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A81194 A compendium of the laws and government ecclesiastical, civil and military, of England, Scotland & Ireland and dominions, plantations and territories thereunto belonging, with the maritime power thereof, and jurisdiction of courts therein. Methodically digested under their proper heads. By H.C. sometime of the Inner Temple. Curson, H. (Henry) 1699 (1699) Wing C7686A; ESTC R231895 237,927 672

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Exectuted To attend and Guard the Itinerant Judges twice a year while in their County with great Pomp and Feasting at the Assizes and hath attendant on him his Under-sheriff Clerks Stewards of Courts Bailiffs of Hundreds Constables Gaolers Serjeants and Beadles with a Train of Servants on Horseback in rich Liveries at the Reception of the Judges He Collects all publick Profits Fines c. of the County And for Exercising his Judicial Power hath these Courts The Court of the Tourn THe Tourn called anciently Shiregmote Is a Court of Record holden before the Sheriff The ancient Institution whereof by King Alfred was before Magna Charta To hear and determine all Felonies Death of Man excepted and Common Nusances See the Charter of William the Conqueror Magna Charta and Exposition thereupon the second part of Coke's Institutes and Coke's 4 Institutes cap. 53. The Stile of this Court is Curia Visus Franc ' pleg ' Domini Regis apud B. coram Vicecomite in Turno suo And seems to have its Denomination from the French Tour i. e. Ambitus circuitus And is as much to say as The Sheriffs Course or Perambulation For which and the Articles Inquirable there See Greenwoods Jurisdiction of County Courts and other Authors at large and Coke's 4 Institutes cap. 53. And this Court is said to be Schola Insigniendi Juvenes A School to Instruct young Men in the ancient Laws of the Kingdom The Court of Leet or View of Frank-pledge THis is a Court of Record at the first derived and taken out at the Tourn because the people did undergo great trouble in travelling to the Sheriffs Tourn Leets or Views of Frankpledge were granted to Lords of Manors within certain Precincts yet this Court in whose Manor soever it is kept is still accompted the Kings Court because the Authority is Originally apertaining to the Crown and thence derived to inferior persons And whosoever hath the Leet hath the same Authority within the Precinct as the Sheriff hath within the Tourn And Lep or Leet is a Saxon word from the Verb Zelepian z being added Euphoniae gratia i. e. Convenire to assemble together unde Conveutus And the Stile of this Court is Curia Visus Franc ' pleg ' tent ' apud B. coram A.B. Seneschallo This Court of the Leet as likewise the Tourn are Instituted for the Common Weal As for Conservation of the Kings Peace Punishment of Common Nusance as for selling Corrupt Wines and Victuals c. And by divers Acts of Parliament the Jurisdiction of this Court hath been increased to the end the Subject might have remedy and Justice at his own Door And therefore the Steward ought to be knowing in the Law for Ignorantia Judicis est calamitas Innocent is Of the Antiquity and Jurisdiction of this Court which is very ample you may Read more at large Coke's 2 Institutes Magna Charta cap. 17.35 4 Institutes cap. 54 There are Three things to be considered in holding of Tourns or Leets 1st Time which must be twice in a year viz. within one Month after Easter and one Month after Michaelmas at the Tourn after Earst No Actions Popular are to be inquired after c But only to take their Suit who are Suitors which at the Sheriffs Tourn are all Men from 12 to 60 years of age within the County Ecclesiastical Persons Peers and Women excepted and at the Leet the like Persons within the Precinct which is called Suit Real by Reason of their Allegiance to which they are Sworn to be true and Loyal to the King and to take the view c. And at the Tourn or Leet after Michaelmas then to inquire of such things which are inquirable there 2ly The place where the Leet is to be holden and that must be within the Precinct or Liberty in Loco debito cosueto and if it be done otherwise whatever is acted in it is void 3ly The Persons who are all Freeholders within the Precinct or Liberty and are obliged to come by the Service of their Fees and all others of fit age except the persons above mentioned to be excepted The Sheriff in the Tourn or Steward in the Leet as Judge hath a double Authority 1. Election of Officers 2. Punishment of Offenders And this Punishment of Offenders is in a twofold manner and in it are to be respected 1. Actus Curiae for Punition of Offences in Curia where the Sheriff or Steward as Judge may punish by Fine without Inquiry by the Country c. As if a Juror sworn refuse to make Presentment depart without giving his Verdict or refuse to be Sworn the Steward may impose a reasonable Fine upon him 2. Actus Patriae for Punishment of Offences Extra Curiam where the Jurors who are sworn have peculiar Cognizance and have Authority to Present and to Assess Amerciaments for them And the Sheriff or Steward by the Statute of 18 Ed. 1. may Inquire of several Misdemeanors from the highest Treason to the lowest Trespass tho' not here punishable He may also Impannel a Second Jury to Enquire of the Defaults and Concealments of the First and so Fine them for their offence And for default of Resiants he may compel a Stranger coming within the view to be of the Inquest And the Officers he hath Election of are The Bailiff who is to Collect the Rents and Profits of the Manor or Liberty and Give a true accompt thereof and to execute all the Precepts of the Court. The Constables who are chosen and are to see the publick peace kept Watch and Ward observed Learn the Contents of the Statute of Winchester made against Rogues c. And to punish such as play at unlawful Games The County Court THe Stile of this Court is Bucks Curia prima Comitatus E.C. Militis Vicecomiti Com. praedict ' Tent ' apud B. c. And the next Court is Curia secunda E. C. c. And soforth of the rest Of the Jurisdiction and Authority of this Court you may Read in the Statute of Magna Charta cap. 35. The Suitors are Judges except in a Redisseis in the Sheriff is Judge and a Writ of Errour lieth upon his Judgment And being no Court of Record It holdeth no Plea of any Debt or Damages to the value of Forty shillings or above Nor of any Trespass Vi armis because a Fine was due thereby to the King But of Debt Detinue Trespass and other Actions personal above Forty shillings The Sheriff may hold Plea by force of a Writ of Justicies for that is in nature of a Commission to him and is Vicountiel and not returnable And the Sheriff may before any County Court award a Summons to his Bailiff returnable within two or three days at his Discretion to Summon the Defendant by his Goods c. to answer and if the Bailiff return Nihil and the Plaintiff remove the same by a Pone into the Common-Pleas that Court shall not grant a Capias for
Ratification or to the end of the next Session of Parliament By the Statute of 22 Car. 2. cap. 9. Persons to be nominated by the King under the Great Seal or so many of them as shall be appointed to be of the Quorum shall have power to Treat with Commissioners to be Authorised by the Parliament of Scotland concerning an Union of the Realms and such other Matters as they shall think fit for the Kings Honour and Good of both Kingdoms Their Proceedings to be reduced into Writings or Instruments Tripartite one part whereof to be presented to the King another to the Parliament of England and a third to that of Scotland Provided that nothing to be agreed on by them shall be of force till confirmed by Act of the Parliament of England By the Statute of 4 Jac. 1.1 He that is once Tried in Scotland shall not be called in Question again for the same Offence By the Statute of 2 Ed. 4.8 Merchandize carried into or brought out of Scotland or the Isles thereof shall be first brought to Berwick in pain to forfeit the same As the Law hath wrought four Unions 1st The Union of both Kingdoms under one Natural Liege Sovereign King being so acknowledged by the Act of Recognition 2ly The Union of Liegeance and Obedience of the Subject of both Kingdoms due by the Law of Nature to their Sovereign 3ly The Union of Protection of both Kingdoms equally belonging to the Subjects of either of them 4ly The Union of the three Lyons of England with that one of Scotland United and Quartered in one Escutcheon So the Law doth make four Seperations 1st England and Scotland remain several and distinct Kingdoms 2ly They are Governed by several Judicial or Municipal Laws 3ly They have several distinct and seperate Parliaments 4ly Each Kingdom hath several Nobilities For albeit a Postnatus in Scotland or any of his Posterity be the Heir of a Nobleman of Scotland and by his Birth Legitimated in England yet he is none of the Peers or Nobility of England for his Natural Ligeance and Obedience due by the Law of Nature maketh him a Subject and no Alien within England But that Subjection maketh him not Noble within England for that Nobility had its Original by the Kings Creation and not of Nature More of which matter you may Read at large hereafter in Ireland And that the highest and lowest Dignities as a King and that of a Knight are nevertheless universal Coke's 7 Rep. 15. Calvin's Case In ancient time part of Scotland besides Berwick was within the Power and Ligeance of the King of England yet was Governed by the Laws of Scotland The Case in 42 Ed. 3.2 Ruleth it That so many as were Born in that part of Scotland that was under the Ligeance of the King were no Aliens but inheritable to Lands in England yet was that part of Scotland in another Kingdom governed by several Laws And certainly if they were Natural Subjects in that Case when the King had but part of Scotland when the King hath all Scotland they shall be Natural Subjects and no Aliens Barwick is no part of England nor Governed by the Laws of England yet they that have been Born there under the Obedience of one King are Natural Born Subjects and no Aliens There were sometimes in England whiles the Heptarchy lasted seven several Crowned Kings of several and distinct Kingdoms but in the end the West Saxons got the Monarchy and all the other Kings melted as it were their Crowns to make one Imperial Diadem for the King of the West Saxons over all Now when the whole was made the actual and real Ligeance and Obedience of one King they were all Natural born Subjects and capable of and Inheritable unto any Lands in any of the said Kingdoms Of all which matters and things last above mentioned you may read at large in Coke's 7 Report Calvin's Case By the Statute of 4 Jac. 1. For Repeal of Hostile Laws It is Enacted That no Englishman shall be sent out of England into Scotland for any Offence done in Scotland until the Realms be made one in Laws and Government There was a Proclamation the 20 of Octob. 20 Jac. 1. concerning the Kings Stile of Great Britain wherein all Judicial and Legal Proceedings are excepted Cokes 4 Inst 345. The Lesser Islands near Scotland ARE the Orcades or Isles of Orkeny in number 32 Situate against the North Cape of Scotland The chief being Pomonia whose prime Town is Kirkwal honoured with a Bishops See and strengthened with two Castles It is stored with Tinn and Lead and called by the Inhabitants Mainland The 2d Hotlands or Oceti the Inhabitants Bibacissimi sunt tamen non inebriantur These Isles in Solinus time were not Inhabited being over-grown with Rushes Now are they Populous and Fertile were first discovered by Julius Agricola and first possessed by Normans or Norwegians who surrendred them to Alexander King of Scotland 1266. They speak the Gothish Language Schetland lies two days Sailing North of Orcades and is supposed to be the Thule of the Ancients The Hebrides because Scituate West of Scotland in number 44. The chief Ila 24 Miles long and 16 broad Plentiful in Wheat Cattle and Herds of Red Deer The Isle of Sky 40 Miles long Iona famous for Sepulture of the Kings of Scotland Mula 25 Miles bigger than the other The People both in Language and Behaviour resemble the Wild Irish and are called Redshanks A COMPENDIUM OF THE Laws and Government OF IRELAND WITH THE ISLANDS Thereunto belonging Anno Domini 1699 IRELAND FROM Erinland signifying in their Language a Western Land lies on the West of England and Wales in length from the North parts of Antrim to the South parts of Cork 285 in breadth from the East parts of Down to the West parts of Mayo 160 Miles long Anciently called Juverna Hibernia Overnia Jernia Scotia minor Bernia and Vernia now by the Natives Eryn by the Welsh Yverden by the Germans Irlandt by the Italians Irlanda and by the French Irlande The first Inhabitants came out of Britain were anciently Rude and Barbarous having little Law or Government First partly Conquered by the Saxon Monarchs of England Then by the Norwegians not long after by Henry the Second of England till by little and little it was wholly Reduced to England and still remaineth so Governed by a Vice-Roy call the Lord Lieutenant or Deputy of Ireland whose Seat is at Dublin They received the Christian Faith by St. Patrick Anno 335 and are both Protestants and Papists Their Language is a Dialect of the Old British intermixed with Norwegian Danish and English The English is also frequently used among them and in some places a Mongrel Speech between both Their chief Commodities are Cattle Hides Tallow Butter Cheese Honey Wax Furs Salt Hemp Linnen Cloath Pipe-Staves Wool Frizes c. This Country is divided into Four Great Provinces Anciently Kingdoms viz. 1. Ulster Ineol Cui-Guilly on the North
Jurisdiction of the Ordinary be saved as by 1 Eliz. in case of hearing Mass or 13 Eliz. for Usury or the like neither Clerk nor Layman shall be compelled to take Juramentum Calumniae because it may be an Evidence against him at the Common Law upon the Penal Statutes The Oath Juramentum Calumniae was warranted by Act of Parliament It is an High Contempt to Minister an Oath without Warrant of Law to be punished by Fine and Imprisonment A Christian may not induce an Infidel or Idolater to Swear by false Gods but may take his Credit by so Swearing to a good end Coke's 4 Inst 155. No Ecclesiastical Person shall tender the Oath Ex Officio or any Oath whereby the party shall be compelled to Accuse or Purge himself See Statutes Title Crown 162. The 2 Houses of parliament being either of them Courts may take voluntary Oaths Coke's 2 Inst. 536. The Lord Coke saith I wonder so little consideration is had of an Oath as I daily observe Cum jurare per Deum actus Religionis sit Quo Deus testis adhibetur tanquam is qui sit omnium rerum Maximus c. Coke's 4 Rep. 95. Slade's Case Jurare in propria causa est Saepenumero hoc Seculo praecipitium Diaboli ad destruendas miserorum animas ad infernum Coke's 4 Rep. 95. Slade's Case See before in Commissioners for Examination of Witnesses Page 203. To the King's Swanherd BY Stat. 1 Jac. 1.27 Every Person Convicted by his Confession or 2 Witnesses before 2 or more Justices of Peace To have killed or taken any Pheasant Partridge Pigeon Duck Heron Hare or other Game or to have taken or destroyed the Eggs of Pheasants Partridges or Swans shall by the said Justices be Committed to Prison without Bail unless he pay 20 s. to the use of the Poor for every Fowl Hare and Egg And after one Months Commitment to give Sureties in 20 l. each never to offend Vide Statutes for Preservation of the Game All White Swans not marked which have gained their Natural Liberty and are Swimming in an Open and Common River may be seized to the King's use by his Prerogative Because Volatilia Quae sunt ferae naturae alia sunt Regalia alia Communia And so Aquatilium alia sunt Regalia alia Communia And as a Swan is a Royal Fowl and all those the Property whereof is not known do belong to the King So Whales and Sturgeons are Royal Fishes and belong to the King But the Subject may have property in White Swans not marked as in his own private Waters And if they go out of those private Waters into Open and Common Rivers yet Eousque nostra intelliguntur quandin habuerunt animum revertendi The like are Cervi Pavones Columbae hujusmodi Resolved That every one who hath Swans within his Manor that is to say within his private Waters hath a property in them For a Writ of Trepass was brought of wroungful taking his Swans scilicet Quare Cygnos suos c. 2. One may prescribe to have a Game of Swans within his Manor as well as to have a Warren or a Park 3. He who hath such a Game of Swans may prescribe that his Swans may Swim within the Manor of another 4. A Swan may be an Estray and so cannot any other Fowl Coke's 7 Rep. 16. Case of Swans The Custom of the County of Bucks is for him who hath property of Swans in the Thames to have two Cygnets and Owner of the Land where the Swan buildeth shall have one Cygnet If one ●ave a Cock and tother a Hen the ●ygnets of them shall be equally divided between them None can have a Swan-mark called Cygni-nota but by Grant of the King or of his Officers thereto authorised or by Prescription and if a Man hath a Swan-mark and hath Swans swimming in an open River lawfully marked therewith they belong to him ratione Privilegii and he may grant such Swan-mark over But if he hath not Five Marks per Annum he forfeits his Swan-mark The King may grant Swans unmarked and by consequence a Man may prescribe to have Swans unmarked in such a place In some Creatures which are ferae Naturae a Man hath Jus Proprietatis and in others Jus Privilegii and there are three kinds of Property 1. Absolute 2. Qualified 3. Possessory Of all which you may read in Coke's 7 Rep. 16 to 18. Case of Swans By Stat. 22 Ed. 4.6 None but the King's Son shall have any Mark or Game of Swans of his own or to his use except he hath Lands and Tenements of Freehold worth Five Marks per Annum besides Reprizes in pain to have them seized by any having Lands of that Value to be divided between the King and the Seizor See before in The King's Swanherd Pag. 204. To the King's Aulnager NOte by Stat. 12 Ed. 3.3 No Clothes made beyond Sea shall be brought into the King's Dominions on pain to forfeit the same and to be further punished at the King 's Will. By Stat. 11 Ed. 3.5 Cloath workers of strange Lands which come into the King's Dominions shall have the King's Protection dwell where they please and have convenient Franchises granted unto them By Stat. 17 E. 3. Stat. 1.4 Cloaths shall not be forfeit for want of Measure but the Aulnager shall measure them and fix a Mark thereunto expressing what each Cloath contains By Stat. 3 R. 2.2 the Aulnager shall not feal a pieced Cloath in pain that the Owner shall forfeit the Cloath and the Aulnager his Office By Stat. 17 R. 2.2 No Cloath shall be sold before it be measured and sealed by the Aulnager upon the Pains contained in the Statutes thereof made By Stat. 4. H. 4.24 the Aulnage may be let to Farm by Improvement according to the Discretion of the Lord Treasurer and barons of the Exchequer notwithstanding the Statute of 17 R. 2. And much more of his Office and Duty and Measuring Regulating and making of Cloaths c. you may read in the many divers Statutes concerning the same Vid. the Statutes concerning Drapery See before in the King's Aulnager Page 205. To the Court of the Sessions of the Peace A Justice of Peace may make a Warrant to bring the Party before himself but if the Warrant be any Justice then the Constable may carry the Party before whom he will Coke's 5 Rep. 59. Foster's Case Where Stat. 8 H. 6. speaketh of Justices of Peace Justices of King's-Bench are within the Statute because they have the Sovereign and Supreme Authority in such Cases Stat. 5 H 4. Enacts That no Justice of Peace shall commit any to Prison but only in the Common Goal saving to Lords and others who have Goals their Franchises in such Case Therefore Justices of Peace offend in committing Felons c. to the Compters in London Coke's 9 Rep. 118 119. Lord Sanchar's Case A Justice of Peace upon the View of the Force may commit but he ought to
can Examine after Judgment 10 Hen. 6.14 15. Also there is a practise called Marking of a Cause before the Lord Mayor which is after a Verdict given for the Plaintiff in the Sheriffs Court the Defendant may get the Cause marked by one of the Clerks in the Lord Mayor's Court to stay Judgment and Execution until the matter be Examined in Equity where the Lord Mayor doth oftentimes mitigate the Damages or give the Defendant time to pay it c. This Court is held Mondays Tuesdays and every day if the Lord Mayor please to sit The Court of the Mayor and Aldermen THis is a Court of Record consisting of the Lord Mayor Recorder and Twenty three Aldermen whereof the Two Sheriffs are part And their Proceedings is by Arrest of the Body or Attachment of the Defendants Goods and in that case much like the other Courts of Common Law By the Statute of 43 Eliz. cap. 12. They have power to correct Errors used for default of good Governance c. in the City The Court of Orphans THe Mayor and Aldermen by Custom have the Custody of Orphans within the City And if they commit the custody to another Man he should have a Ravishment of Ward if the Orphan be taken away And they shall have custody of the Lands and Goods of such Orphans A Recognizance may be acknowledg'd in this Court before the Mayor and Aldermen to the Chamberlain for Orphans and he being a sole Corporation the Recognizance and Bond made to him and his Successors concerning Orphans shall by Custom go to his Successors Executors or Administrator are to Exhibite true Inventories before the Lord Mayor and Aldermen and give Security by Rocognizance or the Court may commit them to Prison till they do it If the Father advance any of his Children by part of his Goods that shall bar him to demand any further unless the Father under his Hand or by Will declare it was but in part of Advancement and then that Child putting his part in Hotchpot with the Executors and Widow may have a Third part of the whole and this the Civil Law calls Collatio Bonorum How the Goods of a Freeman shall be divided See Coke's 1 Inst Sect. 207. The Court of Common Councel THis is held by the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Commonalty Resembling the High Court of Parliament The Commonalty being chosen out of every Ward constitute the Lower House and Represent all the Commonalty of the City Here they make Acts for the better Government of the City For the Execution of the Laws and Statutes of this Realm Pro Bono publico and for the better advancement of Trade and Traffick Provided such Constitutions be not contrary to the Laws of the Realm And these being made by Mayor Aldermen and Commonalty do bind within the City And they of the Common Assembly do give their Assent by holding up their Hands The Court of Wardmote Inquest THis Resembles the Country Leets Every Ward being as a Hundred and the Parishes as Towns And in in every Ward there is an Inquest of Twelve or more Sworn every year to Inquire of and present Nusances and other Offences within the Ward The Court of Hallmote THis is as much as to say The Court of the Hall being the Court which every Company in London keeps in their Halls which was anciently called The Hallmote or Folke Mote The Chamberlain 's Court for Apprentices BEfore the Chamberlain all Indentures of Apprentices are or ought to be Inrolled and if they be not Inrolled and if they be not Inrolled the Apprentice may refuse to Serve and Sue out his Indenture in this Court at his Pleasure and be discharged of his Master The Chamberlain is Judge in all Complaints either of the Servant against the Master or Master against the Servant and punisheth the Offenders at his Discretion In this Court are all Apprentices made Free And that may be Three manner of ways By Service as are Apprentices By Birthright as being the Son of a Freeman which is called Freedom by his Fathers Copy or by Redemption by Order of the Court of Aldermen The Court of the Conservator of the Water and River of Thames THe Lord Major of London for the time being is the Conservator or Governor of the River of Thames and the Issues Breaches and Lands overflown from Stanes Bridge to the Waters of Yendal or Medway And hath Authority for punishment of such as use unlawful Netts or Engins in Fishing or take Fish under Size or unseasonably c. 4 Hen. 7. cap. 15. And in all Commissions touching the Water of Lee the Lord Mayor shall be one 3 Jac. cap. 14. The Court of the Coroner in London THe Mayor is Coroner within the City And this Court is holden before him or his Deputy See Coroner before in the Counties The Court of Escheator in London THe Lord Mayor is also Escheator within the City And this Court is holden before him or his Deputy Vide Escheator before in Counties The Court of Policies and Assurances THis Court Sitteth by Force of the Commission under the Great Seal Warranted by Act of Parliament Ann. 43 Eliz. cap. 12. there being an Officer or Clerk to Register Assurances The Jurisdiction of which Court you may read in that Act of Parliament being for Incouragement of Trade The Judge of the Admiralty Recorder Two Doctors of Civil Law Two Common Lawyers Eight Merchants or any five of them to determine all differences concerning Assurances as they shall think fit without Formalities of Pleadings And to Commit to Prison without Bail all such as disobey their Decrees And to that end they are to meet once a Week at the Assurance Office and not to take any Fee If any be grieved by their Decree he may Exhibit his Bill in Chancery for Re-examination of that Decree The Lord Mayor is Chief Judge at the Court or Sessions of Gaol Delivery held Eight times in the year or oftner at the Sessions-House in the Old Baily for the City of London and County of Middlesex for the Tryal of Criminals and hath power to Reprieve Condemned persons The Tradesmen in London are divided into Corporations or Companies and are so many Bodies Politick of these Twelve are called Chief Companies and he that is chosen Lord Mayor if he be not before must be made Free of one of these Companies viz. Mercers Grocers Drapers Fishmongers Goldsmiths Skinners Merchant Taylors Haberdashers Salters Ironmongers Vintners Cloth-Workers All which Companies have Assembling places called Halls and each of them hath a Master chosen Annually from amongst themselves and Subordinate Governours called Wardens or Assistants And these in their Companies exactly correspond to the General Government of the City Several of our Kings have to honour some of these Companies taken their Freedom of it as VII several Kings had been of the Taylors Company whereof the last of these Seven being King Henry the 7th gave them the Name and Title of Merchant Taylors
Certificate of Tenths which ought to have been there inserted That Court shall have power to enter it into the said Original Record to the end it may from thenceforth be chargable therewith By Stat. 32 Hen. 8. cap. 47. The Bishop of Norwich and his Successors shall Collect the Tenths of all Spiritual Promotions within his Diocess notwithstanding the Statute of 27 Hen. 8. not Printed which did Exempt them from the Collection thereof By Stat. 34 and 35. Hen. 8. cap. 17. The Ten●hs and Pensions reserved upon the Patents of the Five new Bishops of Chester Gloucester Peterborough Bristol and Oxford shall be paid in the Court of the First fruits and Tenths and not elsewhere But note That the Court was afterward annexed to the Exchequer by divers Acts of Parliament and Patents of Hen. 8. and Queen Mary By Stat. 2 and 3 Ed. 6. cap. 20. The penalty for default of Payments of Tenths shall be the Forfeiture of that only Benefice out of which the same is due notwithstanding the Statute of 26 Hen. 8. cap. 3. By Stat. 7. Ed. 6. cap. 4. The Collectors of Tenths shall before Midsummer next give good Security to save the Bishop harmless against the King The Bishop shall have the last day of May for the payment of Tenths and for making Certificates for such as have refused to pay them notwithstanding the Statute of 26 Hen. 8. cap. 3. If a Benefice be void so that no Tenth can be there received the Bishop upon Certificate shall be discharged thereof and then the King shall have it levied upon the Glebe by way of Seisure The Patent of a Collector of Tenths shall be good no longer than during the continuance of the Grantor in the See By Stat. 1 Eliz. cap. 4. The First-fruits and Tenths restored to the Crown the Statutes prescribing the Grant and Order of them recontinued The Statute of 2 and 3 Philip and Mary by which they were taken away repealed and they shall from henceforth be within the Survey of the Court of Exchequer All Advowsons of Vicaridges incident to any of the Queens Impropriations shall be re-setled in her notwithstanding any Act done by Cardinal Pool or Grant made by Queen Mary saving unto all Persons except such unto whom such Grants have been made their Right and Interest into or out of such Impropriations Pensions and all other yearly Payments shall be paid as before the Act of 2 and 3 Philip and Mary All Persons in Arrear for those Duties shall not be answerable for them to the Queen If an Incumbent continue in the Benefice half a year after the last avoidance and die or be legally ousted before the end of the year He his Executors Administrators or Sureties shall only pay the Fourth part of the First fruits if he live out the year and die or be ousted within Six Months after the year only half the First-fruits shall be paid And if he live out the year and half and die or be ousted within one year only the quarter thereof shall be paid Discharge of First-fruits and Tenths heretofore granted by any of the Queens Predecessors to the Universities or the Colleges in them or to those of Eaton and Winchester shall remain good notwithstanding this Act Also the Dean and Canons of Windsor shall be from henceforth discharged thereof All Grants of Impropriations belonging to the Arch-deaconry of Wells shall remain good notwithstanding this Act yet the said Arch-deaconry and all Spiritual Promotions Assigned to it shall from hence forth pay First-fruits and Tenths All Impropriations and other Profits or Emoluments Ecclesiastical which were formerly within the Survey of the Dutchy Court of Lancaster shall be recontinued notwithstanding this Act or that of 2 and 3 Philip and Mary The Revenues of Hospitals and Schools shall not be charged with the Payment of First fruits or Tenths notwithstanding this Act. By Stat. 28 Hen. 8. cap. 11. The year in which the First-fruits shall be paid to the King shall begin immediately after the avoidance or vacation of the Benefice In the time of Hen. 8. There were 3 new Courts erected amongst others viz. Those of the Augmentations First-fruits and Tenths and General Surveyors But these were afterwards annexed to the Exchequer by divers Acts of Parliament and Letters Patents of Hen. 8. and Queen Mary Nevertheless in some of these Acts there remains yet somewhat in force As you may see in the Statutes concerning Courts By Stat. 1 Mary Parl. 2.10 The Queen may by her Letters Patents Alter Dissolve or Reduce into one or more the Courts of Augmentations First-fruits and Tenths Wards Surveyors and the Dutchy or may annex any of them together or unto any other Court of Record or erect of the same any other new Court or Courts Provided That nothing in the said Letters Patent to be contained shall charge the Subject otherwise than as he ought to have been charged before the Second day of this Parliament and that the Officers of the said Courts shall not hold Plea but only where the Queen is party against any of her Subjects Provided also That if the Queen shall annex any of the said Courts to the Exchequer all things within the Survey of the said Court or Courts so annexed shall be ordered the Exchequer way saving to all persons their Offices Rents Annuities and Fees to be paid out of any of the Queens Courts where shall be sufficient Revenue to answer the same Vide le Statute To the Court of Ancient Demesne IN the Book of Doomes-day it self it appeareth that it was made in the time of the Conquerour And as Tenants in Ancient Demesne are careful to preserve their Priviledges so the Lord is as careful to preserve his Seigniority and the Tenure of his Tenancy in Ancient Demesne And therefore if the Tenant Levy a Fine or suffer a Recovery in the Court of Common Pleas c. whereby for a time the Land is become Frankfee the Lord by a Writ of Disceit may not only restore himself to his true Seigniority but utterly avoid the Fine and restore his Tenant against the Recovery and his own Fine to the Land again in his former Estate and the Reason thereof is for that the Recovery or Fine was not suffered or Levied before a Competent Judge in the Right Court which ought to have been in the Court of Ancient Demesne And therefore after the Reversal in the Writ of Disceit it is now Tanquam coram non Judice and the Parties to the Fine or Recovery shall be Fined and Imprisoned pro deceptione Curia But if in a Writ of Right Close in Ancient Demesne the Demandant maketh his Protestation to Sue in the nature of Assize of Mortdancester the Tenant Pleads in Abatement of the Writ and the Writ by Judgment is abated the Demandant brings a Writ of false Judgment wherein the Writ is affirmed to be good the Court of Common Pleas shall proceed as the inferiour Court should have done and