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

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hath three great commodities that is to say Air for his Health Light for his profit prospect for his pleasure may not be taken away no more then a part of his House may be pulled down whereby to erect the next House adjoyning And with this resolution agreeth the Case of Eldred reported by Sir Edw. Cook in his Ninth Report fol. 58. where he sheweth the ancient form of the Action upon the case to be quod messuagium horrida tenebritate obscuratum fuit but if there be hinderance only of the prospect by the new erected House and not of the Air not of the light then an Action of the case will not lye insomuch that the prospect is only a matter of delight and not of necessity As to the second it was resolved by the opinion of the aforesaid Judges that the custome of London will not enable a man to erect a new House upon a void space of ground whereby the ancients lights of an old house are stopt up for first the owner of the old house having possession of a lawful easment and profit which hath been belonging unto the house by prescription time out of mind of man may not be prescribed out of it by another thwarting custome which hath been used time out of mind of man but the latter custome shall rather be adjudged to be void and Prescription against a Prescription will never be allowed by the Law 2. It may well be that before time of memory the owner of the said void piece of ground granted unto the owner of the House to have his Windows that way without any stopping of them the which being done and continued accordingly hath begotten a prescription the which may not be defeated by the Allegation of a general custome and with this resolution doth agree a case adjudged Trin. 29. Eliz. Rot. 253. in the Kings Bench whereupon an action upon the case brought by Thomas Bloond against Thomas Mosley for erecting of a House in the County of the City of York whereby the ancient lights of his House were stopped up The Desendant did plead a Custome for the City of York as there is here for the City of London and adjudged that the Custome was naught whereupon the Plaintiff had his Judgement But if the Houses had been new erected Houses or otherwise Windowes had been newly made Windows in that ancient House the erection of that new House upon that void space of Ground would have been lawful notwithstanding that the Windows and Lights be stopped up for it shall not lie in the power of the owner of the ancient House by setting out his new Windows to prevent him that hath the void peice of Ground from making the best benefit of it As to the third point it was conceived that if the new house be only erected upon the ancient foundation without any inlargement either in Longitude or Latitude howsoever it be made so high that it ●oppeth up the lights of the old house yet he is not subject unto any action because the law authorizeth a man to build as high as he may upon an ancient Foundation and it is no reason to foreclose a man from making his house convenient unto his estate and degree by building up higher when there is no other impediment but only some windowes which are built out over his house and agreeing to this seemeth the old book of 4. E. 3. 150. to be where an Assize of Nusans was brought for erecting his house so high that the light of the Plaintiff in the next adjoyning house was disturbed by it and the Plaintiff upon the opinion of Herl Chief Justice did not proceed in the Assize but let it fall to the ground but if the new builded house exceeded the ancient foundation whereby that excess is the cause of stopping up of lights then is he subject unto the action of him whose light is stopped up as it may appear by 22. H. 6. 25. And in the case at the Bar Judgement was given for the Plaintiff because he had brought his action for building of a new House upon a void piece of ground by which his Windows were stopt up And Keeme the Defendant only justifieth by the Custome the erection of the House upon an old Foundation and upon the void piece of ground the which is not any answer at all unto that which the Plaintiff layeth unto the charge of the Defendant Touching the Custome of Citizens leaving that Trade whereunto they have been Apprentices seven years and betaking themselves to other Trades IOhn Tolley having been an Apprentice in London by the space of seven years unto a Wool-Packer after the seven years expired is made a Freeman of London afterwards he leaveth the Trade of a Wool-Packer and betaketh himself to the Trade of an Vpholster and doth exercise that Trade by many years whereupon one Thomas Allen an Informer doth exhibit an Information in the Court of the Mayor of London as well for the King as for himself upon the branch of the Statute made in the fifth year of the late Queen Elizabeth cap. 4. whereby it is enacted That after the first day of May next ensuing it shall not be lawful unto any person or persons other than such as now do lawfully use or exercise any art Mystery or manual occupation to set up c. any such occupation now used or occupied within the Realm of England or Wales except he shall have been brought up seven years at the least as an Apprentice in manner and form aforesaid nor to set any person on work in such Mystery Art or Occupation being not a Workman at this day except he shall have been an Apprentice as aforesaid or else having served as an Apprentice as is aforesaid shall or will become a Iourney-man or hired by the year upon pain that every person willingly offending or doing the contrary shall forfeit and lose for every default fourty shillings for every moneth And he sheweth that Iohn Tolly the now Defendant hath exercised the trade of an Upholster by the space of fourty moneths whereas he was never an Apprentice to that trade by the space of seven years contrary unto the aforesaid Statute whereby the said Thomas Allen doth demand the forfeiture of eighty pound unto the King and himself whereof he the said Allen doth require the one moyety according to the form of the said Statute And this Information being removed out of the Court of the Mayor of London by Certiorari into the Kings Bench the said Iohn Tolley doth plead a special Plea in Bar shewing that there is a custome of London which hath been used time out of mind of man That every Citizen and Freeman of London which hath been an Appretice in London unto any trade by the space of seven years may lawfully and well relinquish that trade and exercise any other trade at his will and pleasure And sheweth further That all the Customes
Commonalty for payment of the said sum at a certain day and thereupon is enlarged The four hundred Marks are not paid at the day whereupon the Mayor and Commonalty affirm a Plaint against him in London for the said Debt The Defendant obtaineth a Habeas Corpus to remove the body and the cause into the Kings Bench upon a supposition that he was to have the Priviledge by reason of a Priority of Suit in the Kings Bench and upon returne of the Habeas Corpus all this matter appeared unto the Court and it was moved by Sir Henry Mountague now Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench then one of the Serjeants of the King and Recorder of London that a Procedendo might be granted whereby the Major and Commonalty might proceed against him in the Court at London It being a customary Suit meerly grounded upon the custome of London But that was denied by Sir Edward Cook Chief Justice and the whole Court because by the Law Chamberlain having cause of Priviledge by reason of the Priority of Suit against him in the Kings Bench might not be re-manded but he was to answer in that Court Whereupon the Major and Commonalty did declare against him upon the said Obligation in the Kings Bench. Secondly it was moved that the action upon this obligation might be laid in some indifferent County and not in London forasmuch as the Trial there must be had by those that were Parties unto the Action it being brought by the Mayor and Commonalty But Sir Edward Cook and the Court would not upon this surmise take away the benefit which the Law giveth to every Plaintiff upon a transitory action wich is to lay it in whatsoever County he will And if there be any such cause as is surmised then after Plea pleaded he may make an allegation That the City of London is a County in it self and that all the Citizens there are Parties to the Action which is brought whereby there may not be an indifferent Trial. And upon this surmise the Court shall order the Trial to be in a Forreign County The which was done accordingly and so the matter proceeded The Case of the Merchant-Adventurers KIng Edward the third in the year of his reign by Letters Patents doth incorporate certain persons by the name of the Merchants-Adventurers of England and doth give power unto them to transport white Clothes into divers parts beyond the Seas restrayning them from carrying over Woolls The Merchants-Adventurers do trade beyond the Seas and continue the transposing of Clothes white until the 29. of August in the tenth year of his Majesties Reign that now is At which time the King by his Letters Pattents doth encorporate the Earl of Sussex late Lord Treasurer of England Sir Thomas Vavasour Sir Stephen Soam William Cockayn and others by the name of The Merchants Adventerers of the new trade of London with full power authority to transport dyed and dressed Cloths into divers parts beyond the Seas with a restraint prohibiting all the Old Merchants-Adventurers which did not joyn themselves unto this new Company to tranport any under the forfeiture of them and also inhibiting the New Merchants from transporting any Clothes but such as are died and dressed And after three years passed they having power during that time to transport 36000 white Clothes And there being a refusal of the Old Merchants Adventurers to surrender up their Patent The King bringeth a Quo Warranto against divers of the Merchants of the old Company by particular names to know by what Warrant they do without Licence of the King transport Clothes white undied and undressed beyond the Seas The Merchants upon the return of the Quo Warranto do make their appearance And an Information being exhibited gainst them by Sir Fr. Bacon Knight now Lord Chancellour of England and then Attorney General unto his Majesty cometh into the Kings Bench and moveth the Court that the old Merchants Adventurers might have a short day the next ensuing Term to answer unto the Information exhibited against them Insomuch that the new Company of Merchants Adventurers standing at a gaze as being uncertain of what validity the old Patent would be did slack to transplant the Diers and other Tradesmen out of the Low-Countries into England being necessary Instruments for the puting in Execution of this design because there were not here in England those that were able to Die and Dress in that manner that the Low-Country men did And so there was in the interim a stop of the current of Merchandizing with our Cloth the which being the principal Commodity that we had here in England the Fleece that causeth it may well and aptly have the term of The Golden Fleece and there being a stop made of the traffiquing and trading with these clothes it is as dangerous unto the Politique Body of the Commonwealth as the stop of a Vein could be to the natural Body for as by the stop of a Vein the Blood is debarred of his free passage and so of necessity there must be a Consumption by the continuance of it follow unto the body natural So traffique being the Blood which runneth in the Veins of the Commonwealth it cannot be but that the hinderance of it by any long continuance must breed a Consumption unto the State of the Commonwealth Wherefore to open this Vein which was as yet somewhat stopped and to give a more free passage unto the Blood he was a Suitor unto the Court on the behalf of the Company of the New Merchant-Adventurers that the Court would give expedition in this Case for they conceived that if this new design might take its full effect as it was intended it could not be but of necessity there must a great benefit redound to the Commonwealth For first Whereas our State groweth sick by reason of the many idle Persons which have not means to be set on work this Dying and Dressing of Cloths within our Kingdome would give sufficient imployment unto them all whereby there should be a cure to the lazy Leprosie which now overspreadeth our Commonwealth Secondly Whereas now we send out clothes White and the Low-Country-men receive them of us and Dye them and Dress them and afterwards transport them unto forreign parts making a wonderful benefit to themselves both in point of profit and likewise in respect of maintaining their Navy whereas if the Clothes were Died and Dressed by our selves we might reap that matter of gain and also be Masters of the Sea by strengthening our selves in our Shipping Thirdly Whereas there happeneth often a confiscation of all our Clothes and much disgrace and discredit lighteth upon our Nation and our Clothes by the abuse of the Low-Country-men in stretching them a greater length than they will well bear when they Dye and Dress them now it should be prevented when they should never have the fingering of them to put that abuse in practice Wherefore this Patent made by