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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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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the Grant and Order of them recontinued The Statute of 2 and 3 Philip and Mary by which they were taken away repealed and they shall from henceforth be within the Survey of the Court of Exchequer All Advowsons of Vicaridges incident to any of the Queens Impropriations shall be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
est appoint d●luy servire durant le temps de son Commission a faire venir devaunt luy 20 ou 18 Seigniours del Parlement a mesme la jour Et puis al jour quant le Seneschalle serra south le drape d'estate sur l'arraignment del prisoner ad fait lye son Commission le dit Serjaunt retourna le dit precept les Seigniours serront de ceo demaund ' quant ils ount apparus serrount en lour places le Constable del Tower serra demaund a amesner al Court son prisoner quel serra conduct per luy al barre Et donques le dit graund Seneschal monstra a le prisoner la cause pour quel le Roy avoit assemble la les Seigniours luy commaundra luy de responder sauns ascun pavour sur ceo causera le Clerk del Coron a lier l'Enditement a luy de luy demander sil soit culpable ou nemy a quel apres que il ad resp ' de rien culpable Le dit Clerk demand ' ouster de luy coment il voile este try A quel il peut dire per Dieu ses Pieres Et maintenant sur coe Les Serjeants Attorney le Roy deneront Evidence vers luy A quel quant le prisoner respondue Le dit Constable serra commaund de retirer le dit prisoner del barre a ascun lieu pour le temps que les dits Seigniors secretment parleront en le dit Court ensemble Et sur ceo les Seigniors se levent suis de lour places consultant ensemble ceo que ils facent ils facent sur lour honours sans ascun se●rement d'estre minister a eux Et quant eux touts ou les greinder part de eux sont agrees Ils returneront a lour places seeront Et donque le grand Seneschal demaundera del plus puisne Seignior aperluy sil qui est arraign soit culpable ou nemy issint del cestuy que est prochein al puisne issint del remenant seriatim tanque il est peruse touts chescun des Seigniors respondra aperluy Et donques le dit Seneschal remaundra pur le dit prisoner qui serra reamesnus al barr a qui le dit Seneschal rehersera le Verdit donera Judgment accordant Et cest matter de Tryal est done come semble per le Statute de Magna Charta cap. 29. qui est in cest manner Nullus Liber homo capiatur vel imprisonetur aut disseisietur de libero tenemento suo vel libertatibus vel liberis consuetudinibus suis aut utlagetur aut exuletur aut aliquo modo destruatur nec super eum ibimus nec super eum mittemus nisi per legale judicium parium suorum vel per legem terrae Nulli vendemus nulli negabimus aut differemus justitiam vel rectum Stat. 20 Hen. 6.9 Tryal of Dutchesses Countesses and Baronesses for Treason or Felony shall be as Noblemen Peers of the Realm and not otherwise notwithstanding the Statute of Magna Charta cap. 29. which mentioneth Men only to be Tryed by their Peers Mes nul de ceux Statutes ad este mise in ure d'extender a un Evesque ou Abbe coment que ils injoyent le nosme del Seignior de Parlement car ils nont cel nosme d'Evesque ou Abbe ratione Nobilitatis sed ratione Officij ne ont lieu en Parlement in respect de lour Nobility eins in respect de lour possession scil L'auncient Baronies annexes a lour Dignities Et accordant a ceo il y ad divers Presidents d'ont l'un fuist in temps le Roy Henry le 8. Et vide P. 10 E. 4. f. 6. Que un des Piers endite de Treason ou Felony Peut si pleist al Roy estre arraign de ceo en le Parlement donque les Seigniors Espirituels ferront un Procurator pur eux Eo que per le Canonical Leys ils mesmes ne doient condemner ascun a mort Stamford 's Pleas of the Crown fol. 152. The High Court of Chancery CAlled Curia Cancellariae because a● some think the Judge of the Cou●sate antiently Infra Cancellos at th● East end of our Churches being separated per Cancellos from the Body of the Church as peculiarly belonging to the Priest were then●● called Chancels But others derive it ●●ther from the Power of the Lord Chancellor who is called Cancellarius à Cancellando The highest point of his Power being to Cancel the Kings Letter Patents and damning the Inrollme●● thereof by drawing strokes through 〈◊〉 like a Lattice in several cases as whe●● the King grants any thing upon fa●●● Suggestion or what by Law he cannot grant And in the Chancery are two Court● one of Ordinary Jurisdiction Cora●● Domino Rege in Cancellaria And th●● other of Extraordinary Jurisdiction The Court of Ordinary Jurisdictio●● proceeds according to the Right Li●● of the Laws and Statutes of the Real●● Secundum Legem Consuetudinem Angliae and hath power to hold Plea 〈◊〉 Scire facias for Repeal of the King 〈◊〉 Letters Patents of Petitions Monstra●● de droits Traverses of Offices Partitions in Chancery of Scire facias upon Recognizance in this Court Writs of Audita Querela to avoid Executions in this Court Dowment in Chancery by the Writ De Dote assignanda upon Offices found Executions upon the Statute Staple or Recognizance in nature of a Statute Staple by the Act of 23 H. 8. But Execution upon Statute Merchant is retornable into the Kings Bench or Common Pleas all personal Actions by or or against an Officer or Minister of this Court in respect of their Service or Attendance there But these if the Parties descend to Issue this Court cannot try by Jury but the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper delivereth the Record by his proper Hands into the Kings Bench to be tried there because for that purpose both Courts are accompted but one and after Tryal had to be remanded into Chancery and there Judgment to be given but if there be a Demurrer in Law it shall be argued and adjudged in this Court This Court is Officina Justitiae out of which all Original Writs and Commissions under the great Seal do Issue which great Seal is Clavis Regni and for these ends this Court is ever open And for that if any be wrongfully Imprisoned in the Vacation the Lord Chancellor may grant an Habeas Corpus to do him Justice which only other Courts can do in Term time and also may grant Prohibitions in Term time or Vacation which are not returnable but if not obeyed then may this Court grant an Attachment upon Prohibition returnable either in the Kings Bench or Common Pleas. The Author of Novae Narrationes written about the time of E. 3. saith Curia Cancellariae Regiae est Curia Ordinaria pro Brevibus Originalibus emanandu Sed non Placit is
dicitur diuturnam cepit dilationem ad grave dampnum ipsius A. Sicut ex querela sua accepimus Vobis praecipimus quod ad judicium inde reddend cum ea celeritate quae secundum Legem consuetudinem regni nostri procedas c. Likewise when Justices or Judges of any Court of Record or not of Record give Judgment and delayed the party of his Execution the party grieved may have a Writ De executione Judicij by which Writ the Justices or Judges are commanded Quod executioonem judicij nuper redditi c. de loquela quae fuit c. per breve nostrum c. sine dilatione Fieri fac ' and thereupon an Alias Plur ' and Attachment c. do lye By the meeting together upon Adjournment of the Cause out of the Court where the Cause dependeth c. all the Judges c. which now we call an Exchequer Chamber Cause Warranted by the Common Law and Ancient Presidents before this Statute and the frequent use of this Court of Exchequer Chamber hath been the Cause that this Court upon the Act of 14 E. 3. hath been rarely put in ure By the King 's Writ comprehending Quod si difficultas aliqua intersit that the Record should be certified into the Parliament and to Adjourn the parties to be there at a certain Day Si obscurum difficile sit Judicium ponantur judicia in respect ' usque magnam curiam An excellent Record whereof you may read in the Parliament holden at Westminster the Tuesday after the Translation of St. Thomas Becket Ann● 14 E. 3. Secondly By Acts of Parliament Nulli vèndemus nulli negabimus aut differemus justitiam vel rectum That it shall not be commanded neither by the Great Seal nor by the Little Seal nor by Letters nor any other cause to delay Right and albeit such commandment come c. that by them the Justices surcease not to do Right in no manner In divers cases the party grieved shall have an Action for unjust delay Tolle moram semper nocuit differre paratis But seeing neither the Common Law nor any of the Acts of Parliament do extend to Ecclesiastical Courts it is then demanded What if an Inferiour Ordinary will refuse or delay to admit and institute a Clerk presented by the right Patron to a Church within his Diocess or the like or delay or refuse to give Sentence in a Case depending before him It is Answered That the Archbishop of the Province may grant his Letters under his Seal to all and singular Clerks of his Province to admonish the Ordinary within Nine days to perform that which by Justice is desired or otherwise to cite him to appear before him or his Official at a day in those Letters prefixed and to cite the party that hath suffered such delay then and there likewise to appear and further to intimate to the said Ordinary that if he neither perform that which is enjoyned nor appear he himself without further delay will perform the Justice required or in the former of the said Cases the party delayed may have his Quare impedit but that is thought not to be so speedy a remedy Cokes 4 Inst cap. 6. The Kings Bench Court THis Court is so called because antiently the King sat there sometimes in Person upon a high Bench and the Judges upon a low Bench at his Feet to whom the Judicature belongs in the absence of the King And the Pleas here are betwixt the King and Subject As for Treasons Felonies Breach of the Peace Oppression Misgovernment c. And moreover it examineth and corrects all Errors in facto and in jure of all the Judges and Justices of England in their Judgments and Proceedings and this not only in Pleas of the Crown but in all Pleas Real Personal and Mixt except only in the Exchequer And in this Court are Four Judges First The Lord Chief Justice created by Writ thus Mathis Hale Militi Salutem Sciatis quod constitu●mus vos Justiciarium Nostrum capitalem ad Placita coram nobis tenenda durant● bene placito Nostro Teste me ipso ap●l Westminst Three other Judges hold their Places by Letters Patents in these word Rea Omnibus ad quos Praesentes Litterae pe●●nerint Salutem Sciatis quod Constitu●mus Dilectum Fidelem R.R. Militem un●● Justiciariorum ad placita coram nobis ●●nenda durante bene placito nostro Test● c. These Judges and all the Officers of this Court have Salaries from the King and the Chief of them Liveries out of the great Wardrobe In this Court all young Lawyers who have been called to the Bar are allowed to Plead and Practise This Court may grant Prohibition to keep other Courts both Ecclesiastical and Temporal within their Bounds and due Jurisdiction The Jurisdiction thereof is General and extendeth to all England is more uncontrolable than any other Court because the Law presumes the King always is present there in Person None may be Judge here but a Ser●eant who upon taking his Degree is obliged to wear a Lawn Coif under ●his Cap for ever after The King hath wholly left matters of Judicature according to his Laws to his Judges and albeit the Delinquent shall be Fined at the Will of the King Non Dominus Rex Camera sua nec aliter nisi per Justiciarios suos Finem imponit Errors in the Kings Bench cannot be reversed except in certain particular cases by Stat. 27 Eliz. c. 8. wherein the ●urisdiction of the Court is saved but in the High Court of Parliament A Record brought into this Court cannot as it were being in its Center be remanded back unless by Act of Parliament But Indictments of Fe●onies and Murders may be remanded ●nd sent by the Justices of that Court ●nto the several Counties The Justices of the Kings Bench may grant a Nisi prius in case of Treason Felony and other Pleas but if they perceive an Indictment to be removed into that Court by practise or for delay they may send it back again for Justice to be done In this Court the Sentence is give● by the Chief Justice the others all 〈◊〉 the most part assenting If they cannot agree it is referred to a Demurrer i● the Exchequer Chamber before all the Judges of both Benches and Chie● Baron of the Exchequer And now 〈◊〉 us speak somewhat of The Officers THe Prothonotary recordeth all Jud●ments Orders and Rules of Cour●● and all Verdicts given being not 〈◊〉 Crown matters The Secondary is his Deputy for 〈◊〉 said Cause who keeps and mak● up these Records in Books and alway● attends the Court. The Clerk of the Crown Frames 〈◊〉 Indictments of Felony Treason M●ther c. all manner of Appeals a●● is after to Record them and enter 〈◊〉 Verdict and to make and keep th● Records of these matters And hath 〈◊〉 Deputy The Clerk of the Exigents Frames 〈◊〉 Process of Exigi facias and Reco●● the Oulawry The Clerk
are able For all which see more in the Statute de Escheatoribus 29 E. 1. Coke's 4 Institutes cap. 43. c. The Court of the Clerk of the Market THe Clerk of the Market is to this day called Clericus Mercati Hospitij Regis And keepeth a Court and Inquireth after Weights and Measures whether they be according to the King's Standard and for that Purpose he maketh Process to Sheriffs and Bailiffs to Return Pannels before him c. And he is to deliver Estreats of such things as concern his Office into the Exchequer He can hold no Plea but what was holden in the Reign of E. 1. and at this day there is not so much occasion for him or his Authority since Justices of Assize Justices of Oyer and Terminer Justices of Peace and Sheriffs in their Tourns and Lords in their Leets may Inquire of False Weights and Measures Of Wine Ale Beer Corn and Grain there ought to be but One Measure and of all other Merchandize per totum Regnum De Ponderib ' vero sicut de Mensuris But notwithstanding divers Statutes there are two kinds of weights used in this Kingdom one called Troy weight commanded by the Statute And is thus deduced 24 Corns of Barley dry and from the midst of the Ear make a peny we●ght 20 peny weights an Ounce and 12 Ounces a pound Troy a Grain contains 20 Minutes a Minute contains 24 Droits a Droit contains 24 Blanks Twelve Grians of Fine Gold make a Caract 24 Caractes an Ounce and 12 Ounces a pound By this Troy weight are measured according to Law Pearls Precious Stones Gold Silver Bread Wheat and such like And this kind of Weight the Apothecaires do or ought to use although by other Divisions and Denominations Their least Measure is a Grain 20 Grains make a Scruple maked ℈ 3 Scruples make a Drachm marked ʒ 8 Drachmes make an Ounce marked ℥ 12 Ounces make a Pound marked lb Another called Avoir du Pois A Pound of this consisteth of 16 Ounces Every Ounce of 20 Peny weight Every Peny weight 21 Grains and 9 10 of a Grain It is called Avoir du Pois because thereby they have full Measure By this are weighed all Physical Drugs Wax Pitch Tarr Iron Steel Lead Hemp Flax Flesh Butter Cheese and divers other Commodities and especially every Commodity subject to Wast And thereof an 112 Pounds are called an Hundred weight There was another weight called Auncel weight by Scales fixed to a Beam or Staff and by the Hand or Fore-finger wherein was much Deceipt and therefore abolished by several Statute Measures of Troy are of Three kinds viz. Of Things that are Dry Of Things Moist or Liquors and Of Longitude Latitude and Profundity Of Dry things 4 Grains make a Peny weight 20 Peny weight an Ounce 12 Ounces a Pound or Pint 2 Pints a Quart 2 Quarts a Pottle 2 Pottles a Gallon 2 Gallons a Peck 4 Pecks a Bushel 4 Bushels makes a Comb 2 Combs a Quarter 6 Quarters make a Weigh and 10 Quarters a Last Of Liquors 12 Ounces make a Pint or Pound and 2 Pints a Quart and 4 Quarts a Gallon of Wine which is 8 Pounds Troy weight 18 Gallons make a Rundlet 31 Gallons and a Half make Half a Hogshed 42 Gallons make a Tierce 63 Gallons a Hogshead 84 Gallons a Puncheon 126 Gallons a Pipe or Butt and 252 Gallons make a Tun of Wine Of Ale and Beer 8 Gallons is a Firkin 16 Gallons is a Kilderkin 32 Gallons is a Barrel 63 Gallons is a Hogshead The Wine Measure is smaller than the Ale and Beer Measure and holds Proportion as 4 to 5 So that 4 Gallons of Beer are 5 Gallons of Wine And the Measure of Dry things is greater than the Wine and lesser than the Ale and Beer Measure so that the Gallon of this Measure being about 8 Pou●●s Troy weight is in proportion to the Wine Gallon as 33 to 28 and is in Proportion to the Beer Gallon as 33 to 35. Of Longitude Latitude and Profundity 3 Grains of Barley make an Inch 4 Inches make a Handful 3 Handful make a Foot 1 Foot and ½ make a Cubit 2 Cubits a Yard 1 Yard and ¼ an Ell 5 Foot a Geometrical Pace 6 Foot a Fathom 16 Foot and ½ make a Perch Pole or Rod 40 Perch make a Furlong 8 Furlongs make a Mile which according to the Statute of 11 Hen. 7. ought to be 1760 Yards or 5280 Foot That is 280 Foot more than the Italian Mile 60 Miles or more exactly 69 English Miles and ½ make a Degree and 360 Degrees Or 25020 Miles Compass the whole Globe of the Earth For Measuring of Land 40 Perch in Length and 4 in Breadth make an Acre so called from the German Acker and that from the Latin Ager 30 Acres ordinarily make a yard Land and 100 Acres are accounted an Hide of Land By the Stat. of 7 Hen. 7. The Chief Officer of ever City and Burrough shall take for Sealing of every Bushel a peny of every other measure a Half peny of every Hundred weight a peny and every Half hundred weight a Half peny of lesser weight a Farthing The Clerk of the Market ought not to take any Common Fine nor to Claim any thing for Examining or Viewing of Measures Sealed or other Measures Of which see more in the Statute and Coke's 4 Inst cap. 61. The Court of Pepondres Vulgarly Pipowders Curia Pedis pulverisati THis Court is incident to every Fair and Market as a Court Baron is to a Manor and is so called for that Justice for advancement of Trade is as Speedy as the Dust may fall from a Man's Feet Their Proceedings being De hora in horam And this is a Court of Record to be holden before the Steward of the Court and the Jurisdiction thereof consisteth in Four Conclusions 1st The contract or cause of Action must be in the same time of the Fair or Market 2ly It must be for some matter concerning the same Fair or Market complain'd on heard and determined 3ly It must be within the Precinct of the Fair or Market 4ly The Plaintiff must take an Oath according to the Statute of 17 Ed. 4. cap. 2. But that concludeth not the Defendant And there may be a Court of Pipowders by Custom without a Fair or Market and a Market without an Owner And this Court of Pipowders by Prescription may be extended to all Contracts Bonds Actions of Trespass and upon the case and no Writ of Faux Judgment but a Writ of Error lies here and in the Ordinary Court of Pipowders incident to a Fair or Market And this Court by Prescription may be used either by way of Grant or Confirmation For all which see in Coke's 4 Institutes and Greenwood of Courts The Court of the Dutchy Chamber of Lancaster at Westminster KIng Ed. the 3. in full Parliament Ann. 50. E. 3. Erected the County of Lancastar a County Palatine by Letters Patent and
altho' that Judgment be given to recover the Land in the Common Pleas yet the Land is not Frank-see but remains Ancient Demesne because the beginning and foundation thereof was in Ancient Demesne They may Levy a Fine in Ancient Demesne which by Custom is said to be a Bar of an Estate Tail but certainly that will not hold If the Tenant remove the Plea for the cause mentioned in the Recordare he may come into the Kings Court and Assign other Cause And Twenty if he hath to maintain the Jurisdiction of the Kings Court Coke's 4 Inst cap. 58. All those Manors which were in the Hands of St. Edw. the Confessor were caused to be Written in Doomes-day Book Sub Titulo Regis and all the Lands holden of the said Manors are held by Tenure of Ancient Demesne And the Tenants shall not be Impleaded out of the said Manors and if they be they may shew the Matter and abate the Writ But if they Answer to the Writ and Judgment be given then the Lands become Frank-fee for ever And Tenants in Ancient Demesne which held their Lands by Soccage That is by Service with the Plow are called Sockmans That is Tenants or Men that hold by Service of the Plow or Plowmen for Sock signifies a Plow Terms del Ley. All the Lands that are in the Kings Hands are Frank-fee and Pleadable at the Common Law F. N. B. 35. The Manor it self and the Demesne Lands within the Manor is Pleadable at Common Law and a Man ought to Sue his Action for the Manor and for the Lands which are Parcel of the Manor at the Common Law and in the Common Pleas F. N. B. 24. But if a Man Sue for Lands holden of the Manor in the Hands of a Free Tenant he ought to Sue the Writ of Droit Close directed to the Lord of the Manor and there he shall make his Protestation to Sue in the same Court the same Writ in the nature of what Writ he will Declare And if false Judgment be given the Tenant or Demandant may Sue a Writ of false Judgment F. N. B. 24. But he who holdeth in Ancient Demesne by Copy of Court Roll at the Will of the Lord who is called Tenant by base Tenure and anciently Tenure in Villenage if he be ousted of his Lands he shall not have this Writ of Droit Close but ought to Sue by Bill in the Court of the Lord of the Manor and shall make Protestation to Sue there in nature of what Writ he will but he shall not have a Writ of false Judgment or other Remedy but to Sue to the Lord by way of Petition F. N. B. fo 26 27. And when the Writ of Droit Glose cometh to the Lord or his Bailiffs he ought to hold a Court and if he will not hold it The Demandant may Sue a Writ out of Chancery commanding him to hold it and thereupon an Attachment directed to the Bailiff returnable in the Kings Bench or Common-Pleas whereupon he shall recover Damages or the like against the Bailiff And if the Lord oust his Tenant that holds in Fee he may have a Writ of Droit Close or an Assize or other Writ at Common Law against the Lord for those Lands F. N. B. 26. No Lands are Ancient Demesne but Lands holden in Soccage And By this Tenure is intended that the Tenants shall do the Service of the Plow● viz. To Plow and Till the Lords Lands to Mow the Lords Meadows and such like Services as are for the maintaining of the Kings Sustenance or Victuals and his Subjects And for such Services the Tenants have divers Liberties and Priviledges in Law as to be quit of Toll and Taxes if not charged upon Ancient Demesne To be free from Charges of Knights of Parliament and not to be put on Enquests out of their Manors unless they have other Lands c. And if the Lord Distrein for other Service or Customs than they are used to do they may have a Monstraverunt F. N. B. fo 30 31. The Lord shall not answer to Attachment upon the Monstraverunt before the Court be certified by the Treasurer and Chamberlain of the Exchequer whether the Land be Ancient Demesne F. N. B. 35. The Lord shall have a Writ of Disceit against him who levieth a Fine of Demesne Lands and he who is Tenant shall avoid the Fine But if he Release to him in Possession it shall bind F. N. B. 216. Lands in Ancient Demesne may be extended by the Statute de Mercatoribus 13 E. 1. Coke's 2 Inst 397. And upon Statute Staple And general Statutes extend to it Coke's 4 Inst 270. Fine in Ancient Demesne by Custom Bars an Estate Tail Coke's 2 Inst 207 270. The Jurisdiction extends not to personal Actions Coke's 2 Inst 224 270. The Demandant in a Writ of Droit Close cannot remove the Plea out of the Lords Court for any cause c. nor can the Tenant remove the Plea out of the Ancient Demesne if not for Causes which prove the Land to be Frank-fee and not Ancient Demesne And when the Court is removed by Recordare he ought to shew some Special matter to prove the Land to be Frank fee and not Ancient Demesne otherwise the Plea shall be sent back unto the Lords Court But to shew a Fine levied in the Kings Court of the same Land or a Recovery had upon a Praecipe quod Reddat is a good cause to prove the Land to be Frank-fee c. Tenants in Ancient Demesne may make Attorneys Coke's 2 Institutes 700. Ancient Demesne Tryable by Book of Doomes-day Coke's 4 Inst 270. In a Replevin Writ of Mesne Writ of Ward in Accompt against Guardian in Soccage Ancient Demesne is a good Plea for the Appearance and Common Intendment that the Realty doth come in Debate so in Accompt against a Bailiff For it is brought for the Issue and Profits of the Land which is Ancient Demesne which ought to be determined in the Court of Ancient Demesne And in Assize brought by Tenant by Elegit Ancient Demesne is a good Plea For the manner of Proceeding and Tryal See Coke's 5 Rep. 105. Alden's Case 105. If Ancient Demesne be pleaded of a Manor and denied it shall be Tryed by the Record of the Book of Doomes-day in the Exchequer But if Issue be taken that certain Acres are parcel of the Manor which is Ancient Demesne it shall be Tryed by Jury for it cannot be Tryed by the same Book Coke's 9 Rep. 31. Case of the Abbot of Strata Marcella If a Man Levy a Fine of Land in Ancient Demesne to another at Common Law now the Lord shall have a Writ of Disceit against him who levied the Fine and him who is Tenant and thereby he shall make void the Fine and the Conusor shall be restored to the Possession which he hath given by the Fine But if the Conusor after the Fine Release to the Conusee by his Deed being in Possession or by
of the King 's Writ it doth not change the Nature and Jurisdiction of the Court. For as these without Writs are not Courts of Record so when the Plea is holden by Writ the Courts are of the same Nature For upon a Judgment given in both Cases a VVrit of false Judgment lieth and not a Writ of Error But it is true the King may create a new Court and appoint new Judges in it but after the Court is established and created the Judges of the Court ought to determine Matters in the Court. And therefore neither the Lords of Ancient Demesne nor the Court Baron nor the Sheriff in the County Court when the Plea is holden by Writ of Right Justicies Admeasurement c. are Judges but the Suitors who by the Common Law are the Judges of the Court But in some Cases the Sheriff is made Judge by Parliament as in the Redisseisin by the Stat. of Merton cap. 3. And all his proceeding by force of that Act is of Record and a Writ of Error doth lie of a Judgment given against him Coke's 6 Rep. 11 12. Jentleman's Case In some Actions the Defendant shall be fined in one Court and but amerced in another and yet the Offence shall be all one as in a Writ of Recaption if it be brought in the Common Pleas and Judgment be there given the Defendant shall be fined and imprisoned But if the Writ be brought in the County Court and the Defendant be convict before the Sheriff in the County the Judgment shall not be Quod capiatur quia nulla Curia quae Recordum non habet potest imponere finem neque aliquem mandare carceri quia ista spectant tantummodo ad Curias de Recordo and therefore in such cases he shall be only amerced Coke's 8 Rep. 60. Beecher's Case By Stat. W. 1.33 3 E. 1. No Sheriff shall suffer Barretors or Maintainers of Quarrels or Stewards of great Lords or other unless Attorney for his Lord to make Suit or to give Judgment in the Counties or to pronounce them if he be not required so to do by all the Suitors and Attorneys of the Suitors there present in Pain that both the Sheriff and they shall be grievously punished by the King By Stat. 19 H. 7.24 the Shire Court for Sussex shall be holden one time at Chichester and the next at Lewis alternis vicibus in pain that the Court otherwise kept and the things therein transacted shall be void By Stat. 2 3 E. 6.25 County Courts shall be adjourned from Month to Month and no longer The Sheriff of Northumberland shall keep his County Court at Alnwicke and not elsewhere Stat. 2 3 E. 6.25 This Court is incident to the Office of Sheriff and cannot be divided from it by Letters Patent or otherwise but by Act of Parliament Coke's 4 Rep. 33. Mitton's Case See the Court of the Tourn and the Court Leet and after in the Court of the Hundred and Court Baron See before in The County Court Page 228. To the Court of the Hundred AFter King Alfred had divided the Realm into Shires called so from the Saxon Scyran signifying to cut he divided the Shires into smaller Parts called Lathes of the Word Gelathian which is to Assemble together Others Tythings because there were in each of them Ten Persons whereof each one was Surety or Pledge for the others good a bearing Others Hundreds because they contained Jurisdiction over one Hundred Men or Pledges dwelling in Two Three or more Parishes Boroughs or Towns in which he appointed Administration of Justice severally among them of the same Hundred In Stat. of Marlebridge cap. 11. hundredum is taken pro Visu Franci Plegii so as the Sense is That he who hath Tenements in the Town and in some other View of Frankpledge of some other Lord or in divers Views of Frankpledge he shall not need to come to any other but where he is conversant and Hundreds there are named because Sheriffs keep their Tourns in every Hundred If a Man hath a House and Family in two Leets he shall be taken to be conversant where his Bed is If a man hath a House and Family in Two Hundreds yet he shall do his Suit to the Tourn or Leet where his Person is commorant Coke's 2. Inst. 122. A Man may have a Writ to the Sheriff for discharging him from coming to the Sheriff's Tourn or Hundred or Leet or other Place than in the Leet or Precinct of the Hundred where he dwelleth and if the Sheriff distrain him to come contrary to the Statute of Marlebridge cap. 10. and a Writ be delivered to him he shall have an Attachment against the Sheriff All the Tenants in Ancient Demesne may have this Writ And if a Man be distrained to do Suit twice in the Year appertaining to the Leet he shall have a Writ upon Magna Charta but it is otherwise of the Hundred because Suit is there from There Weeks to Three Weeks Vide F. N. B. 356 to 360. Articuli super Chartas 28 E. 1. Bailywicks and Hundreds shall not be let to Farm at over-great Sums whereby the People may be over-charged to make Contributions to such Farms See the Statute and in Court of the Leet and County Court See before in The Court of the Hundred Pag. 233. To Court Baron THE Court Baron is so called because amongst the Laws of King Edward the Confessor it is said Barones vero qui suam habent Curiam de suis hominibus c. taking his Name of the baron who was Lord of the Manor or for that properly in the Eye of the Law it hath relation to the Freeholders who are Judges of the Court. And in Ancient Charters and Records the Barons of London and the Barons of the Cinque-Ports signifie the Freemen of London and of the Cinque-Ports Coke's 1 Inst 58. a. The Lord of a Manor that hath a Court Baron of common Right and by Course of Law all Pleas therein are determinable by Wager of Law and yet by Prescription the Lord may prescribe to determine them by Jury In a Writ of Right Patent directed to the Lord of the Manor Plea shall be holden of Freehold and the Court in that Case may give an Oath for there is the King 's Writ of Praecipe quod reddat Coke's 2 Inst. 143. Before the Statute of Marlebridge cap. 22. Lords would distrain their Free Tenants to come and shew their Deeds especially the Original Deed whereby they might know by what Rent and Services the Tenancy was held of them and obliquely many times perusing the Deeds which are the Secrets and Sinews of a Man's Land brought in question the Title of the Freehold it self Another Mischief was That the Lords of Court Barons Hundreds c. where the Suitors were Judges would constrain them to swear between Party and Party both which Mischiefs are taken away by the said Statute Coke's 2 Inst 142. Fines for Beaupleader are yet paid in some
that there need not be any Written Law had thereof And we find so many Secundary Reasons in the Laws of England that many are willing to affirms the whole Law of England to be proved by Reason which notwithstanding is by no means to be affirmed as by another Example By a certain Statute it is Ordained That he who hath abjur'd the Realm whilst he is in the publick High-way shall be in peace with our Lord the King and not in any sort molested and by the Custom of the Kingdom he is to be conducted from Town to Town by the Constables c. to the Sea-port c. Now if he Escape the Constable ought not to be charged to the King because by reason of the Statute he could not keep him in safe Custody or use any Force or Imprisonment whereby he might be kept in safe Custody and the Reason is grounded upon that Statute And some say Robbery is to be prohibited from Reason Primary even before the Law of Property for that it was not Lawful even when all things were in Common to take any thing from another by force or to throw him out of his Habitation but that such Robbery is to be punished with Death is from the Custom of the Law of England Also from the General Law of Property aforesaid by the Laws of England are excepted Birds Wild beasts and Beasts of Warren in which by the Laws of England is no Property to any One unless they be Tame yet nevertheless by the Laws of England in the Eggs of Herons and such like Building in the Woods of any is a Property And for that every Deduction of Reason in the Laws of England proceeds from the first Principles or from somewhat from those Principles derived no Man althô the most Wise can Judge justly or Argue rightly in the Laws of England if he know not these Principles The Second Fundamental of the Law of England is Lex Divina whereby to punish the Transgressors against the Divine Law The Law of England in many Courts of our Lord the King doth Inquire of Hereticks Also if any Statute be made or set forth against them as that none shall give Alms it ought to be of no force also Persons Excommunicated in the Laws of England may not Prosecute nor have Communication with others whilst the Excommunication is certified And from the same Fundamental the Law of England admits the Spiritual Jurisdiction of Tithes and other things which do of right belong to the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and receives Canonical or Ecclesiastical Laws Quae non Excedunt potestatem ferentis so that in many Cases it behoves the Kings Justices to Judge according to the Laws of the Church As if the Law of the Church be that the Sentence of Divorce is not in force till it is affirmed upon Appeal The Judges of our Lord the King shall form their Judgment according to the Laws of the Church And if A. B. and C. D. have Goods and Chattels joyntly and A. B. by his last Will give his part to E. F. the Ecclesiastical Judges are bound in this case to adjudge this Will void The Third Fundamental of the Law of England is the General Customs of the Kingdom which are divers General Customs used and approved of in Ancient time throughout the whole Kingdom of England and who attempts any thing against them Works against Law and Justice And these are properly called the Common Law and ought always to be determined by the Judges whether a General Custom or not and not by the Country and of these and other Principles or Maxims a great part of the Law of England depends and therefore the King by his Coronation Oath promiseth inter alia that he will faithfully observe all the Customs of the Kingdom and the Ancient Customs of the Kingdom is the Original and Foundation of divers Courts in the same Kingdom Whereof one is The Chancery of the Kingdom in which inter alia Writs original are obtained directed to other Courts of the King another The Kings-Bench in which are handled all Treasons Murders Homicides Felonies and other things done against the Kings Peace another Court is called The Common Bench in which Common Pleas are handled That is to say of Lands and Tenements Debts and Chattels and such like another Court is called The Kings Exchequer in which are handled divers matters touching the King alone as of Sheriffs Escheats or Receivers Bayliffs and other the Kings Officers and the like and these are called Courts of Record because those who preside as Judges ought to be assigned by the Kings Letters Patent and these Courts have many and divers other Authorities of which we shall speak more hereafter in their proper places and likewise of divers other Courts of inferiour Authority in the Kingdom of England And althô in divers Statutes and Books mention is made of the Authority of these Courts yet we have no written Law of their Institution for their Institution depends upon the Custom of the Kingdom which hath so great Authority that they may not be altered or their Names changed or altered but by Act of Parliament Also there is an Ancient Custom which is confirmed by the Statute of Marlebridge That all shall do and receive Justice in the Kings Court and another that none shall be put to Answer or be judged but according to the Law of the Land and this is confirmed by Magna Charta And there are other General Customs in the Kingdom of England which retain the force of Law as that the eldest Son shall succeed the Father in the Inheritance and many more not here to be recited From whence it appears that Customs in the Laws of England may not be proved by Reason alone for how can it be proved by Reason that the Husband shall have the Wife's Land for Term of his Life as Tenant by that Law and that the Wife shall have only the Third part scilicet that it shall be so done and not otherwise And it is certain that the Law of Property is not the Law of Reason but a Customary Law and ought to be accounted amongst the General Customs of the Kingdom and there is not any Statute or written Law of the Institutions of the Customs of the Law of England but according to the Skilful in the Law of England The Ancient Customs of the Law of England are of themselves of sufficient Authority and the Customary Law is the most firm Law provided such a Custom be not against the Law of God or the Law of Reason The Fourth Fundamental of the Law of England consists of Divers Principles which the Learned in the Law call Maxims always esteemed and held for Law of this Kingdom of England which none Learned in the Law may contradict because every one of them gives Faith or Credit to it self and whether a Maxim or not is to be tried by the Judges as before is said of General Customs of
be called the Starred Chamber because Crimina Stellionat ' was there handled Others of the Saxon word Steeran to Steer or Rule as doth the Pilot because this Court did steer and govern the Commonwealth Others because it is full of Windows But the true cause of the Name was because the Roof was starred This Court sate twice a Week in Term-time viz. on Wednesdays and Fridays except either of those Days fell out to be the first or last Day of the Term then it sate not but was constantly held the next Day after Term ended But if any Cause was begun to be heard in Term-time and for length or difficulty could not be sentenced within the Term it was continued and sentenced after the Term. Divers Acts of Parliament gave Jurisdiction to this Court for to punish horrible and enormous Crimes and other exorbitant Offences in Great Men but ordinary Offences and such as may be sufficiently punished by the proceedings of the Common Law this Court left to the ordinary Courts of Justice The proceeding in this Court wasby Bill or Information by Examination of the Defendant upon Interrogatories and by Examination of Witnesses and rarely Ore tenus upon the Confession of the party in Writing under his Hand which he again must confess freely in open Court upon which Confession the Court did proceed But if the Confession was set down too short or otherwise than he meant he might deny it and then they could not proceed against him but by Bill or Information which was the fairest way The Informations Bills Answers Replications c. and Interrogatories were in English Engrossed in Parchment and Filed up All the Writs and Process of the Court were under the Great-Seal The Sentences Decrees and Acts of this Court were Ingrossed in a fair Book with the Names of the Lords and others of the King's Council and Justices that were present and gave their Voices In the 28th year of the Reign of Edward the Third it appeareth that the Retorns Coram nobis are in three manners 1 Coram nobis in Camera which was afterwards called Camera stellata 2. Coram nobis ubicunque fucrimus in Anglia which is the Kings-Bench And 3. Coram nobis in Cancellaria By the Statute of 3 Hen. 7. the Letter whereof followeth It was Ordained That the Chancellor and Treasurer of England and the Keeper of the King 's Privy Seal or two of them calling to them a Bishop and a Temporal Lord of the Kings most Honourable Privy Council and the two Chief Justices of the Kings-Bench and Common-Pleas for the time being or other two Justices in their absence upon Bill or Information put to the said Lord Chancellor or any other against any person for unlawful Maintenance giving of Liveries Signs and Tokens and Retainers by Indentures Promises Oaths Writings or otherwise Imbraceries of his Subjects Untrue demeaning of Sheriffs in making of Pannels and other untrue Returns by taking of Money by Injuries by great Riots and unlawful Assemblies have Authority to call before them by Writ or Privy Seal the said Misdoers and they and others by their Discretion by whom the Truth may be known to Examine and such as they find therein Defective to punish them after their Demerits after the Form and Effect of Statutes thereof made in like manner and form as they should and ought to be punished if they were thereof Convict after the due Order of Law Camerae Stellatae authoritatem prudentissimus Princeps Henricus Septimus ita Parliamentaria adauxit Constabilivit nonnulli primum instituisse falso opinantur But the Act of 3. Hen. 7. did not raise a New Court for there was a Court of Star Chamber before and all the Kings Privy Council Judges of the same But By the Statute of 16 17. Car. 1. cap. 10. this Court is absolutely Dissolved The Court for Redress of Delays of Judgments in the Kings great Courts THis Court is raised by the Statute of 14. E. 3. which followeth in these words Item Because divers Mischiefs have hapned of late that in divers places as well in the Chancery as in the Kings-Bench the Common-Bench and in the Exchequer before the Justices assigned and other Justices to hear and determine matters the Judgments have been delayed sometimes by Difficulty sometimes by divers Opinions of the Judges and sometimes for some other Cause It is assented established and accorded That from henceforth at every Parliament shall be chosen a Prelate two Earls and two Barons which shall have Commission and Power of the King to hear by Petition delivered unto them the Complaints of those that will complain to them of such Delays and Grievances made and they shall have power to come before them at Westminster or elswhere where the places or any of them shall be the Tenour of Records and Processes of such Judgments so delayed and to cause the same Justices to come before them which shall be then present to hear their cause and reasons of such delays which Cause and Reasons so heard by Good Advice of themselves the Chancellor Treasurer the Justices of the one Bench and of the other and other of the King's Counsel as many and such as shall seem convenient shall proceed to take a good Accord and make a good Judgment and according to the same Accord so taken the Tenor of the same Accord together with the Judgment which shall be Accorded shall be remanded before the Justices before whom the Plea did depend and that they shall give Judgment according to the same accord and in case it seems to them that the Difficulty be great that it may not well be determined without Assent of the Parliament that the said Tenor or Tenors shall be brought by the said Prelate Earls and Barons in the next Parliament and there shall be a final Accord taken what Judgment ought to be given in this case and according to this Accord it shall be commanded to the Judges before whom the Plea did depend that they shall proceed to give Judgment without delay Before the making of this Statute delay of Judgments was forbidden both by the Common Law and by Acts of Parliament By the Common Law 1. It is required That Plena celeris Justitia fiat partibus c. not plena alone nor celeris alone but both plena celeris All Writs of Praecipe quod reddat are Quod juste sine dilatione reddat c. All Judicial Writs are Sine dilatione c. 2. There did and yet doth lye a Writ De procedendo ad judicium when the Justices or Judges of any Court of Record or not of Record delayed the party Plaintiff or Defendant Demandant or Tenant and would not give Judgment and thereupon an Alias Plur and an Attachment c. doth lye And the Words of the Writ be Quia redditis Judicij loquelae quae est coram vobis c. de quadam transgressione eidem A. perpraefat B. illata ut
prius were first Instituted by Stat. W. 2. cap. 30. Of Issues joyned in the Kings-Bench and their Authority is annexed to the Justices of Assize and is by force of a Judicial Writ and therefore we have joyned them under one Title And this appeareth by the Writ REx Vicecomiti Salutem Praecipimus tibi quod Venire fac ' coram Justiciarus nostris apud Westm ' in Octab ' Sancti Michaelis vel coram Justiciariis nostris ad Assisas in Com' tuo per formam Statuti nostri inde provis Capiend ' Assignatis si prius die Lunae prox ' ante Festum c. apud c. vene rint 12 tam Milites quam alios c. By the Statute of 7 R. 2. Nisi prius shall be granted in the Exchequer as well as elsewhere Of Issues joyned in the Chancery Kings-Bench Common-Bench and Exchequer the Chief Justices or Chief Baron or in their absence two other Justices or Barons of the said several Courts as Justices of Nisi prius for the County of Middlesex within the Term or four days after each Term shall severally Try c. And for their several other Powers and Authorities vide le Stat. and Coke's 4 Inst. cap. 27. And this Writ of Nisi prius is so called because the word Prius is before Venerint in the Distring as c. which was not so in the Venire facias upon The Statute of Westm 2. cap. 30. although the words of the Writ are Si prius c. And albeit Justices of Assize have their Dignity and Authority much increased yet they retain their Original Name although Assizes are now rarely taken before them For that the Common Action of Ejectment hath Ejected most Real Actions and so the Assize is almost out of use Justices of Nisi prius have power to give Judgment in Assize of Darrein Presentment and Quare Impedit And that Commissions and Writs of Nisi prius shall be awarded c. It is to be observed That there is but a Transcript of the Record sent to the Justices of Nisi prius By the Statute of 27 E. 1. de Finibus cap. 4. it is provided Quod Inquisitiones Recognitiones capiantur tempore Vacationis coram aliquo Justiciario de utroque Banco coram quibus placitum deductum fuerit See the Statutes of York 2. E. 3. cap. 16. 4. E. 3. cap. 2. and the Statute of 14. Ed. 3 cap. 16. which Statute doth provide That Nisi prius may be taken in every Plea Real or Personal before Two so that one be Justice of one of the Benches or the Chief Baron or Serjeant sworn without any regard where the Plea depended and this standeth yet at this day Concordatum fuit per totum Cocilium Regis quod nullus Vicecomes aut Coranat ' fiat Justiciarius ad Assisas capiend ' Gaolas Deliberand ' Transgress ' audiend ' terminand ' seu ad aliquod aliud officium Justic ' faciend ' eo quod debent esse intendentes aliis Justiciariis Which Statute is Declaratory of the Common Law 14 H. 6. cap. 1. Justices of Nisi prius have power in all cases of Felony and Treason to give Judgment as well where the Prisoner is acquitted as where he is Attainted and to award Execution Where the King is a Party a Nisi prius may be granted if the King's Attorney assent unto it In Appeal of Murder Robbery Rape brought in the King's Bench if the parties be at Issue a Nisi prius may be granted before Justices of Assize And if Appeal be brought before Justices of Assize they have also power to enquire and judge These Justices of Nisi prius were Instituted for two causes viz. 1. Propter intolerabilem jacturam Juratorum in exonerationem Juratorum 2. Ad celerem Justiciam in ea parte exhibendam A Prohibition is grantable to Justices of Assize Quod non caperent in patria inquisitiones quae magna indigent examinatione By the Original Institution of Justices of Assize and Nisi prius the Tryal should be before Two at the least for plus vident oculi quam oculus especially in Pleas of the Crown concerning the Life of Man The Justices of Nisi prius may grant a Tales de Circumstantibus either when but one or more appear of the principal Pannel or where Eleven do appear and all the Jury may be of the Tales de Circumstantibus as it was upon a Tales at the Common Law A Nisi prius may be granted in an Attaint In Trespas between the Duke of Exeter and the Lord Cromwell The Counsel of the Duke moved for a Nisi prius and for the Duke was a Praepotent Prince in that Country and the Venire facias being Return'd there was a great Rout in the Hall so as if a Nisi prius should be granted great Mischief might ensue therefore no Nisi prius was granted 32 H. 6.9 Coke's 4. Inst cap. 27. The Court of the Justices of Oyer and Terminer THe Authority of these Justices is by Commission and of these are two sorts The General Commission which is so called because it is General in respect of the Persons the Offences and Places where the Offences are committed the substance of which Commission is thus REx c. Fidelibus suis R.M. aliis Salutem Sciatis quod Assignavimus vos Tres vestrum quorum aliquem vestrum vos praefat ' R.M. L.G. unum esse volumus Justiciarios nostros ad inquirendum per Sacramentum proborum legalium hominum de Com' nostris South ' Wiltes ' Dorset ' Somerset ' Devon ' Cornub ' eorum quobilet ac aliis viis Modis Mediis quibus melius sciveritis aut poteritis tam infra Libertates quam extra per quos rei veritas melius scire poterit de quibuscunque Proditionibus Misprisionibus Proditionum Insurrectionibus Rebellionibus Murdris Feloniis Homicid●is Interfectionibus Burglartis Rop●●bus Mulierum Congregationibus Conventiculis illicitis Verborum prolationibus Coadiju● ationibus Misprisionibus Confederationibus Falsis allegantiis Transgressionibus Riotis Routis Retentionibus Escapiis Contemptibus Falsitatibus Negligentiis Concelamentis Manutenentiis Cambipartiis Deceptionibus aliis Malefactis Offensis Injuriis quibuscunque Necnon accessar ' eorundem infra Com' praed ' eorum quemlibet c. Et easdem proditiones alia praemissa hac Vice audiend ' terminand ' secundum Legem Consuetudinem regni nostri Angliae c. As you may read at large in Coke's 4th Inst cap. 28. The particular Commissions of Oyer and Terminer are so called in respect of particular Persons Offences or Places for which they are granted whereof you may see Fresh Presidents in the Register 1. Against the Bishop of Winchester and his Ministers 2. De Nave fracta if the Goods ought to be taken for Wreck 3. Of divers Oppressions Extortions c. 4. For the Prior of Daventry 5. For the King in time
of Vacation of all which you may read there more at large And concerning Commissions of Oyer and Terminer Ten Conclusions are to be observed 1. That they are not granted but before the Justices of the one Bench or of the other or before the Justices Errant and that for great and horrible Trespasses of the King 's special Grace according to the Statute of W. 2.13 Ed. 1. Commissions are like to the King's Writs such only are to be allowed which have Warrant of Law and continual Allowance in Courts of Justice They cannot proceed upon any Indictment but such only as are taken before themselves They may upon Indictment found proceed the same day against the party Indicted as in Hill 2 H. 4. Rot. 4. Thomas Merx Bishop of Carlisle was before Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer Indicted Tryed and Adjudged for High Treason all in one day And for other Conclusions and their proceedings therein you may read more at large in Coke's Fourth Inst. cap. 28. If any Offence be prohibited by any Statute and name not in what Court it shall be punished or if the Statute appoint that it shall be punished in any Court of Record in both these cases it may be heard and determined before Justices of Oyer and Terminer The King may make a Commission of Association directed to others to joyn with the Justices of Oyer and Terminer and a Writ of Admittance to the Justices of Oyer and Terminer to admit the others into their Society which Writ is close There is also a Writ of Si non omnes directed to the Justices of Oyer and Terminer and to their Associates the Forms of all which you may read in the Register and in F. N. B. And in all these Commissions and Writs the Justices are directed with this Rule Facturi quod ad justitiam pertinet secundum Legem consuetudinem Angliae If the Justices sit by force of the Commission and do not adjourn the Commission it is determined Justices of Oyer and Terminer shall send their Records and Process determined and put in Execution to the Exchequer at Michaelmas every year to be delivered there to the Treasurer and Chamberlain c. to keep them in the Treasury None of these Commissioners or of Assize or of Gaol-delivery or of the Peace or other of the Kings Commissioners are countermanded by any New Commission unless it be shewed unto them for so many as it is shewed unto or that it be proclaimed in the County or that the New Commissioners do sit and keep their Sessions by force of the new Commission whereby the former Commission is countermanded Concerning which see the Statute of 1 Ed. 6. cap. 17. Co. 4. Inst 165. Anno 1 Mariae Stat. 2. cap. 2. Upon conclusion of her Marriage with Philip the Son of the Emperour and Prince of Spain It is provided That the said Prince shall not promote admit or receive to any Office Administration or Benefice in the Realm of England and Dominions thereunto belonging any Stranger or Persons not born under the Dominion and Subjection of the said most Noble Queen Co. 3. Inst 225. Judges and other Officers in Courts may be increased or diminished as need shall require and at Entrance shall take an Oath to serve the King and his People duly Wingate's Abridgment of the Statute of 14 Ed. 3. Title Judgments fol. 303. Association is a Patent sent by the King either of his own motion or at the Suit of the party Plaintiff to the Justices of Assize to have other Persons associated to them And upon that Patent the King will send a Writ to the Justices to admit them and if there be Three Justices and one dye the King may grant a Patent of Association to Associate another to the Two and a Writ which shall be close to the other two to admit him Terms del Ley. Si non omnes Is if those Associated or some of them cannot come then the King may make a Patent for other Justices or for One Justice to be Associated in his Room to take those Assizes and Juries And the Forms of these several Writs of Association you may see in F. N. B. 412 to 418. And if the King make Three Justices to take Assizes and make them a Patent of si non omnes if one of them dye the other two may proceed F. N. B. 416. And the King may make Association in Juries as well as in Assizes as also in Attaints and also one Association after another and any Association may be made to a Sheriff in a Redisseisin and although the Assize be discontinued yet if the other Re-attachment is Sued the Association shall stand good and the si non omnes and a Re-attachment may be sued to revive those Assizes altho' there be several Adjournments and the Associations and si non omnes shall serve for all the Assizes F. N. B. 417 418. Bailiff in Magna Charta extendeth to any Judge or Minister of the King and Bailie le Roy is understood Justice le Roy Coke's 1 Inst 168. Justices of Assize have also Commissions of Oyer and Terminer of Gaol-delivery and of the Peace of Association si non omnes throughout their Circuits so as they are armed with simple yet ordinary Jurisdiction they sometimes being bounded with express Limitations Facturi quod ad Justitiam pertinet secundum Legem Consuetudinem Angliae And in former time according to their Original Institution and their Commission both the Justices joyned both in Common Pleas and Pleas of the Crown Coke's 1. Inst 263. a. In ancient time Prelates as well as other Noble-men were Chancellors Treasurers and Judges being Expert and well Learned in the Laws of the Realm Coke's 1 Inst 304 8. Coke's 2 Inst. 98 265. Capitalis Justiciarius in Glanvil is taken for Custos Regni who may name Justices and Original Writs shall bear Teste under his name which no Officer may do whilst the King is within the Realm In the time of Ed. 1. Justices would not proceed in Case of the Death of Man without the King 's Writ By Magna Charta cap. 26. Nihil de caetero detur pro brevi inquisitionis ab eo qui inquisitionem petit de vita vel de membris sed gratis concedatur non negetur Breve inquisitionis being the Writ Odio and Atia anciently called Breve de bono malo by this Statute of Life and Member which the Common Law gave to a Man that was Imprisoned though it were for the most hainous Crime for the Death of a Man for the which without the King 's Writ he could not be Bailed yet the Law favouring the Liberty and Freedom of a Man from Imprisonment and that he should not be detained in Prison until the Justices in Eyre should come at what time he was to be Tried he might Sue out this Writ of Inquisition directed to the Sheriff Quod assumptis tecum custodibus placitorum Coronae
the nature of the Writ doth not warrant a Capias and the Sheriff could not grant the same neither doth the Writ of Justicies alter the nature of the Court of the County for therein the Sheriff is not Judge but the Suitors and upon a Judgment given therein a Writ of False Judgment doth lie and not a Writ of Errour And in divers Real Actions a Writ of Justicies doth lie as in Breve de Admeasurement of Dower of Pasture De Nusance c. As by our Books may appear And Pleas ought not to be hence removed without cause as appears by the Writs of Pone Recordare The Writ of False Judgment Accedas ad Curiam which are yet in use In this Court upon the Exigent after Quint ' Exact ' The Coroners give Judgment Ideo Utlagetur per Judicium Coronatoris But by this Judgment No Goods are forfeited before the Outlary appear of Record and that is the Reason that no Man can Claim the Goods of Outlaws by Prescription neither shall such an Outlawry disable the party till the Exigent be returned This Court is holden at any place within the County except in Northumberland Sussex and Chester where it is limited to be held at certain places by Statute And is to be holden once every Month counting 28 days to the Month. No Fine can here be inposed because it is no Court of Record But a Man may be there amercied for Contempt or Disturbance of the Court In the presence of the Court. And in this Court are these Officers The Sheriff who is Elected yearly Crastino Animarum by the Statute of 9 E. 2. and 14 E. 3. cap. 7. And his Letters Patents bear date commonly the sixth of Novemb. unless in case of necessity And before the next County day after his Election and Discharge of the old Sheriff he ought to depute A County Clerk who according to Fleta ought to be Endued with Circumspection Fidelity Providence Humility Peace and Modesty Expert in the Laws and Customs of his Country and of ability to direct the Bailiffs and other Ministers in Dubious Things He may not Practise as an Attorney at the same time nor Act without consent of Suitors he must Depute honest able Bailisss to Execute the Process and Precepts of the Court and after Plaints entred which must be in full County Sedente Curia Except in case of Replevins he must Issue sufficient Precepts directed to his Bailiff to Attach or Warn the Defendants to appear at next County Court and at the Adjournment of every Court must appoint a day certain for the next Court To the intent the Country may know when to Resort thither to hear the King's Exigents and Proclamations read The Coroner is a Principal Officer being chosen in this Court by a Writ De Coronatore eligendo directed to the Sheriff whereupon he is chosen by the Freeholders or Suitors in full Court and is there published and afterwards his Election certified into the Chancery by the Sheriff and the County Clerk Administers to him an Oath for due Execution of his Office then he Sits there with the Sheriff every County Court where Exigents and Proclamamations being proclaimed five County days Once in open Sessions and once at the Church Door If at the fifth County day the Defendant appear not the Coroner gives Judgment That he be out of the King's Protection and out of the Aid of the Law A Man being then said to be Outlawed as it were Extra Legem positus because he is supposed to be once Sworn to the Law But a Woman is said to be waved Waviatur because she was never Sworn to the Law The Attorneys may do all things in the Name and as the Act of him who gave them the Authority as if he did it himself For he is Aliorum Negotiorum Gestor and Qui per alium facit per seipsum facere videtur And these ought to be honest and just according to their Oath And ought not to delay their Clients Argenti gratia not demand Moneys otherwise than is allowed them by the Court. The Bailiffs are Servants and Ministers of the Law and by Consequence to the party at whose Suit he is to distrain And therefore ought to be True Vigilant and not exoculated with Bribes Ought to be contented with the Fees allowed for if they Extort more or commit any Error contrary to their Precept they forfeit Forty shillings by the Stature of 27 Eliz. No Bailiff or other Person ought to take a Distress or Execute Process till he be Sworn but now Experience shews the Contrary King Alfred hanged Judge Arnold for saving a Bailiff from Death who had robbed the People by Distress and for Extorting of Fees The Court of the Hundred AS the Leet was derived for the Ease of the People out of the Tourn So this Court of the Hundred for the same cause was derived out of the Court of the County And is in nature a Court Baron where the Suitors are Judges and is no Court of Record The Stile of this Court is Curia E. C. Milit is Hundredi sui de B. in Com' Bucks Tent ' c. coram A. B. Senceschallo ibidem Officers Incident to this Court are chiefly the Constables of the Hundred commonly called The Chief Constables so named because the Constables of Towns are called Petit Constables The Constables of the Hundred are Created by the Statute of Winchester 13 E. 1. And their Authority thereby limitted to five things 1st To make view of Armour 2ly To present before Justices Assigned all such Defaults they see in the Country about Armour 3ly Defaults of Suits of Towns 4ly Of High-ways 5ly To present such as lodge Strangers in uplandish Towns for whom they will not Answer And these disperse all Warrants of the Justices of Peace to the Petit Constable and divers other Authorities are given to them and the Petit Constables by Acts of Parliament which they must strictly observe For that no Officer constituted by Act of Parliament may Prescribe as the Officer by the Common Law may Term. 2 Car. Regis Fortescu of Bucks Plaintiff and the Sheriff of the same Defendant The Plaintiff had divers Hundreds granted to him for Life Reserving a Rent which the Sheriff disallowed and put in Bailiffs of his own And the Attorney General was commanded to avoid the like in other Counties for that they were against Law and belonged to the Office of the Sheriff And this division of Counties into Hundreds is very Ancient and thought to be so called at first either for containing an Hundred Houses or an Hundred Men bound to bear Arms and hath commonly a Bailiff an Ancient Officer but now of small Authority And if there be a Bailiff of a Liberty Or a Sheriff's Bailiff of a Hundred Wapentake or Tything which hath not Lands or Tenements sufficient within the County there lieth a Writ De Ballivo Amovendo by the Statute of 4. E. 3. cap. 9. The
Honoured his Son J. Duke of Lancaster therewith for Term of his Life It is called Comitatus Palatinus a County Palatine à Comitatu Palatio Regis because the Owner be he Duke or Earl c. Hath in that County Jura Regalia as fully as the King had in his Palace And he may have his Chancery and Writs under his Seal for the Office of the Chancellor to Depute Justices as well touching Pleas of the Crown as all other Pleas and Execution of Writs and making Officers and Servants and all other as by the Letters Patents above mentioned granted in Parliament appears And the King may Erect a County Palatine without Parliament by his Letters Patents But now by the Statute of 27 H. 8. cap. 24. several of those Jura Regalia are taken from them and recontinued and annexed to the Crown And all Writs are now to be made in the King's Name but the Teste in Name of him who hath the County Palatine And they shall have Forfeiture of Lands and Goods for High-Treason which Forfeiture accreweth by the Common Law But Forfeitures given after the Erection of the County Palatine by an Act of Parliament they shall not have Justices of Assize of Gaol-Delivery and of the Peace are and ever since the Erection have been Assigned by Commission under the Seal of the County Palatine of Lancaster Fines were levied with 3 Proclamations c. before the Justices of Assize there or one of them and all Recoveries to be had of Lands there are to be had in the Court of the County Palatine at Lancaster and not at Westminster All Lands c. Parcel of this Dutchy given to the King by the Statute of Monasteries Chantries c. are still within the Survey of the Dutchy Lands within the County Palatine should pass by the Dukes Charter without Livery of Seisin or Attornment But of Lands parcel of a Manor annexed to the Dutchy without the County Palatine there ought to be Livery of Seisin and Attornment of Tenants and in the same Degree is it in the King's Case The Proceedings in this Court of the Dutchy Chamber at Westminster is as in a Court of Chancery for Lands and other Matters within the Jurisdiction of the Court by English Bill c. and Decree But this Chancery is not a mixt Court as the Chancery of England is partly of the Common Law and partly of Equity but admitting only some small mixture of the Common Law in some Cases And in some Cases they are led by their proper Customs and Prescriptions respectively The Process of this Court is by Privy Seal Attachment and Commission of Rebellion as in the Chancery The Officers of this Court be the Chancellor The Attorney The Receiver General Clerk of the Court The Auditors Surveyors The Messenger There is an Attorney of the Dutchy in Chancery and another in the Exchequer And there are Four Learned in the Law Assistants and of Councel with the Court. The Seal of the Dutchy of Lancaster remains with the Chancellor at Westminster And the Seal of the County Palatine remains in a Chest in the County Palatine under the safe Custody of the Keeper thereof All Grants and Leases of Lands Offices c. in the County Palatine of Lancaster shall pass under that Seal and no other And all those out of the County Palatine and within the Survey of the Dutchy under the Seal of the Dutchy See the Statute of 27 Hen. 8. cap. 24. For the great Royalties Priviledges c. the Duke of Lancaster had for him his Men and Tenants which are necessary to be known by all concerned in those Possessions and other matters concerning the same See Coke's 4 Institutes 36. and Books and Records their recited And the Statute of 16 and 17 Car. 1. c. 10. For dissolving the Court of Star-Chamber and annulling and making void the like Jurisdiction excercised in the Court called the Court of the Dutchy of Lancaster held before the Chancellor and Councel of that Court c. The Courts of the County Palatine of Chester THis is the most Ancicent and most Honourable County Palatine remaining at this Day with which Dignity the King 's Eldest Son hath been of long time honoured And this is a County Palatine by Prescription Within this County Palatine and the County of the City of Chester there is and aciently hath been a principal Officer called the Chamberlain of Chester who time out of mind hath had the Jurisdiction of a Chancellor and the Court of Exchequer at Chester is and hath time out of mind been the Chancery Court for the said County Palatine whereof the Chamberlain of Chester is Judge in Equity He is also Judge of Matters at the Common Law within the said County as in the Court of Chancery at Westminster for the Court of Chancery is a mixt Court There is also a Vice-Chamberlain which is the Deputy of the Chamberlain And also the Justice called the Justice of Chester who hath Jurisdiction to hear and determine Matters of the Crown and of Common-Pleas Of Fines and Recoveries levied and suffered as well within the County Palatine as of the City of Chester For which and much more concerning the same See Coke's 4 Institutes cap. 37. and the Statute of 16 17 Car. 1. c. 10. For disabling the Court of Star Chamber and Annulling and making void the like Jurisdiction exercised in the Court of Exchequer in the County Palatine of Chester held before the Chamberlain and Council of that Court. The Courts of the County Palatine of Durham THis is also a County Palatine by Prescription parcel of the Bishoprick of Durham and raised soon after the time of the Conqueror Here is a Court of Chancery which is a mixt Court both of Law and Equity as in the Chancery at Westminster But herein it differeth from the rest that if any Erroneous Judgment be given either in the Chancery upon a Judgment there according to the Common Law or before the Justices of the Bishop a Writ of Error shall be brought before the Bishop himself and if he give Erroneous Judgment thereupon a Writ of Error shall be sued Returnable in the King 's Bench. If the Bishop do wrong within his County Palatine for that he cannot be Judge in his own Cause Justices shall be Assigned to hear and determine the Cause as was done in the case when Richardus de Hoton Prior Dunelm ' queritur de Anthonio Episcopo Dunelm ' alledging several Plaints against the Bishop whereupon Issue was Joyned and Verdict given against the Bishop And by that Record which was Termino Paschae 30 E. 1. it appears the Bishop had within the County of Duresme Regalitatem suam And more concerning the same you may Read in Coke's 4 Institutes cap. 38. The Royal Franchise of Ely KIng Henry the first of the Rich Monastery of Ely made a Cathedral Church and of the Abbey made a Bishoprick and for his Diocess Assigned him the
dignioribus est credendum Tessemoignes ne poent testifie le negative mes l'affirmative Allegans contraria non est audiendus verum vero consentiens est falsum nec vero nec falso Juramentum est indivisibile non est admittendum in parte verum in parte falsum Allegans suam turpitudinem non est audiendus Coke's 4 Inst 279. Antiquity did add hijs Testibus in the Continent of the Deed after the In cujus rei Testimonium written with the same Hands the Deed was which Witnesses were called The Deed read and then their Names entred And this is called Charter Land and by the Saxons Bookland which Clause of hijs Testibus continued until and in the Reign of Hen. 8. but is now wholly ommitted Before Stat. 12. Ed. 2. cap. 2. Process should be awarded against the Witnesses and therefore that Statute was but in Affirmance of the Common Law But the delay therein was great And sometimes tho' rarely the Exceptions to those Witnesses being found true they were not to be Sworn at all neither to be joyned to the Jury nor as Witnesses As if the Witness were Infamous as Attainted of False Verdict or Conspiracy at Suit of the King Convict of Perjury Forgery Felony or Praemunire or by Judgment lost his Ears or stood upon the Pillory or Tumbrel or been Stigmaticus whereby they become Infamous for some Offences Quae sunt minoris Culpae sunt Majoris Infamiae If a Champion in a Writ of Right become recreant he thereby loseth Liberam Legem becomes Infamous and can be no Witness or if a Witness be an Infidel or non sanae memoriae or not of Discretion or a Party interested or the like But a Man may be challenged to be of a Jury that cannot be challenged to be a Witness and Witnesses cannot prove a Negative of all which you may Read more in Coke's 1 Inst 6. a. b. Coke's 2 Inst 662. When Tryal is by Witnesses regularly the Affirmative ought to be proved by 2 or 3 Witnesses But when it is by Verdict of 12 Men There the Judgment is not given upon Witnesses or other kinds of Evidences But upon the Verdict and upon such Evidence as is given to the Jury they give their Verdict Bracton saith There is Probatio duplex That is Viva as by Witnesses Viva Voce Mortua as by Deed Writings and Instruments And many times Jurors are with other matter much induced by presumption which is of three sorts Praesumptio Violenta which is many times Plena probatio Praesumptio probabilis which moveth litle and Praesumptio levis seu temeraria which moveth not at all If all the Witnesses to a Charter or Deed be Dead then violent presumption which stands for a proof is continual and quiet Possession A Wife cannot be a Witness for or against her Husband for they are Duae animae in carne una And in some Cases Women by Law are wholly excluded to bear Testimony A Party cannot be Witness against the Usurer And he that Challengeth a Right to the thing in Demand cannot be a Witness for that he is a Party in Interest Coke's 1 Inst. 6. a. b. 25. a. Witnesses Viva voce whereupon Jurors try matter of Fact are much better Courses than the Conscience of one particular Man Guided by Paper Proofs Coke's 2 Inst 111. Bracton saith Post intervallum temporis Accusator non erit audiendus nisi dicere potest se fuisse justis rationibus impeditum In Misprision of Treason there ought to be two Witnesses as well upon Tryal as upon Indictment By Stat. 1 5 Ed. 6. None shall be Indicted Arraigned Condemned Convicted or Attainted of any the Treasons aforesaid or other Treasons unless accused by two lawful Witnesses Coke's 3 Inst 24 25. One may not be Accuser by hear-say ibidem No Act of Parliament Ancient Author Book Case or Record That in Criminal Cases the Party accused should not have Witnesses Sworn for him Coke's 3 Inst. 79. In some Cases as in Dower c. The Courts of Common Law Judge by Witnesses but they must ever be Viva Voce An Alien if not Infidel may be a Witness and how Examiners and Witnesses ought to behave themselves See Coke's 4. Inst. 278 279. Proof is intended Tryal by Verdict and an Extent and Appraisement ought to be per Sacramentum duodecim and not by the Sheriffs But if the Sheriff upon a Fieri facias Sell all the Interest the Defendant had in the Land the Sale is good notwithstanding misrecital of the Term The like if he do not take upon him to recite the Term otherwise than pro Termino diversorum annorum ex tunc ventur ' it is good Coke's 4 Rep. 74. No proof allowed by Law but the Verdict of 12 Men Coke's 5 Rep. 108. Sir Henry Constable's Case If it be generally spoken of proof generally altho' there be many proofs in Law yet it shall be of the best proof and that is by Jury See more of General Expressions in other Cases Coke's 6 Rep. 20 Gregories's Case If a Man be bound to prove a thing he ought to prove it by the principal proof in Law and that is by Jury Coke's 11 Rep. 39. Metcalf's Case Tryals per Primos Juratores alios Et per Primos only By Jury with Witnesses adjoyned See Coke's 9 Rep. 32. Case of Abbot of Strata Marcella and Statutes and Books there mentioned Where Witnesses not appearing shall forseit Issues See Stat. 12 E. 2. And where convenient Charges being tendred they shall forfeit 10 l. See Stat. 5 El. 9. Besides the 10 l. shall forfeit such Damages for Recompence as the Judge shall think fit ibid. Witnesses upon Statute of Bankrupts allowed their Charges See Statutes concerning Bankrupts Null Justice Null Minister le Roy c. Ne eit power a Mitter Frank home Serement faire sans le Comandment le Roy Coke's 2 Inst 44. By Stat. de Marlebridge Nullus possit distringere Liberae Tenentes suos ad respondendum de aliquibus ad liberum Tenementum suum spectantibus nec jurare faciet contra voluntatem suam Coke ' 2 Inst 142 143. A new Oath cannot be imposed upon any Judge Commissioner or other Subject without Authority of Parliament or by Common Law Time out of mind By Stat. Articuli super Chartas Vicecomites non permittant quod Laici in Balliva sua conveniunt ad aliquas recognitiones per Sacramenta sua faciendum nisi in Causis Matrimonialibus Testamentarijs Coke's 2 Inst 600. Persons proceeded against Ex Officio ought to have the Cause made known to them before their Examination that it may appear whether the Cause be of Ecclesiastical Cognizance for otherwise they ought not to Examin them upon Oath Coke's 2 Inst 618. Clergy Men better able to take Juramentum Calumniae for concerning the Testimony of Witnesses in the Ecclesiastical Court the Act of Articuli c. above extends not unto but if in a Penal Law the
Comitatus coming of the Saxon Verb Siram i. e. partiri for that the whole Realm is parted and divided into Shires And this Shireve being Deputy of the Consul or Earl was therefore by the Romans called Vice-Consul as we at this day call him Vice-comes i. e. Vice-comitis that is instead of the Earl of that County who in ancient time had the Regiment of the County under the King For it is said in the Mirror Cap. 1. Sect. 3. That the Earls of the Counties had the Custody and Guard of the Counties and when the Earls left their Custodies or Guards then was the Custody of Counties committed to Viscounts who therefore are called Vicecomites And whom the Romans called Senatores the Saxons sometimes and we now call Aeldermen or Earls Non proper aetatem sed propter sapientiam dignitatem cum quidam adolescentes essent jurisperiti tamen super hoc experti The Shireve is called Praefectus because he is the Chief Officer to the King within the Shire for the Words of his Patent be Comisimus vobis custodiam Comitatus nostri de c. And he hath triplicem Custodiam viz. 1. Vitae Justitiae for no Suit begins and no Process is served but by the Sheriff Also he is to return indifferent Juries for the Tryal of Mens Lives Liberties Lands Goods c. 2. Vitae Legis he is after long Suits and chargeable to make Execution which is the Life and Fruit of the Law 3. Vitae Reipublicae he is Principalis Conservator pacis within the County Marculphus saith This Office is Judiciaria dignitas Lampridius That it is Officium digniatatis And Fortescue Cap. 24. saith Quod Vicecomes est nobilis Officiarius and is thus chosen Every year the Morrow after All Souls Day all the King's Councellors meet together in the King's Exchequer as well the Lords Spiritual and Temporal as all other Justices all the Barons of the Exchequer the Master of the Rolls and certain other Officers where all these with one common Assent do name of every County Three Knights or Esquires whom among other of the same County they take to be of good Disposition and Fame and best disposed to the Office of Sheriff of that County Of the which Three the King chuseth one whom by his Letters Patent he appointeth Sheriff of the County that he is chosen of for the year then following but he before he receive his Patent shall swear upon the Holy Gospel among other Articles That he shall well and faithfully and indifferently exercise and do his Office all that year and that he shall receive or take nothing of any other Man than the King by colour or mean of his Office In the Romans time and before he was a Minister to the King's Courts of Law and Justice and had then a Court of his own which was the County Court then called Curia Consulatus as appears by these Words Ipsius vices supplebat in Jure in Foro. This Realm being divided into Shires and Counties and those Shires into Cities Boroughs and Towns by the Britons King Alfred's Division of Shires and Counties being but a Renovation or more exact Description of the same The Sheriff is Balivus and his County called Baliva which is thus derived Bailiff is a French word and signifies an Officer concerning the Administration of Justice of a certain Province and because a Sheriff hath an Office concerning the Administration of Justice within his County or Bailywick therefore he calleth his County Baliva sua For Example When he cannot find the Defendant c. he returneth Non est inventus in Baliva mea In the Statute of Magna Charta Cap. 8. some hold that Balivus signifieth any Judge And in 10th of Hen. 4. it is holden That Bailie le Roy is understood Justice le Roy And in the Mirror it is holden That the Stature doth extend to every Justice Minister of the King Steward c. and all comprehended under this Word Bailiff Coke's 1 Inst 168. a. b. Curia Comitatus in Saxon Scypegemoce i. e. Comitatus Conventus ejus duo sunt genera quorum alterum hodie le Countie Court alterum le Tourn del Viscount olim Folkmore vulgo nuncupatur So as many times Turn ' Vicecomit is is expressed under the name of Curia Comitatus because it extended through the whole County and therefore in the Red Book of the Exchequer amongst the Laws of King H. 1. Cap. 8. De Generalibus Placitis Comitatuum it is thus contained viz. Sicut antiqua fuerat institutione formatum salutari Regis Imperio vera est recordatione firmatum Generalia Comitatuum Placita certis locis vicibus definito tempore per singulas anni provincias convenire debere nec ullis ultra fatigationibus agitari nisi propria Legis necessitas vel commune Regni commodum saepius adjiciant Intersint autem Episcopi Comites Vicedomini Vicarii Centenarii Aldermanni Praefecti Praepositi Barones Vavassores Tingrevii caeteri terrarum Domini diligenter intendentes ne malorum impunitas aut gravionum pravitas vel judicum subversio solita miseros laceratione confiniant Agantur itaque primo debita verae Christianitatis jura secundo Regis placita postremo causae singulorum c. Debet enim Sherysmote i.e. The Sheriff's Tourn bis Hundreda Wapentachia i.e. The County Courts duodecies in anno congregari By the Laws of King Edward before the Conquest the first which succeeded King Alured it is thus Enacted Praepositus quisque 1. Vicecomes Saxonice Geresa Anglice Sheriff ad quartam circiter septimanam frequentem populi concionem celebrato cuique jus dicito aequabile litesque singulas cum dies condicti adveniant dirimito Hereby it appeareth that common Pleas between Party and Party were holden in the County Court every Month which agreeth with Magna Charta and other Statutes and continueth at this day And by Stat. 2 E. 6. Cap. 25. It is provided that no County Court shall be longer deferred than one Month from Court to Court Coke's 2 Inst 69 70 71. In the County Court though the Plea be holden therein by a Justicies the King 's Writ yet it is no Court of Record for of a Judgment therein there lieth a Writ of false Judgment and not a Writ of Error Coke's 2 Inst 140. By Stat. Gloucester cap. 8. Purview est ensement que les Visconts pled ' en Counties les Plees de Trespasse auxy come ils soilent estre Pledes Et que nul neit desormes Briefs de Trespass devant Justices sil ne affirm per foy que le biens emportes vailent 40 s. al meins c. En Countie Courts is there put for an Example for the Hundred Court and the Court Baron being no Courts of Record are also within this Law Writs of Trespass are there put also for an Example for Debt Detinue Covenant and the like But if the Trespass be Vi Armis where the King upon