any passenger or cattel out of England into Wales or the Forrest of Dean or from either of those places into England before Sun-rising or after Sun-set unless such as they know and will answer for And besides the parties so offending shall there by incur fine and imprisonment VI. Stat. 2. and 3. P.M. 16. At the first Court of Aldermen in London next after the first of March out of the Watermen betwixt Gravesend and Win sor there shall be 8. chosen for Overseers which shall have power to keep good order amongst the rest VII Two Water-men shall not carry any but where one of them hath exercised that profession two years before that time and hath been allowed by the greater part of the said Overseers under the known Seal in pain to be committed to one of the Counters by the said Overseers for one moneth or for less time as the offence shall deserve VIII No single man which is no housholder nor retained as an Apprentice or as a servant for one year at least shall exercise that profession betwixt the places aforesaid in pain of like punishment IX The Lord Mayor and Aldermen of London and the Justices of Peace within the Counties adjoyning to the River of Thames upon complaint of any two of the Overseers or of any Watermans Master have power not onely to hear and determine any offences committed against this Act and to enlarge any Waterman unjustly punished by the said Overseers but likewise to inflict punishment upon the Overseers themselves in case they unjustly punish any person by colour of this Act. X. A Wherry that is not two foot and a half long and 4 foot and an half broad in the Mid-ship and sufficient to carry two persons on one side right shall be forfeit in which case the King and Queen shall have the one Moity and the Informer the other XI The Water-man that withdraws himself in time of pressing it being proved by two witnesses before the said Mayor Aldermen or Justice and two of the said Overseers shall suffer a fortnights imprisonment and shall be prohibited to row any more upon the Thames for a year and a day after XII The Overseers shall not onely call the Water-men before them direct them and register their names but likewise examine their Boats before they be lanched whether they have due proportion and goodness according to this Act. XIII If the Overseers refuse or neglect their Office they shall forfeit 5 l. whereof the King and Queen shall have the one Moity and the informer the other XIV The Court of Aldermen shall assess the fares of Watermen which being subscribed by two of the Privy Council at least shall be set up in Guild-Hall Westminster-Hall c. And the Water-man that takes more then according to the Fare so assessed shall for every such offence suffer half a years imprisonment and forfeit 40 s. to be divided as before XV. Stat. 1. Jac. 16. No Water-man shall retain any servant or Apprentice unless he himself hath been an Apprentice to a Water-man by the space of five years before and not an Apprentice under the age of 18 years or for less time then seven years in pain to forfeit for every such offence 10 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XVI This Act shall not restain Water-mens Sonnes of convenient growth and strength and formerly trained up in rowing but that they may be allowed to serve as Apprentices and to carry passengers from place to place at the age of 16 years XVII The eight Overseers shall yearly upon the first of March and the first of September cause openly to be read in their common Hall all their Orders made or to be made in pain that every of them for every such default shall forfeit 20 nobles to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XVIII Stat. 21 Jac. 32. The River of Thames shall be made Navigable for Barges Boats and Lighters from the Village of Bercot in the County of Oxon unto the University and City of Oxon See the Statute at large Patents I. Prerog Reg. Cap. 65.17 E. 2. The Kings gift or grant of Land or Manor cum pertinentiis conveyeth not Knights Fees Advowsons or Dowers without express words II. Stat. 11. R. 2.8 All annuities and other things given or granted by the King his Father or Grandfather with this Clause Quousque prostatu suo aliter duxerimus ordinandum shall be void if other things have been afterwards accepted by the Grantees thereof III. Stat. 1 H. 4.6 To the intent that the King might not hereafter be deceived in his Grants he is content by the assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and at the request of the Commons to be hereafter concluded by the wife men of his Council in things touching the estate of him and his Realm saving alwayes his liberty IV. In a Petition to the King for Lands Annuities Offices c. their value shall be therein exprest otherwise the Letters Patents thereupon had shall be void V. Stat. 18. H. 6.1 All Letters Patents which beat not date the day of the delivery of the Kings Warrant into the Chancery shall be void VI. Stat. 6. H. 8.15 If any make suit to the King for lands offices or other things formerly granted to any person during the Kings pleasure the first Patentee being still in life the last Grantee shall express in his Petition or Patent the former Patent and the determination of his pleasure concerning the same otherwise the last grant shall be void VII Stat. 34 35. H. 8.21 The King shall hold and enjoy all Honours Manors Lands and other Hereditaments which he hath obtained since the fourth of February in the 27. year of his Reign or shall hereafter obtain within seven years next after the making of this Act by bargain exchange or purchase Notwithstanding any mis-recitall non-recitall or not naming of the said Honours c. or of the places where they lie or of any part thereof or any other matter or cause whatsoever VIII The right of others is saved save only for rents services and rents secks IX All Letters Patents and Grants made by the King since the said 4th of February or which shall be hereafter made by him within 7 years next after the making of this Act shall be good Notwithstanding in any mis-naming mis-recitall non-recitall not finding of Offices mis-recital or non-recital of Leases uncertainly miscasting rating or setting forth of the yearly values or rate of the things granted or of the yearly Rents thereof want of Attornment and Livery of Seisin or the mis-naming of the places where the things granted do lie or of the Tenants or Farmers of them or any of them X. Provided that notwithstanding this Act the Kings Grants of Offices and
need be assemble and meet together for the better execution of this Statute and some four or five dayes before their meeting shall by warrant command the Constables and Tything-men of every Hundred Town and Hamlet being assisted with other sufficient men to make a general privy search in one night within their several Precincts for the finding and apprehending of Rogues c. and such as shall be found to bring them to the said meeting to be examined punished or sent to the house or houses of correction there to be set to work XXIX The said Constables and Tything-men shall appear at the said meeting and there give an accompt upon oath in writing under the Masters hand testifying the Rogues c. they have taken in the last search or since the last meeting and how many have been punished or otherwise sent to the house of Correction Which if they neglect to do or safely to convey such to the house of Cortection as by the said Justices Warrant shall be committed thither they shall incur what fine the said Justices shall please to set upon them so it exceed not 40 s. XXX The Governors of the Houses of Correction shall have such a sum of mony yearly as shall be thought fit by the more part of the Justices of Peace in Sessions the same to be paid quarterly before-hand by the Treasurers of the County the Governors giving security for their continuance in the said service XXXI If any lewd woman have a Bastard which may be chargeable to the Parish the Justices of Peace shall commit her to the house of Correction there to be punished and set to worke one whole year And if she offend again then is she to be committed again there to remain till she put in good sureties for the good behaviour and not to offend so again XXXII Persons running away and leaving their charge to the Parish shall be deemed and punished as incorrigible Rogues And those that threaten so to do it being proved by two witnesses upon oath before two Justices of Peace of the same division shall be by the same Justices sent to the house of Correction there to be punished as sturdy Rogues unless they put in sufficient Suteties to discharge the Town and not to be delivered but at such a meeting as aforesaid or in open Sessions XXXIII If the Governors shall not every Quarter-Sessions yield to the said Justices a true account of all such persons as shall be committed to their custody or if they suffer any within their charge to make escape or to be troublesom to the Country by going abroad or otherwise they shall incur what fine the same Justices in Sessions shall think fit to impose upon them XXXIV All Fines which shall accrue by this Act other then those already limited shall be paid to the Treasurers of the County and by them be accounted for XXXV See Title Poor Numb XLV and XLVI Vestry-men Vid. Religion Numb XXIII ☞ Victual Victuallers Inholders and Hostlers * I. Stat. 12 E. 26. No person in any City or Burrough which by reason of his Office ought to keep the Assizes of Wine and Victuals as long as he shall be attendant upon his office shall buy or sell Wines or Victuals in pain to forfeit the same to the Kings whereof the prosecutor shall have the third part of the King's gift * II. Stat. 23 E. 3.6 All Butchers Fishmongers Regrators Hostlers Brewers Bakers Poulterers and all other sellers of Victuals shall sell the same at reasonable prizes and for moderate gain in pain upon proof of the contrary before the Sheriff or the Kings Bailiffs or before the Constables of the place by the evidence of two true men to forfeit the double value thereof to the party damnified or in his default to him that will sue for the same And all Majors and Head-officers of Corporations have like power and upon neglect of their duty herein shall forfeit the treble value thereof to the party or prosecutor as aforesaid and besides shall incur a fine to the King to be imposed by the Justices to be assigned by the King * III. Stat. 31 E. 3.10 Every man that bringeth victual to London may freely sell the same without the interruption or impeachment of any IV. The Mayor and Aldermen of London may rule and redress the defaults of Fishmongers Butchers and Poulterers as they do of such as sell beer ale or wine notwithstanding any Franchise Statutes Custome or other priviledg to the contrary And they shall put the same in due execution upon the pain ordained by the Statute of 28 E. 3.10 which see in London * V. Stat. 6 R. 2. Stat. 1.9 No Victualler in London or any other City Burrough or Port of the Sea shall exercise any judicial office there and in case any be chosen in the places aforesaid in such office he shall forbear to use victualling during the time he exerciseth such office in pain to forfeit the victuals sold VI. Stat. 6 R. 2.10 Aliens being in amity with the King and Realm may bring in victual and sell the same in gross or by retail without the impeachment of any See Stat. 11 R. 2.7 1 H. 4.17 14 H. 6.6 * VII Stat. 7 R. 2.11 All Vintners and Victuallers as well Fishmongers as other comming with their victuals to London shall be under the governance of the Mayor and Aldermen of that City as hath been heretofore used * VIII Stat. 13 R. 2.8 Victuallers shall sell their victuals at such reasonable prizes as shall be set down by the Justices of Peace in two of their Sessions to be holden betwixt Easter and Michaelmas in pain to be punished at the discretion of the said Justices where no pain is already limited in certain IX And here Sheriffs Stewards Mayors Bailiffs and all others which have power to keep Assize of Bread and Ale shall take no fine or Amerciament for any default touching the Assize for which the offender ought by Law to have bodily punishment * X. Stat. 23 H. 6.13 Justices of Peace shall twice every year cause all Statutes concerning Victuallers before this time made to be openly proclaimed in Sessions * XI Stat. 12 E. 4.8 No person other then Mayors Bailiffs Lords of Leets or others in point of Charter shall execute any office of searching or surveying of Wine Ale Beer or any other ●●tual or of the correction of breaking the Assize thereof in pain 〈◊〉 forfeit 40 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor And all Letters Pattents of the King granted for that purpose shall be void * XII Stat. 3 H. 8.8 When a Victualler in a City or Corporation is chosen to bear an Office by reason whereof he ought also to have the Assizing of victual during that time two other being no victuallers shall be joyned and sworn with him truly to assess and set prizes and assizes of victual there and they shall be sold accordingly but here the Officers
the cause shall require but if such plea or voucher be tryable in England the Justice of Wales before whom they are pleaded or made may proceed to tryal thereof in such County of Wales where they are so pleaded or made such forreign plea or voucher notwithstanding CXX All Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in VVales and in the Lordships and places annexed by the Statute of 27 H. 8.26 to the Counties of Salop Hereford Glocester or any other Shires shall be English tenure and not partable amongst heirs males according to the Custome of Gavelkind CXXI No Mortgages of lands c. made in any of the said Counties or places shall be hereafter allowed or admitted otherwise than after the course of the Common-Law and Statutes of England CXXII It shall be lawful for all persons to alien their Lands c. in VVales the County of Monmouth and other places annexed as aforesaid from them and their heirs to any person or persons in Fee-simple fee-tail for life or years according to the Laws of England notwithstanding any Welsh Law or Custome to the contrary CXXIII If any person having lands in VVales be bound in England by a Statute-Staple or Recognisance and pay not the debt accordingly in such cases upon certificate into the Chancery of England Processes shall be made to the Sheriffs of VVales out of the said Chancery for the due levying of the said debt as is used in England Howbeit for such Recognizances as are taken in the Kings Bench or Common Pleas of England Processes shall be pursued immediately from the Justices of the said Courts as in England also is used CXXIV All such Writs Bills Plaints Pleas Process Challenges and Trials shall be used throughout all the Shires aforesaid as are used in North VVales or as shall be devised by the President Council and Justices or three of them whereof the President to be one CXXV Where there shall be some Suits in Pleas personal which cannot be well tryed before the Justices in the great Sessions for shortness of time such issues may be tryed at the petty Sessions before the Deputy-Justices as is used in the three Counties of North VVales save only for such Suits as by the discretion of the said Justices shall be necessary to be tryed before themselves Howbeit there shall be no suit taken before any of the said Justices by Bill under the sum of 20 s. CXXVI No other Liberties Franchises or Customs shall be used or claimed in any Lordship which was anciently part of Wales whosoever be owner or owners thereof but only such as be given to the Lords thereof by force of the Statute of 27 H. 8.26 and not altered by this Act notwithstanding the Stat. of 32 H. 8.20 which see in Franchises CXXVII If any murther or felony be committed in Wales the party or parties grieved shall make no agreement with the offender or with any other in his behalf unless he first acquaint the President Council or Justices therewith in pain of imprisonment and grievous fine at the discretion of the President Council and Justices or two of them whereof the President to be one the like punishment also they shall incur that labour or procure such agreement although it never take effect CXXVIII If any person or they whose estate he hath have peaceable possession of Lands in Wales by the space of 5 years without interruption or lawful claim such person shall continue the same untill they be recovered from him by law or decree of the President or Council there CXXIX If in personal actions pursued before the Justices nine of the Jury be sworn and the residue make default or be tryed out in that case the Sheriff may return other names de circumstantibus until the Jury be full as is used in North VVales and elsewhere in such cases CXXX No sale of goods or cattel stollen in Wales and sold in any Fair or Market there shall alter the propriety thereof such sale notwithstanding CXXXI No person shall buy any quick cattel in VVales out of the Fair or Market unless he can produce credible witness of the person place and time he so bought the same in pain of such punishment and fine as shall be set by the President and Council or any of the Justices in his Circuit and to answer it at his further peril CXXXII If any goods or cattel be stollen in VVales the tract shall be followed from Town to Town and Lordship to Lordship according to the Laws and Customs heretofore used in Wales upon such penalty as hath been heretofore accustomed CXXXIII Any man being a Frecholder may pass upon a Jury in all causes both criminal and civil attaint only excepted saving to every man his lawful challenge according to the Laws of England Howbeit none shall pass in attaint unless he have Freehold of 40 s. per annum CXXXIV Tenants and resiants in Wales shall pay their Tallage at the change of their Lords in such places aad after such form as hath been accustomed in Wales CXXXV The Kings Subjects in VVales shall find at the Parliaments in England Knights for the Counties and Citizens and Burgesses for the Cities and Towns to be chosen by the Kings Writ according to the Statute of 27 H. 8.26 and shall also be chargeable to all Subsidies and other charges granted by the Commons of the said Parliaments and pay all other rents farms customs and duties to the King as hath been accustomed fines for redemption of Sessions only excepted which the King is pleased to remit CXXXVI Haverford-west shall find one Burgess for that Town whose charges shall be born by the Mayor Burgesses and Inhabitants of the said Town and by none other CXXXVII The King shall have all Felons goods goods of persons outlawed Waifs Estrays and all other forfeitures and escheats and shall be answered thereof by the Sheriffs saving the right of all others having lawful title thereto CXXXVIII Errours and Judgments before any of the Justices in their great Sessions in Pleas reall and mixt shall be redressed by Writ of Errour out of the Chancery of England returnable before the Justices of the Common Pleas as other Writs of Errour be in England but Errors in Pleas personal shall be reformed by Bill before the President and Council and if the Judgment be affirmed good in any of the said Writs or Bills then there to make execution and all other process thereupon as is used in the Kings Bench of England and that the Plaintiff in every such Writ or Bill pay for the same like Fees as is used in England CXXXIX No execution of any Judgment given in any base Court shall be stayed by reason of any Writ of false Judgment but execution may be had at all times before the reversal of such Judgment and if such Judgment shall after be reversed the Plaintiff shall be restored to what he hath lost by such Judgment CXL All process for urgent and weighty causes shall be
in the wild of Surrey XIX Stat. 13 El. 25. All Woods or Copices intended by the Statute of 35 H. 8.17 to be enclosed and the springs thereof preserved shall be so saved by the space of two years more then in the several clauses of the said Act is severally limited according to the age of such Woods felled upon such pains as in the said Acts are contained And none shall put any Cattel into any such Copice woods from the time of their sale until the end of five years nor from the end of five years until the end of six years any Cattel but Calves and yearling Colts onely until the end of six years if the wood was under 14 years growth at the last fall or until the end of 8 years if it was above 14 years growth And this Addition shall continue as long in force as the said Statute of 35 H. 8.17 XX. Stat. 23 El. 5. None shall convert into Coal or other fuel for the making of Iron or Iron Mettal any Wood or Underwood growing within the compass of 22 miles of London or the Suburbs thereof or of the River of Thames from Dorchester in Com. Oxon. downwards or within four miles of the foot of the Downs betwixt Arundel and Pemsey in Com. Sussex or of Winchelsey or Rie or within two miles of Pemsey or three miles of Hastings in pain to forfeit for every load so converted 40 s. to be divided betwixt the Queen and the Prosecutor XXI This Act shall not extend to any woods growing in any such part of the wildes of Surrey Sussex or Kent within 22 miles of London or Thames as is distant above 18 miles from London or Thames XXII No new Iron-works shall be erected within 22 miles of London 14 miles of Thames or four miles of the said Downs Pemsey Winchelsey Hastings or Rie in pain of 100 l. to be imployed as aforesaid XXIII This Act shall not extend to the woods of Christopher Darrell Gentleman in Newdigate in the weld of Surrey XXIV Stat. 27 El. 19. None shall make or set up within the Counties of Sussex Surrey or Kent any Iron Mill furnace finary or blomary for the making of Iron or Iron Mettal other then upon some old Bayes or Pens whereupon such works have been lately standing or else upon such lands where such works may be continually furnished with sufficient supply of the parties own woods growing upon his own soil being his in fee-simple fee-tail or for life without impeachment of waste nor shall convert to coal or other fuel for the making of such Iron or Iron-Mettal any sound Timber-tree of Oak Ash or Elm which will bear a foot-square at the stub or any part thereof in pain to forfeit for every such new work set up 300 l. and for every Timber-tree so converted 40 s. to be divided betwixt the King and the Prosecutor XXV Howbeit the lops and offal of such Timber-trees may be converted to Coal for the purposes aforesaid within the welds of Sussex Surrey and Kent so as it be not within eighteen miles of London eight miles of Thames four miles of Rie or Winchelsey 3 miles of Hastings or 4 miles of the foot of the Downs betwixt Arundel and Pemsey aforesaid XXVI Stat. 15 Car. 2. Cap. 2. Stat. 3. Reciting the Statute 43 El. Cap. doth not sufficiently prevent nor punish the cutting and spoiling of Woods Enacted that every Constable Headborough and other person in every County City or other place where they shall be Officers or Inhabitants shall and may apprehend or cause to be apprehended every person they shall suspect having carrying or conveying any burden or bundel of Wood Poles young Trees Bark bast of Trees Gates Stiles Posts Pales Rails or Hedge-wood Broom or Furze XXVII And by Warrant under the hand and seal of any one Justice of the Peace directed to any Officer such Officer may enter into and search the houses yards Gardens and other places belonging to the houses of every person or persons they shall suspect to have any kind of such Wood or other the said Trees c. and where they shall find any such to apprehend every person suspected for cutting and taking the same and as well those apprehended carrying any kind of wood or other the trees and premises as those in whose houses or other places belonging to them any of the same shall be found to carry before any one Justice of the Peace of the same County And such persons suspected do not give a good accompt how they came by the same by the consent of the owner such as shall satisfie the said Justice or within some convenient time to be set by the said Justice produce the party of whom they bought the said wood or some credible witness upon Oath to prove such sale which Oath the said Justice may administer then such persons so suspected and not giving such good accompt nor producing such witness shall be judged as convicted for cutting and spoiling of woods underwoods poles trees gates stiles posts pales rails hedge-wood broome or furze within the meaning of the said Statute of Queen Elizabeth and lyable to the punishments therein and of this Act appointed XXVIII Every person so convicted shall for the first offence give the owner satisfaction for his damages within such time as the Justice shall appoint and over and above pay down to the Overseers of the poor of the Parish where such offence is such sum of money not exceeding 10 s. as the said Justice shall think meet in default of either of which payments the said Justice may commit such offendor to the house of Correction for such time not exceeding one month as he shall think fit or to be whipt by the Constable or other Officer as in his judgement shall seem expedient XXIX And if such persons shall again commit the said offence and be thereof convicted as before that then the persons offending the second time and convicted shall be sent to the house of Correction for one moneth and there be kept to hard labour And for the third offence convicted as before shall be adjudged and deemed as Incorrigible Rogues XXX Provided also whosoever shall buy any burdens of wood or any the premises mentioned in this Bill suspected to be stolen or unlawfully come by the Justices Mayors or chief Officers or any one of them within their respective Jurisdictions upon complaint may examine the matter upon Oath And if they find the same was bought of any person suspected to have stolne or unlawfully come by the same then any one of the said Justices or chief Officer shall and may award the party that bought the same to pay treble the value thereof to the party from whom the same was stolne or unlawfully taken And in default of present payment to issue forth their respective Warrants to levy the same by distress and sale of the offendors goods rendering the overplus to the party And in default of such
the Chancery in one case a Writ is found and in another case falling under like law and requiring like remedy there is found none the Clerks of the Chancery shall agree in making the Writ or the Plaintiffs may adjourn it untill the next Parliament and then the cases being written in which they cannot agree let them refer themselves to the next Parliament where by the consent of men learned in the Law a Writ shall be framed lest the Kings Court should fail to administer Justice to complainants II. West 2.49 13 E. 1. Pars inde Where the Law faileth lest Suitors should depart from the Kings Court without remedy Writs shall be provided in their cases III. Stat. 6 R. 2. Stat. 1.2 If in Writs of debt accompt and the like it shall be declared that the contract thereof was made in another County then is contained in the original Writ such Writ shall be abated Vid. Title Arrests Numb 4. Yarn I. Stat. ● H. 6.23 NOne shall export any Thrums or Woollen Yarn under colour of Thrums in pain to forfeit the double value thereof York I. Stat. 29 H. 6.3 All Letters Parents granted to Citizens of York to be exempt of the offices of Mayoralty Sherifwick Chamberlain Collector of Dismes and Quinzims and Citizen for the Parliament shall be void and the Citizen who purchaseth or taketh such exemption shall forfeit 40 l. to the King and Mayor and Citizens of York II. Stat. 34 35 H. 8.10 An Act for making of Coverlets within York and none shall be made to be put to sale in Yorkshire but onely in the Town of York together with divers other good provisions touching that subject For which see the Statute at large The New ACTS lately made at Oxon. Anno 17º Caroli Secundi Regis Abridged and here added by way of APPENDIX Non-conformists I. Stat. 17 Car. 2. Cap. 1. apud Oxon. ENacted That all Parsons Vicars Curates Lecturers and other persons in or pretending to serve in Holy Orders and all Stipendaries or other persons who have been possessed of any Ecclesiastical or Spiritual Promotion and who have not declared their assent and subscribed the Declaration mentioned in the ACT of 14 Car. 2. For Uniformity of Publique Prayers c. And shall not take and subscribe the Oath following I A. B. Do swear That it is not lawfull upon any pretence what soever to take up Arms against the King And that I do abhor that Trayterous Position of taking Arms by his Authority against his Person or against those that are Commissionated by him in pursuance of such Commissions And that I will not at any time endeavour any alteration of Government either in Church or State II. And all such persons who shall take upon them to preach in any unlawful assembly conventicle or meeting under colour or pretence of any exercise of Religion contrary to the Laws and Statutes of this Kingdom shall not at any time after the 24th of March 1665 unless in passing upon the Road come or be within five miles of any City or Town Corporate or Borough that sends Burgesses to the Parliament within England Wales or Town of Berwick upon Tweed or within five miles of any Parish Town or Place wherein he or they have since the Act of Oblivion been Parson Vicar Curate Stipendary or Lecturer or taken upon them to preach in any unlawful Assembly Conventicle or Meeting under colour or pretence of any exercise of Religion contrary to the Laws and Statutes of this Kingdom before he or they have taken and subscribed the said Oath before the Justices of the Peace at their Quarter-Sessions to be holden at the Division next to the Corporat on City or Borough Parish Place or Town in open Court which the said Justices are impowred to administer upon forfeiture for every such offence the sum of forty pounds one third thereof to his Majesty and his Successors the other third part to the poor of the Parish where the offence is committed the other third part to the person that will sue for the fame by Action of Debt Plaint Bill or Information in any Court of Record at Westminster or before any Justices of Assize O●er and Terminer or Goal Delivery Justices of the Counties Palatine of Chester La●caster or Durham Great Sessions in Wales or Justices of the Peace in their Quarter-Sessions no Essoin Protection or Wager of Law to be allowed III. It shall not be lawfull for any person or persons restrained from coming to any City Town Corporate Burrough Parish Town or Place as aforesaid or for any other person or persons as shall not first take and subscribe the said oath and as shall not frequent Divine Service established by the Law of this Kingdom and carry him or her self reverently there to teach any publique or private School or take any Boarders or Tablers to be taught or instructed by him or her self or any other upon pain of forty pounds for every offence to be recovered and distributed as aforesaid IV. Any two Justices of the Peace in the respective County upon oath to them of any offence against this Act which oath they are impowred to administer may commit the offender for six moneths without Bail unless before such Commitment he shall before the said Justices of the Peace swear and subscribe the said Oath and Declaration Provided That appearance to any Subpoena Warrant or Process whereby perso●al appearance is required shall not be construed an offence within this Act. Churches and Chappell 's I. An Act for uniting Churches and Chappels in Towns Corporate See 27 Car. 2. Cap. 3. Apud Oxon. Books and Printing I. Stat. 17 Car. 2. Cap. 4. apud Oxon. The Act for preventing abuses in Printing Seditions Treasonable and unlicensed Pamphlets and for regulating Printing continued in force untill the end of the first Session of the next Parliament II. And further That after the 26. of September 1665. every Printer within London or any other places except the two Universities shall reserve three printed Copies of the best and largest Paper of every Book new printed or reprinted with additions and shall before any publique sale of the said Book bring them to the Master of the Company of Stationers and deliver them to him one whereof shall within ten dayes after be delivered to the Keeper of his Majesties Library and the other two within the said ten dayes to be sent to the Vice-Chancellors of the Two Universities respectively for the use of their publique Libraries III. And the Printers in the said Universities respectively after the said 26th of December shall deliver one such printed Copy as aforesaid so new printed or reprinted in the said Universities to the Keeper of the Kings Library as aforesaid as also to the Vice-Chancellors of either of the said Universities for the time being two other such printed Copies for their publique respective Libraries And for default of so doing by the Printer or Master of the Company of Stationers
Age Pag. 10 Aide of the King Pag. 10 Aide to marry the daughter and to make the Son a Knight Reasonable Aide Ayel Besayel Cosinage Cosinage Damages 3 c. Alehouses Customs 6 11. Ale and Beer Alehouses Alienation without licence Pag. 14 Tenure 7. Aliens Pag. 14 Ability 2 3 4 5. Crown 147. Customs 9.12.14.17.20 Drapery 42.69 English-men Gauging 14. Hats and Caps 9. Informers 9 10. Ireland 10. Merchants Money 34. Proviso 4.5 Staple Tythes 3. Victuals 6. Wines 8. Allegiance Crown 108. Amendments Pag. 18 Amerciaments Pag. 19 Ampthil Honours Anniversary Fast Pag. 19 Anniversary thanksgiving Pag. 20 Annates First-Fruits Apothecaries Physitians 26. Apparance Pag. 20 Essoyn 12. Appeals Pag. 20 Clergy 8. Demurrers 2. Essoyn 8.15 Triall 13. Appeals to Rome Pag. 21 Apprentice Pag. 21 Aliens 6.19 c. Cordwainers 26. Corporation 3 4. Drapery 168.195 Hats and Caps 1.5.8 Labourers Norwich 5 Passage 15 c. Poor people 21 Ships 25.59 Worsteds Appropriations Pag. 22 Approvements Pag. 23 Approvers Pardon 11. Archery Playes Armour Arms Pag. 24 Crown 145 Musters Treason 5. Wales 9. Arrests Pag. 25 Arrow-heads Pag. 26 Artificers Aliens 2. c. 19. c. Cordwainers 11.30.39.40.59.60.67 Labourers Merchants 63 Wares Assault and Fray Pag. 27 Assises Pag. 27 Conusance Essoyn 4 12. Justice of Assise Nisi prius Assize of Bread and Drink Weights Assize of Darrein presentment Dayes in Bank Assurance Office Merchants 77 c. Attaint Pag. 30 Age 3. Dayes in Bank 14.22 Essoin 4. Limitation 9. Attorney Pag. 35 Apparence 4 Attaint 47 Jeofail 3. Trespass 4. Attornment Error 8 Auditors Account Receivers Augmentations Courts Aulnage Aulnagers Account 5 Drap●ry 3.5.8 9.11 c. 140 141 202 c. 290. Estreats 6. Wales 144 145. Avowry Pag. 37 Badgers Corn. Universities Bail Felony 23 Mainprize Bayliffs of Mannors c. Account Eschequer Franchises Indictments Bayliffs of Cities Franchises and Towns Corporations Franchises Towns Sheriffs B. BAkers Aliens 32 Clerk of the Market Weights Ballast Havens 7. Banks Pag. 37 Bankrupt Pag. 38 Barbers Physitians 26. Bargains and Sales Inrollments Uses Bark Cordwainers 36 37. Barking of Trees Burning of Carts c. Barons County 2 Crown 12.126 Forrests 11 18. Barons of the Eschequer Account 3. Attorney ● Commission Damages 5. Drapery 21 43. Error Eschequer Escheators 1. Executors 9. Justice 4. Sheriffs 4 7 68. Staple 27. Barwick Pag. 42 B●tchers 3 Bastardy and Bastards Pag. 42 Ability 4 Barne Vagabonds 8. Battail Grand Assise Pag. 43 Dower 5 Beau-pleader Pag. 43 Beer Clapbord Coopers Beggers Vagabonds Bel-mettle Brass Benevolences Taxes Bigamie Clergy 2 5 27. Matrimony 6 Bisextus Dayes in Bank Benevolence Pag. 44 Bishops Bishopricks Pag. 44 Ability 4. Appeals to Rome Appropriations Crown 44 c. 57. Debt to the King 12 First-fruits 12 c. Le●se 9 Rome Vacations of Bishopricks Blackmail Felony 19. Blackney Fish 14 15. Boats and Boatmen Passage Books and Images Pag. 46 Crown 143 Bows Bow-staves Pag. 47 Playes Brass Pewter Copper Bel-mettle c. Pag. 47 Bread Ale and Beer Clerk of the Market Weights Breakers of Leagues and Truces Pag. 50 Brewers Al●-houses 9. Aliens 32 Coopers Gauging 12 Weights Bridges Pag. 51 Borderers England and Scotland Brokers Pag. 52 Buckstales Forrests Hunting Parks Buggery Felony 11. Bullion Plate Jewel● Gold Money Bulls from Rome Dispensations Burford Bridges 1. Burglary Forfeiture 10. Buriall Crown 138. Burning of Carts and Wood Pag. 53 Felony 19 Burport Cables 1. Butchers Pag. 53 Calves 2. Cordwainers 25. Victuall Weights Butler of the King Pag. 53 Butter and Chéese Pag. 54 Corn. Buts Playes Buying and selling Corn. Buying of Titles Actions popular 10 Champerty Informers 8 Buxton Vagabonds 8. C. CAbles Halsors and Ropes Pag. 55 Calves Pag. 56 Cordwainers 24. Cambridg and Cambridgshire Pag. 56 Aliens 14. 27. 34. Butchers 3. Crown 140. Caps Hats Captains Souldiers Pag. 56 Musters 55 Captives Pag. 68 Cardiff Bridges 10 Cask Clapbord Carlile Butchers 3. Carlion Bridges 12 Castles Fortresses c. Pag. 68 Cattle Forestallers Horses Certificate Ability 4. Bishops 14 Butler of the King 2. Captains 28 c. Commission 5 Crown 19. Certificate of the Cause of Attainder c. Pag. 68 Certiorari Corpus cum causa Cessavit Pag. 69 Contra formam collationis Challenge Pag. 69 Champerty Pag. 6 Actions popular 7.10 Informers 8. Maintenance Nisi prius 9 Chancellor Aliens 1.14 Bankrupts 1 3 10 Books 4 Butter 1 Chancery Corporation 1. Custos Rotulorum Error Escheators 1 Execution of Statutes Executors 9 Exigent 1 2 First-fruits Fish 13 Hospitals 6. Infections Justice 5 Merchants Mortmain Parliament 35 c. Sewers Sheriffs 7 Staple 32 c. Treason 1 Triall 8 Vacations of Bishopricks Vagabonds 13 Wales 93 140 Wards 36 48 51 84 86 Wines Woolls 6 Women 8 Chancery Pag. 70 Accusation 10 11 Pardon Chaplains Residence Chases Forests Chanteries Monasteries Cheese Butter Chelsey Pag. 71 Chepstow Brides 15 Ships 52 Chester and Cheshire Pag. 72 Certificate of the c. 5 Corn 8 Courts 32 Eschequer Exigent 11 c. Fines 32 Wales 152 Chichester County 5. Paving 9 Chimage Forests 14 Churches Fighting Church-service Crown 44 c. Service and Sacraments Church-wardens Alehouses Captains 22 c. Clerk of the Market 6 Crown 100 150 Church-yards Pag. 73 Mortmain 16 Cinque-Ports Five Ports Cirographer Pag. 73 Error 2 Fees 2 Citation Pag. 73 Clapbord Pag. 74 Malt 13 Clergy Pag. 74 Conjuration Fairs and Markets 21 Clerk of Assize Certificate of the cause of Attainder Justices of Assize Clerk of the Chancery Pag. 78 Addition 4. Clerks of the Crown Pag. 78 Certificate of the cause of Attainder Clerk of the Estreats Estr●ats Sheriffs Clerk of the Market Pag. 78 Franchises 23. 6. Weights Clerk of the Peace Certificate of the cause of Attainder Corn 3. Custos Rotulorum 3. Inrolements Paving 4. Clerk of the Recognisances Fraudulent Conveyances 9 c. Recognisance Clerks of the privy Signet and privy Seal Pag. 79 Clerk of the Sewers Sewers Clerk attaint Certificate of the c. Clerk convict Clergy Client Attorney Clothes and Clothing Drop●y Coaches Pag. 80 Coachmakers Cordwainers 46 Coal Pag. 81 Fuel Wood 17 c. Coin Money Collectors Pag. 82 Colledges Chelsey Election Patents 18 Collusion Admeasurement of Dower Advowson 12 Conusance Common Approvements Assizes 6. 12. Horse● Common Place Attaint 47. Common Pleas. Pag. 83 Adjornment Constable and Marshall Commissions and Commissioners Pag. 82 Discontinuance of Process 3. 5. Escheators 21 c. First-fruits Hospitals 16 c. Sewers Common Prayer See Religion Concealments Limitation 11. Conditions Pag. 83 Patents 27 Confirmation Pag. 83 Cony-skins Merchants 84 c. Conjuration Pag. 84 Consecration of Bishops c. Bishops 16 c. Conspiracies Pag. 85 Nifi prius 9. Victual 16 Constables of Hundreds and Towns Ale-houses Banks 5. Bridges 4. Captains 22. c. Crown 78. 150. Drapery 48. 29. 230 Feasants 22. High-wayes Holy-dayes Horses 14 Malt. Merchants 4. Plague Purveyors Swearing Vagaboads Constable and Marshal Pag. 85 Appeals 9. Exchequer 12
Statute III. Provided also that no Painter shall take above 16 d. the day for laying any flat colour whatsoever mingled or mixed with Oyl or Size upon any Timber Stone or Lead Palace I. Stat. 28 H. 8.12 The limits of the Kings Palace at Westminster sholl extend from Chariag-Cross to Westminster-Hall and shall have such priviledges as the Kings ancient Palaces have Panel I. Stat. 42 E. 3.11 No Inquests but Assizes and Deliverances of Goals shall be taken by Writs of Nisi prius before the Names of all that are to pass thereupon are returned into the Court. II. The Sheriff shall array the Panels in Assizes four days at least before the Sessions of the Justices in pain of 20 l. so that the parties may have a Copy of the Panels if they demand them and the returns thereof by the Bailiffs to the Sheriffs shall be six dayes before the Sessions upon the like pain III. The most substantial people worthy of credit and not suspect shall be put upon Panels and such as may have best knowledge of the truth and dwell nearest IV. Stat. 3 H. 8.12 Panels returned by the Sheriff to inquire for the King may be reformed by the Justices of Goal-Delivery or Justices of Peace 1 Qu. before whom such Panel shall be so returned And the Sheriff shall return the Panels so reformed in pain of 20 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the Prosecutor and in this case the Kings Pardon shall be no bar against such Prosecutor ☞ Pardon I. The Stat. of Glocester 9. 6 E. 1. No Writ shall be granted out of the Chancery for the death of a man to inquire whether one did kill another by misfortune or se defendendo or otherwise by Felony but the party shall be put in Prison until the coming of the Justices in Eyre or Justices assigned to the Goal-delivery and shall put himself upon the Countrey before them and in case it be found per insortunium or se defendendo upon report thereof to the King by the Justices the King shall take him to his Grace if he so please II. Stat. 2 E. 3.2 pars inde Charters of Pardon for Manslaughters Robberies Felonies and other Trespasses shall not be granted but where the King may do it saving his Oath viz. where one man killeth another in his own defence or by a misfortune III. Stat. 4 E. 3.13 The Statute of 2 E. 3.2 is confirmed IV. Stat. 10 E. 3.2 Pardons shall not be granted contrary to the Stat. of 2 E. 3.2 V. Stat. 10 E. 3.3 He that hath a pardon of Felony shall within three moneths after such pardon find Sureties before the Sheriff and Coroners for the good behaviour which shall within 3 weeks after the 3 moneths be returned into the Cháncery under the Seals of the said Sheriff and Coroners And if the party give not Security as aforesaid as being bound do bear himself otherwise against the Peace than he ought the Pardon shall be holden for none VI. Stat. 14 E. 3. Stat. 1.15 No Pardon of the death of a man or other Felony shall be granted but onely where the King may do it saving the Oath of his Crown and if any Pardon be granted against the Statutes made before this time it shall be holden for none VII Stat. 27 E. 3. Stat. 1.2 Pardons which have not in them the suggestion whereupon they are granted and also the Suggestors name shall be void so are those likewise which are granted upon false suggestions VIII Stat. 13 R. 2.1 In a Pardon the offence committed shall be specified otherwise it shall not be allowed IX No Pardon of Treason or Felony shall pass without Warrant of the Privy Seal X. If the Offence pardoned be afterwards found wilful Murder that Pardon shall not be allowed Vide. Stat. 16 R. 2.9 XI Stat. 5 H. 4.2 If an Approver shall commit Felony after he is pardoned he that procured his Pardon shall forfeit 100 l. whose Name shall also for that purpose be inserted in the said Pardon XII Stat. 21 Jac. 35. The Kings most gracious and general Pardon except as therein is excepted See the Statute at large XIII Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 11. The Kings most gracious free and general Pardon Indempnity and Oblivion See the Stat. at large ☞ Parliament I The Mirrour of Iustices Cap. 1. Sect. 3. Anno Aelfredi Primi Monarchae Anno Domini Parliaments shall be held twice a year and oftner if need require But note that this was by the King and Lords onely and in time of Peace II. Stat. 4. E. 3.14 A Parliament shall be holden once a year and oftner if need be III. Stat. 36 E. 3.10 A Parliament shall be holden every year IV. Stat. 5. R. 2. Stat. 2.4 Every person and Communalty having Summons of Parliament shall come thither in pain to be amerced or otherwise punished And if the Sheriff doth not summon them he shall be likewise amercied or otherwise as hath been used in times past V. Stat. 12 R. 2.12 The levying of the expences of Knights coming to Parliament shall be made as in times past and if any Lord or other have purchased Lands or other possessions that were wont to be contributary to such expences they shall still continue to be so notwithstanding such purchase VI. Stat. 7 H. 4.15 The election of the Knights of the Shires shall be as followeth viz. At the next County after the delivery of the Writ Proclamation shall be made in full County of the day and place of the Parliament and that all there present as well Suitors summoned as otherwise shall attend to the Election of the said Knights and then in full County a free and indifferent Election shall be made notwithstanding any request or command to the contrary VII After such Choice the names of the parties so chosen be they present or absent shall be written in an Indenture under the Seals of all them that did choose them which Indenture so sealed and tacked to the said Writ shall be the Sheriffs return thereof touching the Knights of the Shires And in such Writs this Clause shall be hereafter put Et electionem tuam in pleno Comitatu tuo factam distincte aperte sub sigïllo tuo sigillis corum qui electioni illi interfuerunt nos in Cancellaria nostra ad diem locum brevi contentum certifices indilate VIII Stat. 11 H. 4.1 Justices of Assize shall have power to inquire in their Sessions of Returns made by the Sheriffs contrary to the Statute of 7 H. 4.15 And if it be found by Inquest that any Sheriff hath made any such return he shall forfeit 100 l. to the King and the Knights so unduly returned shall lose their wages IX Stat. 1 H 5.1 All former Statutes made for the election of Knights of the Shire are confirmed X. They shall be resiant in the County for which they are chosen the day of the date of the Writ of Summons so also shall