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

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Per quae servitia shall be entred upon Record unless the party attorning have first appeared in Court or by Attorney warranted under the hand of a Justice of one of the Benches or of Assize And every Attornment otherwise made shall be void without any Writ of Errour or other means to be used for the avoiding thereof IX There shall be an office for the inrolments of Writs for fines and recoveries and one of the Justices of the Common-Pleas besides the chief Justice shall have the care thereof and shall have for the inrolment and examination of every fine with the parts thereof 6 s. 8 d. and as much for a Recovery and the parts thereof and for every exemplification of them 5 s. and for the search of every year 4 d. and for every sheet of a Copy containning 14 lines 4 d. and shall subscribe his name to the Roll after he hath so examined it in pain of 5 l. X. The said Justice shall have power to punish the officers who manage that imployment by fine or amerciament for their misprision or negligence therein which shall be estreated amongst the fines and amerciaments of that Court. XI The Chirographer shall the first day of every Term fix in the Court of Common-Pleas a Table of each County containing a true content of the fines passed in any one Term and shall also deliver the like to each Sheriff in pain of 5 l. and the Sheriff shall fix it up in the Court at the next Assizes in like pain of 5 l. The said forfeitures are to be divided betwixt the Queen and the prosecutor and the Chirographer's fee for every such content is 4 d. XII The Records shall not be carried out of the Office of Inrolments and Fines and recoveries already passed and exemplified shall not be afterwards amended XIII Stat. 27 El. 8. Where a judgment is given in the King's Bench in debt detinue covenant accompt action upon the case ejectione firma or trespass first commenced there other then such where the Queen is party the plaintiff or defendant may sue forth of the Chancery a Writ of Errour commanding the chief Justice to cause the Record to be brought before the Justices of the Common Pleas and Barons of the Exchequer into the Exchequer-chamber which Justices and Barons or any six of them being of the Coif have there power to examine and reverse or affirm the said judgment other then for errour concerning the jurisdiction of the King's Bench or for want of form in any Writ Return Plaint Bill Declaration or other proceeding whatsoever and after such judgment reversed or affirmed the said record shall be remanded that the King's bench may proceed thereupon as shall appertain yet such reversal or affirmation shall not be so final but that the party who finds himself grieved may still sue in Parliament as before XIV Stat. 31 El. 1. The not coming of the Chancellor and Treasurer at the day of adjournment in any suit of Errour depending by force of 31 E. 3. Stat. 1. cap. 13. shall not be any discontinuance of the Writ of Errour But if both the chief Justices or either of those great Officers be there it shall be no discontinuance Howbeit no judgment shall be given therein unless both those Officers be there present XV. Any three of the Justices of the Common Pleas or Barons of the Exchequer may receive Writs of Errour award process thereupon and prefix days of continuance for such Writs notwithstanding the Statute of 27 El. 8. but no judgment shall be given therein without the full appearance of six according to that Statute and here also the party that finds himself grieved may sue in Parliament as before XVI Stat. 16 Car. 2. ca. 2. For preventing abatement of Writs of Errour upon judgments in the Exchequer enacted That the not coming of the Lord Chancellor and Lord Treasurer or either of them at the day of Return of any writ of Errour to be sued forth by vertue of the Stat. 31 E. 3. ca. 12. recited in the Statute 31 El. ca. 1. shall not cause any abatement or discontinuance of any such Writ of Errour But if both the chief Justices of either Bench or either of them or any one of the said great officers the Lord Chancellor or Lord Treasurer shall come to the Exchequer chamber and there be present at the day of Return of any such Writ of Errour it shall be no abatement or discontinuance But the suit shall proceed to all intents as if the said Lord Chancellor and Lord Treasurer had come and been present at the day and place of return of such Writ Provided no Judgment be given in any such suit or writ of Errour unless both the Lord Chancellor and Lord Treasurer shall be present thereat XVII An Act to prevent Arrests of Judgment and staying Executions by Writs of Errour and Supersedeas Vid. Title Execution num XI ☞ Escape I. West 1.3 3 E. 1. Nothing shall be taken for the escape of a felon until it be judged an escape by the Justices in Eyre in pain of restoring as much to the party grieved and as much also to the King II. Stat. 31 E. 3. Stat. 1.14 The escape of felons and the chattels of felons fugitives and Clerks convict adjudged by the King's Justices shall be levied as they shall fall III. Stat. 1 R. 3.3 Justices of Peace have power in Sessions to inquire of escape of felons Eschange I. Stat. 9 E. 3.7 Exchanges shall be kept where it shall please the King and his Council II. Stat. 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.12 Every man may exchange gold for silver or silver for gold or for gold and silver so that no man hold the same as exchanged nor take profit for such exchange in pain to forfeit the money so exchanged except the King's exchangers which take profit for such exchange according to the ordinance before made Note that this Statute is thus also recited in 5.6 E. 6.19 Howbeit the French Copy in stead of so as no man hold the same as exchanged hath it thus issint que nul home teigne comen eschange and so the mistake seems to be in the word come which should have been comen and Rastal in the first Edition of his Abridgment which I have renders it thus null preigne riens pur eschange dor pur argent on è contra sur pain de forfetter del mony issint change for priss changours le Roy quex pregneront solunque lordinante ent fait III. Stat. 14 R. 2. Stat. 1.2 For every Exchange the Merchant shall be bound in Chancery to buy within three moneths after such exchange Merchandise of the Staple to the value of the summ exchanged in pain to forfeit the same IV. Stat. 11 H. 4.8 The Statute of 14 R. 2. shall be duly executed and the Lord Chancellor shall send the estreats or exchanges taken of Merchants into the Exchequer every 15 dayes and the Barons there shall have
the cause shall require but if such plea or voucher be tryable in England the Justice of Wales before whom they are pleaded or made may proceed to tryal thereof in such County of Wales where they are so pleaded or made such forreign plea or voucher notwithstanding CXX All Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in VVales and in the Lordships and places annexed by the Statute of 27 H. 8.26 to the Counties of Salop Hereford Glocester or any other Shires shall be English tenure and not partable amongst heirs males according to the Custome of Gavelkind CXXI No Mortgages of lands c. made in any of the said Counties or places shall be hereafter allowed or admitted otherwise than after the course of the Common-Law and Statutes of England CXXII It shall be lawful for all persons to alien their Lands c. in VVales the County of Monmouth and other places annexed as aforesaid from them and their heirs to any person or persons in Fee-simple fee-tail for life or years according to the Laws of England notwithstanding any Welsh Law or Custome to the contrary CXXIII If any person having lands in VVales be bound in England by a Statute-Staple or Recognisance and pay not the debt accordingly in such cases upon certificate into the Chancery of England Processes shall be made to the Sheriffs of VVales out of the said Chancery for the due levying of the said debt as is used in England Howbeit for such Recognizances as are taken in the Kings Bench or Common Pleas of England Processes shall be pursued immediately from the Justices of the said Courts as in England also is used CXXIV All such Writs Bills Plaints Pleas Process Challenges and Trials shall be used throughout all the Shires aforesaid as are used in North VVales or as shall be devised by the President Council and Justices or three of them whereof the President to be one CXXV Where there shall be some Suits in Pleas personal which cannot be well tryed before the Justices in the great Sessions for shortness of time such issues may be tryed at the petty Sessions before the Deputy-Justices as is used in the three Counties of North VVales save only for such Suits as by the discretion of the said Justices shall be necessary to be tryed before themselves Howbeit there shall be no suit taken before any of the said Justices by Bill under the sum of 20 s. CXXVI No other Liberties Franchises or Customs shall be used or claimed in any Lordship which was anciently part of Wales whosoever be owner or owners thereof but only such as be given to the Lords thereof by force of the Statute of 27 H. 8.26 and not altered by this Act notwithstanding the Stat. of 32 H. 8.20 which see in Franchises CXXVII If any murther or felony be committed in Wales the party or parties grieved shall make no agreement with the offender or with any other in his behalf unless he first acquaint the President Council or Justices therewith in pain of imprisonment and grievous fine at the discretion of the President Council and Justices or two of them whereof the President to be one the like punishment also they shall incur that labour or procure such agreement although it never take effect CXXVIII If any person or they whose estate he hath have peaceable possession of Lands in Wales by the space of 5 years without interruption or lawful claim such person shall continue the same untill they be recovered from him by law or decree of the President or Council there CXXIX If in personal actions pursued before the Justices nine of the Jury be sworn and the residue make default or be tryed out in that case the Sheriff may return other names de circumstantibus until the Jury be full as is used in North VVales and elsewhere in such cases CXXX No sale of goods or cattel stollen in Wales and sold in any Fair or Market there shall alter the propriety thereof such sale notwithstanding CXXXI No person shall buy any quick cattel in VVales out of the Fair or Market unless he can produce credible witness of the person place and time he so bought the same in pain of such punishment and fine as shall be set by the President and Council or any of the Justices in his Circuit and to answer it at his further peril CXXXII If any goods or cattel be stollen in VVales the tract shall be followed from Town to Town and Lordship to Lordship according to the Laws and Customs heretofore used in Wales upon such penalty as hath been heretofore accustomed CXXXIII Any man being a Frecholder may pass upon a Jury in all causes both criminal and civil attaint only excepted saving to every man his lawful challenge according to the Laws of England Howbeit none shall pass in attaint unless he have Freehold of 40 s. per annum CXXXIV Tenants and resiants in Wales shall pay their Tallage at the change of their Lords in such places aad after such form as hath been accustomed in Wales CXXXV The Kings Subjects in VVales shall find at the Parliaments in England Knights for the Counties and Citizens and Burgesses for the Cities and Towns to be chosen by the Kings Writ according to the Statute of 27 H. 8.26 and shall also be chargeable to all Subsidies and other charges granted by the Commons of the said Parliaments and pay all other rents farms customs and duties to the King as hath been accustomed fines for redemption of Sessions only excepted which the King is pleased to remit CXXXVI Haverford-west shall find one Burgess for that Town whose charges shall be born by the Mayor Burgesses and Inhabitants of the said Town and by none other CXXXVII The King shall have all Felons goods goods of persons outlawed Waifs Estrays and all other forfeitures and escheats and shall be answered thereof by the Sheriffs saving the right of all others having lawful title thereto CXXXVIII Errours and Judgments before any of the Justices in their great Sessions in Pleas reall and mixt shall be redressed by Writ of Errour out of the Chancery of England returnable before the Justices of the Common Pleas as other Writs of Errour be in England but Errors in Pleas personal shall be reformed by Bill before the President and Council and if the Judgment be affirmed good in any of the said Writs or Bills then there to make execution and all other process thereupon as is used in the Kings Bench of England and that the Plaintiff in every such Writ or Bill pay for the same like Fees as is used in England CXXXIX No execution of any Judgment given in any base Court shall be stayed by reason of any Writ of false Judgment but execution may be had at all times before the reversal of such Judgment and if such Judgment shall after be reversed the Plaintiff shall be restored to what he hath lost by such Judgment CXL All process for urgent and weighty causes shall be
heir at full age the reversioner or remainder in possession the feme discovert or the spiritual person in succession from having the Writ of Advouson possessory viz. Quare impedit or an Assise o Darreine presentment as their ancestor or Predecessor might have had if the Usurpation had happened in their time whereas before this Act they were in such cases put to their Writ of right of Advouson II. Howbeit this Act shall not extend to annull judgments already given but they shall be reversed by Error or Attaint III. One and the same form of pleading shall be used in Darreine presentment and Quare imped t viz. if the Defendant alledgeth plenarty of his own presentation the plea shall not stay by reason of the plenarty so as the Writ be purchased within the six moneths albeit he cannot recover within that time IV. Where partition is made upon record or by fine to present by turn the Copercener that is disturbed shall not be put to a Quare impedit but may have remedy upon the Roll or fine by Scire facias V. When six moneths pass hanging a Quare impedit or Darrein presentment so that the Bishop presents by Lapse the Patron shall recover dammages to two years value of the Church otherwise dammages onely to half a years value VI. The disturber not being able to render dammages shall in the first case have imprisonment of two years and in the other of half a year VII Writs also shall hereafter be granted for Chappels Prebends Vicarages Hospitals Abbeys Priories and other Houses which be of the Advousons of other men VIII When the Parson of a Church is disturbed to demand Tithes in the next Parish by Indicavit the Patron shall have a Writ to demand the Advouson of those Tithes and when it is deraigned then shall the Plea pass in the Court Christian IX Amongst Coperceners if one present twice together yet shall not the other be barred but have his or her turn when it falleth X. Prero Reg. cap. 8. 17 E. 2. Lapse of six moneths shall not prejudice the King's Presentation to a Church XI Stat. de Clero cap. 3. 23 E. 5. When the King collates to the Church in anothers right his Title shall be well examined and the Patron grieved shall have as many Writs thereupon as shall be needful XII Stat. de Clero cap. 7. 23 E. 3. When the Ordinary presents by Lapse and the King takes the suit against the Patron who in deceit suffers the King to recover in this case when the King 's right is not tried the Ordinary or Incumbent may counterplead the King's Title Age. I. West 1. cap. 46. 3 E. 1. If a Writ of Novel disseisin be purchased and the Disseisor die before the Assise be passed the Plaintiff shall have a Writ of Entry sur disseisin against his heir The like Writ shall the heir of the disseisee have in case he die c. II. And here Nonage of the heir of the disseisor or disseisee shall not prejudice in Assise III. If the inquest pass against the heir of the disseisee he shall have an Attaint gratis IV. Stat. of Glocester Cap. 2. 6 E. 1. where an Infant is held from his inheritance whereby he is driven to his Writ the Inquest shall pass notwithstanding his Nonage V. An Exposition of the Statute of Glocester Cap. 2. 6 E. 1. Touching an Inquest to be made for an Infant that Statute shall run without limitation of time VI. Stat. West 2. cap. 40. 13 E. 1. The suit of a woman or her heir after the death of her husband shall not be delayed by the Minority of the heir who ought to warrant the Land Aid of the King I. Stat. de Bigamis Cap. 1. 4 E. 1. Where a feoffment with a Charter thereupon being made by the King hath so much in it that another person by a like feoffment and like Deed should be bound to warranty the heir shall have Aid and the Justices shall not proceed without the King's Commandment II. Ibidem Cap. 2. But where the King onely confirmeth or ratifieth anothers Act in another mans thing or granteth any thing to a man as much as in him is or where a Deed is shewed whereby the King hath rendered any Tenement and no clause of warranty is contained therein In these and like cases the same being shewed to the King the Justices may proceed and the Tenant shall not have aid III. Ibidem Cap. 3. In Dower the King 's Grantee of a Ward shall not have Aid but the Justices may proceed according to right IV. Stat. 14 E. 3.14 Stat. 1. Upon demand of Lands in the King's hands after four Writs of search directed to the Treasurer and Chamberlains of the Exchequer for finding the King's Minuments he that defends the lands for the King shall be put to answer so that the said Writs were delivered 40 daies before their return and then Justice shall not be delayed albeit the contrary be commanded under the Great or Privie Seal * Alehouses Drunkenness I. Stat. 5 and 6 E. 6.25 None shall keep Alehouse without Licence granted either in Sess or by two Justices 1 Quo. in pain of three daies imprisonment without bail and not to be enlarged without Recognisance by himself and two sureties that he shall not keep Alehouse any longer the Certificate of which Recognisance and offence shall be a sufficient conviction at the Qu. Seff to fine him 20 sh ☞ II. The Qu. Seff or two such Justices have power to put down Alehouses at their discretion and to take Bond and surety of Alehouse-keepers by recognisance that they shall not use unlawful Games or other disorder in their houses for which Recognisance the parties bound shall pay 12 pence and whereof Certificate shall be made at the next Qu. Seff by the two Justices that take it in pain of 5 Marks III. Justices of Peace have power to inquire after the breach of this last Recognisance to award process thereupon and to hear and determine the same at their discretions IV. This Act shall not restrain the selling of Ale and Beer in Towns where Fairs are kept during the time of the Fair. V. Stat. 1 Jac. 9. No Inn-keeper Victualler or Alehouse-keeper shall suffer any Town-dwellers to sit tippling in his house in pain of ten shillings nor sell less then a full Ale-quart of the best Ale or Beer or two quarts of the small for one peny in pain of 20 shillings And here the view of one Justice or proof by two witnesses upon oath before one Justice is sufficient conviction VI. The penalties aforesaid are given to the poor of the Parish where the offence is committed and are to be levied by the Constable and Church-wardens by distress which after six days may be sold to satisfie the penalty and in default of distress the party delinquent must suffer imprisonment till he pay the penalty VII Here every Officer that neglects to levy the said penalties
36 E. 3. St. 1.13 8 H. 6.16 18 H. 6.6 7. 23 H. 6.17 1 H. 8.8 2 3 E. 6.8 Page 197 ad 201 Who may be an Escheator 42 E. 2.5 12 E. 4.9 33 H. 8.22 Page 198 199 200 Escuage what Mag. Chart. 37. Page 201 Essoin where it shall be allowed and where not Marlb 13. 52 H. 3. Marlb 19. West 1.41 42 43. Gloucest 10. 6 E. 1. West 2.13 17 27 28. Stat. of Essoyns 12 E. 2. Page 202 203 Estreats what and against whom West 1.44 5 E. 1. De froma mittendi extractus ad Scaccarium 15 E. 2. 42 E. 3.9 7 H. 4.3 Page 203 204 Exception where to be allowed and where not West 2.31 Page 205 Excise who and of what to pay Excise and the said duty settled on the King 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. 15 Car. 2. c. 12. Stat. 3.16 17 Car. 2. cap. 4. Page 205 ad 208 Excommunication who may be excommunicated and who not Art Cleri Cart 7.12 against whom a Writ de Excommunicato capiendo shall be made and when 25 El. 23. Page 208 209 210 Execution the several kinds thereof where a second for the same thing to be had 32 H. 8.5 1 Jac. 13. 3 Jac. 8. 21 Jac. 24.16 17 Car. 2. c. 8. Page 210 ad 214 Executors their power how they may sue and be sued West 2.23 4 E. 3.7 9.3 Stat. 1.3 25 E. 3. Stat. 5 6. 33 H. 6.1 21 H. 8.4 43 El. 8. Page 214 215 216 Exigent and Outlary who may be outlawed and for what when the same may be reversed and when not and how the same is to be sued 5 E. 3.12 13. 18.2 5. 6 H. 8.4 1 E. 6.10 5 6 E. 6.26 31 El. 3. p. 216 217 218 Extortion what in whom and the punishment thereof West 1.26 27 29. 3 E. 1. 28 H. 6.5 Page 219 F. FOrce force of arms by whom to be prohibited 7 E. 1. 2 E. 3.3 7 R. 2.13 Page 25 Felony 't is felony for a Souldier to run away from his colours 18 H. 6.19 7 H. 7.1 3 H. 8.5.2 3 E. 6.2 Page 57 58 To go out of England to serve any foreign Prince or State without licence and giving securiry is felony 3 Jac. 4. severall offences made felony 3 Car. 1. Page 124 130 131 Fleet Warden of the Fleet may not suffer his prisoner to go at large being in by Judgment 1 R. 2.12 Page 142 Forfeit a woman suffering a Recovery by Covin the recovery is void and she forfeits her estate 11 H. 7.20 Page 148 149 Fines and Recoveries being inrolled the inrollment as good as the same extant 23 El. 3. Page 187 188 Fieri Facias to what it extends West 2.18.45 Page 210 Fares or Markets where when how long and by whom to be kept Winchest c. 6. 13 E. 1. 2 E. 3.15 5 E. 3.5 3 H. 7.9 Page 219 220 Toll-taker or Book-keeper therein his duty and office 2 3 P. M. 7. 31 El. 12. Page 220 221 False Judgment Who may hold Plea of false Judgment and how triable Marlb 20. 52 H. 3. Stat. 1. E. 34. Page 221 Fees due and appointed to several persons West 2.42 44. 13 E. 1. Page 222 Feoffment of Lands where void 1 R. 2.9 4 H. 4.7 11 H. 6. 3r ibid. Felony what is felony and the punishments thereof West 1.12 Stat. of breaking prison 1 E. 2. 5 H. 4.4 5. 1 H. 7.7 3 H. 7.2.14 21 H. 8.7 22 H. 8.11 25 H. 8.6 1 E. 6.12 5 El. 10.17 43 El. 13. 21 Jac. 26. Page 222 223 224 Feasants and Partridges the penalties for hunting or killing them 11 H. 7.17 23 Eliz. 10. 1 Jac. 27. 7 Jac. 11. Page 225 ad 228 Fighting and Quarrelling when and how punishable 5 6 E. 6.4 Page 228 Fines how to be levied and by and before whom when it shall be good and when not Stat. de finibus 18 E. 1. Stat. de finibus levatis 27 E. 1. Stat. 1. St. of Carlile 15 E. 2. 3 E. 3.4 16. 38 E. 3. Stat. 1 3. 5 H. 4.14 1 R. 3.7 4 H. 7.24 32 H. 8.36 37 H. 8.19 2 3 E. 6.28 1 M. Parl. 1.7 35 El. 2. Page 228 ad 232 First-fruits given to the King how to be paid and by whom and the penalties for non-payment 26 H. 8.3 17. 1 El. 4. Page 232 ad 236 Fish and Fishermen who may fish what fish they may take how where and when sell it 31 E. 3. Stat. 1.3 Stat. 3.1 2. 35 E. 3. 13 R. 2.19 17 R. 2.9 22 E. 4.2 11 H. 7.23 31 H. 8.2 2 3 E. 6.6 1 El. 17. p. 237. ad 242 Fishpond c. none may break a Fishpond head c. 5 El. 21. Page 241 Flax and Hemp how to be watered 33 H. 8.17 Page 242 Fools Lunaticks and Mad-men the King to have the custody of them Praerog Reg. 9 10. 17 E. 2. Page 242 243 Force Forcible Entry the punishment thereof who shall judge thereof and the remedy therein 5 R. 2. L. 15 R. 2.2 8 H. 6.9 31 El. 11. 21 Jac. 15. Page 243 244 Forrests the Laws and Liberties of Forrests Charta Forestae cap. 1 2 ad 15. 9 H. 3. 1 E. 3. Stat. 1. cap. 8. 1 E. 3. Stat. 2. c. 1 2. 25 E. 3. Stat. 5. c. 7. 7 R. 2.3 4. 22 E. 4.7 32 H. 8.35 16 17 Car. 16. Page 244 ad 248 Felons shall not be disseised of Lands till convicted Stat. de catallis felonum 31 E. 3. Stat. 1 3. 1 R. 3.3 11 H. 7.1 24 H. 8.5 Page 249 250 Forger of false Deeds how punishable 5 Eliz. 14. Page 250 251 Forestallers Regradors Ingrossers who and their punishment 5 6 E. 6.14 13 El. 25. in fine Page 251 252 253 Franchises and Liberties Magna Chart. c. 1 9 37. 9 H. 3. Stat. de Quo War 18 E. 1. 30 E. 1. de Tallagio non concedendo 1 E. 1. c. 4. 1 E. 3. Stat. 2 4. 14. Stat. 1. c. 1. 6 R. 2. Stat. 1. c. 1. 2 H. 4.1 27 H. 8.24 32 H. 8.20 Pet. Right 3 Car. 1. Page 253 ad 258 Fraudulent Conveyances when and why void 50 E. 3.6 13 El. 5.27 27.4 Page 250 259 260 Freeholders their priviledges Marlb cap. 22. 50 H. 3. 15 R. 2.12 16 R. 2.2 Page 260 Fuel the assize thereof 7 E. 6.7 43 El. 14. Page 260 261 162 Fustians how to be dressed and by whom to be searched 11 H. 7.27 39 El. 13. Page 262 Fens and Marshes to be drained 4 Jac. 8.13 7 Jac. 20. 15 Car. 2. cap. 17. 16 17 Car. 2. cap. 11. Page 370 G. GRain and Corn who may transport it and by what licence and at what price 5 El. 12. 13 El. 13. 3 Car. 1.4 Page 95 96 Gavel-kind in some kind abolished 31 H. 8.3 Page 127 Gauging all Wines brought in shall be gauged by the Kings Gaugers 27 Ed. 3.8 4 R. 2.1 18 H. 6.17 31 El. 8. Page 262 263 264 Gauger his duty and fee 27 E. 3.8 23 H.
6.16 ibid. Gigmill not to be used 5 6 E. 6.22 Page 264 Gold an Goldsmith none shall make any vessels or other thing of worse silver then money Art super Cart. c. 20. 28 E. 1. 27 E. 3.14 7 E. 3.37 5 H. 4.13 2 H. 6.14 nor alloy it 4 H. 7.2 18 El. 15. 14 Car. 2. c. 3. Page 264 ad 268 No mettal but silver shall be guilded 2 H. 5. Stat. 2. c. 4. 8 H. 5.3 Page 266 Grant Exemplification thereof as good and effectuall as the the Grant it self 3 4 E. 6.4 13 El. 6. Page 268 Gunpowder and Salt-peter may be brought in from foreign parts 16 17 Car. 21. Page 268 Gavelet a Writ of Gavelet what and of what use Stat. de Gavelet 10 E. 2. Page 337 Games none may keep houses of unlawful gaming and the penalty of those that do 33 H. 8.9 2 3 P. M. 9. 16 Car. 2. cap. 5. Page 425 ad 428 H. HIdes when they must be tanned by whom and with what 1 M. Parl. 2.8 1 Jac. 22. p. 88 89 They must not be gashed or sold when putrified 1 Jac. 22. Page 89 Hawk no hawk of English breed may be born 11 H. 7.17 Page 225 The penalty of driving Hawks from their Coverts or concealing any Hawks 34 Ed. 3.22 37 Ed. 3.19 Page 272 Hare Deer c. may not be bought to sell again the penalty thereof 1 Jac. 27. Page 226 227 Herrings when they may be bought and sold and the prices 31 E. 3. Stat. 2.1 2 3. Page 237 238 Hemp and Flax where it may be watered and where not 33 H. 8.15 Page 242 Hats who may make them and of what and who sell them 8 El. 11. 1 Jac. 17. Page 268 269 Hexamshire where 14 El. 13. Page 272 High-wayes made altered repaired and the penalties for neglect thereof 14 15 H. 8.6 26 H. 8.7 37 H. 8.3 1 M. Parl. 2. cap. 5. 2 3 P. M. 8. 5 El. 13. 18 El. 10. 39 Eliz. 19.13 14 Car. 2. cap. 2. Stat. 2. 14 Car. 2. cap. 6.15 Car. 2. cap. 1. St. 3.16 17 Car. 2. Page 272 ad 280 Homage and fealty the manner thereof 17 E. 2. Page 281 Hampton-Court made an Honor 31 H. 8.5 Ampthill 33 H. 8.37 and Grafton 33 H. 8.38 Page 281 282 Hops who may bring them in and how mixed 1 Jac. 18. Page 282 Horns who may buy and sell them and who may search and try the commodity 4 E. 4. 7 Jac. 14. ibid. Horses may not be taken without the owners consent 20 R. 2.5 nor transported by any 11 H. 7.13 1 E. 6.5 Page 283 284 Hospitals by whom they may be founded and reformed 2 H. 5. St. 1. c. 1. 2 H. 6.2 13 El. 17. 14 18 27 El. not printed 39 El. 5. Page 285 ad 288 Hunting who may hunt and what 13 R. 2.13 19 H. 7.11 3 Jac. 13. 13 Car. 2. cap. 10. Page 289 290 I. JUstices of the Peace their power to punish lewd women and Bastardy 7 Jac. 4. 3 Car. 4. Page 43 Jesuits and Seminary Priests what is in them felony or treason and the punishment thereof 27 El. 2. 35 El. 2. Page 116 ad 119 Judgment Plea of false Judgment who may hold and by whom triable Marlb 20. 52 H. 3. 1 E. 3.4 Page 221 Indictments c. must all run in the Kings name 27 H. 8.24 Page 255 By whom to be found and how and where good West 2. c. 13. 13 E. 1. 1 E. 3. Stat. 2. c. 17. 25 E. 3. St. 5.14 11 H. 4.9 3 H. 7.1 37 H. 8.8 Page 293 294 Inclose who may inclose their Land and better it by Seas 4 Jac. 11. 7 Jac. 18. Page 291 Identitate nominis what and wherein available and by what maintainable 37 E. 3.2 9 H. 6.4 ibid. Judgment where it may be stayed or reversed and where not 18 El. 14. 21 Jac. 13. 14 E. 3. Stat. 1.5 4 H. 4.23 Page 291 292 299 Isle of Wight none there to take above one Farm 4 H. 7.15 Page 292 Incontinency of Priests by whom punishable 1 H. 7.4 Page 293 Incumbent who and his remedy if unlawfully turned out of his Benefice 13 R. 21. 4 H. 4.22 Page 293 Indicavit where it lies and for whom 34 E. 1. ibid. Infections no dung c. to be cast in or near the City c. 12 R. 2.13 Page 294 Informer how he must sue and what he must do in it 18 El. 5. 29 El. 5. in fine 31 El. 10. Page 295 Inrollment the force and value thereof when to be done and before whom 6 R. 2.4 27 H. 8.16 34 35 H. 8.22 5 El. 26. Page 296 Intrusion what the inconvenience thereof and how punishable Prerog Reg. c. 13. 17 E. 2. 21 Jac. 14. Page 296 297 Ipswich to be paved 13 El. 21. Page 297 Ireland all merchandize may be carried thither 34 E. 3.17 18. Irish-men may not live in England 1 H. 6.3 2 H. 6.8 16 17 Car. 30 33. Page 299 Iron not to be exported or sold too dear 28 E. 3.5 ibid. Judiciall Proceedings confirmed 12 Car. 2. c. 12. ibid. Jurisdiction to whom belonging and in what Artic. Cler. c. 6. 9 E. 2. Stat. pro Cler. 25 E. 3. Page 300 Juris Utrum what and where it lies West 1. c. 24. 13 E. 1. 14 E. 3. Stat. 1.17 ibid. Jurors who shall be how summoned their duty Marlb c. 14. West 2. c. 38. 21 E. 1.1 Art sup Cart. c. 9. 5 E. 3.10 34 E. 3.4 8. 8 E. 4.3 1 R. 3.4 23 H. 8.13 35 H. 8.6 27 El. 6. 16 17 Car. 2.3 Page 300 ad 306 Justices their oath and duty 18 E. 3. Stat. 3 1. 20 E. 3.1.2 3. 1 Jac. 10. Page 307 Justices in Eyre their power office and duty Marlb 24. 52 H. 3. West 1. c. 18. 3 E. 1. West 2.10 13 E. 1. Page 307 308 Justices of Assize who may be how many where to keep their Sessions their power in it Just Assisar incerti temporis 20 E. 3.6 6 R. 2.2.5 8.2.2 20.2.3 11 H. 4.3 14 H. 6.3 33 H. 8.24 Page 308 309 Justices of both Be●che● their office and fees West c. 45. 10 H. 6. Statutum per se not printed Page 309 Justices of Gaol-delivery their power and when they must deliver the Gaols Stat. de finibus levatis c. 3. 27 E. 1. 2 E. 3.2 4 E. 3.2 17 R. 2.10 Page 310 Justices of Peace who may be their power and duty when to keep Sessions c. 1 E. 3. Stat. 2.16 34 E. 3. St. 1. c 2. 34 E. 3.1 36 E. 3.12 c. Page 310 ad 313 K. KIng not prejudiced by lapse of time or otherwise Prerog Reg. c. 8. 17 E. 2. Stat. de Clero c. 3. 7. 2 E. 3. Page 9 Ayd of the King where to be had and where not Stat. de Bigamis cap. 1 2. 4 E. 1. 14 E. 3.14 Stat. de Big c. 3. Page 10 11 Butler of the King what he may take and by whose order 25 E. 3.21 43 E.
Here if the Assise pass for the disseisee he shall recover treble dammages against the Patentee XX. Stat. 4 H. 5.8 If any make forcible entry into lands by way of maintenance the Chancellor of England shall grant a special Assise without suing to the King and if the disseisor shall be attainted thereof he shall suffer one whole year's imprisonment and restore double dammage to the party grieved XXI Stat. 6 H. 6.2 The pannels of Assises shall be arrayed and an indented Copy thereof delivered by the Sheriff to the Plaintiffs Tenants and Defendants six days before the Sessions if they demand the same also Bailiffs of Franchises shall make their returns thereof to the Sheriff at the like time upon pain to forfeit each of them Sheriff or Bailiff 40 l. XXII Stat. 11 H. 6.2 In an Assise if the Sheriff be named a disseisor by Collusion to the end the Writ may be directed to the Coroner and the Assise secretly awarded by the tenant's default upon the Plaintiff's averment thereof and if it shall also be found by the Assise to be so the Justices shall abate the Writ and grievously amerce the Plaintiff XXIII Stat. 21 H. 8.3 The Plaintiff in Assise may abridge his plaint of any part whereunto a barr is pleaded without prejudice to the residue Attaint I. VVest 1. cap. 37. 3 E. 1. An Attaint is granted in Plea of Land Free-hold or any thing touching Free-hold II. Stat. de attinctis 13 E. 2. In Attaint if the first Jurors which shall be living appear not at the first grand distress or be returned to have nothing by their absence there shall be no delay made of the other Jury See Rast Attaint 2. III. Stat. 1 E. 3.6 In a Writ of Trespass an Attaint shall be granted by the Chancellor without speaking to the King as well upon the principal as upon the dammages IV. In all cases of Attaints the Justices shall not let to take the Attaints for the dammages not paid V. Stat. 5 E. 3.6 Nis● prius shall be granted in Attaints but ●o essoin or protection and five daies by the year shall be given before the Justices of the Common Bench at least VI. Stat. 5 E. 3.7 Writs of Attaint shall be granted as well in pleas of trespass moved without Writ as by Writ before Justices of Record if the dammages adjudged do exceed 40 s. VII Stat. 28 E. 3.8 An Attaint shall be granted as well upon a Bill of trespass as upon a Writ of trespass without having regard to the quantity of the dammages VIII Stat. 34 E. 3.7 An Attaint shall lie as well in plea real as personal and it shall be granted to the poor who shall affirm that they have nothing whereof to make fine saving their countenance without fine and to all others by easie fine IX Stat. 9 R. 3.3 He in the reversion shall have an Attaint or Writ of Error upon a false verdict found or an erroneous Judgment given against the particular tenant X. If the oath be found false or the Judgment erroneous and the tenant still in life he shall be restored to his possession and issues and the reversioner to the arrearages but if he be dead or be found of Covin with the demandant the reversioner shall have all yet the tenant may traverse the Covin by Scire facias out of the Judgment or Writ of Attaint if he please XI Stat. 13 R. 2.18 Upon a false verdict given before the Mayor and Bailiffs of Lincoln an Attaint shall be sued in the King's Bench or common-Common-Pleas and the Jury shall be of the County of Lincoln returned by the Sheriff of the said County XII Stat. 3 H. 5.5 By letters Patents of H. 4. the name of Bailiffs of the City of Lincoln being translated to Sheriffs lest it might be douted which Sheriff ought to return the Jury in Attaint the former Statute of 13 R. 2.18 is explained and confirmed XIII Stat. 11 H. 6.4 The Plaintiff in Attaint shall recover against all the Jurors Tenants and Defendants the costs and dammages which he shall sustain by delay otherwise in that suit XIV Stat. 15 H. 6.5 No Sheriff Bailiff or Coroner in Writs of Attaint of Plea of Land or of Deeds concerning Lands of the yearly value of 40 s. or more or of goods or chattels personal worth 40 s. or more shall impannel any but such as inhabit within their Bailiwicks and have free-hold or inheritance not ancient Demesne within the five Ports or Gavel-kind worth 20 l. per annum and shall not return against them less issues then 40 s. at the first Writ of distresses 10 s. at the second and double afterwards in pain to forfeit 100 l. to the King and as much to the Plaintiff And none but persons of that worth shall be impannelled upon Attaints if challenge thereof be made by the Plaintiffs XV. If any of the Defendants plead a forein plea and fail thereof the Justices shall give Judgment against them as if the Grand Jury upon the Articles of the Writ had passed against them Howbeit the rest of the Defendants shall not be prejudiced thereby neither shall this Act extend to Cities or Boroughs XVI If there shall not be in the County under the degree of a Baron enough of that worth to fill the pannel then shall the said Officers impannel and return the most sufficient persons there under that worth upon the like pain XVII Stat. 18 H. 6.2 Owners of Inheritance or Free-hold lands in Gavel-kind of 20 l. per annum may also be impannelled upon Attaints notwithstanding the Statute of 15 H. 6.5 XVIII Stat. 11 H. 7.21 None shall be impannelled upon a Jury in London except he have lands and tenements or goods and chattels worth 40 marks and if the trial be for lands or debt or dammages amounting to 40 marks or above his real or personal estate shall be worth 100 marks and the Jurors defect herein is a principal challenge XIX The issues of the Jurors for default of appearing shall be at the first summons 12 d. at the second 2 s. and double afterwards and the issues lost in the Mayor's Court shall accrue to the Mayor and Commonalty and those lost in the Sheriff's Court to the Sheriffs XX. An Attaint may be sued by Bill in the Hustings of London upon any false verdict given in any of the Courts of that City And thereupon the Mayor shall award a Precept to every Alderman to present either by themselves or their Deputies unto the said Mayor at the next Hustings the names of four indifferent and discreet Citizens out of each of their Wards each of them being worth in estate 100 pounds at least out of which the Mayor and six Aldermen or more shall impannel 48 whom the Mayor shall cause to be summoned together with the Tenants or Defendants in the Attaint to appear at the next Hustings and if upon default of appearance or otherwise there shall need a Tales the pannel
shall be supplied out of the rest presented or by other such Citizens at the discretion of the said Mayor and six Aldermen XXI Pleas of Attaints commenced in London shall be tried there by Inquests of the same City and not elsewhere XXII In an Attaint there no challenge shall lie for lack of sufficiency in estate XXIII The Judgment in such an Attaint shall not extend to lands or tenements nor yet to other punishment of the petty Jury or other processes then such as are limited by this Act. XXIV In such an Attaint if the petty Jury be attainted Judgment shall be given against the Defendant as at the Common Law and against the petty Jury to forfeit each of them 20 l. or more at the discretion of the Court to be employed as other penalties forfeited before them and to suffer six moneths imprisonment or less at the like discretion of the Court and to be for ever after disabled to be a Juror XXV But if the verdict be affirmed the Grand Jury shall-further inquire the corruption of the petty Jurors and if any of them be found to have taken any reward or promises thereof he shall forfeit ten times the value thereof to the Plaintiff and shall further incurr imprisonment and disability to be a Juror as aforesaid The like forfeiture also and imprisonment shall be inflicted upon the Tenant or Defendant that shall give such reward or promise but this last forfeiture shall accrue to the City in manner aforesaid XXVI If a debt costs or dammages are recovered in the first Action whereupon the Attaint is brought and that verdict found false the Plaintiff in such Attaint may sue for restitution of such debt costs and dammages by Writ Bill or Plaint in any of the King's Courts wherein no wager of Law shall be admitted XXVII In such an Attaint if the Plaintiff be non-suit or the first verdict affirmed the Plaintiff shall be imprisoned and make fine to the use of the City at the discretion of the Court. XXVIII Where there are one or more Plaintiffs if any of them die or be non-suit and albeit all the Tenants or Defendants and some of the petty Jury die yet shall not the Attaint abate so that two of that Jury remain in life XXIX The Grand Jurors that make default shall forfeit for the first forty shillings for the second five pounds and for every other afterwards ten pounds XXX Such process shall be made against the Jurors and parties in this Attaint as is usually made in Attaints at the Common Law and shall be returnable at every Hustings XXXI The Attaint shall not remain to be taken after the first summons for the default of the Tenant or Defendant or any of the petty Jury neither shall any essoign be allowed in the same XXXII When the trial is to be per medietatem linguae the Mayor and Aldermen shall impannel half strangers worth an hundred pound a piece XXXIII Stat. 23 H. 8.3 Upon every untrue Verdict before Judges of Record except where the thing in demand extendeth not to the value of 40 l. or concerneth life the party grieved shall have an Attaint against the petty Jury and also against the party that hath the judgment thereupon XXXIV The Processes here shall be summons re-summons and distress infinite as well against the petty Jury and party as against the Grand Jury who shall be of the accustomed number and have lands of the yearly value of 20 marks out of ancient demesne XXXV The distress shall be awarded 15 daies before the return thereof and shall be made upon the land of every one of the Grand Jury as is used in other distresses XXXVI Albeit the Defendant or petty Jury or some of them appear not yet the grand Jury shall proceed XXXVII If any of the petty Jury appear the Plaintiff shall assign the false serement whereunto the petty Jury shall have no other answer if they be the same persons and the Writ Processes Return and assignment be good but that they made true serement which shall be tried by 24 of the Grand Jury unless the Plaintiff hath before been non-suit or discontinued his suit or had judgment against the same Jury for the same Verdict XXXVIII Howbeit the Defendants may plead that they gave a true verdict or any other matter which may barr the Attaint but notwithstanding such plea the Grand Jury shall nevertheless inquire whether the first Jury gave a true verdict or no. XXXIX If the petty Jury be found to have given an untrue verdict they shall each of them forfeit 20 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the Plaintiff and incurr several fines at the discretion of the Justices and be ever after disabled to give testimony in any Court XL. If the Defendant's plea in bar be found against him the Plaintiff shall have judgment to be restored to that he lost with his reasonable costs and dammages XLI Outlawry or Excommunication shall be no plea against the Plaintiff in Attaint and in the aforesaid process such day shall be given as in dower but no essoign or protection allowed XLII If the Grand Jury appear not so that the petty Jurie's verdict remains untried the defaulters shall upon the first distress forfeit 20 s. upon the second 40 s. and upon every default after 5 l. The like penalty is also to be inflicted upon the Tales XLIII The Attaint is maintainable so long as any two of the petty Jury are alive XLIV An Attaint shall also lie for a personal thing under the value of 40 l. in manner aforesaid save onely that in such case the Grand Juror is to have lands worth 5 marks per annum out of ancient demesn or to be worth 100 marks in goods and the forfeiture of each petty Juror shall be but 5 l. XLV For want of sufficient Jurors in one County a Tales shall be awarded into another County at the discretion of the Justices XLVI An Attaint shall also lie for him in reversion or remainder And also in Attaint if the Plaintiff be non-suit or discontinue the suit he shall be fined at the discretion of the Justices XLVII All Attaints shall be hereafter taken in the King's Bench or Common Pleas and not elsewhere and Nisa prius shall be granted upon the distress at the discretion of the Justices also any of the petty Jury may appear and answer by Attorney XLVIII As concerning the forfeitures the several moieties shall be recovered by the King and parties respectively by Ca. sa or Fi. fa. or Elegit or Action of debt against each of the petty Jury their Executors or Administrators having then sufficient goods of the Testators not administred XLIX Judgment and Execution of restitution to the Plaintiff and of discharge of restitution to the Tenant or defendant shall be given and had as in case of a grand Attaint hath been used L. The Non-suit or release of one Plaintiff shall not prejudice his companions LI. In every
such Steward do contrary to this Act he shall forfeit five pounds to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor IX This Act shall not prejudice the liberties of the Bishop of Duresm X. Stat. 1 R. 3.6 The Statute of 17 E. 4.2 is made perpetual XI Stat. 3 H. 7.9 Upon an Ordinance made by the City of London to prohibit Citizens to carry their wares to Fairs and Markets out of the City this Act gives them liberty and makes that Ordinance void and none shall trouble any Citizen for so doing in pain of 40 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor * XII Stat. 2.3 P. M. 7. Every owner of a Fair or Market shall appoint a Toll-taker where Toll is taken or a Book-keeper where no Toll is paid to sit there from ten of the clock in the fore-noon till Sun-set in pain of 40 s. for every default XIII The Toll-taker or Book-keeper shall within one day after deliver unto the said owner a note of all the Horses sold there that day in pain of 40 s. which note the owner shall subscribe in like pain of 40 s. XIV Sale of a stoln Horse in a Fair or Market without entry in the Book as aforesaid and without staying there in open view by the space of an hour at least betwixt 10 of the clock and Sun-set shall not alter the property of the right owner but that he may by vertue of this Act seize or replevy him wheresoever he finds him XV. ☞ Justices of Peace in Sessions have power to hear determine the breach of this Statute and the forfeitures shall be divided betwixt the King and Queen's Majesties and the Prosecutor XVI Where no Toll is due the Book-keeper's fee for entring every contract is 1 d. and no more XVII Stat. 31 El. 12. Every seller or exchanger of an horse in a Fair or Market which being unknown to the Toll-taker or Book-keeper doth not procure one credible person that is well known unto him to vouch the sale of the same horse also every false voucher and the Toll-taker or Book-keeper that suffers such sale or exchange to pass shall forfeit 5 l. to be divided betwixt the Queen and the prosecutor And besides the sale of such horse shall be void XVIII The names of the buyer seller and voucher and the price of the horse shall be entred in the Toll-book and a note thereof delivered to the buyer under the Toll-takers or Book-keepers hand for which the buyer shall pay 2 d. XIX Justices of Peace in Sessions have power to hear and determine these offences XX. Notwithstanding such sale and voucher as aforesaid the right owner or his executors may redeem a stoln horse if they claim him within six moneths after the Stealing at the Parish or Corporation where he shall find him and make proof by two sufficient witnesses before the next Justice of Peace in the Country or before the Head-officer of a Corporation that the horse was his and repay to the buyer such price for the horse as the same buyer shall upon his own oath before such Justice or Officer testifie to have paid for him XXI An accessary of an horse-stealer shall not have his Clergy False Judgment I. Marlbridge 20. 52 H. 3. None but the King shall hold plea of false judgment II. Stat. 1 E. 3.4 If against a Record brought into the King's Court by writ of false judgment the party alledgeth that the Record is otherwise then the Court did record the same it shall be tried by those of the Countrey who were pesent when the Record was made but if they appear not upon the Sheriff's return of them with others it may be tryed by other good men of the Country Fees I. West 2.42 13 E. 1. Several ancient fees of Marshals Chamberlains Porters of Justices in Eyre and Serjeants bearing verge before the Justices at Westminster See the Statute II. VVest 2.44 13 E. 1. Porters bearing verge before the Justices of the Bench in the Circuit shall take for keeping a Jury onely 10 d. for the Bills nothing Upon a recovery without a Jury nothing upon a Recovery against many by one writ 4 d. for homage done in the Bench they shall have their upper garment Of great Assizes Attaints Juries and Battel waged the fee is 12 d. For the pleas of the Crown the fee is 12 d. the dozen For every prisoner delivered 4 d. The Chirographer's fee is 4 s. The Clerk's fee for writing Originals is for every writ 1 d. See the Statute Feoffments I. Stat. 1 R. 2.9 Every gift of Feoffment of Lands made by fraud or maintenance shall be void and the disseisee notwithstanding such alienation shall recover against the first disseisor both his land and double dammages provided he commence his suit within a year after the disseisin and that such feoffor be then Pernor of the profits II. Stat. 4 H. 4.7 The disseisee shall have his action against the first disseisor during the life of the same disseisor so as such disseisor be also Pernor of the profits at the time of such suit commenced but as to other Writs in plea of Land the Demandant shall commence his suit within the year against him that is Tenant of the free-hold as the time of the Action accrued to him so as such tenant be also Pernor of the profits at the time of such suit commenced notwithstanding the Statute of 1 R. 2.9 III. Stat. 11 H. 6.3 In all writs grounded upon Novel disseisin Disseisees may have recoveries against the disseisors of their feoffees as well as in Assize of Novel disseisin so as such disseisors or their feoffees against whom the writ is brought be Pernors of the profits at the time of the Writ purchased notwithstanding any gifts or feoffments made to other persons to delay the demandants ☞ Felony I. West 1.12 3 E. 1. Notorious felons which refuse lawful trial shall suffer strong and hard imprisonment II. Stat. Of breaking prison 1 E. 2. it shall be selony for any person to break prison being in for felony otherwise not III. Stat. 5 H. 4.4 It is felony to multiply gold or silver IV. Stat. 5 H. 4.5 It is felony maliciously to cut out the tongue or put out the eys of any of the King's Subjects V. Stat. 1 H. 7.7 If any shall hunt within Forrests Parks or Warrens in the night-time or disguised one of the King's Council or a Justice of Peace to whom information thereof shall be made shall by his warrant cause the offendor to be brought before himself or some other Councellor or Justice of Peace to be examined where if he conceal the fact such hunting shall be deemed felony but being confessed the offence is onely finable at the next general Sessions And here a rescuouse of the execution of any such warrant shall be also deemed felony VI. Stat. 3 H. 7.2 It is felony to carry away a woman wife widow or maid against her will
All fines whereupon Proclamations are not duly made by reason of the adjournment of any term by Writ shall be good as if that term had been holden from the beginning to the end and Proclamations therein made according to the Statute 4 H. 7.24 XXXIV This Act shall not extend to any fine heretofore levied of lands now in suit or heretofore lawfully recovered by judgment or otherwise XXXV Stat. 35 El. 2. Fines in the Common Pleas shall be proclaimed four times onely viz. once in the Term wherein the fine is ingrossed and once in each of the three Terms then next following ☞ Fines to the King I. Magna Chart. 26. 9 H. 3. Nothing shall be given for a Writ of Inquisition nor taken of him that prayeth Inquisition of life or member but it shall be granted freely and not denied First-fruits and Tenths I. Stat. 26 H. 8.3 The first-fruits and profits for one year of every spiritual living is granted to the King which every spiritual person shall pay or secure by bond before his actual possession of his Benefice II. Search for the value of Benefices and composition for the First-fruits thereof shall be made by the Lord Chancellor Master of the Rolls and other Commissioners to be appointed by the King for that purpose and the money and securities taken upon such Compositions made before the Chancellor and Master of the Rolls only shall be paid and delivered unto the Clerk of the Hanaper for which he shall render account as he useth to do for other profits of the Great Seal but being made before other Commissioners shall be paid and delivered unto the Treasurer of the King's Chamber or such other person or persons as the King shall authorize under the Great Seal for that purpose to receive the same III. Acquittances for the receit of any money paid for First-fruits under the hands of the Clerk of the Hanaper Treasurer of the King's Chamber and the Commissioners or any of them shall be a sufficient discharge for the same in any of the King's Courts IV. An obligation for First-fruits shall be of like force as a Statute-staple and no more shall be so taken for such an Obligation then 8 d. and 4 d. for an Acquittance V. The Commissioners shall every six moneths deliver by Indenture unto the Treasurer or other person or persons authorized as aforesaid such money and specialties as they shall receive and in case they do not or do conceal them they shall forfeit their office and be fined at the King's pleasure VI. If any be convicted by presentment verdict confession or witness before the Lord Chancellor or other Commissioners to have entred upon any spiritual living before payment or composition made as aforesaid he shall forfeit the double value of the First-fruits VII All First-fruits heretofore payable to other persons shall be from henceforth paid to the King VIII Provided that Bishops may give institution and induction Notwithstanding this Act. IX A rent of pension out of every spiritual living amounting to the tenth part of the annual value thereof shall be yearly paid unto the King at Christmas and the Collector thereof shall pay them in yearly befor the first of April X. The Lord Chancellor shall appoint Commissioners in every Diocess for the Discovery of the yearly value of every spiritual living there and to make Certificate thereof as also of such deductions as are to be made out of the same which Commissoners shall be aforehand sworn by Dedimus potestatem duely to execute their Commmissions XI Every spiritual person shall be charged for his tenth in the Diocess where he is albeit their possessions ly elsewhere XII Bishops shall be charged with the Collection of all the tenths within their respective Diocesses and shall make payment thereof yearly before the first of April unto the Treasurer of the King's Chamber or other person authorized to receive the same and upon non-payment thereof process shall issue out of the Exchequer against them XIII Bishops shall have power to levy the Tenths by Censures of the Church distress or otherwise and no replevin prohibition supersedeas or other writ or impediment shall be allowed to hinder the same XIV During the vacation of a Bishoprick the Dean and Chapiter shall be charge therewith XV. If tenths being due shall not be paid within 40 days after demand thereof made by the Bishop or his officers the Incumbent so making default after certificate thereof into the Exchequer under the Seal of the Bishop shall be adjudged deprived ipso facto of all such Benefices as he hath at the time of such certificate made or at any time after and the Benfice or Benefices which he so hath shall be adjudged void as if he were dead XVI The Bishop making such certificate shall be discharged of so much as is certified to be unpaid for the recovery whereof process shall issue out of the Exchequer against the Incumbent his Executors or Administrators or rather then the King should lose it against his successor XVII The Acquittances of the Treasurer of the King's Chamber or other Commissioners authorized to receive the tenth and all such certificates as aforesaid shall be allowed in all Courts without further warrant XVIII No Officer of the Exchequer shall take any thing of the Bishop or his Collector for his Account or Quietus est in pain to lose office and to be fined at the King's will XIX They which pay pensions to others out of their spiritual livings may retain the tenth part thereof and shall be therein protected by plea upon this Act. XX. No pension shall be reserved upon the resignation of a Benefice above the value of the third part thereof XXI They who in one Corporation aggregate of many have several and distinct possessions belonging to their respective dignities shall only pay for their own possessions and not for those of others XXII No First-fruits shall be paid for a Benefice being not above the yearly value of 8 marks except the Incumbent live three years after his Induction or Collation thereunto and there shall be an exception inserted in the Obligation that in case he live not out those three years the Obligation shall be void but if he outlive them the First-fruits shall be paid by him his Executors or Administrators XXIII Fees payable by any Bishop or other Prelate for temporal Justice shall be defalked out of the valuation of their several dignities XXIV Stat. 26 H. 8.17 Farmers of spiritual persons shall not be compelled to pay First-fruits or Tenths for their lessors XXV Stat. 27 H. 8.8 Every spiritual person at his entry into specialty for the payment of his First-fruits shall have deduction of the tenth part thereof in respect of the tenth which shall be by him payable that year XXVI Where the last incumbent leaves the tenth unpaid the successor may distrain the said incumbents goods found upon the Benefice and keep them until the Incumbent if living or if dead
exemplified under the Great Seal or the seal of any other Court of this Realm nor to any Judge Justice or other person that shall set any such seal thereunto not knowing the same to be forged ☞ Forestallers Regradors and Ingrossers * I. Stat. 6 E. 6.14 He or she that shall buy or contract for any Merchandize Victual or other thing whatsoever in the way before it shall be brought by land or by water unto any City Port Road Fair or Market where it should be sold or shall cause the same to be so bought or shall diswade people from bringing any such commodity to any such place or being brought shall perswade them to inhance the price thereof shall be adjudged a Forestaller A Regrador is he that buyes any grain wine fish butter cheese candles tallow sheep lambs calves swine piggs geese capons hens chickens pigeons conies or other dead victual whatsoever brought to a Fair or Market to be sold there and do sell the same again in the same Fair or Market or in some other Fair or Market within 4 miles III. An Ingrosser is he that gets into his hands by buying contract or promise other then by demise grant or lease of land or tithe any corn growing in the fields or other grain butter cheese fish or other dead victual whatsoever with intent to sell it again IV. The party guilty of any of the offences aforesaid shall forfeit for the first offence the value of the goods so bought or had and suffer 2 moneths imprisonment without bail for the second the double value and suffer 6 moneths imprisonment without bail and for the third shall forfeit all his goods be set upon the Pillory and be imprisoned at the King's pleasure V. This Act shall not restrain the buying of Barley or Oats to be converted into Mault or Oatmeal nor the provision of any Town Corporate Ship Castle Fort Barwick Holy Island c. or any Fish-monger Inholder Victualer Butcher Poulterer or people dwelling within one mile of the main Sea which use to buy and sell fish for any thing concerning their several mysteries or trading they retailing the same at reasonable prices nor any Badger Lader Kidder or Carrier assigned to that office by three Justices of Peace and delivering the commodity out of his hand within one moneth after he buyes it nor the taking of any thing reserved upon any lease so that all these things be done without fraud or forestalling VI. He that buyeth grain in any Market for change of seed shall bring as much the same day and sell it if he can according to the present price of grain there in pain to forfeit double the value of the grain so bought VII He that buyes any cattel and sells the same again alive within 5 weeks shall forfeit double the value thereof during which time he ought to keep them upon Pasture which he hath either by grant or prescription VIII Justices of Peace in Sessions have power to hear and determine the aforesaid offences by inquisition presentment bill or information or by the testimony of two witnesses and to exact the one half of the forfeitures to the use of the King and cause the other half to be levied to the use of the prosecutor by Ficri facias or Capias and when the prosecution shall be at the Kings suit onely to extract the whole to the King's use IX None shall be punished twice for the same offence X. This Act shall not restrain the transporter of grain or cattel from Port to Port allowed by three Justices of Peace and not fore-stalling so that he imbark the same within 40 days after he buyes them and brings back from some Justice of Peace or Head officer a Certificate of their unlading agreable to his Cocket XI The offences against this Statute shall be prosecuted within two years XII This Act shall not restrain a Drover allowed by three Justices of Peace 1. Qu. and selling his cattel at 40 miles distance from the place where he bought them Howbeit such allowance ought not to continue above one year XIII Stat. 13 El. 25. in fine The Statute of 5 6 E 6.14 shall not extend to Wines Oyls Sugars Spices Currants or other forein victual brought from beyond Sea Fish and Salt onely excepted XIV For more ancient Statutes against Forestalling see the Statute of Forestallers 31 E. 1. and the Statute of clothes 25 E. 3.3 Which because they are altered by 4 5 E. 4.14 I have not thought thme fit to be inserted ☞ Franchises and Liberties I. Magna Charta Cap. 1. 9 H. 3. The Church of England shall be free and shall have all her holy Rights and liberties inviolable II. Magna Charta Cap. 9. 9 H. 3. The City of London and all other Cities Burroughs Towns the Barons of the five Ports and all other Ports shall have all their old liberties and free Customs III. Magna Charta Cap. 37. 9 H. 3. All free and ancient liberties and customs of all persons as well Spiritual as Temporal are reserved which the King himself promiseth to observe and commandeth all men of this Realm to do the like He likewise further promiseth that neither he nor his heirs shall procure or do any thing to infringe them and that if any thing be so procured it shall be void VI. Stat. De quo warranto 18 E. 1. If any can verifie by good enquest or otherwise that they or their Ancestors or Predecessors have used any liberty whereof they have been impleaded by Quo warranto before the death of R. 1. and have hitherto not having abused such liberty They shall be adjourned to a reasonable day before the Justices within which time they may repair to the King with the Record thereof signed by the Justices seal which done the King will confirm their estate and if any judgments have been given upon such writs by the Justices at Westminster upon the complaint of the party grieved to the King he will give them remedy V. All pleas of Quo warranto shall be from henceforth pleaded and determined in the Circuit of the Justices and all pleas now depending shall be adjourned into their proper Counties until the coming of the Justices into those parts Note that this Statute was confirmed by another Statute De quo warranto of the same year and to the same effect VI. Stat. De quo warranto 30 E. 1. The form of a Writ to be directed to the Sheriff to permit all men to injoy all such liberties as they had before and of a Proclamation that such as claim liberties shall shew to the Justices at the first Assizes when they shall come into those parts how they hold them for which they shall have forty days summons and if they appear not their liberties shall be seised in the name of distress Also the form of another Proclamation that such as complain of the King's officers shall shew their grievances to the said Justices VII Stat.
the King and his Council therewith they shall take no fee but of the King nor give councel where he is a party and if they do amiss they shall be at the King's will in body lands and goods IV. Stat. 20 E. 3.2 The like is commanded to the Barrons of the Exchequer and to dispatch businesses depending before them without delay V. Stat. 20 E. 3.3 Justices assigned by Commission and of Assize and Gaol-delivery and their Associates shall make such oath as shall be enjoyned them by the King's Council or the Chancery before their Commissions be delivered unto them VI. Stat. 1 Jac. 10. None shall take any money or promise for the report of an order or cause referred unto them by any of the King's Judges or Court directly or indirectly in pain of 5 l. and to lose his office or place in the same Court VII The forfeiture is to be divided betwixt the King and the party grieved if he will sue for it but if not then betwixt the King and any other prosecutor VIII This Act shall not prohibit the Clark from taking for his pains in writing the Report viz. 12 d. for the first sheet and 2 d. a piece for the rest Justices in Eyre I. Marlb 24 52 H. 3. Justices in Eyre shall not amerce Townships because all of twelve years of age came not before the Sheriffs and Coroners to make inquiry of robberies House-burnings and other offences against the Crown so that a full Inquest of those Towns appear Howbeit upon an Inquest for the death of a man all of 12 years of age ought to appear unless they have some reasonable cause of absence II. West 1. cap. 18. 3 E. 1. The common fine and amerciament of the whole County in Eyre of the Justices for false judgment or other trespass shall hereafter be Assessed by the said Justices upon the oaths of Knights and other honest men and not by Sheriffs and Barretters as in times past hath been used And the said Justices shall cause the parcels thereof to be Estreated into the Exchequer and not the whole summe onely III. West 2. cap. 10. 13 E. 1. Justices in Eyre in their Circuits shall appoint a certain time before which all writs shall be delivered in and then the Sheriff shall certifie the chief Justice in Eyre how many writs he hath and what they concern after which time they shall not be received or if received shall have no force except writs that abate during the Circuit which may be amended also except writs of Dower of men dying within the summons of the circuit Assizes of Darrein presentment and Quare impedit of Churches vacant within the said summons and of Novel disseisin ☞ Justices of Assize I. Stat. Justic Assisarum Incerti temporis There shall be eight circumspect and discreet Justices Assigned to take Assizes Juries and Certificates throughout the Realm viz. Two in the Counties of York Northumberland Westmerland Cumberland Lancashire Nottingham and Darby Two in the Counties of Lincoln Leicester Warwick Stafford Salop Northampton Rutland Glocester Hereford and Wigorn Two in the Counties of Cornwal Devon Somerset Dorset Wiltshire Southampton Oxon Berk Sussex and Surrey And two in the Counties of Kent Essex Suffolk Norfolk Cambridge Huntingdon Bedford and Buckingham II. Assizes Juries and Inquests of Middlesex shall be taken before the Justices of the Bench. III. The said eight Justices so Assigned shall daily attend for that purpose at such places as they shall think fit and most for the ease of the people and writs of Assizes Juries or Recognizances shall be granted to be taken before none but them save of the special grace of the King IV. Stat. 20 E. 3.6 Justices of Assize have power to inquire of the misdemeanours of Sheriffs Escheators Bailiffs and other Ministers Imbraceors and Jurors and to punish such as be found guilty And the Chancellor and Treasurer are to hear all complaints thereof and to apply speedy remedy thereunto V. Stat. 6 R. 2.5 Justices of Assize and Gaol-delivery shall hold their Sessions in the chief Towns of every County where the Shire-Courts there use to be holden VI. Stat. 8 R. 2.2 No man of Law shall be Justice of Assize or Gaol-delivery in his own Country and the chief Justice of the Common Bench shall be Assigned amongst others to take Assizes and to deliver Gaols but as to the chief Justice of the King's Bench it shall be as for the most part of 100 years last past hath been wont to be done VII Stat. 11 R. 2.11 Because it was found inconvenient to the subject that Justices of Assize should be bound to hold their Sessions where the Shire-Courts use to be held the Chancellor by the advice of the Justices shall have power to order that otherwise as need shall be notwithstanding the Statute of 6 R. 2.5 VIII Stat. 20 R. 2.3 No Lord nor other shall sit upon the Bench with the Justices of Assize in pain of great forfeiture to the King and the Justices are there commanded not to suffer it IX Stat. 11 H. 4.3 Justices of Assize shall deliver into the Treasury the Records of Assizes of Novel desseisin Mortdancester and Certifications every second year after the plea determined and judgment given and those Records shall not be amended or impaired after judgment given and recorded X. Stat. 14 H. 6.3 The Sessions of the Justices of Assize and Gaol-delivery in Cumberland shall be holden in the time of peace and truce in the City of Carlile and not elsewhere according to the Statute of 6 R. 2.5 XI Stat. 33 H. 8.24 No Justice or other learned in the Law shall be Justice of Assize in the County where he was born or doth inhabit in pain of 100 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XII This Statute shall not extend to the Clark of Assize or to any Associate or to any such Justice of Assize XIII Neither shall these words Justices of Assize or others learned in the Law extend to Officers in Corporations but that they may be Justices of Assize of fresh force or other Assizes in the place where they dwell or were born XIV This Act shall not be prejudicial to any Justice of the one Bench or the other for hearing and determining Assizes in those Courts nor to any Justice that shall take any Assize by adjournment for difficulty thereof XV. The Clark of Assize shall not during the Sessions be of Council to any within the Circuit otherwise then as to his Office appertains in pain of 10 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the party grieved XVI This Act shall not extend to Justices Clarks nor Clarks of Assize within the Dutchy and County Palatine of Lancaster Justices of both Benches I. West 1. cap. 45. 3 E. 1. One plea shall be decided by the Justices of the King's Bench before another be commenced yet Essoins shall be entred and allowed but let none presume to absent himself at the
for the victualling or amending of Ships ☞ News * I. West 1.33 3 E. 1. None shall report any false or slanderous news or tales whereupon discord may arise betwixt the King and his People or the great men of the Realm in pain of Imprisonment until he produce the Author II. Stat. 2. R. 2. Stat. 1.5 None shall devise speak or tell any false news lies or other such false thing of Prelates Lords or the great Officers of the Realm whereby any discord or slander may arise in pain to be punished as by the Statute of westm 1. ordained III. Stat. 12. R. 2.11 When any one hath spoken falsities contrary to the aforesaid Statutes and cannot produce the Author and is thereupon imprisoned he shall afterwards be punished by the Kings Council notwithstanding the said Stat. of West 1. Nisi prius I. West 2.30 13 E. 1. Justices sworn shall be assigned to take assizes of Novel disseisin Mortdancester and Attaiuts and they shall associate unto them one or two of the discreetest Knights of the County where they come which Assizes and Attaints shall be taken but thrice in the year viz. 1. between 8. of July and the first of August 2. the 13. of September and the 6. of October the 3. of January and the 2. of February II. At such Assizes before they depart they shall appoint the day of their return and may also adjourn the Assizes from day to day if the taking of them happen to be deferred at any day by vouching to warranty essoin or default of jurors They may also adjourn Assizes of Mortdancaster being respited by essoin or voucher into the Bench and in such case shall send thither the Record thereof together also with the Original writ And when the matter is come to the taking of the Assize the Justices of the Bench shall remit it to the Justices before whom the Assizes shall be taken But the Justices of the Bench in such Assizes shall give 4. dayes at least in the year before the Justices assigned to spare expence and labour III. All pleas in either of the Benches that require small examination shall be determined before them Howbeit it must be at a day and place certain appointed in the presence of the parties and mentioned in the Judicial writ by these words Praecipimus tibi quod venire facias coram justiciariis nostris apud Westmonasterium in Octabis Sancti Michaelis nisi Talis Talis tali die loco ad partes illas prius venerint duodeeim c. And when the Inquests of such pleas are taken they shall be returned into the Bench where they were commenced to receive Judgement and to be inrolled And Judgement otherwise taken shall be void except in an Assize of Darrein presentment and Inquisitions of Quare impedit which shall be determined in their proper County before one of the Justices of the Bench and a Knight at a day certain in the Bench assigned whether the Defendant consent or not and there shall judgement also passe immediately IV. The Justices of the Benches shall have in their Circuits Clerks to inroll all pleas pleaded before them as hath been used in times past and the Justices assigntd shall not compell the Jurors to say precisely whether it be disseisin or not so as they will shew the matter of fact and then require aid of the Justices But if they will of their own head say that it is disseisin their verdict shall be admitted at their own peril And the Justices shall not put upon Assizes or Juries any other then such as were summoned for the same at the first V. Stat. Definibus levatis 27 E. 1.4 Inquests and Recognisances determinable before the Justices of either Bench shall be taken in time of vacation before any of the Justices before whom the plea is brought being associate to one Knight of the same County where such Inquest shall pass unless they require great examination And such Justices shall proceed therein notwithstanding the Statute of 21 E. 1. De ponendis in Assisa which see in Jurors VI. Stat. Eborac 12 E. 2.3 Inquests in pleas of land that require no great examination shall be taken in the County before a Justice of the Peace where the plea is accompanied with a substantial man in the Country whether Knight or other so as a certain day be given in the Bench and a certain day and place in the Countrey in the presence of the parties and the demandant request the same but Inquests of Pleas that require great examination shall be taken in the Countrey in manner aforesaid before two Justices of the Bench. VII Stat. Ebor. 12 E. 2.4 Justices of Nisi prius have power to record non-suits and defaults in the Countrey at the dayes and places assigned and shall report them in the Bench at a day certain there to be inrolled and thereupon Judgment shall be given VIII Stat. 2 E. 3.16 Inquests in pleas of Land shall be as well taken at the request of the tenant as of the demandants notwithstanding the Statute of 12 E. 2.3 IX Stat. 4 E. 3.11 Justices of the Benches of Assiise and of Nisi Prius shall have power to hear and determine maintenance conspiracy confederacy and champerty as well as Justices in Eyre And that which cannot be determined before the Justices of either Bench upon the Nisi Prius shall be adjourned unto the Bench where they are Justices and shall be there determined Note that this Statute is confirmed by the Statute of 7 R. ● 15 which see in Maintenance X. Stat. 14 E. 3. Stat. 1.16 A Nisi prius in the Kings Bench shall be granted before a Justice of that place if any Justice of that place may well go into those parts if not then before a Justice of the Common Pleas so likewise those in the Common Pleas shall be grantable before a Justice of the Kings Bench if he may go thither vice versa but if none of them may go then before the chief Baron if c. or else before the Justices assigned to take Assizes in those parts so as one of them be a Justice of one of the Benches or the Kings Serjeant sworn And here to avoid fraud if one party demand a tenor of the record another tenor thereof shall be also upon request delivered to the other party XI Where Assizes of Quare impedits and Darrein presentments are triable in the Countrey by Nisi prius before the Justices of either Bench the chief Baron or Justices of Assize they may there give Judgment upon them XII Stat. 7 R. 2.7 In all pleas where Nisi prius is grantable of office after the great distress returned and three times served before the Justices against the Jurors and thereupon the parties demanded if either party will pursue or if they refuse to have a Nisi prius in the case then at the suit of any of the Jurors there present a Writ of Nisi prius shall be
granted to end the quarrel and that as well in the Exchequer as elsewhere XIII Stat. 14 H. 6.1 Justices of Nisi prius have power to give their Judgments in cases of Felony and Treason as well upon acquital as attainder and thereupon also to award execution XIV Stat. 18 El. 12. The chief Justice of England upon issue joyned in the Kings Bench or Chancery and the chief Justice of the Common Pleas and chief Baron of the Exchequer upon issues joyned in their several Courts or in their absence two other Justices or Barons are made Justices of Nisi prius for the County of Middlesex and may sit in Westminster-Hall or in the Exchequer within the term or four days after for the trial of issues joyned in the said Courts respectively and triable in Middlesex aforesaid to prevent interruption of proceeding in the said several Courts during the term and for the better ease of the Free-holden of Middlesex Upon which trials Tales shall be granted and all other proceedings shall pass as upon Writs of Nisi prius triable elsewhere in the Country Non-plevin I. Stat. 9 E. 3.2 None shall lose their Land by reason of Non plevin Non-suit I. Stat. 2 H. 4.7 Where before Justices of Assise the parties are adjourned for some difficulty in law upon the matter found in this case the Plaintiff shall not be non-suited albeit the verdict passe against him Non-tenure I. Stat. 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.16 By the exception of Non-tenure of parcel no Writ shall abate but only for the quantity of the Non-tenure which is alledged Northumberland I. Stat. 23 H. 6.7 The Sheriff of Northumberland shall gather no more Head-pence there in pain of 100 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor Norwich * I. Stat. 33 H. 8.16 None shall buy within Norwich or the County of Norfolk any Worsted yarn spun in the said City or County but such as shall work it or cause it to be wrought in Norwich or elsewhere within the said County in pain to forfeit for every pound thereof otherwise imployed 40 s. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor II. None shall convey beyond Sea any Worsted-yarn spun in England in pain to forfeit 40 s. for every pound to be divided as aforesaid III. Stat. 1 E. 6.6 The Statute of 33 H. 8.16 is made perpetual IV. Hat-makers dwelling in Norwich may buy Worsted-yarn called Middl usse yarn as they have used to do notwithstanding the Statute of 33 H. 8.16 so as they imploy it in Hat-making within the said City V. Stat. 56 E. 6.24 None shall make Mats Coverlets or Dornecks by himself or others or use any of those mysteries in Norwich or Norfolk unless he be admitted so to do by the Major Recorder Steward and two Justices of Peace of that City or by four of them or have been apprentice to the said Mystery by the space of seven years VI. None shall make any Hats Dornecks or Coverlets in Norfolk but only in some Corporate or Market-Town there in pain to forfeit for every six Felts 10 s. for every Coverlet 3 s. 4 d. and for every six yards of Dornecks 6 s. 8 d. VII This Act shall not extend to the Inhabitants of Pulham in Norfolk VIII The Major Recorder Steward or Justice of Peace that takes a reward for admitting any to work shall forfeit 5 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor IX Stat. 1 2. P. M. 14. An Act for the making of Russets Sattens Sattens reverses and Fustians of Naples at Norwich and not elsewhere by which Act there is a Corporation made for that purpose and divers Articles concerning the same See the Act at large X. Stat. 39 El. 22. An establishment of the Bishoprick of Norwich and the possession thereof against a pretended concealed title made thereunto See the Statute at large ☞ Nusance I. West 2.24 13 E. 1. A Writ of Nusance shall be grantable as well against the Alienee as against the party that levied it and when it is against the party himself the Writ shall be Questus est nobis A. quod D. injuste c. Levavit domum murum mercatum alia quae sunt ad nocumentum c. But when against the Alien the Writ shall be Questus est nobis A. quod B. C. Levav●runt c. II. Stat. 6 R. 2.3 All Writs of Nusance called Vicomtiels shall be made at the election of the Plaintiff according to the old form or in the nature of Assizes determinable before the Justices of the one Bench or other or the Justices of assize to be taken in the County of the place assigned Oath I. SEe Magna Charta printed by Richard Tottle Anno Domini 1556. fol. 164. and 166. the Oaths of the King the Bishops the Kings Counsellors Escheators Sheriffs Majors and Bailiffs See the Oath Ex Officio Courts and Jurisdictions Ecclesiastical Numb IV. And see Title Quakers Numb I. Obligations I. Stat. 38 E. 3.4 Whereas divers people be bound in another Court out of the Realm by Instruments or otherwise it is accorded that all penal bonds in the third person be void and holden for none Odio Atia I. West 1.11 3 E. 1. Forasmuch as many being indicted of Murder and guilty thereof by favourable inquests taken by the Sheriff and by the Kings Writ of Odio Atia are replevied until the comming of the Justices in Eyre It is provided that from henceforth such Inquests shall be taken by lawful men chosen out by the oath of twelve men of whom two at the least shall be Knights who by no affinity with the Prisoners or otherwise are to be suspected ☞ Officers and Office I. Stat. 12 R. 2. The Chancellor Treasurer Keeper of the Privy Seal Steward of the Kings house the Kings Chamberlain the Clerk of the Rolls Justices of the Benches Barons of the Exchequer and all others called to name and ordain Justices of Peace Sheriffs Escheators Customers Controllers or any other Officer or Minister of the King shall be firmly sworn that they shall not name or ordain any Officers or Ministers for any gift or brocage favour or affection And none which pursueth by him or by other privily or openly to be in any such office shall be put in the same or any other but that they make all such Officers and Ministers of the best and most lawful and sufficient men in their judgments and knowledg II. Stat. 14 R. 2.10 No Customer Controller Searcher Weigher or Finder shall have any such Office for term of life but only during the Kings pleasure notwithstanding any Patent or grant to the contrary III. Stat. 17 R. 2.5 No Searcher Gauger Aulnager Finder or Weigher of Wools or other Merchandize Collector of Customs and Subsidies or Controller shall have their several Offices for ●●erm of life or years But such Offices shall remain in the Kings 〈◊〉 and under the governance of the Treasurer with the assent of the
attainted of Treason so long as the attainder continues in force XXVI Stat. 1 M. Sess 1. No Act or offence shall be adjudged Treason petty Treason or misprision of Treason but such as be declared to be so by 25 E. 3. Stat. 5. cap. 2. XXVII Stat. 1 M. Sess 2.6 To counterfeit any forreign coin made currant in this Realm or the Queens Signet Manuall privy Signet or privy Seal shall be adjudged High Treason And all counsellors procurers and abettors thereunto shall also be deemed Traytors XXVIII Stat. 1 2 P. M. 10. Tryal of Treason shall be according to the course of the Common Law and not otherwise XXIX The right of all others is saved XXX Concealment of High Treason shall be adjudged misprision of Treason and shall incur punishment accordingly XXXI Also in cases of High Treason concerning coin and for counterfeiting the King or Queens Signet privy Seal Great Seal or Signet Manual such tryal shall be observed as heretofore hath been used by the Common Law XXXII Stat. 1 2 P. M. 11. If any person bring from beyond Sea into this Realm or any of the Dominions thereof any false and counterfeit coin of money allowed to be currant in this Realm knowing it to be so with intent to utter the same here by Merchandizing or otherwise both he and his accessaries shall be adjudged offenders in High Treason and shall be adjudged and convicted or attainted for the same by such evidence and in such form as hath been used within this Realm before the first of E. 6. XXXIII Stat. 5 El. 11. Clipping washing rounding or filing for lucre sake any of the proper moneys or Coins of this Realm or the Dominions thereof or of forreign Moneys or Coins allowed to be currant here shall be adjudged High Treason and the offender herein together with his accessaries being thereof attainted shall suffer death forfeit all his goods and his lands also during life XXXIV They who have any grant of forfeitures of lands or goods within any Liberty or Precinct shall in this case also enjoy them XXXV These offences make no corruption of bloud nor forfeiture of Dower And here tryal of a Peer shall be by his Peers XXXVI Stat. 18 El. 1. If any person shall for lucre sake by any wayes or means whatsoever impair diminish falsify scale or lighten the Coins of these Dominions or the Coins of any other Realms allowed to be currant here during the time they are so allowed it shall be adjudged Treason and the offenders therein their Counsellors Consentors and Aiders shall suffer death forfeit all their goods and chattells and their lands also during life XXXVII Howbeit this offence shall cause no corruption of bloud or forfeiture of Dower and the tryal of a Peer shall be by this Peers XXXVIII Stat. 29 El. 1. No Record of Attainder of Treason shall be reversed where the party attainted is executed for the same offence XXXIX Stat. 13 Car. 2. cap. 1. It shall be Treason in any persons whatsoever during the Kings life within the Realm or without to compass imagine invent devise or intend death or destruction or any bodily harm tending to death or destruction maim or wounding imprisonment or restraint of the person of the King or to deprive or depose him from the stile honour or Kingly name of the Imperial Crown of this Realm or of any other his Dominions or Countries or to levy War against him within or without the Realm or to move or stir any forreiner or stranger with force to invade this Realm or any other the Kings Dominions or Countreyes being under his obeysance And such compassings Imaginations Inventions Devices or Intentions that any of them shall express utter or declare by any Printing Writing Preaching or Malitious advised speaking being legally convicted thereof upon the oaths of two lawful and credible Witnesses upon Tryal or otherwise convicted or attainted by due course of Law Every such person shall be adjudged a Traytor and suffer pains of death and forfeit as in cases of Treason Vide Title King Numb VII XL. Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 30. Oliver Cromwell deceased Henry Ireton deceased John Bradshaw deceased and others attainted of High Treason for the horrid Murther of King Charles the first Vide the Act at large XLI Stat. 13 Car. 2. cap. 15. The pains Penalties and forfeitures imposed upon the Estates and persons of certain notorious offenders excepted out of the Act of Free and General Pardon Indempnity and Oblivion Trespass I. The Statute of Glocester Cap. 8. 6 E. 1. Sheriffs shall plead pleas of Trespass in their Counties as they have been accustomed to be pleaded II. None shall have Writs of Trespass before Justices unless he swear by his faith that the goods taken away were worth 40 s. at least III. If he complain of beating he shall answer by his faith that his plaint is true but for maims and wounds a man shall have his Writ as before hath been used IV. The Defendants in such pleas may make their Attorneys where Appeal lyeth not so that if they be attainted of Trespass being absent the Sheriffs shall be commanded to take them and they shall incur like pain as they should have had if they had been present at the Judgment given V. If the Plaintiffs in such Trespasses cause themselves to be Essoined after the first appearance day shall be given them till the coming of the Justices and the Defendants in the mean time shall be in peace VI. In such pleas and others where attachments and distresses do lye if the Defendant Essoin himself of the Kings service and do not bring his warrant at the day given by the Essoin he shall recompence the Plaintiffs damages for his Journey 20 s. or more at the discretion of the Justices and besides shall be grievously amerced to the King VII Stat. 43 El. 7. If any shall be convicted by his own confession or by the Testimony of one Witness upon Oath before one Justice of Peace or Head-Officer to have unlawfully cut and taken away any grain growing robbed any Orehard or Garden digged up or taken away any Fruit-Trees broken any hedges pales or other fences cut or spoiled any woods or under-woods standing and growing or the like or to have been accessary thereunto shall for the first offence pay unto the party grieved such damages and within such time as by the said Justice or Head-Officer shall be appointed And in case the party offending shall not by the said Justice or Officer be thought able to discharge the said damages or shall not discharge them according to the Order then shall the said offender be by them or either of them respectively committed to the Constable or other Officer of the place where the offence was committed or the party apprehended to be whipped and for every other offence committed afterwards and proved as aforesaid the party offending shall receive the like punishment of whipping VIII The Constable or other
and mixt attaints conspiracies Assizes Quare Impedits appeals of murder and felony and all actions grounded upon any Statute shall be sued by Original Writs sealed with the Original Seal and returnable before the Justices at their Sessions but all personal actions as debt detinue trespass account and the like amounting to the sum of 40 s. or above shall be sued by such Writs original or by bills at the election of the Plaintiff as is used in North Wales LXXX All personal actions under the sum of 40 shillings may be sued by original Bill as is also used in North Wales sealed by the judicial seal remaining in the custody of the Justice LXXXI The Fee for sealing every original Writ upon the causes aforesaid and for every Bill in Actions personal when the debt and damages amount to 40 s. or above is six pence and for every judicial process sued upon any such original Writ or bill seven pence whereof the King shall have six pence and the Justice one penny And for every bill in personal actions when the debt and damages amount not to forty shillings and for every judicial process to be sued upon the same 3 d. whereof the King is to have 2 d. and the Justice 1 d. LXXXII All Writs of Scire facias and writs of Good Abearing or for the Peace or writs of Supersedeas upon the same and all other process sued before the Justices upon any Record or Suggestion shall be sealed with the Judicial Seal for which the Plaintiff shall pay seven pence whereof the King is to have six pence and the Justice 1 d. LXXXIII Every exemplification upon any Record shall be Sealed by the Judicial Seal for which the Plaintiff shall pay 20 pence whereof the King is to have 16 pence and the Justice four pence LXXXIV Recoveries and Fines Concords and Warrants of Attorney for the same may be taken before the said Justices of lands tenements and hereditaments within their authority by force of his general Commission without any dedimus as is used before the Chief Justice of the Common-Pleas LXXXV All fines levied before any of the Justices with Proclamation made the same Sessions it shall be engrossed and in two other great Sessions then next following shall be of the same force as Fines levyed with Proclamations before the Justices of the Common-Pleas LXXXVI Every person suing Writs of Entry in the Post or Writs of Covenant or any other Writs for any recovery to be had by assent or otherwise or for any fine to be levied shall pay fines to the Kings use for the same as well fines pro licentia concordandi as all other fines as is used in Chancery or elswhere in the Kings Courts of England which fines shall be paid to such persons as shall Seal the Original Writs for that purpose who shall accompt for the same as they do for the profits of the said Original Seal LXXXVII Also the Kings silver upon every such fine shall be paid as is used in the Common-Pleas of England viz. 2 s. and shall be received by the Justice before whom such fine is levied whereof the King shall have 16 d. the Prothonotary for entring it 2 d. and the Justice the rest who shall accompt for the Kings profit as he doth for the profits of the Judicial Seal LXXXVIII The four said Justices shall have each of them a Prothonotary to attend upon them for the entring of all Pleas Process and matters of Record in Sessions to be holden before the said Justices LXXXIX There shall be a Marshal and a Crier in every of the said Circuits to be named by the said Justices as Justices of Assize in England use to do which Officers shall attend upon the said Justices in their Circuits in proper person and not by Deputy XC The Marshall shall have upon every judgment and every fine 4 d. and the Cryer 1 d. and the like fees shall be paid upon the acquittal of felons and of such as be delivered by Proclamation or out of common mainprise XCI Here also are set down the fees that the Prothonotaries shall take for Writs Entries Judgments c. for which see the Statute at large XCII The King shall have all fines issues amerciaments and recognizances forfeited which the Prothonotaries shall yearly estreat into the Exchequer appointed for that limit that process may be awarded to the Sheriff to levy them for the Kings use which Sheriffs shall yearly accompt before the Kings Auditors to be thereunto assigned XCIII Besides the President Council and Justices aforesaid there shall be Justices of Peace and Quorum and also one Custos R●tulorum in every of the said 12 Counties who shall be appointed by the Chancellor of England by Commission under the Great Seal with the advice of the President Council and Justices aforesaid or three of them whereof the President to be one XCIV There shall not be more then 8 Justices of Peace in any of the said 12 Shires besides the President Council and Justices aforesaid and the Kings Attorney and Sollicitor all which persons shall be also put in every such Commission XCV These Justices of Peace shall be of good name and fame and may exercise their Office albeit they have not 20 l. per annum or be not learned in the Law but before they shall execute their Commission they shall take such Oath as Justices of Peace in England use to take before the Chancellor of England or else before the President or one of the same Justices of Wales by dedimus or before some other to be appointed by the Lord Chancellor for the purpose XCVI The said Justices of Peace or two of them at least 1. Qu. shall keep their Sessions four times in the year and at other times also upon urgent cases as Justices of Peace in England use to do for which they shall also have such allowances for themselves and their Clerks as the Justices in England have XCVII Here the fee for a Warrant of the peace or good abearing is 6 d. for entring of pledges to pay the King a fine upon an indictment 9 d. and if it be with protestation 12 d. for a supersedeas 8 d. and for a recognizance 12 d. XCVIII These Justices of Peace shall certify Recognizances taken before any of them for the Peace and good abearing into the next Sessions but Recognizances taken before them for suspition of Felony shall be certified before the Justices at the next great Sessions without concealing them upon such penalties as be therefore ordained XCIX All Fines and Amerciaments lost before the Justices of Peace shall be asserted by two of them at least 1. Qu. and shall be duly set without partiality C. All such fines and amerciaments as also all issues lost forfeited recognizances and other forfeitures before the said Justices of Peace shall be yearly estreated by the Clerks of the Peace into the Exchequer appointed for that limit to the end that processes may
Officer or Clerk of the Chancery Justices of either Bench Barons of the Exchequer or other Officers or Clerks of the said places the Kings Attorney or Sollicitor Serjeants at Law any of the Kings Officers in Berwick or Carlisle or the Clerk of the Kings Council See also another Statute to the like effect for the fo●feiture of lands made 19 H. 7.1 VI. Stat. 16.17 Car.c. 2. An Act was made for the relief of the Kings Army and the Northern parts of this Kingdome otherwise called the Act of the Poll money or four Subsidies VII Cap. 3. Another Act was made for the reforming of some things mistaken in the Stat. of 16 Car.c. 2. And to make good the Acts of the Commissioners and other Officers by them authorized or appointed and to be then authorized or appointed VIII Cap. 4. Another Act was made for the levying of two intire Subsidies for the further relief of the Kings Army and the said Northern parts of the Kingdome IX Cap. 5. An Act was made for the levying of Mariners Sailers and others for the present guarding of the seas and necessary defence of the Realm X. Cap. 9. This Act was made for the speedy provision of money for disbanding the Armies and setling the peace of the two Kingdoms of England and Scotland XI Cap. 13. Another Act for the securing of such moneyes as are or shall be due to the Inhabitants of the County of York and the other adjoyning Counties wherein the Kings Army is or hath been billeted for the billet of the souldiers of the said Army as also to certain Officers of the same Army who do forbear part of their pay according to an Order in that behalf made in the Commons House of Parliament this present Session for such part of their pay as they shall so forbear VVaste I. Magna Charta 4.9 H. 3. No Waste shall be made by the Guardian in Wards lands and if the custody be committed to the Sheriff or any other that is accomptable to the King and they commit waste they shall make recompence and the wardship shall be committed to two discreet men of the fee who shall answer the issues of the land to the King or his Assignee II. The Committee of the Ward making such waste shall lose the custody and then likewise he shall be committed to two discreet men who shall be answerable to the King as aforesaid III. Magna Charta 5.9 H. 3. The Guardian of the Wards lands shall with the issues thereof uphold his Houses Parks Warrens Ponds Mills and other things pertaining to the said lands and shall deliver unto him at his full age lands stored with ploughs and other things at least as he received them IV. The like shall be observed in the custodies of all spiritual dignities which pertain to the King during their vacancy Howbeit such custodies ought not to be sold V. Marlbr 23.52 H. 3. Pars inde Farmers during their terms shall not make waste sale or exile of house woods men or any thing else which appertains to the tenements that they have in farm without special license had by writing of Covenant making mention that they may so do in pain that they being thereof convict shall yield full damage and be grievously punished by amerciament VI. The Statute of Glocester 5.6 E. 1. An Action of Waste is maintainable against tenant by the courtesy in dower for life or years and the party attainted thereof shall lose the thing wasted and recompence thrice so much as such waste is taxed at VII As for Waste done in the time of Wardship Magna Charta 4. 9 H. 3. before 1. shall be observed and moreover the Guardian shall recompence the heir for the waste done if the Wardship lost shall not amount to the value of the damages before the Heirs full age VIII West 2.14.13 E. 1. The processes in an action of waste shall be summons attachment and distress and if the defendant appear not upon the distress a writ of enquiry shall be directed to the Sheriff to inquire of the waste upon return whereof the Court shall proceed to Judgment according to the Statute of Glocester cap. 5. before IX West 2.22.13 E. 1. An action of waste shall be maintainable against one tenant in common against another of wood turfland fishing or the like and when the cause comes to Judgment the defendant shall choose either to take his part in a certain place to be set out by the Sheriff with a Jury or to grant to take nothing but as his pernors do and if he chuse to take his part in a place certain the place wasted shall be assigned for his part The writ in this case is Cum A. B. tenent Boscum pro indiviso B. fecit vastum c. X. The Statute of Waste 20 E. 1. An action of waste is maintainable by the heir for waste done in his ancestors time as well as for that done in his own time XI Artic. sup Chart. 18.28 E. 1. An action of waste is maintainable against Escheators and Sub-escheators for waste by them commitred in Wards lands XII Stat. 11 H. 6.5 An action of Waste is maintainable by the reversioner against tenant for life or years that first aliens his estate to a stranger and afterwards still receiving the profits thereof commits waste Howbeit this Statute shall not extend to such tonants as hold without impeachment of waste ☞ VVatches I. Stat. 5 H. 4.3 Watches shall be kept upon the Sea-costs as they were wont to be and in that case the Statute of Winchester shall be observed Which see in Robbery II. In every Commission of Peace hereafter to be made this article shall be inserted viz. That the Justices of Peace shall have power in their Sessions to inquire of Watches and to punish them who shall be found in default according to the tenor of the said Statute ☞ VVax * Stat. 11 H. 6.12 No Wax-chandler shall sell or put to sale any Candles or other wares made of Wax at a dearer rate then that he may have only 4 d. in every pound of wares above the common price of plain wax in pain to forfeit all such wares put to sale and the value of them sold and besides to make fine to the King II. Justices of Peace Mayors Bailiffs and Stewards of Franchises have power to examine and search concerning the breach of this Law and also to hear and determine the offences committed against it III. Stat. 23 El. 8. None in mingling or making of wax shall use or cause to be used any deceit by mixture and mingling the same with Rosin Tallow Turpentine or other deceitful thing to the intent to sell it or to put it to sale in pain to forfeit the same And if such deceitful wax happen to be sold before it be discovered the melter or procurer thereof shall forfeit for every pound thereof 2 s. to be divided betwixt the Queen and the party deceived if he will
16 Gaol-delivery Justices of G. D. Garnishment Deceipt 3 Gavel-kind Forfeiture 4 Wales 148 Gauging Pag. 262 Weights 50.60.65.66 General Issue Evidence 1 Gigmils Pag. 264 Girdles Cordwainers Glamorgan Sewers 34 Glass-men Vagabonds 15.22 Glocester Forfeiture Gold Silver and Goldsmiths Pag. 264 Grafton Honours Grants Pag. 268 Greenwax Estreats 8. Sheriffs 4. Green-hue Forrests 16.22 Guilds and Fraternities Monasteries Guns Gunners Cross-Bows Gun-powder Pag. 268 Gun-powder Treason Service and Sacraments H. HAbeas Corpus Corpus cum causa Hadenham in the Isle of Ely Appropriations 2 4. Hampton Court Honours Hand-guns and Haque-buts Playes Handy-crafts Artificers Hats and Caps Pag. 268 Norwich 4 c. Havens and Kivers Pag. 270 Approvements 11. Customs 13 Newcastle Weares Hawks and Hawkins Pag. 272 Feasants Fish 42. Forests 13. Heirs Admeasurement of Dower Age. Courts 22. Debt to the King 21 c Dower 6 Mortdancester Prochein Amy. Hemp. Flax. Herrings Clapboard 5. Fish Herens Hawks Heramshire Pag. 272 Hides Cordwainers Hearth-money vid. King Numb 9. Highwaies Pag. 272 Banks 6 Robberies 7 8. Holborn Paving Holy-dayes and Fasting-dayes Pag. 280 Cordwainers 44 Ships 27 c. 5. Homage and Fealty Pag. 281 Honours Pag. 281 Honey Forests 13 Wax 7 c. Hops Pag. 282 Horners Pag. 282 Horses Mares and Cattell Pag. 283 Fairs 12 c. Hospitalls and Hospitallers Pag. 285 Election First-fruits 45 Templers Hounslow-heath Pag. 288 House-breaking Clergy 40. Houses of Religion Monasteries Houses of Correction Hospitals Poor people Vagabonds 1 5 13 26 c. Hoyes Ships 14 22 53. Hull Pag. 289 Ships 18 Hundreds Pag. 289 Sheriffs Hunters Hunting Pag. 289 Feasants 11 12 Fish 42 Forest Husbandry Tillage Pag. 291 Hue and Cry Robbery Jane Dudley Deeds and Writings I. IDentitate nominis Pag. 291 Ideots Escheators 40 Fools Ieofail Pag. 291 Repleader Jesuits and Seminary Priests Crown 53 c. 82 Isse of Wight Pag. 292 Images Books Importation Drapery 1. 50 Imprisonment Prison Incontinency of Priests Pag. 293 Incumbent Pag. 293 Parson Indicavit Pag. 293 Indictments Pag. 293 Certificate of the c. Clergy 8 Demurrers 2 Process Infants Crowns 90 c. 137.139 Fines 17 c. Infections Pag. 294 Informers Pag. 295 Actions popular Inholders Alehouses Victuallers Inmates Cottages Inns of Court and Chancery Crown 27 Inrollments Pag. 296 Error 9 10. Grants Felony 23 Installments Mortmain 10 Intrusion Pag. 296 Inventory Administrators Executors Invasion Armour 2 Joynt-Tenants and Tenants in Common Assises 13 Essoin 5 Partition Suit 5 Ipswich Pag. 297 Ireland Pag. 297 Staple 4.26 Iron Pag. 299 Woods 17 c. Journey-man Corporation I Iudgment Pag. 299 Demurrers Error Felony 23 Iudicial proceedings Pag. 299 Iurisdiction Pag. 300 Iuris utrum Pag. 300 Assises 14 Discontinuance of process 3 Essoin 4 Iurors Pag. 300 Attaint 15 c. Attorney Challenge Cross-bows 12 Decies tantum England and Scotland 4.13 Escheators 2.8.23 Essoyn 2 Execution of Statutes Fish 38 c. Forcible Entry 5 Forrests 35 Indictments Informers 4 Lancaster Pannel Sheriffs 27.71 c. Triall Staple 19 Wales 5. Iustice and right and Iustices Pag. 306 Accusation 1 c. Armour Distresses 4 Merchants Staple 14 Iustices in Eyre Pag. 307 Atturney 3 Treason 1 Iustices of Assise Pag. 308 Aliens 14 Armour 4 Commission 1 Cordwainers Corn 9 Coroner 9 Corporation 1 Cottages Counterfeit Letters Crown Discontinuance of Process Felony Feasants Fines 15 Forger of false Deeds High-wayes Jurors Justice 5 Justices of Goal-delivery Labourers Linnen cloth Liveries Mouy 30 Musters Nisi prius Non-suit Offices 11 Parliament Perjury Playes Prison Prophesies Records Return of Sheriffs 10 Riots Robberie Service and Sacraments Treason 1 Usury Wines Women 8 Iustices of both Benches Pag. 309 Attorney 3 c. Books 4 Chancery Commission 1 2 Crown 19 63 Error Escheators 1 Execution of Statutes Executors 9 10 11 Justice Nisi prius Offices 11 Parliament Prison Robbery Sewers 7 Sheriffs 7 Treason ● Usury Wines Iustices of Coal-delivery Pag. 310 Actions popular Cordwainers Crown 44 c. Discontinuance of Process 6 7 Felony Justice 5 Justices of Assise 5 6 10 Murder Panel Parliament Perjury Playes Prison Records Robbery Ships 47 Treason 1 Wales Justices of Oyer and Terminer Oyer and Terminer Crown 46 Discontinuance of process Exigent 3 Forger of false Deeds High-wayes Justices of Peace 4.22 Labourers Linnen cloth Prophesies Records Robberies Service and Sacraments Treason 1 Usury Iustices of Peace Pag. 310 Actions popular Ale-houses Armour Arrow-heads Banks 3 Bastardy 3 c. Brass c. Butter Calves 3 c. Captains Chester 2 c. Clergy 16 Clerk of the Market Commission 2. Cordwainers Corn Coroner 9 Cottages Counterfeit Letters Coopers Cross-bows Crown Discontinuance of process 1 Drapery 18 48 49 68 114 116 142 209 229 234 c. 247 291 297. England and Scotland Escheators 18 Fairs and Markets 15 19 Felony Feasants Fines 16 Fish 23 c. Forcible Entry Forestallers Franchises 26 Fuel Gold Havens 3 High-wayes Holy dayes Horses Hunters Indictments Informers Ireland 15 Justices of G. D. Labourers Linnen clolh Mainprise Malt Money 30 41 Musters Nisi prius 6. Panel Parliament Severn Paving Perjury Physicians 27 Plague Playes Poor people Prison Processes Prophesies Riots Robberies Service and Sacraments Sewers 12.37 Sheep Sheriffs 49 c. Ships 4 Swearing and cursing Ties Tindale Tithes Trespass Vagabonds Victual Victuallers Uniuersities Usury Wales Watches Wax Weares Weights Wild-fowl Wines Woolls 25 Justices of the Forests Forests K. KEepers of the Great Seal of England Pag. 313 Kerseys Drapery King Pag. 313 Advowson 10 11 12. Challenge Courts Crown Damages 12 Debt to the King Discontinuance of process 2 Essoin 13 False Judgment Fools Forfeiture Franchises Justice Patents Treason Kings-Bench Attaint 47 Exigent 3 Treason 10 13 Kings Letters Excommunication 2 Knights Pag. 320 L. LAbourers Servants and Apprentices Pag. 321 Actions popular 9 Cordwainers 26 Crown 119 Drapery 47 48 49 201 Hats and Caps 1 Iron Merchants 86 Lancaster Pag. 327 Certificate of the c. 5. Crown 8 Courts 27.29.32 Exigent 15 Fines 31 First-fruits 44 Hospitals 16 c. Justices of Assise 16 Wales 149.152 Latten Brass Lead Merchants 18 21. Staple Leagues and Truce Breakers of Leagues and Truce Leap-year Dayes in Bank 1. Leases Pag. 328 Leather Pag. 332 Action popular 10 Cordwainers Merchants 18 21 Staple 4 22 c. Taxes 4 Wooll Lée-River Pag. 332 Chelsey Leet Pag. 332 Cottages 2 3. County Cross-bows Crown 27 Drapery 48 49 Letters of Mart Merchants 24 Letters Patents Patents Lewes County 5 Libell Pag. 333 Liberty Accusations Amerciaments 1 Liberties Franchises Limitation Pag. 333 Lincoln Attaint 11 12 Linne Pag. 336 Approvements 11 Worsteds Linnen cloth Pag. 336 Livery and Ouster le main Pag. 336 Liveries of Companies Retainers Pag. 337 Loan Taxes Lockeram Linnen cloth London Pag. 337 Attaint 18 c. 53 54 Butchers Butter 4 Captains 38 Challenge 3 Cordwainers 39 c. Damages 5 Debt 6. c. Franchises 23 36 Fustians Jurors 18 c. Monopolies 6 Paving Reccit Sewers 42
be thereupon awarded for the levying of them for the Kings use to the Sheriff of every County who shall account before such Auditors as shall be thereto assigned which Auditors shall make due allowance unto the Sheriffs upon their accompts for the fees of the Justices and Clerks of the Peace as is used in England CI. The President Council and Justices of Wales or three of them at least whereof the President to be one shall yearly nominate three able persons in every of the said twelve Shires to be Sheriffs thereof and shall certify their names to the Lords of the Privy Council Crast Animarum to the end the King may appoint one of them in every of the said Shires to be Sheriff for that year like as is used in England And thereupon the said Sheriff shall have their Pattents under the Great Seal of England and shall make oath and acknowledg recognizances before the President and Justices or one of them by a Dedimus for the due execution of their Offices and for their just accompt before the Kings Auditors assigned for Wales CII The said Sheriffs have power to use their Offices as Sheriffs of England do shall be observant to all lawful commands and Precepts of the President Council Justices of Wales Justices of Peace Escheators and Coroners and every of them in all things appertaining to their Offices shall yearly accompt to the Auditor or Auditors assigned by the King for VVales and shall each of them have yearly for his fee 5 l. CIII All Officers and other persons in VVales shall be obedient attendant and assisting to the President Council and Justices of Wales and shall obey the Kings commands and process from any of them directed and all lawfull and reasonable precepts of them and every of them and also shall be obedient to all Justices of Peace Sheriffs and Escheators within their several limits in all things appertaining to their duties and offices CIV Also Escheators shall be named in every of the said Counties by the Treasurer of England with the advice of the President Council or three of them whereof the President to be one which Escheators shall make oaths and acknowledg Recognizances before the President or one of the Justices by a Dedimus for the due execution of their Offices and for their true account before the Kings Auditor or Auditors to be assigned for that purpose which oath and recognizance shall be agreeable to those used for Escheators in England CV Such Escheators shall yearly have their Pattents under the Great Seal and shall exercise their Offices as Escheators in England and shall be bound to all Laws and Statutes of England But they need not have above 5 l. per annum free-hold and shall accompt yearly before such Auditor or Auditors as the King shall assign for Wales CVI. There shall be also two Coroners elected for each of the said 12 Shires by the Writ De Coronatore Eligendo awarded out of the Chancery of England which Coroners shall exercise their Offices and have like fees as in England Only the Writ de Cor. elig for the County of Flint shall be directed out of the Exchequer of Chester ☞ CVII The Justices of Peace or two of them 1. Qu. shall appoint in every hundred within their limits two substantial Gentlemen or Yeomen to be chief Constables of the Hundred where they dwell who shall preserve the Peace and use their Offices and be bound in all things as High-Constables in England CVIII The Sheriff shall have a Goal in a place of the Castle of the Shire-town or such other convenient place as by the President Council and Justices or three of them whereof the President to be one shall be appointed any Patent or Grant notwithstanding The Sheriff also shall make Bail●ffs of the Hundred who shall attend upon the Justices at their Courts and Sessions CIX Sheriffs shall keep their Counties Monthly and their Hundred-Courts for pleas under 40 s. and shall take for entring of plaints process pleas and judgments there as is used in England and not above Also all tryals in such Courts or before Stewards in Court Barons shall be by Wager of Law or verdict of six men at the election of the party Plaintiff or Defendant that pleads the plea. CX Sheriffs shall hold their Turns yearly after Easter and Michaelmas as is used in England CXI The King shall have all Fines Issues Amerciaments and Forfeitures lost in the said Courts and Turnes to his own use and the Sheriff shall account for the same accordingly having been first affered by the Justices of Assize of that Circuit before they be levied And the Sheriff shall not levy them before they be so affered in pain to forfeit to the King 40 s. Also the Sheriff upon every Judgment in his County or Hundred Court may award a Capias ad satisfaciendum or a Fieri facias at the election of the Plaintiff CXII Certain fees which the Sheriff is to have for the return and execution of divers writs For which see the Statute at large CXIII Every Sheriff within this limit may put suspitious persons under common main-prise according to the Statute of 37 H. 8.26 which see before binding them with two sufficient Sureties by recognizance to appear before the Justices at the next great Sessions and shall then also certify the names of the parties so bound without concealment CXIV The Sheriffs fee for taking such common main-prise is 2 d. but he shall take no fee for the return of any writ of execution unless he return the same executed CXV The fees of Sheriffs Escheators and Coroners and their Ministers Prothonotaries and their Clerks and other Ministers of Justice in Wales shall be rated augmented and diminished by the President Council and Justices or three of them whereof the President to be one from time to time at their discretions CXVI None for murder or felony shall be put to his fine but suffer according to the Laws of England except it please the King to pardon him And if the Justices see cause of pity or other consideration they may reprieve the prisoner till they have advertised the King of the matter CXVII The Statute of the 26 H. 8.6 which see before is confirmed notwithstanding this Act and from henceforth shall be put in execution CXVIII Abertannad heretofore reputed parcel of the County of Merioneth shall now be annexed to Salop and be reputed parcel of the Hundred of Oswestry CXIX If any forreign plea or voucher be pleaded or made before any of the Justices of Wales tryable in any other County in Wales in this case the said Justice shall send the Kings Writ with a transcript of the Record unto the Justice of the County where the matter is tryable commanding him to proceed to the tryal thereof according to Law which tryal being had he shall remand it with the whole record unto the Justice that sent it who thereupon shall proceed to Judgment as