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A10218 De pace Regis et regni viz. A treatise declaring vvhich be the great and generall offences of the realme, and the chiefe impediments of the peace of the King and kingdome, as menaces, assaults, batteries, treasons, homicides, and felonies ... and by whome, and what meanes the sayd offences, and the offendors therein are to bee restrained, repressed, or punished. ... Collected out of the reports of the common lawes of this realme, and of the statutes in force, and out of the painfull workes of the reuerend iudges Sir Anthonie Fitzharbert, Sir Robert Brooke, Sir William Stanford, Sir Iames Dyer, Sir Edward Coke, Knights, and other learned writers of our lawes, by Ferdinando Pulton of Lincolnes Inne, Esquier. Pulton, Ferdinando, 1536-1618.; Fitzherbert, Anthony, Sir, 1470-1538.; England and Wales. Public General Acts. Selections. 1609 (1609) STC 20495; ESTC S116053 719,079 571

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Iurors to enquire of riots rout or vnlawfull assembly shall be committed which shall be returned by the Sherife to enquire thereof shall haue lands and tenements within the same shire to the yearely value of xx s. of Charter land or freehold or twentie sixe shillings eight pence of copiehold or of both aboue all charges But in that case by the Statute of Anno 2. H 5. St. 2. H. 5. 8. if they be returned by the Coroners then euery of them shall haue lands and tenements or rents to the yearely value of tenne pounds at the least By the Statute of Anno 1. St. 1. R. 3. 4. R. 3. it was enacted That no officer shall returne in any panell to be taken or put in Iurors in the sherifs Turne or vpon any inquisition or inquirie before the Sherife in his Turne other than such which bee of good name and fame and which haue lands or tenements of freehold within the same countie to the yearly value of xx s̄ at the least or else copyhold lands to the yearely value of xxvj s̄ viij d. at the least aboue all charges By the Statute of An̄ 8. H. 6. Sta. 8. H. 6. 9 it was prouided That euery person which shall be returned to inquire of any forcible entrie into lands Iurors to inquire of forcible entrie or detayning of lands by force shall be a sufficient indifferent person and shall haue lands and tenements to the cléere yearely value of xl s̄ By the Statute of An̄ 1. H. 8. it was established Sta. 1. H. 8. 8. That euery Iuror which is returned before any escheator Iurors returned before Escheators or commissioner to inquire of lands or tenements or some other to his vse shall haue lands or tenements of the yearely value of xl s. aboue all charges in the same shire where the inquirie shall be made St. 11. H. 7. 21. 23. H. 8. 3. 37. H. 8. 5. And by the stat made An̄ 11. H. 7. An̄ 23. H. 8. An̄ 37. H. 8. The Iurors returned vpon an attaint in London or els where shal be of more or greater ability in lands tenements goods or cattels then is before specified 16 The law hauing first vsed al good deuises to cause shirifes vndershirifes Bailifes of liberties coroners al others authorized to return impannel Iuries to be indifferent to returne the said Iuries Iurors without al partiality that they shal be no furtherers maintainors nor assistors to periury subornation or embracery also hauing prouided that all those Iurors which be so returned vpon Enquests to try issues betwéen party party may again one by one be sifted tried examined whether they standing vnsworne be indifferent or not She doth then expect to receiue from those Iurors Veredictū a true tale that is to say a true verdit or presentment of such things as be giuen them in charge according to their euidence But if the same Iurors will decline from truth and make a false presentment contrarie to their euidence then is it not to be termed Veredictum but Periurium and it will be returned to them as Maledictum for by the common Law they being attainted by the verdict of xxiiij other Iurors shall receiue a cursed and villanous iudgement therefore viz. the said Iurors shall loose the fréedom of the Law their wiues children shall be thrust out of their houses Fit Ass 396. 46. Ed. 3. 23. 42. Ed. 3. 26 6. Assi● p. 7. 30. Ass p. 24 40. Ass p. 20. 41. Ass p. 18. Li. Int. fo 92 The iudgement in an at the common law of a Iury proued periured their houses shall be pulled downe to the ground their orchards gardens shall be supplanted their trées shall be digged vp by the roots their meadowes shall be eyred vp All the goods cattels which they had at the time of the Attaint brought or at any time after shal be forfeited to the King The King shall haue all the profits of their lands during their liues And they shall be committed to perpetuall prison Which iudgement was deuised many yeres put in execution to the intent it might be knowen how much the common Law did detest and punish wilfull Periurie and falshood in those who shée trusted in place of justice and from whom shée accompted to receiue truth 17 But sithence by the Statute of An̄ 11. H. 7. and An̄ 23. H. 8. the said iudgement against a petit Iurie attainted is in some cases altered and qualified Sta. 11. H. 7. 21. for by the Statute of 11. H. 7. it is ordained That the party grieued by any false verdict giuen in any of the Courts of the Citie of London shall and may sue Attaint by Bill in the Hustings of London The iudgement in Attaint in London holden for common Pleas before the Maior Aldermen of the same Citie And if the graund Iurie sworne in the same Attaint find that the petit Iurie haue giuen an vntrue verdict then the iudgement shal be against the defendant as is vsed in attaint sued by writ at the common Law And the iudgement shall be against the petit Iurie that euery of them shall loose xx li. or more by the discretion of the Maior and Aldermen of the said Citie kéeping the Hustings to such vses as other issues and penalties béen forfeited in any action or plaint commenced before the Mayor and Aldermen of the said citie and his bodie to bee imprisoned there to remaine without baile or mainprise vj. moneths or lesse by the discretion of the Mayor and Aldermen and to be disabled for euer to be sworn in any Iurie before any temporall Iudge But the iudgement in such Attaint shall not extend to any lands or tenements St. 23. H. 8. 3 An. 13. El. 25. ne to other punishment of the petit Iurie And by the before mentioned Statute of Anno 23. H. 8. it was enacted That vpon euery vntrue verdit giuen betwéene partie and partie in any suit plaint or demaund before any Iustices or Iudges of Record where the thing in demaund and verdict thereupon giuen extendeth to the value of fourtie pounds An attaint where the thing eetendeth to xl l. and concerneth not the ieopardie of mans life the partie grieued by the same verdict shall haue a writ of Attaint against euery person so giuing an vntrue verdict and euery of them and against the partie which shall haue iudgement vpon the same verdict And euery one that shall passe in the same Attaint shall haue lands and tenements to the value of twentie markes by yeare of fréehold out of auncient demesne And if the graund Iurie find that the petit Iurie gaue an vntrue verdict then euery of the said petit Iurie shall forfeit twentie pounds whereof one halfe shall be to the King and the other halfe to him that sueth to be leuied by Capias ad satisfaciendum fieri facias
to haue execution of a fine if the shirife returne the tenant of the land summoned by two summoners whereas he was not summoned by which returne the demaundant shall recouer and haue execution of the land if the tenant do not appeare and the tenant shall loose the land in this case the tenant may haue a writ of Deceit against the shirife and the demaundant that did recouer and him that is then tenant of the land and shal be restored to his former possession And the like law is 17. Ed. 3. 12. if a man sue a Scire facias vpon a Recognizance against another for a debt before recouered Deceit to auoid a recouery of debt if the shirife returne the defendant summoned whereas he was not summoned by reason wherof the defendant hath execution awarded against him of the debt then the defendant may haue a writ of Deceit against him that had the execution and the shirife and the shirife shall be punished for his false returne and the party who did recouer shall make restitution of that which he recouered and if the defendant die his executors may haue a writ of Deceit Where executors shall haue a writ of Deceit and be restored if the deceit be proued and that the Testator was not garnished whereupon the garnishers shal be examined And so it is if a man recouer in a writ of Annuity Annuity and after doth sue a Scire facias and recouereth by default of garnishment Fitz. Deceit 42. the defendant may haue a writ of Deceit For by the statute of Anno 2. Ed. 3. St. 2. E. 3. 17. 17. a writ of Deceit holdeth place and is maintenable as well in case of garnishment which toucheth plea of land where such garnishment is giuen as in case of Summons in a plea of land for in all the cases aforesaid a Deceit was wrought by the shirife to the Court and the party grieued by his false returne and the Law hath ordained That euery of those deceits shal be reformed by the writ of Deceit And a recouerie and iudgement had made and giuen to the intent to defraud and frustrate the true meaning of a statute shal be void as amongst others it appeareth by the statute of Anno 43. A iudgement to defraud the meaning of a statute Eliz. whereby it was ordained St. 43. Eli. 9. That all iudgements which shal be had for the intent to haue enioy any lease of a benefite with cure or any bonds contracts promises couenants made for any person to enioy the same contrary to the statute of An. 13. El. 20. An. 14. El. 11. or any of them shal be void in such sort as bands couenāts are appointed to be void which are made void for that purpose for that the suits whereupon the same iudgements be giued were commenced prosecuted vpon collusion fraud to defeat and make frustrate the true intent and meaning of the said statutes or of one of them Deceit vhon recouery in a Quare impedit 8 If any person do recouer against another in a Quare impedit by default of the defendant whereas he was not summoned 27. H. 6. 5. Fitz. Deceit 57. 19. Eliz. Dyer 353. then the same defendant may haue a writ of Deceit and the Summoners and the pledges vpon the attachment and the mainpernors vpon the distresse shall be examined and if the deceit be found the first iudgement shal be reuersed and there shal be a writ awarded to the Bishop to remoue the Clerke that was in the Church And so it is Deceit vpon a recouery in wast if any person do bring an action of Wast against another 29. Ed. 3. 42. 48. Ed. 3. 20. Fitz. Deceit 30. the plaintife doe recouer against the defendant by default whereupon a writ is awarded to the shirife to inquire of the wast whereas the defendant was not summoned the defendant may haue a writ of Deceit against him that recouered in the same action of Wast and he shall suppose that hee was not summoned attached nor distrained and proces shal be awarded against the summoners the pledges and the mainpernors who shal be seuerally examined and if they all did not their duty according to the Law the plaintife in the writ of Deceit shal recouer and be restored to that which before he lost in the action of Wast Deceit vpon a recouery by a Praecipe in capite 9 And the like law is 17. Ed. 3. 31. 36. if any person doe recouer land against another by a Praecipe in capite where the same land is not holden of the King in chiefe but of a meane lord by other seruices and where the demaundant had no licence of the chiefe lord to sue at the common place then the chiefe lord may haue a writ of Deceit against him that recouered the same land wherein he shall recouer his dammages the demandant shal be imprisoned for the deceit and also the lord shal retaine his seigniory in the same land But the recouery shal remain in force and he that did recouer shall also hold of the K. in chiefe by the way of estoppell And this writ of Deceit is maintenable in this case by force of the stat of Magna Charta 9. H. 3. 24. whereby it is ordained That the writ which is called Praecipe in capite shal be granted to no man wherby any fréeman may loose his Court. 10 Couin is accounted so professed an enemy to iustice Where a good title shal be impaired by a couenous recouery therefore is so hated by the law that she adiudgeth that bad and vnlawful which is mixed with couin though before of it selfe it were good lawful as if the issue in taile who hath good cause to bring a Formedon in discender vpon a discontinuance made of certaine lands by one of his auncestors 44. Ass p. 28 41. Ass p. 28 be of couin that a stranger shall disseise the tenant of the land against which stranger he doth bring his action doth recouer this land and hath execution in this case he shall not be remitted to his former estate though his title be good but shall be adiudged in possession by disseisin 44. Ed. 3. 46. 15. E. 4. 4. 7. H. 7. 11 Co. lib. 5. 31 in respect of the couin And so it is if a woman that hath good cause to be indowed of her late husbands lands will be of couin that a stranger shall disseise the tenant of the land wherof she is indowable against which stranger she will bring a writ of Dower and recouer hath execution she shal be adiudged in possession against the disseisée but as a disseisor in respect of her couin though she had good title to be indowed And so couin mingling together vertue vice persuadeth the law to reiect condemne a lawfull title which is vnlawfully atchieued 11
lessor of the remedy which the said statute of Anno 4. H. 7. did giue him viz. to make his entry or to pursue his action within fiue yeares which he could not do being ignorant of the lease for life which his tenant had made of this land to a stranger and also conceiuing that the lessée hauing land of his owne fée simple in the same towne he leuied a fine of that land which hee might lawfully doe And the deceit and fraud in this case is the more odious because it was practised by the lessée against his lessor and by the copyholder against his Lord who is by the law bound to do fealty to the lessor and Lord which is a bond of confidence and a linke of trust And if a man seised of land in fée Fit Fines 120. do make a lease to another thereof for terme of life and the lessée for life doth leuie a fine therof to a stranger he in the reuersion may enter into the same land for a forfeiture and put forth the conusée in the fine and auoid the fine for it was leuied by deceit to defraud him of his reuersion If a fine be leuied of lands to secret vses to deceiue the purchasor of the same land it may be auerred to be leuied by fraud and so by the statute of 27. El. 4. auoided St. 27. Eli. 4. And so if a fine be leuied vpon an vsurious contract and that be auerred the same fine shal be void by the stat of 13. Eliz. 8. St. 13. Eli. 8 A fine leuied of ancient demesne lands to defraud the Lord. 5 The law is as prouident to protect mens seigniories rents and seruices from euiction by deceit as she is their lands and tenements knowing that a fine in some cases leuied by couin of the one may be as preiudiciall to his inheritance as of the other hath therefore ordained seuerall remedies to redresse seuerall wrongs as if a man seised of lands in ancient demesne do leuy a fine thereof at the common law to another this is a deceit to the lord of that manor of whom the said lands be holden 21. Ed. 3. 20 Fit Nat. Br. 98. therefore he may haue a writ of Deceit against the cognisor and the tenant of the lord thereby auoid the said fine and then he that leuied the said fine shall be restored to the possession and the title which he had before in the same land and also the same land shall returne and become auncient demesne as it was before for that the said fine shal be vtterly void 21. Ed. 3. 56. And he that is lord of a manor of auncient demesne but for the terme of his life only may maintaine this writ of Deceit And so may he in reuersion if tenant for the terme of life doe not bring it during his life and either of them by his said writ may auoid the same fine for by the leuying of a fine at the common law of lands in ancient demesne 8. E. 4. 6. or by recouerie of them at the common law the same lands do become Franke fée and pleadable at the common law and so the lord should be deceiued of his right and loose his seigniorie in them And the writ of Deceit will auoid the said fine or recouerie because the fine was leuied and the recouerie was suffered coram non iudice in deceit of the Lord viz. not before that Iudge nor in that Court where they ought to haue béene 17. Ed. 3. 31. 7. H. 4. 44. 8. H. 4. 23. Fitz. Na. Br. 98. But if a man seised of lands whereof parcell be auncient demesne and parcell Franke fée doe leuie a fine at the common law of both parcels in this case though the Lord of the auncient demesne doe by his writ of Deceit auoid the fine for so much as is ancient demesne yet the residue of those lands which be Franke fée shall continue in force for a fine leuied of them was no wrong or deceit to any 6 And the same law is where land is recouered by deceit A writ of Deceit to auoid a recouery as if one man do bring a Praecipe quod reddat against another and demaund certaine land by force whereof the tenant ought to be summoned to be before the Iustices at a certaine day and the shirife doth returne the tenant of the land against whom the said Praecipe is brought Fit Nat. Br. 97. summoned whereas in truth he was not summoned by which false returne and deceit of the shirife the demaundant doth vpon the Graund Cape recouer seisin of the land by default of the tenant in this case the tenant to whom this deceit is done 3. E. 3. 28. Fitz. Deceit 49. may after iudgemēt giuen for the demaundant haue a writ of Deceit against him that did recouer and against the shirife for his false return And by this writ of Deceit the tenant shal be restored to his land againe 18. E. 4. 11. so that it be brought during the life of the summoners viewers and pernors or any of them for if it bee not brought vntill all the summoners viewers and pernors be dead it will not lye for after the death of them the tenant shall not haue a writ of Deceit for proces shal be awarded against the summoners viewers and pernors to appeare in Court and by the examination of them it is to be tried whether the tenant was summoned or not 50. Ed. 3. 16. 8. H. 6. 1. Fitz. Deceit 48. Fitz. Deceit 32. 33. 34. 46 for the summons must be made by two summoners at the least and two viewers And if any of them did not their duty then the writ was not executed as it ought to haue béene and therefore the plaintife in the writ of Deceit ought to be restored But the K. shall haue the issues of the land in the meane time And if the demaundant who did recouer by the shirifes false returne do make a feoffement of the land then the writ of Deceit must be brought against the demaundant the feoffée and the shirife and if the demaundant that doth recouer 8. E. 3. 6. 10. Ed. 3. 43. the shirife also be both dead yet the writ of Deceit may be brought against the heire of the demaundant and the tenant of the land if the summoners viewers and pernors be liuing And if a man do lose his land by default in a Praecipe quod reddat Fit Nat. Br. 98. Fitz. Deceit 43. 80. whereby he was not summoned and then dieth his heire may haue a writ of Deceit as well as his auncestor and shall haue restitution and the vouchée The vouchée may haue a writ of Deceit where he doth loose by default if he were not summoned 7 And so it is if a man sue a Scire facias against another Deceit to auoid a recouerie vpon a Scire facias
6. 28 for then was not the plaintife lawfully acquit according to the Statute of Westminst 2. Iudgement in conspiracie 12 When any is conuict in a writ of Conspiracie at the suit of the partie the iudgement is none other but that the plaintife shall recouer his damages 43. E. 3. 33. and that the defendants shall bée taken But if one be indicted and conuicted of conspiracie at the Kings suit the iudgement is more grieuous for then the iudgement is That they shall loose their frée law to the intent 27. As p. 59 46. As p. 11. 24. E. 3. 34. that they shall not after that time be put in Iuries or Assises nor otherwise produced as witnesses to testifie truth and if they haue to do in the Kings Court they shall make their Attourney to sue for them and that they shall not approach within twelue miles of the Kings Court and that their lands goods and cattels shall bée seised into the Kings hand and their houses wasted and their wiues and children thrust out of doores and their trées pulled vp by the rootes and their bodies taken and imprisoned And this is tearmed a villainous iudgement because it bringeth villanie and shame to him that receiueth it 13 And because that wicked offence of conspiracie should bee inquired of and punished as well by indictment as by writ there was a Statute made Anno 28. Ed. 1. called Articuli super chartas whereby it was ordayned St. 28. E. 1. That in right of Conspirators false informers and imbracers of Enquests Assises and Iuries the King hath prouided remedie by a Writ out of the Chauncery And from henceforth the King will that his Iustices of the one Bench the other and the Iust assigned to take Assises Inquirie of Conspiracies by Iustices when they come into the countrey to do their office shall make enquiry thereof at any mans plaint without writ Register fo 118. and shall without delay do right to the plaintifes And the Iustices may be commaunded by a writ directed vnto them out of the Chancery to execute the same statute although the statute of it selfe is a sufficient warrant and authoritie for them so to doe which remedie mentioned in the foresaid statute was intended to be ordained by another statute called the statute of Conspirators St. 20. E. 1. made Anno 20. Edw. 1. at Berwike vpon Tweed which doth prouide a writ of Conspiracie against conspirators maintainers of false quarels and champertors and expresseth the forme of that writ St. 28. Ed. 1 14 But because the foresayd Statute of Articuli super chartas did prouide onely a remedie at the plaint of the partie and did not giue the Iustices in the sayd Statute mentioned power to enquire of heare and determine conspiracies at the suit of the King neither did it giue authoritie to the said Iustices to adiourne the suit if for shortnesse of time it could not be determined in the countrey St. 4. E. 3. 11. Therefore by a statute made Anno 4. Edw. 3. Inquirie of conspirators at K. or parties suit the same enormities were redressed by these words viz. Where in times past diuers people of the Realme as well great as other haue made alliances confederacies and conspiracies to maintaine parties pleas and quarels whereby diuers haue béene wrongfully disherited and some ransomed and destroyed and some for feare beeing maymed and beaten durst not sue for their right nor complaine nor the Iurors of Enquests giue their verdicts to the great hurt of the people and slaunder of the Law and common right Therefore it is agréed that the Iustices of the one Bench and of the other and the Iustices assigned to take Assises whensoeuer they come to hold their Sessions to take Enquests vpon Nisi prius shall enquire heare and determine as well at the Kings suit as at the suit of the partie of such maintainers bearers and conspirators and also of champertors and of all other things contained in the sayd Article as well as Iustices in Eire should doe if they were in the same Countie And that which cannot be determined before the Iustices of the one Bench or of the other vpon the Nisi prius for shortnesse of time shall be adiourned into the places whereof they be Iustices and there shall be determined according to right and reason 15 Notwithstanding the foresaid Statutes there were such deuises and practises to execute malice and reuenge and desire to put others in perill of their liues lands and goods that some would frame indictments or appeales against others of the K. good and obedient subiects of Treason Felony or trespas in seuerall forrein counties liberties and franchises where the said persons did neuer dwel nor conuerse and there they were pursued to the Exigent and sometime outlawed before that they could know of it For the remedie whereof there was a stat St. 8. H. 6. 10 made Anno 8. H. 6. wherein amongst other things it was enacted That if any person shall be indicted or appealed of felony Procurers of an indictment or appeale in a forrein county treason or trespas in a forein county he shal in an action vpon the case recouer treble damages against euery procurer of such indictment or appeale after hee is duly acquited by verdict And the like proces shal be in the same as in an action of Trespas vi armis S. Appeales 61. An offence supposed to be in a place where there is none such 16 Because diuers people vpon malice enuie and desire of reuenge did ofttime cause the K. liege people to be appealed or indicted in diuers counties of Treasons or Felonies supposing by the said appeals or indictments that the said Treasons or Felonies were committed in one certaine place whereas there is no such place within the said county where the said indictmēt is found nor any such place in the county as is declared by the said Appeale Therefore by the stat made anno 7. H. 5. anno 9. H. 5. anno 18. H. 6. it was ordained St. 9. H. 5. 1. St. 18. H. 6. 12. That the said Appeals and indictments and the proces thereupon shal be void and adiudged of no force And that the said Appellées and Indictées may haue their writs of Conspiracie against their indictors procurors and conspirators and recouer their damages And that the indictors procurors and conspirators shal be punished by imprisonment fine and ransome for the K. aduantage by the Iustices discretion ❧ The Coroner and his Authoritie and dutie in Felonies c. 1 A Coroner is an antient officer of trust in this realm The Coroners Office ordained to be a principall preseruer and kéeper of the peace to make record of the pleas of the Crown and of his owne view and of abiurations and of outlawries and of Appeales and accusations of felons made before him and of nonsuits of plaintifes in Appeales and of all
or any of them in their Turnes or Lawdayes And as of other felonies 3. H. 7. 5. 5. E. 6. D. 69 9. H. 4. 1. so I. of peace may inquire of murder Murder because wilfull murder is felony But Iust of peace cannot inquire of treason Treason for neither the before mentioned stat of 18. E. 3. nor the words of their commission do authorise them so to do The Lord of a Mannor Iudge in felonie 13 There be some that haue libertie of Soc and Sac Tol and Them Bracton de Corona cap. 35. 2. R. 3. 10. Infangthéefe and Outfangthéefe these in their own courts may giue iudgement of him who is found within their liberty possessed of any manifest theft as if he be hand hauing and back bearing and that Sathaber viz. he whose the goods be do pursue him Kel fol. 150 for vnlesse he be in possession of the goods though another doth pursue him as a théefe yet that Court Hundred or Wapentake cannot hold plea of such a theft nor make inquirie by the Countrey whether such a man which was not possessed of the goods bee culpable or not Neither shall any wage battell without possession It is called Infangtheefe Infangthéefe where a Theefe is taken possessed of goods stolne within any such Manor or Libertie who is commorant and dwelling within the same libertie and one of the said Lords owne people Outfangthéefe Outfangthéef is a théefe that is a stranger comming from some other place into the Mannor of the Lord who hath such a libertie and is there taken with the manoure And yet he that hath such a libertie cannot fetch one of his owne people who hath committed larcenie out of his libertie and bring him into his libertie and iudge him there according to his libertie for euery person must receiue the punishment of the law where he hath offended the law But he may giue iudgement as well against his own people as against strangers committing larcenie that be taken within his libertie 46. Ed. 3. 15 14. H. 4. 15 And in this libertie of Infangthéefe and Outfangthéefe and in waife and stray and wreck of the sea a man may prescribe but so he cannot do in goods of felons and fugitiues for they do belong to the Crowne and cannot passe without the Kings graunt Fitz. Prescription 65 14 The custome of some countrey is such A felon first executed and then iudged that if one hath committed burglarie or other felonie and he be pursued by huy and cry from towne to town and so taken flying he must be beheaded in the presence of the inhabitants of foure townes and so by the vsage of that countrey he is accounted a felon And this must be recorded in the Coroners roll and after the Coroner must present it before the Iustices and they will adiudge him a felon And so he must be first put to death and after iudged a felon FINIS ❧ The generall Titles of this Booke 1MEnace Assault Batterie Jmprisonment Maiheming 2 Riots Routs vnlawfull and rebellious Assemblies 3 Force and Forcible Entries and Forcible detaining of possessions 4 Forgerie 5 Periurie and Subornation of Witnesse 6 Maintenance Champertie Embracerie 7 Deceit Couin Collusion Fraud 8 Extortion Exaction 9 Oppression 10 Treasons 11 Homicides 12 Felonies by the common Law 13 Felonies by Statute 14 Principall and Accessorie 15 Breaking of Prison and Rescous 16 Escapes of Felons 17 Pursute by Huy and Cry 18 Appeales of Felony 19 Jndictments 20 Mainprise and Bayle 21 Confession of the offence 22 Approuer 23 Sanctuarie and Abiuration 24 Pleading not guilty 25 Triall of the plea of not guilty by Battell 26 Triall by Peeres 27 Triall by the Countrey 28 Challenges 29 Euidence 30 The Verdict 31 Clergie 32 The Kings Pardon 33 Standing mute or answering indirectly 34 Judgement and Execution 35 Forfeitures for Treason or Felony 36 Corruption of Blood 37 Restitution of stolne goods 38 Dammages in an Appeale 39 A Writ of Conspiracie 40 The Coroner and his authority and dutie in Felonies 41 Who shall be Judge in Treason and Felonie ❧ A briefe effect of euery Braunch or Chapter in this Treatise Menace Assault Batterie Imprisonment Maiheming Fol. 1. 1 THe euill fruits of menaces Menacers shal be imprisoned The enormitie of libelling and defaming 2 The differences of Menacing Assault and Batterie 3 The declaration in trespas of menacing A rebuke accounted a Menace or Assault 4 Menacing a seruant wherby he departeth out of seruice 5 Menacing a tenant whereby he departeth from his tenancie Menacing of a Lords Freeholder 6 Menacing which is iustifiable 7 Menacing by going or riding armed 8 Wearing of a priuie coat a Menace 9 Labourers shall weare no weapons to preuent Menaces 10 Assurances made by Menace 11 What is an assault What is a batterie 12 Iustifying of beating in his owne defence Barre in trespas of Assault and Batterie 13 Iustifying of beating in defence of others The mast●rs remedy for beating of his seruant 14 Batterie in defence of his goods Battery in defence of his land lease or way 15 Batterie in resisting of a Iustice of Peace 16 A Schoolemaster beateth his Sholler 17 A Master beateth his Prentice 18 Beating of a man that is franticke 19 Beating of one that will not yeeld to arrest 20 Beating of a seruant departing out of seruice Beating of a Ward 21 Commaundement of Batterie 22 Battery or hurting at some exercise or disport 23 Battery by whipping of a vagabond Punishments by the order of Law 24 Battery for disobeying of a writ or warrant 25 Arresting one in a Church that is doing diuine seruice 26 Disturbing of a Preacher in his Sermon 27 Chiding in a Church or Churchyard Smiting in a church or churchyard Drawing or smiting with a weapon in a Church or c. 28 Drawing of blood within the kings palace 29 Assaulting one which commeth to the Parliament Assaulting the seruant of a Parliament man The liberty of the Clergie at a Conuocation house touching assaults 30 Assaulting a Iudge or Iuror Striking in time or place of iustice 31 Arresting by watchmen 32 Trespas for a battery before Outlawrie 33 A man first indicted for batterie and after sued for the same 34 What imprisonment is Voluntary consent no cause of imprisonment 35 Imprisonment by the commandement of the king or his Iustices c. 36 Imprisonment for notorious and grieuous offences 37 Imprisonment for offences done vi armis 38 Imprisonment for Riots 39 Imprisonment for holding land with force 40 Imprisonment of one that is pursued by huy and cry 41 Imprisonment of him that doth breake the peace Arresting of suspected persons 42 Imprisoning of him that doth attempt to rob 43 Assisting him to arrest that hath a warrant 44 Breaking of a house to arrest in what case lawfull 45 The shirife doth arrest and doth not returne his writ 46 Arresting vpon suspition of felony Causes of suspition of felony
out the eyes of D. this shal be adiudged a maihem 13. H. 7. 14. for that A. had an intention at the first to do some hurt in striking at B. 60 The greatnesse or smalnes of the wound in some of the cases aforesaid doth make the difference whether it be a maihem or not Examination of a maihem which is to be examined by the Iustices of the court before whom the appeal of maihem is depending and by them to be decided if they be requested by the defendant in the appeall and will condiscend to do it And they may award the Kings writ to the shirif of the countie where the fact was done to warn two expert surgeons of that Countie 28. Ass p. 5. 28. E. 3. 94. citie or towne to appeare in the same court at a day prefixed to informe the court what they thinke of the wound and whether they conceiue it to be a maihem or not And if the wound be fresh and new and thereby hardly to be discerned 41. Ass pla 27. whether it will proue a maihem or not the Iustices néed not presently to examine it though the defendant in an appeal of maihem doth desire it or notwithstanding he doth plead that it is no maihem And if in an appeall of maihem the defendant doth plead not guilty 22. Ass pla 82. without requesting that the maihem may be examined by the court by this the defendant hath allowed that it is a maihem But if in an appeall of maihem the defendant doth pray that the maihem may be examined 21. H. 7. 40. if the Iustices and the surgeons that they will call vnto them be in doubt whether it be a maihem or not the Iustices may refuse the examination and compell the defendant to put him selfe vpon the triall of the countrie And yet in that case if the defendant do praie that the maihem may be examined 6. H. 7. 1. 22. Ass p. 99 by the court if the Iustices do adiudge it a maihem it is paremptorie to the defendant for he shall not after plead not guilty or any other plea in Barre séeing by his plea he hath allowed it to be a maihem But the court can not view the wound and examin whether it be a maihem or not 28. Ass p. 8. vnlesse the defendant in the appeal will request it and referre it to their iudgement If in an appeall of maihem the defendant doe plead not guiltie 22. Ass p. 82 without requesting that the maihem may be adiudged by the court though the Iurie who are to try the issue doe desire to sée the plaintife if he be maihemed or not the plaintife néed not to shew his wound for by pleading not guilty the defendant hath allowed that it is a maihem though he hath estraunged himselfe from the committing thereof 9. H. 4. 2. 61 If seuerall men do at one time assault one man and one of them doth maihem him in one part of his body Diuers appels of maihē for one offence and an other in an other part he may haue seuerall appeals of Maihem against them for that they be seuerall maihems which he hath receiued And yet if seuerall men do murder or otherwise kill a man there may be but one appeall of murder maintained against them all for that a man can haue but one death 40. Ass p. 1. But if a man sue an appeall of maihem against seuerall persons whereof against some as principals and some others as accessories and after apparance he is nonsuit he can not pursue an other appeall of maihem against the same persons and charge those as accessories which before he had named principals nor those principals who before were suggested to be accessories Principal and accessorie in maihem 62 In an appeall of maihem the plaintife may choose to make all principals or els to make him principall that did first strike him 40. Ass p. 9. 41. Ass pla 16. and the residue accessorie The Law was holden in auncient time that the plaintife in an appeall of maihem must haue declared against all the defendants as principals But now he may choose and make some principals and some accessories for an appeall of maihem is in effect but an action of Trespas wherein the plaintife shall recouer damages Maihem is a Trespas The iudgem̄t in appeall of maihem according to the quality quantitie of the offence and the defendant shall be imprisoned 8. H. 4. 2 1. And if the plaintife do bring an appeal of maihem whereas it doth appeare to the court that by the blow which was giuen him he is not maihemed he shall paie a fine Mainprise in an appeall of maihem 63 In an appeall of maihem if it do appeare to the court that the maihem is very apparant gréeuous bloudy and extreame 6. H. 7. 1. as if a mans legs or armes be broken or that the partie maihemed is in great perill of death the defendant shall not be let to mainprise no more then he should be in an appeall of murder or burglarie But if the maihem be not apparant or that it is doubtfull and questionable whether it be a maihem or not then the defendant in an appeall of maihem may be let to mainprise And that also appeareth by the statute intituled officium Coronatoris whereby it is ordained Stat. 3. E. 1. that vpon an appeall of maihem if the wounds be mortall they which be appealled shal forthwith be apprehended and kept vntill it be knowen whether he that is hurt shall recouer or not if he die they shall be retained if he liue they shall be attached by foure or sixe pledges according to the bignesse of the wound if it be for a maihem then there shall be no lesse then foure pledges if a small wound two will serue 64 In an appeall of maihem the plaintife doth declare that the defendant did maihem him felonice vt felo domini Regis Why maihem is supposed to be done felomously 40. Ass pla 40. 6. H. 7. 1. and so it may be called felony as petit Larcenie is called felony or it may be termed felony for that the blow which caused the maihem may be a meane of his death within the yeare and day after the stroke stricken and then it will be felony or for that he which did giue the blow had then a murdring mynd and so a felonious intent 65 It is a good plea in barre in an appeall of maihem for the defendant to plead Barres in appeall of maihem that the plaintife at the place aforesaid Li. intur f. 45. and at the day and yeare aforesaid did make assault vpon the defendant and would haue beaten and killed him vnlesse the defendant had then and there quickly defended himselfe against the plaintife and so the hurt and dammage if any were that then and there did come
to the plaintife was of the plaintifes owne assault and in defence of the defendant Iustifiing in his owne defence And likewise it is a good plea in barre in an appeall of maihem for the defendant to plead the plaintifs release made vnto him after the supposed offence done of all actions personals or of all actions The plaintifes release or of all appeales or of all demaunds for in this case the plaintife is but to recouer dammages 7. H. 4. 30. 66 If an appeal of maihem be brought against diuers Execusion in appeal of maihem one of them doth appeare in court and confesse the maihem and is committed to the Marshalsea and the plaintife hath iudgement against him he can not sue against the residue vnlesse he will suffer him that hath confessed the maihem to goe at liberty for if he hath iudgement and the body of him who confessed the maihem to remaine in prison that shall be an execution for this whole maihem 67 The Sages and Iudges of the land in former ages did hold it for law An action of Trespas after an appeal of maihem that if one doe assault Fitz. Coron̄ 110. 22. Ass p. 82 beate and maihem an other and the partie maihemed doth bring an appeall of maihem against the offendor and recouer dammages against him yet after he may haue an action of Trespas of assault and battery against the same offendor and recouer dammages for his beating and the recouerie of dammages in the appeal of maihem shal be no plea in barre against the plaintife for the appeal doth only medle with the maiheming not with the beating But if the plaintife do bring an appeal of maihem in the Kings bench 43. Ass p. 39 and after apparance be nonsuit in the same and then doe bring an action of Trespas of assault and batterie for the same fact Then the defendant may plead the same appeal and nonsuit in barre against the plaintife and it is a good plea. 41. Ass p. 16 Co. Lib. 4. 43. But of late yeares viz. An̄ 31. Eliz. it was adiudged that in this and all cases when the plaintife for one wrong and iniurie is but to recouer dammages he shall not be for that cause satisfied twice for one offence And in these two actions of appeal of maihem and trespas the plaintife shall onely recouer dammages And therefore it was adiudged a good plea in barre in an appeal of maihem to plead that the plaintife had before brought an action of Trespas against the defendant of assault battery wounding and had recouered dammages therein and to auerre that the same assault batterie and wounding and this maiheming were all one offence 68 As the law hath prouided remedies to punish those who by menace Restraint of affraies by Iustices of peace assault battery imprisonment or maiheming do breake the peace So hath it alwaies had a vigilant eie by anticipation to preuent many others that would breake the peace by any of the meanes aforesaid and therefore hath from age to age appointed méet magistrates and watchmen to whose charge specially as selected Sentinels she did commit the preseruation of the peace who in times past before the raigne of King Edward the third were called Conseruators of the peace Stat. 1. E. 3. 26. and sithence they haue béen termed Iustices of peace because they be Iudges of record or otherwise they be named Commissioners of the peace because they haue and deriue their authority by the Kings Commission who him selfe being the chiefe and generall Conseruator and Preseruer of the peace throughout all his Dominions doth by his seuerall Commissions commit some particles of his authoritie touching the continuance of the peace and maintenance of certaine of his Lawes to some chiefe and select men in all the parts of the Realme whom he taketh to be the most méete men for the same in respect of their integritie wisdome learning courage and liuelyhood The forme of so much of which Commission as toucheth the Peace and good Abearing is this Iacobus c. praedilecto fideli Conciliario nostro Thomae domino Elsmere domino Cancellario nec non praedilectis A.B.C.D.E.F.G. H.I.L.M.N.O.P. c. The Commission of the Peace Sciatis quod assignauimus vos coniunctim diuisim quemlibet vestrum Iusticiarios nostros ad pacem nostram in Comitatu nostro buck conseruand ' ac ad omnia ordinationes Statuta pro bono pacis nostrae ac pro conseruatione eiusdem pro quieto regimine gubernatione populi nostri aedita in omnibus singulis suis articulis in dicto comitatu nostro tam infra libertates quam extra iuxta vim formam effectum eorundem custodiend ' custo dire faciendum Et ad omnes contra formam ordinationū vel Statutorum illorum aut eorum alicuius in comitatu praedicto delinquentes castigandū puniendum prout secundum sormam ordinationū Statutorū illorum fuerit faciendum Et ad omnes illos qui alicui vel aliquibus de populo nostro de corporibus suis vel de incendio domorū suarum minas fecerint ad sufficientē securitatem de pace vel bono gestu suo erga nos populum nostrū inueniendam coram vobis seu aliquo vestrum venire faciendum Et si huiusmodi securitatem inuenire recusauerint tunc eos in prisonis nostris quousque huiusmodi securitatem inuenirent saluo custodire faciendum Et ideo vobis cuilibet vestrum mandamus quod circa custodiam pacis ordinationum Statutorum omnium singulorum caeterorum praemissorum diligenter intendatis Et ad certos dies loca quae vos vel aliqui duo vel plures vestrū vt praedict ' est ad hoc prouideritis super praemissis faciatis inquisitiones premissa omnia singula audiatis terminetis ac ea faciatis expleatis in forma praedicta factur̄ in de quod ad Iusticiam pertinet secundū legem consuetudinem Regni nr̄i Angliae saluis nobis amerciamentis alijs ad nos inde spectantibus 69 And though there be many other offences mentioned in the said commission which the Iustices of peace are by force of the said Commission to enquire of heare and determine and to punish the offendors therin according to the lawes and Statutes of the Realme Yet as it appeareth by the words of the said commission the same hath his chiefe care and respect of the peace to the preseruation thereof And to the intent that the said Iustices or commissioners should the better remember and respect their charge and dutie they are called Iustices or commissioners of the peace and not commissioners of justice of conscience or equitie c. And so their names together with their offices and duties be in a sort written in their foreheads And the restraining or punishment of all the other offences mencioned in the said
21. H. 7. 39. As In what cases any p●rson may de●end himselfe and his by force if theeues or robbers do come to a mans house to rob or murther him he may defend his house by force and if he or his seruants do kill any of them they shall receiue no hurt thereby And if a man being in his house doe heare that another will come to his house to beat him he may lawfully assemble his neighbors and friends to assist and aid him in the defence of his person for his house is his castle and place of protection defence where he must dwell But if a man be threatened ●hat if he come to such a Market or Fayre or to such a place that then he shall be beaten in this case he may not assemble his neighbours and friends to go thither in safegard of his person for there is no necessitie that he should go thither seeing it would rather be a meane to seeke a quarrell then to eschew it but in that case he may take his remedy by surety of peace 16. Ed. 4. 17. 9. E. 4. 28. 19. H. 6. 31. 6. H. 7. 1. And if there be an attēpt made to maihem wound or beat a man his wife father mother or any of his children within age or to disseise him of his land or to dispossesse him of his goods or to disturbe him of his high way or to turne an ancient watercourse from his mill he may lawfully vse force to resist it 34 As the law hath prouided by the before rehearsed statute of 15. R. 2. St. 15. R. 2. 2. that whē any forcible entry shal be made into any benefices or offices of the church a Iustice of peace shall take the power of the county and commit the offendors to the gaole So hath it further deuised that if there be debate betwéene two persons for one church and one of them doth enter into the church with a great power of lay men and holdeth out the other by force and armes then he which is holden out The writ of Vi laica remouenda to remoue force shall haue a writ of Vi laica remouenda directed to the Shirife commaunding him that he shal remoue the power which is within the church and the shirife shal be further commaunded that if he doe find any that doe resist he shall take with him the power of the county and attach the bodies of all the resisters and commit them to prison so that he may haue their bodies before the King at a certaine day to answer for their contempt Fitz. Na. B. 55. But by this writ the Shirife ought not to remoue the Incumbent who is in possession of the church be he in possession by right or wrong but only to remoue the force and to suffer the Incumbent to inioy his possession for if he do remoue the Incumbent the same Incumbent shall haue a writ to the Shirife to restore him to it againe Where force shal be remoued for the K. incumbent where not 35 If the King do bring a Quare impedit against the disturber and the Incumbent and the Kings title is found for him Br. force 20 whereupon his clarke is instituted by writ and after the first Incumbent doth enter by force great number of people and doth take the profits the Kings Incumbent shall not haue the Kings writ to the Shirife to remoue the force for that when the iudgemēt giuen by the court is executed the court hath no more power to deale in that cause But if the defendant had disturbed the Bishop to admit the Kings Incumbent then he should haue had such a writ ❧ Forgerie 1 HAuing vndertaken to write of the great and generall maladies of the Realme and the chiefe impediments of the iustice and peace of the kingdome I shall not farre digresse from my theame by treating of Forgerie Periury Maintenance Deceit Extortion and Oppression wherein though a man be not assaulted by the rapier and dagger pike-staffe or bilbow-blade as he is in a fray forcible entrie or riot yet a forged déed that conueyeth his land from him a false othe which depriueth him of his lease or vnlawfull mantenance that wresteth his credit or goods from him do longer disturbe the peace of his mind stick in his stomacke and infixeth a déeper and more durable impression of sorrow into his heart than a boxe on the eare a dust in the necke or a blow with a cudgell giuen on the sodaine will doe For the griefe of these later stripes is short and doe weare out of mans mind by little and little as his choller ceaseth and his hot bloud cooleth but the discontent and the wants which he receiueth of the former blowes doe continue with him and yéeld him most dislike when he is most patient and best aduised And therefore the wisedome of this Realme hath from age to age taken great care by lawes and statutes to represse them and to inflict vpon the offendors in euerie of them penalties correspondent to their deserts Our lawes doe chastise those that breake the peace by frayes assaults batteries riots or routs with imprisonment of their bodies vntill their hot blouds be cooled and their distemperat humors be qualified but they doe impose sharper and more durable punishments vpon such as doe forge déeds commit or procure periurie Forgerie periurie maintenance do ten 5 to the breach of the peace or bee maintainers of other mens suits or quarels accounting these last offences to tend more and for a longer time to the breach or blemish of the peace or hinderance of the iustice of the Realme than the former doe As hee that committeth forgerie in some cases shall bée set vpon the pillorie loose his eares haue his nostrels slit and pay to the partie grieued his double costs and dammages And in some other cases shall be hanged as a felon He that committeth periurie shall in some cases be one yeare imprisoned be set vpon the pillorie and neuer after be allowed as a witnesse And hee that maintaineth other mens suites shall in some cases be thrée yeres imprisoned and further punished at the kings pleasure And in some other cases sustaine other disgraces And therefore the preamble of the statute of anno 1. St. 1. H. 5. 3. H. 5. doth truely informe vs that forged déeds do trouble and change the lands of good people intending to be in peace And the statute of anno 32. St. 32. H. 8. 9 H. 8. doth teach vs that the suborning of witnesse for to maintain any matter or cause is to the disturbāce or hinderance of iustice The enormity of Forgerie 2 The forging of false sealed Déeds Euidences or Writings or of Court Rols or of the will of any person or of any Obligation Bill obligatorie Release or other discharge or the pronouncing publishing or giuing in euidence of the same wherby any person shal be molested troubled charged
in returning of those Iurors lest by their partialitie Truth may be concealed Periurie committed and so iustice subuerted Fitz. Challenge 113. 7. Ed. 4. 56. 33. Ass p. 12 12. Ass pl. 1. 26. Ass p. 56 12. Ass p. 36. 44. Ass p. 18 Plo. Com. fol. 425. 29. Ass p. 2. 28. Ass p. 22 7. H. 4. 10. Fitz. Challeng 94. 99. 8. H. 5. 5. 20. H. 6. 39. 11. H. 4. 26. 38. H. 6. 6. 24. Edw. 37. And for that cause the prouidence of the Lawe doth not allow that Shiriffe Vndershiriffe Bailiffe of Franchise Coroner Causes of suspition in Shiriffes in impannelling of Iuries or other person as indifferent or méete to impannell a Iurie who is a partie to the sute or matter in question or who doth maintaine either of the parties plaintife or defendant in the same sute or is of councell with either of them in that sute then in issue Nor who is within the distresse receiueth the yéerely fée or weareth the liuerie or robe of any of the parties to that sute Nor who is of kinred by nature or of affinitie by marriage to any of the parties to that sute Nor who doth returne that Enquest or any of the Iurors therein at the denomination or by the procurement of any of the parties to the same sute or of any other person whatsoeuer Nor who doth impannell that Enquest or any of the Iurors therein for the fauour which he doth beare more to the one partie than to the other Nor who was an Arbitrator in that cause in question and to be in triall and did treate and conferre of the same Nor who is then in sute of lawe with either of the parties to this question or triall for any matter of trespasse malice or euill will Nor who did baptize the childe of any of the parties to this sute and triall 4. Ed. 4. 11. or any of the parties to the same sute did baptize his childe All which the Lawe doth suspect as causes of fauor and affection in the Shiriffe his Vndershiriffe c. and to be moouers fauourers or consentors to Periurie and therefore vpon challenge of the Array so being impannelled and the same prooued the whole Array shal be quashed 4 As the Lawe hath great care that Shiriffes Vndershiriffes Bayliffes of Liberties Coroners and all others hauing authoritie to returne enquests should therein be voide of all partialitie or presumption or cause thereof to the intent that a gappe should not be left open by their meanes to those that be willing to enter into corruption of conscience and so to commit Periurie In like sort hath shée vigilantly foreséene that those Iurors which be returned by the said Shirifes c. may be so sifted tried and examined that they may be found in all respects Probi legales homines Euery Iuror must be an honest and lawfull man viz. honest vpright 33. H. 6. 55. 26. Ass p. 28 14 H. 4. 19. 9. Ed. 4. 16. 11. H. 4. 4. and lawfull men in the eie and iudgement of the Lawe and that none of them be an Alien a villaine or outlawe an excommunicate person and thereby not legalis homo nor conuicted in a Writ of Conspiracie or an Attaint and by that meanes not probus homo and so to be challenged in euery cause and by euery person and further that they may be prooued to bee men of indifferencie and voide of all partialitie and such as will wholy respect the trueth of the cause in question and in their verdict nothing regarde any that is partie thereunto And therefore if there be any lawfull cause to feare particular fauour and affection in any of the Iurors and that hée will rather incline to Periurie than giue eare to the trueth of the cause the Lawe doth allow to the partie grieued Challenges of Iurors suspected or suspecting the same seuerall Challenges to the same Iuror and thereby to haue him drawne and remooued out of that Enquest A witnesse 5 As if a man be a witnes in a cause in question he can not be a Iuror in the same cause for the witnes doth testifie vpon his certaine knowledge 23. Ass p. 11 12. Ass p. 12 11. Ass p. 19 and the Iurors of an Enquest must giue their verdict according to their euidence And besides he that produceth a witnesse expecteth at his hand a fauourable deliuery of his euidence or otherwise he would not produce him which fauor euery Iuror must be wholy voide of if he will auoide Periurie Periurie suspected by deliuering his verdict before hand 6 If a Iuror after he is returned and before he is sworne 20. H. 6. 39. 8. Ed. 3. 69. will say that he will passe for the plaintife or defendant and doth speake it for the fauour which he beareth to the one partie or the hatred which he hath to the other and not in respect of his owne knowledge of the trueth of the cause the Law doth feare periurie in him and therefore shée will remooue him out of that enquest if he be challenged therefore Periury suspected by lying at the charge of one of the parties 7 If one that is impannelled of a Iurie doth goe to the Assises with one of the parties to the issue and doth eate and drinke with him at his charges 8. Ed. 3. 69 13. H. 4. 13. Fitz. Challenge 177. the Law doth suspect the same Iuror of partialitie and so of inclination to Periurie in recompence of that kindnes receiued and therefore she will remooue him out of that Enquest if he be challenged therefore 20. H. 6. 39. 9. Ed. 4. 46. 7. H. 7. 18. 8 If two men be in question for any cause Periurie suspectcted by an Arbitrator in the cause in question and then do refer the matter in debate to be heard ended by two Arbitrators whereof the one doth make choice of one Arbitrator and the other of an other which Arbitrators doe méete together and confer of the cause but do not agrée whereupon the party grieued doth prosecute the said suit to an issue and one of the same Arbitrators is returned of that Enquest the law doth suspect the same Iuror of partialitie and so of inclination to Periurie and therfore she will remoue him out of that Enquest if he be challenged therefore for when he was chosen by one of the parties alone this election maketh him in a sort of councel with him that did choose him and so fauorable vnto him but if he had bin chosen by the consent of both the parties together 3 H. 6. 25. the law would haue made other construction of him and adiudged him indifferent 34. Ass p. 6. 9 If two men do combine themselues by Oath bond couenant or faithfull aduised promise that one of them will take an others part be his friend and assist him in all causes whatsoeuer And after there is a sute commenced betwéene one
verdit or misdemeanors shall happen to be made shall haue full power to compell such Iurors and euery of them vpon paine of imprisonment to be bound by Recognisance in a certaine summe of money by their discretion to be limited that the same Iurors and euery of them shall personally appeare at a certaine day by the same Iusticiar Steward or other officer to be limited before the Lord President and other of the Councell aforesaid for the time being then and there to abide and stand to such direction and order as the same councell shall make ordaine and decree of in and vpon the same And the same councell shall thereupon haue authoritie by examination or otherwise to heare and determine all and euery such cause and shall haue like authoritie to commit euery of the same Iurors to prison or other punishment as shal be thought meet by the discretion of the said counsel or otherwise assesse or taxe euery such Iuror to his fine and ransome by the same discretion to be paied and leuied of their lands goods and cattels to the vse of the King Periurie committed by witnesses 20 Hauing written of the restraint and punishment of periurie in Iurors consisting of twelue persons at the least impannelled or sworn to deliuer their verdict according to their euidēce I am now to expresse what punishments the law doth inflictt vpon such which doe come one by one as deponents or witnesses to testifie the truth and to informe the Iudge or the Iurie of the veritie of the matter in issue or question according to their knowledge whereof euery man by himselfe may be called singularis testis though there be more witnesses sworne in that cause And séeing that iustice cannot be executed without the knowledge of the truth of the cause in question that truth is in most cases only to be deliuered by the othes and testimonies of such parties as were witnesses priuie or best acquainted with the matter in variance Therefore first it is to be obserued that the wisdom of the law hath thought it necessarie to prouide that such witnesses may be compelled vnder a great paine to appear in court and testifie their knowledge concerning such matter in question as by the Statute made Anno 5. A witnes vpon proces serued shall appeare El. it was ordained St. 5. El. 9. St. 29. El. 5. That if any person vpon whom any proces out of any of the courts of Record within this Realme or Wales shal be serued to testifie or depose concerning any matter depending in any of the same courts and hauing tendered to him according to his countenance or calling such reasonable sums of money for his costs and charges as hauing regard to the distance of the places is necessarie to be allowed in the behalfe doe not appeare according to the tenor of the said Proces hauing not a lawfull and reasonable let to the contrarie then the partie making default shall forfeit for euery such offence x. l and shall yéeld such further recompence to the partie grieued as by the discretion of the Iudge of the court out of the which the said proces shall be awarded according to the losse and hindrance that the partie which procured the said proces shall sustaine by reason of the non appearance of the said witnesse the said seuerall summes to be recouered by the partie so grieued against the offendor by A.I.B.P. c. in any of the K. courts of Record wherein no W.E. or P. c. 21 There were seuerall statutes made during the raignes of king H. 6. K. H. 7. and K. H. 8. against Periurie and the procurers and committers of periurie and lastly one was ordained Anno 32. H. 8. St. 32. H. 8. 9 against such as should suborne witnesses to the hindrance of Iustice and the procurement of periurie Sithence the making whereof for that the penaltie therein is small towards the offendors in that behalfe the said offence of subornation and sinister procurement of false witnesses did neuerthelesse greatly increase and by reason of the wilfull Periurie committed by the same suborned witnesses diuers persons did sustaine disherison and great impouerishment as well of their lands and tenements as of their goods and cattels The penaltie for procuring of wilfull periury in witnesses for the redresse and more sharpe punishment whereof St. 5. El. 9. 29. El. 5. by a Statute made Anno 5. El. it was enacted That all and euery person and persons which shall vnlawfully and corruptly procure any witnes or witnesses by Letters Rewards Promises or by any other sinister and vnlawfull labour or meanes whatsoeuer to commit any wilfull and corrupt Periurie in any matter or cause whatsoeuer depending in suit and variance by any Writ Action Bill Complaint or Information in any wise concerning any lands tenements or hereditaments or any goods cattels debts or dammages in any of the courts of the Chauncerie Starre chamber White hall or in any other of the Kings Courts of Record or in any Léet view of Franke pledge or Law day Auncient demesne Court Court Hundred Court Baron or in the Court or Courts of the Stannerie in the countie of Deuon and Cornewall Or shall likewise vnlawfully and corruptly procure or suborne any witnesse or witnesses which shall bée sworne to testifie in perpetuam rei memoriam Then euery such offendor or offendors shall for his hers or their said offence béeing thereof lawfully conuicted or attainted forfeit fourtie pounds to the King and the partie grieued hindered or molested by reason of any of the offences aforesaid that will sue for the same by A. B. P. or I. in any of the Kings Courts of Record wherein no W. E. P. or I. shall bée allowed And if it happen any such offendor or offendors béeing so conuicted or attainted as is aforesaid not to haue any goods or cattels Lands or Tenements to the value of fourtie pounds then euery such person or persons so conuicted or attainted of any of the offences aforesaid shall suffer imprisonment one halfe yeare without Baile or Maineprise and stand vpon the Pillorie one whole houre in some Market Towne neere or next adioyning to the place where the offence was committed in open market there And no person béeing so conuicted or attainted shall bée from thenceforth receiued as a witnesse to bée deposed in any court of Record within any of the Kings dominions of England Wales or the Marches of the same vntill the Iudgement giuen against him or them shall bée reuersed by Attaint or otherwise And vpon euery such reuersall the parties grieued shall recouer his or their dammages against all and euery such person and persons as did procure the said iudgement so reuersed to bee first giuen against them or any of them by action to be sued vpon his or their case according to the course of the common Law St. 5. El. 9. 22 If any person or persons either by the subornation
The penaltie for committing of wilfull periurie vnlawfull procurement sinister perswasion or meanes of any others or by their owne Act Consent or Agreement shall wilfully and corruptly commit any manner of wilfull periurie by his or their deposition in any of the Courts before mentioned or béeing examined ad perpetuam rei memoriam Then euerie person or persons offending shall for his or their said offence loose and forfeit twentie pounds to the King and the partie grieued hindered or molested by reason of any of the offences before mentioned that will sue for the same by A. B. P. or I. in any of the Kings courts of Record wherein no W. E. P. or I. shall be allowed and shall haue sixe months imprisonment without Baile or Maineprise And the oath of such person or persons so offending from thenceforth shall not bee receiued in any court of Record within England or Wales or the Marches of the same vntill such time as the iudgement giuen against the said person or persons shall be reuersed by Attaint or otherwise And vpon euery such reuersall the parties grieued to recouer his or their dammages against such person and persons as did procure the said iudgement so reuersed to be giuen against thē by action to be sued vpon his case And if the said offendor haue not any goods or cattels to the value of xx l. then he shall be set on the Pillorie in some market place within the shire citie or borough where the said offence shall be committed by the Sherife or his ministers if it be without any citie or towne corporat and if it be within any citie or towne corporat then by the head officer or officers of the same citie or c. or by his or their ministers there shall haue both his eares nailed and from thenceforth be discredited disabled for euer to be sworne in any of the courts of Record aforesaid vntill the iudgement shall be reuersed and thereupon shall recouer his dammages in manner and forme before mentioned In what courts Periurie shall be punished 23 As well the Iudge and Iudges of euery such of the said courts where any such suit is or shall be Sta. 5. El. 9. and whereupon any such periurie is or shal happen to be committed as also the Iustices of Assise and gaole deliuery in their seuerall circuits and the Iustices of the peace in euery countie within this realm or in Wales at their Quarter Sessions both within liberties and without shall haue authoritie by vertue hereof to enquire of all and euery the defaults and offences committed contrarie to this act by inquisition presentment bill or information before them exhibited or otherwise lawfully to heare and determine the same and thereupon to giue iudgement award processe and execution of the same according to the course of the lawes of this Realme Proclamatiō of this Statute 24 The Iustices of Assise of euery circuit within this Realme shal in euery countie within their circuits two times in the yeare St. 5. El. 9. viz. in the time of their sittings make open Proclamation of this Statute or of the effect thereof to the intent that no person shal be ignorant of the penalties herein contained Periurie punished in the spirituall court 25 Prouided that this Act or any thing therein contained St. 5. El. 9. shall not extend to any spirituall or Ecclesiasticall court within this Realme of England or Wales or the Marches of the same but all and euery such offendor and offendors as shall offend in forme aforesaid shall and may be punished by such vsuall and ordinarie lawes as heretofore hath bin and yet be vsed in the said Ecclesiasticall court any thing in this Act c. notwithstanding Periury punishable in the Starchāber 26 Prouided that this Act shall not extend to restraine the power or authoritie giuen by Act of Parliament made An̄ 11. H. 7. Sta. 5. El. 9. St. 11. H. 7. 25. to the Lord Chauncelor and others of the Kings Councel to examine and punish riots routs hainous Periuries and other offences which haue vsed to heare and determine such matters in the Starre-chamber at Westminster nor to restraine the power of the Lord President and Councell in the Marches of Wales or in the North nor of any other Iudge hauing absolute authoritie to punish Periurie before the making of this Statute But But they and euery of them shall procéede in the punishment of all offences heretofore punishable in such wise as they might haue done and vsed to do before the making of this Act to all purposes so that they set not vpon the offendors lesse punishment then is contained in this Act. 27 Because by the said statute of 5. Eliz. 9. there is no Ordinance made for the punishment of those Bankrupts who being sworne and examined vpon Interrogatories by Commissioners thereunto authorized shall commit Periurie Nor for the punishment of those witnesses who either by the procurement of others or by their owne consent shall commit Periurie being examined by the said Commissioners touching Bankrupts goods or debts Therefore by a statute made Anno 1. St. 1. Iac. 15. Iac. it was ordained That it shall be lawfull for the Commissioners authorized vnder the great Seale of England or the greatest part of them to take order with Bankrupts bodies lands tenemēts and hereditaments money goods cattels wares and debts to examine the said offendor or offendors vpon such interrogatories touching the lands tenements goods cattels and debts bils bonds bookes of accompt and such other things as may tend to disclose his her or their estate or the secret graunts cōueyances and eloigning of his her or their landes tenements goods money and debts as they shall thinke méet And if therein the offendor or offendors shall refuse to be examined or to answer fully to euery interrogatorie to him to be ministred by the said Commissioners or the greater part of them it shall be lawfull for the said Commissioners or the greater part of them to commit the said offendor or offendors to some strait or close imprisonment there to remaine vntill he she or they shall better conforme him or her selfe And if vpon his her or their examination it shal appeare that he she or they haue committed any wilfull or corrupt Periurie tending to the hurt or dammage of the creditors of the said Bankrupt Periury punished in Bankrupts to the value of tenne pounds of lawfull money of England or aboue the party so offending shall or may thereof be indited in any of the Kings Courts of Record and being lawfully conuicted therof shall stand vpon the Pillory in some publike place by the space of ij houres and haue one of his eares nailed to the Pillory and cut off And by the same statute of Anno 1. Iac. it is further established That if any person or persons other then the Bankrupt either by subornation vnlawfull procuremēt sinister persuasion
dispose or otherwise imploy or suffer or cause to be paid disposed or imploied to any of the foresaid vses or to any of the like vses aboue the terme of 20. yeares next after the first making and beginning of any such vses shal be vtterly voide But for the preuenting of collusion and fraud which might bee deuised for the further establishing or corroboration of such vses by the said Statute of an 23. H. 8. Collaterall conueyaunces to defraud the assurance to Churches it was moreouer prouided That if any person or persons in defraud of the said Statute doth bind or ordaine any of their heirs or successors or any other persons that they shall suffer such vses intents or purposes to continue contrarie to the said statute vpon paine of losse of any other lands or of any other thing or doe deuise by any colour craft or meanes any thing to make such vses declared contrarie to the meaning of the said Act to continue for any longer time then is aboue limitted for the same Then euerie such penaltie craft colour and euery other thing that is made or deuised in defraud of the said act shal be voide for the said Statute shal be interpreted as beneficiallie as may be to the destruction or vtter auoyding of the vses aboue remembred and of all other like other then such as are before expressed Co. lib. 1. 26 Notwithstanding the foresaid Statute of An̄ 23. H. 8. To what vses lands may be giuen it is lawfull for any person at this day to giue his lands tenements or hereditaments to any person or persons to his or their heirs for to find a preacher for the maintenāce of a Schoole for the reliefe of maihemed souldiers for the sustentation of poore people for the reparation of churches highwayes bridges cawseis for the discharge of the poore inhabitants of a towne of cōmon charges for to make a stock for poore labourers in husbandrie poore apprentices for the mariage of poore maids or for such other charitable vses for the said stat was made onely to restraine the assuring of lands to superstitious vses and not to charitable vses And in this case it shal be expedient that the feoffor which doth assure his land to any of the vses aforesaid doe reserue to himselfe some annuall rent or take some money of the feoffées at the first for then the feoffement or assurance shal be good to the feoffées and their heires though the vse be vnlawfull And it appeareth by the stat made an 43. Stat. 43. El. 4. El. that they be accounted good and charitable vses no superstitious vses to giue lands tenements rents annuities profits hereditaments goods chattels money and stocks of money for the reliefe of aged impotent and poore people or for the maintenance of sicke and maihemed souldiers mariners schooles of learning frée schooles schollers in Vniuersities or for repaire of bridges ports hauens cawseys churches sea-bāks high waies or for education or preferment of orphans or for or toward reliefe stocke or maintenance for houses of correction or for mariage of poore maids or for supportation helpe ayd of yong trades-men handicrafts-men and persons decaied or for reliefe or redemption of prisoners or captiues or for aid or ease of any poore inhabitants concerning paiment of fifteens setting out of souldiers and other taxes For the said Stat. of 43. El. doth giue authoritie to the L. Chauncelor the L. Kéeper c. to the Chauncelor of the Duchie to award commissions from time to time into all or any parts of this Realme to certaine persons to enquire of al singular such gifts assignments appointments and of the abuses breaches of the truce negligences misimployments not imploying concealing defrauding misconuerting or misgouernment of any lands tenements rents c. goods chattels money c. heretofore giuen or assigned or which hereafter shal be giuen limited or assigned to or for any the charitable or godly vses before rehearsed And after such enquiry hearing and examining thereof to set downe such orders iudgements and decrées as the same lands tenements rents goods money c. may be duly and faithfully imployed to and for such of the charitable vses and intents aforesaid respectiuely for which they were giuen or appointed by the donors and founders thereof 26 Because when tenants for terme of life tenants in dower or by the curtesie of England or tenants after possibilitie of issue extinct were impleaded they would often be of couin with the demandants that the tenemēts demanded should be recouered against them they would not pray in ayde nor vouch to warrantie them in the reuersiō but plead in chiefe such a plea wherby they knew the tenements should be lost for the preuention and eschewing of which couin St. 13. R. 2. 16. by a stat made an 13. R. 2. it was ordained That if any such tenant be impleaded and he in the reuersion come into the Court and prayeth to be receiued to defend his right at the day that the tenant doth plead to the action or before he shal be receiued to plead in chiefe to the action without taking delay by voucher ayd-prayer nonage or other delay whatsoeuer Couin by a particular tenant to defraud him in the reuersion so that after such receipt he shal haue no delay by protection essoine of the Kings seruice or common Essoine but the sute shal be hastened as much as it may be by the lawe And dayes of grace shal be giuen by discretion of the Iudges betwixt the demaundant and him which is receiued and not the common daies giuen in pleas of land except the demaundant will thereunto assent to the intent the demaundant shal not be too much delaied which must plead with two aduersaries And he in the Reuersion which praieth to be receiued shall finde sureties for the issues of the Land aswel where the receite is counter-pleaded as where it is grauted Stat. West 2. 13. Ed. 1. 3 And by the Statute of Westminster 2 it was established That if by default or yeelding of such tenant in dower or c. iudgement shal be giuen then the heyres or they which haue the reuersion shal recouer after the death of such tenants by a writ of Entrie ad communem legem The wiues receit vpon the husbands default And by the same Statute of Westminster 2. it is also ordained That if in an Action brought against the husband and the wife of lands which bee the right of the wife the husband will absent himselfe and will not defend his wiues right or will against his wiues consent yeeld the land If the wife wil come before iudgement and be ready to answere to the demaundant and to defend her right she shal be thereunto admitted And for the further auoiding of Couin in Recoueries suffred by particular tenants by the Statute of Anno 14. Eliz. it was enacted Stat. 14. El. 8.
shall willingly and wittingly put in vre auowe maintaine iustifie or defend the same or any of them as true simple and done or made bona fide and vpon good consideration or shall alien or assigne any the lands tenements goods leases c. to them conueied or any part thereof shall forfeit to the Queene c. and the partie grieued by such fraudulent feoffement gift bond suit c. one yeares value of the said lands c. leases rents or other profits and the whole value of the said goods and cattels and so much money as shall be contained in such couenous and fained bond to bée recouered by A. I. B. P. c. wherein no W. E. P. c. And béeing thereof lawfully conuicted shall suffer imprisonment one halfe yeare Common recoueries without Baile or Mainprise But common Recoueries had against Tenant in taile or other tenant of the fréehold of lands the Reuersion or Remainder or right of Reuersion or Remainder whereof then shall bée in any other person shall as touching such person and his heires which hath the Reuersion or Remainder thereof be of like force and none other Voucher in Formedon as the same should haue béene if this Act had not béene made And no estate or conueyance by reason whereof any person shall vse any voucher in any writ of Formedon shall bée made void by this Act But euery such voucher in any writ of Formedon shall be of like force as if this act had not béene made Lands or goods assured bona fide and vpon good cōsideration Prouided alwaies that this Statute shall not extend to any estate or interest in lands leases goods c. lawfully assured vpon good consideration and bona fide to any person or persons bodies politique or corporat not hauing at the time of such conueyance c. any knowledge of such fraud or collusion as is aforesaid Fraudulent déeds to auoid forfeitures 29 If a man to preuent a forfeiture for a felonie or vpon an outlarie Co. li. 3. 82. will make a gift of all his goods and after is attainted of felonie or outlawed these goods shall be forfeited notwithstanding this gift for this word forfeitures specified in the foresaid Statute of Anno 13. St. 13. El. 5. El. shall not be intended onely of the forfeiture of an obligation Recognisance or such like but also of euery thing which by the Law may be forfeited to the King or to a Subiect And the same Act of Anno 13. El. shall not extend onely to creditors but also to all others who haue cause of Action or suit or to haue any penaltie or forfeiture And if a man do bind himselfe and his heirs to pay to another a certaine sūme of money at a day assigned and before the day doth come of paiment Co. li. 5. 60. the obligor dieth leauing to his sonne and heire sufficient land to pay the same debt the heire doth enter and alien the same land before the obligée doth commence his suit vpon the said obligatiō If vpon the suit of the same obligation the heire do plead nothing but discent and vpon the trial of that issue the foresaid alienation be found by the Iurie to be made by fraud to deceiue the said creditor of his debt or that be pleaded the said alienation shal be void by the foresaid statute of 13. El. and the plaintife shall recouer A déed of gift must be vpon good consideration and bona fide 30 In the said Statute of Anno 13. El. there is one Prouiso St. 13. El. 5. That the said Act shall not extend to any estate or interest in lands tenements or hereditaments leases rents commons profits goods or cattels which is or hereafter shall be lawfully had made conueyed or assured vpon good consideration bona fide to any person or persons or bodies politique or corporat not hauing at the time of such conueyance or assurance to them made any manner of notice or knowledge of such couin fraud or collusion By which Prouiso it appeareth that the gift which is within the compasse of the same Prouiso must be both vpon good consideration and also bona fide And therefore whereas A. did owe to B. CC. l. and to L. a hundred pounds Co. li. 3. 80. payable by two seuerall obligations L. brought an Action of debt against A. vpon his said obligation of a hundred pound during which sute A. being possessed of goods and cattells to the valew of two hundred pounds in secret made a generall déede of gift by writing of all his goodes and cattells Realls and Personalls whatsoeuer to B. in satisfaction of his debt and notwithstanding A. continued in possession of the same goods and sold some of them and did share and brand the shéepe with his owne brand and after L. had iudgement to recouer against A. and had a Fieri facias directed to the Shiriffe of the Countie where A. dwelt who by force of the Writ came to make execution of the same goodes but B. resisted him by force clayming those to be his goodes in respect of his said déede of gift and reported that it was a good déed of gift and made vpon lawfull consideration But in the Starrechamber this was adiudged a fraudulent déede and within the statute of 13. Infallible markes of a fraudulent deede of gift Eliz. for this déed of gift had all the badges and markes of fraud for it was generall and without any exception of his apparrell bedding or any other necessary thing and the owner continued in possession of all the goods and vsed them as his owne and the déede of gift was made in secret and not sealed deliuered nor published amongst his neighbours And it was made whilest the sute was depending betwéene L. and A. And héere was a trust betwéene the Donor of these goods and the Donée for the Donor possessed the goodes and vsed them as his owne and fraude is alwayes shaddowed with trust and trust is the couer of fraud and the writing purported that the déede was made honestly truely and Bona fide which be not accustomed words in a déede of gift and vnusuall termes in any Instrument doe bréed suspition And though this was a true debt due to B. and the consideration was good yet this was not within the before specified Prouiso for that the déede of gift was not made also Bona fide for no déede shall be adiudged to be made Bona fide according to the said Prouiso which is accompanied with any trust and the words of the Prouiso be in the copulatiue vpon good consideration and Bona fide So that good consideration will not serue vnles the gift be also Bona fide viz. to the intent that the Donée shall haue carry away and enioy to his owne vse the possession of the same goodes without any trust expressed or implied and therefore whosoeuer will make a déede
4. 23. by a Statute made Anno 2. H. 4. it was declared That the said Marshall may take the fees héereafter following viz. of euery person which commeth by Capias to the said Court iiij d and if he be let to mainprise vntill his day ij d more And of euery person being defendant which is impleaded of Trespas and findeth two Mampernors to keepe his day vntill the end of the plea ij d. And of euery person committed to prison by iudgement of the steward in whatsoeuer maner the same be iiij d and of euery ptrson deliuered of felony iiij d and of euery felon let to mainprise by the Court iiij d. But if the Marshall or any of his officers vnder him doe take any other fées than are before declared the said Marshall and euery of his officers shall lose their offices A Seruitor of bills in the Marshals Court. and also pay to the partie gréeued treble dammages for the which the said party shall haue his sute before the Steward of the said Court for the time being A seruitor of bills which beareth a staffe of the Court shall take for euery mile from the said Court vntil the same place where he shall do his seruice j. d and for xij miles xij d to serue a Venire facias or a Distringas out of the same court the double And if any Seruitor of Bills do the contrary he shall be imprisoned and make fine to the K. after the discretion of the Steward of the same court and also be foreiudged and banished the same court All which articles the steward at his comming into the country hath authoritie to proclaime and put in execution 21 And for that the kings of this realme haue from time to time bestowed vpon such as they assigned to be muster masters or captains in times of wars liberall and bountifull stipends and allowances the rather to the intent they should not exact or make a pray of such as should be or then were souldiers Therfore to preuent such like exaction by a statute made An̄ 4. 5. St. 4. 5. P. M. 3. P. M. it was ordained Muster masters exacting mony to spare souldiers That if any person which shall be commanded by the Q. her heirs or successors by commission leters or otherwise authorized to leuy muster or to make men to serue in her warres or otherwise for the defence of this Realme do by any meane exact leuie receiue or take or cause to be taken any mony or other reward or thing whatsoeuer of any persō for seruice in wars or that shal be appointed named or mustred to serue in any such seruice or for the sparing or discharging of such person from the said seruice then he shall forfeit ten times so much as he shall receiue exact or take to the Q. I. to be recouered by A.I. c. wherein no W.E.P. If any captaine petit captaine or other hauing charge of men shall for any aduantage or gaine by him to be receiued discharge or licence any of the men or souldiers appointed to serue in the warres vnder his rule or order to depart from the said seruice or shal not pay vnto his souldiers Exacting by captaines of their souldiers to euery of thē their full whole wages conduct and coat mony within x. daies next after he shal haue receiued the same then the party offending in giuing such licence or discharge shall forfeit for euery such offence x. times the value of the thing so receiued to the Q. I. to be recouered by A. I. wherin no W.E.P. c. And also he shal pay vnto euery such souldier from whom he shall with-hold any such wages conduct or coat money treble the summe so with-holden Extortion by taking of scauage of merchants 22 Because Scauage otherwise called Shewage was many times wrōgfully and extortiously taken by Magistrates of cities and corporat townes of merchants that transported or brought their marchandizes thither therefore by a statute made Anno 19. H. 7. it was prouided That if any maior shirife St. 19. H. 7. 8 bailife or other officer in any city borough or towne within this realme doe distraine take or leuie any custome called Scauage or Shewage of any merchant denizen or of any other the K. subiects denizens for any merchandize to the K. before truly customed that is brought by land or water to be vttered in any citie borough or towne in this land or if any maior shirife bailife or other officer in any city borough or towne for non paiment of the said scauage let or disturbe any merchants or any other persons denizens to sel and vtter their merchandize by them brought into any city borough or towne then he which offendeth shal forfet for euery offence xx l. to the K. the party grieued or any other that wil first sue by A. of debt in any shire wherein no W.E.P. shal be allowed But the maior shirifes cōmunalty of London and euery of them shall haue such summes of mony for scauage of euery person denizen as of right they ought to haue 23 Euery of the chiefe Iustices of the Kings Bench and Common Pleas and the maior of the Staple at Westminster and the Recorder of the Citie of London before whom any obligation being of the nature and force of a statute Staple shall be recognized St. 23. H. 8. 6 according to the statute of An̄ 23. H. 8. The Iustices Clarks fee vpon euery Recognisance shal take for euery such Recognisance iij. s̄ iiij d the clarke that shall write make and inroll the same iij. s̄ iiij d and for the certificat of euery one such obligation xx d. And if any of the said Iustices Maior Recorder or Clarke take of any of the K. subiects aboue the summe or summes to them limited by this statute then the same offendor shal forfeit for euery time so offending xl l. to the K. and I. to be recouered by A. I. wherein no W.E.P. c. And by the Stat. of An̄ 27. St. 27. Eli. 4. Eli. it was further ordained That no Clarke of the same Recognisances shall or may take for or in respect of any search to be made for or concerning any statute Merchant or of the Staple The Clarkes fée for search brought vnto him to be entred aboue ij d for one yéers search so after the rate of ij d for euery yéere not aboue vpon paine to forfeit lose to the partie or parties grieued twentie times as much as he shal take contrary to the true meaning of this Act to be recouered in any of the K. courts of Record by action of debt B. P. I. wherein no W.E.P. 24 Because it is well perceiued that learned and expert Atturnies be necessarie members in our State and great meanes to further iustice and to bring sutes to their expected ends and that they must therefore
and the disseisée may at his choyce either haue an Assise and recouer double dammages and the defendant shal be amerced or else the K. vpon complaint shall redresse the matter If lands be graunted by the Kings Patent without any title sound by Enquest St. 1. H. 4. 8. or where the Kings entrie is not giuen by the law and if any be put out or disseised of his fréehold thereby this is an oppression And the partie put out shal haue a speciall Assise against the kings Patentée and recouer treble dammages Oppression by approuement of common 2 If the Lord of a Mannor wherein he hath certaine fréehold tenants and certaine neighbours do approue some part of the wasts woods or pastures of the same Mannor not leauing to his said tenants and neighbours sufficient common of pasture vnto their tenements or not sufficient and conuenient ingresse and regresse to the same this is an oppression of the same tenants and a disseisin of their common And the sayd tenants and neighbours or any of them may by force of the Statutes of Merton and West 2. St. 20. H. 3. 4 St. 13. E. 1. 46. bring an Assise of Common of pasture against the Lord who doth so approue and oppresse And if it be found by the Iurie that their ingresse and regresse were any thing hindered by the deforceors or that they had not sufficient pasture then they shall recouer their seisin by the view of the Iurors so that by their discretion and othe they shall haue sufficient pasture ingresse and regresse and the disseisors shall be amerced and render dammages which dammages by force of the statute of Anno 3. Ed. 6. St. 3. E. 6. 3. shall be trebled by the iudgement of the Court where such Assise and iudgement shall be had Oppression by surcharge of common And so it is if the Lord of a Manor doth surcharge the common with so many cattell Fitz. Admes 11. Common 29. as that his fréeholders or neighbours cannot haue sufficient common for their cattell as they had woont to haue or as they ought to haue belonging to their tenements this is an oppression and disseisin of their common and any of them may bring an Assise of Common of pasture against the said Lord and recouer his common and his dammages Inclosure of common by cause of vicinage is no oppression But if there be two Lords of two seuerall Mannors which haue two wasts adioyning parcell of their mannors Co. li. 4. 38. lying together without inclosure or seperation and yet the bounds of each mannor is well knowne by certaine méers and marks in which wasts the tenants of the one mannor and of the other haue reciprocally had and vsed common by cause of vicinage 13. H. 7. 14 M. 14 Eliz. Dyer 316. In this case one of those Lords may inclose against the other by that meanes vtterly take away his common by cause of vicinage from him though it hath béene otherwise vsed time out of the remembrance of man And this common per cause de vicinage is rather an excuse of a Trespasse when the cattell of the tenant of one Mannor do stray into the wasts of the other Mannor than any certaine inheritance for the tenants of one Mannor may not put their cattell into the wast of the other Mannor but they may come thither onely by escape and this inclosure is onely to preuent the escape of the cattell which is a lawfull act and no oppression For in the case aforesaid where the wasts of both the Mannors be adioyning together and that the one of them hath common with the other by cause of vicinage Co. li. 7. 5. and that the one village hath an hundred acres of common and the other but fiftie acres of common Commoners shall charge common according to the quantity thereof in this case the inhabitants of the village which hath but fiftie acres of common can put no more cattell into their sayd common of fiftie acres than it will maintaine without hauing respect to the common in the said hundred acres for if they do it is an oppression and wrong nece conuerso for the originall cause of this common by cause of vicinage was not for profit but for preuenting of suits in a Champion countrey in respect of reciprocall escapes from one towne to another 3 It appeareth by the preamble of the statute of Marlebridge that they who tooke distresses of their tenants or neighbours for rents supposed to bée due to them or for any trespasses done to them and after did driue the same distresses forth of the countie where they were taken to be impownded in another countie were accounted to do it to oppresse them whose cattell they so did distrain and impownd and the same was also adiudged an act done against the peace whereupon for the eschewing of such oppressions by the same statute and also by the statute of West 1. St. 25. H. 3. 4 St. 3. E. 1. 16. it was ordained Oppression by distresses That no man shall cause a distresse to be driuen forth of the Countie wherein it was taken And for the auoiding of the like oppressions vexations and troubles by a statute made Anno 1. St. 1. 2. P. M. 12. 2. P. M. it was enacted That whosoeuer shall driue any distresse out of the Hundred Rape Wapentake or Lath where it was taken except it be to a pownd ouert within the same shire being not aboue thrée miles distant from the place where it is taken or shall impownd in seuerall places goods distrained for any cause at one time whereby the owner shall be constrained to sue seuerall Repleuies for the deliuerie of the same distresses shall forfeit to the partie grieued for euerie such offence fiue pounds and treble dammages And whosoeuer doth take for kéeping in pownd pondage Pondage money or the impownding of a whole distresse aboue iiij d. or doth take so much where lesse hath vsually béen taken shall forfeit to the partie grieued fiue pounds and so much as hée taketh ouer the said iiij pence And because the law hath deuised that one neighbour may distraine the goods of another for his debt duetie or dammages sustained and that the same distresse shall be reasonable according to the quantitie of the sayd supposed debt or dammages and that then the same distresse shall bée put in a pownd ouert sub custodia legis vntill it bée decided whether the same was taken vpon iust cause or not and not to the end that one neighbour should by distraining vniustly oppresse another or demaund of him that which is not due or put him to further charge or trouble than the necessitie of that cause for the recouerie of his owne debt or damages required therefore by the before mentioned statute of Marlebridge it was further established That if one neighbour take a distresse of another whereby he hath receiued
Striking in Westminster Hall 27 And the same Law is Fitz. Cor. 280. M. 2. 3. P. M. Dy. 188. if one strike another in Westminster Hall during the time that the Kings Courts be sitting there and be indicted thereof this is misprision of Treason and an indignitie offered to the Magistrates and place of iustice Therefore in this case the offender shall haue iudgement to haue his right hand cut off to loose his lands and goods and to be perpetually imprisoned Re●scuing a prisoner arrested by a Iudge 28 If one of the Kings Iustices assigned M. 22. Ed. 3. 13. doe arrest any person which hath made a fray before him and a stranger will rescue the prisoner whereby he doth escape this is misprision of Treason and in this case as well the prisoner as he that made the rescous shall forfeit to the King his landes and goods and be imprisoned during their liues Because the attachment of such a Iustice is the Kings owne attachment in the construction of Lawe 29 Because striking in the Kings pallace or where he shall remaine in person is a kinde of disgrace offered vnto or contempt had of the maiestie of the king who is the head of the common wealth and the chiefe preseruer of peace therein and therefore it is to be accounted a great Misprision and worthy of seuere punishment wherefore for the preuention thereof Shedding of blood within the kings palace by a Statute made Anno 33. St. 33. H. 8. 12. H. 8. 12. it was established That if any person or persons shall malitiously strike any other person whereby blood shall be shedde in any of the Kings houses or Palaces or any other house wherein the king his heires or successors shall bee at that time abiding in his royall person viz. within any edifices courts places gardens orchards or houses within the Porters ward of any of the houses aboue rehearsed or within any Gardens priuie walkes orchards tilt-yards wood-yards tennice-plaies cocke-fights bowling alleyes néere adioyning to the said houses and béeing part of the same or within two hundred foot of the Standard of any outward gate or gates of any of the said houses commonly vsed for passage from any of the houses c. and shal be thereof indicted arraigned and attainted according to the forme of the said Statute he so offending shall haue his right hand cut off bee imprisoned during his life and make fine to the King at his pleasure But this Act and the paines and forfeitures before rehearsed shall not extend to any Noble man nor other person that shall strike his seruant within the said Palaces or Houses or the limits of the same with his hand or fist or any small staffe or sticke for correction for any offence committed Nor to any of the Kings officers that in execution of his office shall strike any person with his hand fist or small staffe sticke or tipstaffe Nor to any other person that in doing seruice at any triumph or any other time of seruice by the Kings or any of his Councel or other his head officers commandement shal for the execution of his said seruice strike any person with his hand fist smal staffe or stick or any tipstaffe within the same palace house c. although by reason of the same stroke or strokes there happen to bée any blood-shed of such person as shal be so stricken except the person so stricken die of the same stroke within one yeare next after And so it is to be noted by the foresaid Statute of 33. H. 8. and the foure cases next precedent that striking in the Kings Palace or House where himselfe doth make his abode is not so penall as striking or drawing a weapon to strike is where he is but represented by others in time and place of Iustice for the law doth inflict a more seuere punishment vpon him who striketh or draweth his weapon to strike in place time of execution of Iustice than it doth to him who offereth the like violence in the house and at the time where the kings owne person is remaining In which case the offendor receiueth no punishment at all for striking or drawing of his weapons to strike vnlesse blood be shed thereby Which lawes doe procéed of the great care and reuerend respect that is had of Iustice and of peace ensuing thereof 30 For as much as some doubts and questions were mooued that certaine kinds of Treasons Misprisions and concealements of Treasons committed out of this Realme could not by the common lawes of this Realme be enquired of heard and determined within this Realme of England for a plaine declaration whereof St. 35. H. 8. 2 26. H. 8. 13. 5. Ed. 6. 11. by a Statute made Anno 35. H. 8. it was enacted That all manner of offences béeing alreadie made or declared or hereafter to bee made or declared to be Treasons Misprisions of Treasons or concealements of Treasons and done perpetrated or committed by any person or persons out of this Realme of England shal be enquired of heard and determined before the Kings Iustices of his Bench for pleas to be holden before himselfe Trial of treasons committed out of the Realme by good and lawfull men of the same shire where the said Bench shall sit and bée kept or else before such Commissioners and in such shire of the Realme as shall be assigned by the Kings Commission and by good and lawfull men of the same Shire in like manner and forme to all intents as if such treasons c. had béene committed in the same shire where they shall be so inquired of heard and determined as is aforesaid And if any Péere of this Realme shall be indicted of any such Treasons c. then he shall haue his triall by his Péeres c. Which foresaid Statute of Anno 35. H. 8. remaineth in force notwithstanding the Statute of Anno 1. 2. P. M. 10. By which it is ordered h. 13. El. Dyer 298. That all Trials had awarded or made for any Treason shall bee had and vsed onely according to the course of the common lawes of this Realme and not otherwise Outlawrie of offendors in Treason beeing beyond Sea 31 By a branch of a Statute made Anno 26. H. 8. it was ordained That all Proces of Outlawrie to be made within this Realme against any offendors in Treason being resiant or inhabiting out of this Realme or beyond the Sea at the time of the Outlawrie pronounced shal be as good and effectuall in the law to all intents as if any such offendors had béene resiant within this Realme at the time of such Proces awarded Outlawrie pronounced And after by a Statute made Anno 5. E. 6. it was conditioned and prouided St. 5. E. 6. 11. That if the partie so outlawed shall within one yeare after the said Outlawrie pronounced or iudgement giuen thereupon yéeld himselfe to the chiefe Iustice
of England for the time beeing and offer to trauerse the said indictment or Appel whereupon the said Outlawrie shal be pronounced then he shal be receiued to the said trauerse being thereupon found not guiltie by verdict of xij men he shal be cleerely discharged of the said Outlawrie and of all penalties and forfeitures by reason of the same as though no such Outlawrie had bin made And it is to be noted h. 12. El. Dyer 287. that the foresaid two Statutes doe extend to offendors in any manner of Treasons by the Common law or Statute and not to those onely which were declared to be Treasons by the Statute of 25. Edw. 3. 32 For the spéedie triall and punishment of such persons as shall commit any manner of Treasons within the Principalitie of Wales and the Marches of the same or elsewhere within the Kings dominions where his originall Writs in the Chauncerie of England commonly runne not by a Statute made Anno 32. H. 8. it was enacted That all such Treasons and Misprisions of Treasons as is aforesaid Triall of treasons committed in wales shall be presented St. 32. H. 8. 4. and tried by the oathes of twelue men inhabiting within any such Shires and before such commissioners as the King from time to time in such cases shall assigne and appoint by his Commission or Commissions of Oyer Determiner in like manner forme as if such Treasons or misprisions of treasons had bin done and committed within such of the said Shires into the which the said Commissions of Oyer and Determiner shall bée directed as is aforesaid And all Presentments Trials Processes Iudgements Executions and forfeitures hereafter to be had made or done by vertue of such Commissions shal be good and effectuall in the law to all purposes Any graunt custome or vsage to the cōtrarie notwithstanding c. After that by the Statute made an̄ 1. 2. P. M. it was enacted That all trials hereafter to be had St. 1. 2. P. M. 10. awarded or made for any Treason shal be had and vsed onely according to the due Order and Course of the common law of this Realme not otherwise Quaere whether this Statute of 1. 2. P. M. doth repell or take away the force of the before rehearsed Statute of 32. H. 8. St. 33. H. 8. 20. 33 By a statute made an̄ 33. H. 8. it was established The force of attainder of treason by the common law That if any person or persons shal be attainted of high Treason by the course of the common laws or statutes of this Realme in euery such case euery such attainder by the cōmon law shal be of as good strēgth value force effect as if it had bin done by authoritie of Parliament And the king his heires and successors shall haue as much aduantage by such attainder as well of vses rights entries conditions and possessions reuersions remainders and all other things as if it had béene done and declared by authoritie of Parliament and shal be deemed and adiudged in actuall and reall possession of the lands tenements hereditaments vses goods chattels and all other things of the offendors so attainted which his Highnesse ought lawfully to haue and which they so béeing attainted ought or might lawfully loose and forfeit if the attainder had béene done by the authoritie of Parliament without any office or inquisition to be found of the same Any Law Statute c. notwithstanding Sauing to all and euery perfect and persons and bodies politique and their heires assignes and successors and euery of them other than such person and persons which shall be attainted of high Treason and their heires and assignes and euery of them and all and euery other person and persons claiming by them or any of them or to the vses of any of them after the said Treasons committed all such right title vse possession entrie reuersions remainders interests conditions fees offices rents annuities commons leases and all other commodities profits and hereditaments whatsoeuer they or any of them should might or ought to haue had if this Act had neuer bin made 34 Because through corruption or negligent kéeping the Records of attainders of Treasons happen to be many times impaired blemished or otherwise to be defectiue St. 29. El. 2. therefore by a Statute made an̄ 29. El. it was ordained That no Record of attainder that now is of any person or persons No record of attainder shall be reuersed when the offendor is executed of or for any high Treason where the partie so attainted is or hath béene executed for the same Treason shall by the heire or heires of any such person or by any other whatsoeuer clayming in by from or vnder any such heire or heirs be in any wise hereafter reuersed vndone auoyded or impeached by any plea or for any error whatsoeuer But this Act shall not extend to any Record of attainder of or for any treason vpon which any writ of Error is now depending or which Record is already reuersed repealed or vndone by or for any error matter plea or cause whatsoeuer but the same shall be and remaine as vnto and against that partie at whose suit the same writ of Error is depending or at whose pursuit the same Record hath bin reuersed repealed or vndone his their heires and assignes onely as if this Act had neuer beene had or made Any thing in this Act c. M. 33. H. 8. Dyer 50. 35 If an offence be murder or other felonie by the common lawe Felony made treason by Statute and after the same offence shal be made treason by a Statute Then it is not punishable as murder and felonie but as Treason And no appeale will lie thereof and the Kings pardon of all Treasons will discharge the offendor therein An English traitor subiect to another prince 36 If an English man borne beeing indicted of high Treason P. 13. El. Dyer 300. will vpon his arraignment plead that he will not answer to the said indictment for that he is a subiect and seruant to a forraine Prince and not subiect to the King of England in this case the Court will record a Nihil dicit and he shall haue such iudgement as is vsed in cases of Attainder of Treason An alien borne committeth treason 37 If an alien borne doe commit high Treason in England in the time of peace betwéen England and that Nation where the same alien was borne P. 3. 4. P. M. Dyer 140. H. 33. H. 6. 1 he shal be indicted and arraigned of high treason and shall haue iudgement according to his desert But if it were in the time of warre betwéene England and that nation where the said alien was borne then the alien shall be ransomed and not arraigned Ioyning the kings armes with his owne 38 An Earle of this Realme was attainted of high treason
said master or mistresse go away with the said caskets iewels mony or cattels or any part thereof to the intent to steale the same defraud his or their said master or mistresse thereof contrary to the trust confidence in him or thē put by his or their master or mistresse or els being in the seruice of his said master or mistresse without assent or commaundement of his master or mistresse hee imbesill the same caskets iewels money goods or cattels or any part thereof or otherwise conuert the same to his owne vse with like purpose to steale it if the said caskets iewels money goods or cattels that any such seruant shall go away with or which he shall imbesill with purpose to steale it as is aforesaid be of the value of forty shillings or aboue then the same false fraudulent and vntrue act shal be from henceforth déemed and adiudged felony and he or they so offending shal be punished as other felons be punished for felonies cōmitted by the course of the common law Prouided alwaies that this act or any thing therein contained shall not in any wise extend or be preiudiciall to any apprētice or apprētices nor to any person being within the age of xviij yéeres going away with his or their masters goods or iewels or otherwise conuerting the same to his or their owne vses during the time of their apprentiship or being within the said age of xviij yeares but that euery apprentice or apprentices such person or persons being within the said age doing or offending contrarie to this act shal be and stand in like case as they and euery of them were before the making of this act If a man do deliuer an obligation to his seruant to receiue xx M. 25. H. 8. Dyer 5. l. and the seruant doth receiue the money of the obligor Receiuing money vpon an obligation and thē goeth away with the same or doth conuert it to his owne vse this is not felony within the compasse of the foresaid stat of 21. H. 8. for the master did not deliuer any goods to his seruant in this case but an obligation which is not valuable but a thing in action and moreouer the money was not deliuered to the seruant by the hands of his master but by the obligor But if one of a mans seruants doth deliuer to another of his seruants goods of the masters being aboue the value of 40. s̄ and he doth go away with it or conuert it to his owne vse this is felony If a man do deliuer to his apprentice wares or marchandises M. 25. H. 8. Dyer 5. to sell at a faire Receiuing money for wares or a market and he selleth them and receiueth the mony and then goeth away with the mony or conuerteth it to his own vse this is not felony by the stat of 21. H. 8. for he had not the mony by the deliuery of his master neyther went he away with the thing that was deliuered vnto him Seruants imbesilling their masters goods after his death 13 By the stat of An̄ 31. H. 6. it was ordained St. 31. H. 6. 1 That executors shall haue a writ out of the Chancery by the aduice of the Chauncelor two chiefe Iustices and the chiefe Baron of the Exchequer with two proclamations returnable in the K. Bench against such houshold seruants of the Testator as haue spoiled or eloigned the goods of their master after the death of the Testator And if the writ be returned serued the defendants make default they shall be attainted of felony and if they appeare they shal be cōmitted to prison there to remaine at the discretion of the Iustices vntill the defendants do answer vnto the said executors in such actions which the said executors will declare against them or any of them by bill or writ for the riot taking and spoiling aforesaid and that the same actions be determined so that such actions be pursued with effect and not slackly to retaine the same persons in prison And if the same persons be enlarged out of prison by the said Iustices then they shal find sufficient sureties to the executors by recognizance to kéepe such daies as they shal haue assigned by the Court. And if the kéeper of the prison whereunto they shal be committed doe let them go at large without order of the Iustices then the said kéeper shall forfeit xl l. to the executors No protection shall lye in any action vpon this statute 14 By the stat of An̄ 14. E. 3. it was accorded Enforcing a prisoner to become an approuer That shirifes shall haue the kéeping of gaoles St. 14. E. 3. 10 as they had wont to haue and put in such kéepers for whom they will answer And if any kéeper of prison or vnder kéeper shall by too great dures of imprisonment and paine cause any prisoner which he hath in his custody to become an approuer against his will and is thereof attainted he shall be adiudged a felon 15 By the stat of an̄ 5. El. it was enacted Egyptians that euery person persons which shal be séene or found within this realme of England or Wales St. 5. El. 20. in any cōpany of vagabonds commonly called or calling themselues Egyptians or counterfeiting transforming or disguising thēselues by their apparell speech or other behauiour like vnto such vagabonds commonly called or calling themselues Egyptians so shall or doe remaine continue in the same by the space of one moneth then the same person or persons shall be déemed iudged a felon and felons and shall suffer paines of death losse of lands goods as in cases of felony by the order of the common lawes of this realme Triall and shall vpon triall of them or any of them be tried in the countrey and by the inhabitants of the county or place where he or they shall be apprehended or taken and not per medietatem linguae No Clergy and shall loose the priuiledge and benefit of Sanctuary and Clergy Prouided Xiiij. yeares That this act shall not in any wise extend to any child or children being within the age of 14. yeares St. 8. H. 6. 12. 16 By the stat made An. 8. H. 6. it was ordained That if any Record Imbesilling of Records or parcell of the same Writ Returne Pannell Proces Warrant of Atturney in the Courts of Chauncery Exchequer the one Bench or the other or the Treasury be willingly stolne taken away withdrawne or auoided by any Clerke or other person by cause wherof any iudgement be reuersed such stealer taker away withdrawer or auoider their procurors counsellors abbettors being thereof indicted and by proces thereupon made therof duly conuict by their owne confession or by enquest to be taken of lawfull men wherof the one halfe shal be of the men of any court of the same courts and the other halfe of other shal be iudged for
writeth That he which is appelled of the déed doth come and defend all manner of felony and that the peace of the king is not broken whatsoeuer is against the K. peace and the death whatsoeuer is obiected against him and that he doth put himselfe vpon the countrey of good and euill that he is not guilty thereof if he do chuse the country Or that he is ready to defend himselfe by his body against the appellant as the kings court shall consider for if he will simply say that he will defend himselfe as the kings court shall consider vnlesse he will say more he shal not be defended for the kings court must not instruct him in what manner he ought to defend himselfe and if he doe say that he is ready to defend himselfe either by his body or by the countrey as the kings court shall consider he séemeth thereby to take from himselfe election And the kings court ought not to compell him to the one more then to the other nor to inforce him how he shall defend himselfe séeing he hath frée choice and therefore he must hold him to one of them But if he make his election to be tried by the countrey it shall not be in his choice what countrey he will take Fi. Cor. 121 83 A writ of Appeale shall abate for false Latine or for lacke of forme Pleas to the writ in appeal as in a writ of Appeale this word Habeas did want and therfore the appeale abated without amendment In an appeale brought against a principall and accessorie of the death of A. B. of C. in the County of D. the accessory pleaded 18. El. Dyer 348. that there was no such A. B. at the time of the writ brought neither was there euer any such as the writ supposeth and demaunded iudgement of the writ and this was adiudged a good plea in abatement of the writ if there were no such A. B. in the said County of D. though there was one at that time of the name of A. B. in another County Or if the said A. B. dyed before this appeale commenced 84 In an appeale of Rape the writ shall be The forme of the writ of appeale of Rape ad respondendum appellanti secundum formam statuti quare vxorem suam rapuit and not vnde eum appellat secundum formam statuti because the statute doth not giue the appeale for the appeale was at the common Law but hée ought to answere according to the Statute to this intent that he shall not wage battaile for the Statute sayth St. 6. R. 2. 6 Ad duellum vadiandum minimè recipiatur And though in his writ of appeale of Rape he doth not vse these words felonicè Rapuit yet is the writ good notwithstanding that for in this word Rapuit felony is implied If in an appeale of Rape the writ hath not this word Rapuit 3. Eli. Dyer 202. it shal abate Rapuit materiall although it hath words amounting to the same effect as carnaliter cognouit such like S. Felony by Statute 4. 7. H. 7. 6 Co. li. 4. 47. 85 One shall not haue diuers writs of Appeale Not two appeales for one offēce against one person depending at one time against another of one felony But yet before the writ be abated it is requisite that the court be satisfied that both those writs were pursued by the plaintife which must be proued by some act that the plaintife hath done as if he hath appeared to them both and counted vpon them for notwithstanding that one of them hath bin deliuered of record to the shirife to serue yet séeing that may bée done by a stranger as well as by the plaintife it shall be no conclusion to the plaintife to say that the said writ so deliuered of record was not his sute And the like law is 4. H. 6. 15. if an appeale by bill be commenced in the county before the shirife and the Coroners and is remoued out of the county into a court of record and there depending the plaintife doth purchase another appeale by writ this appeale by writ shal abate But it is otherwise if the appeal by writ be purchased before the appeale by bill remoued out of the county 10. H. 4. 4. for there the Court ought to send for the appeale in the county without abating the appeale which is cōmenced by writ and this is more worthy and of an higher nature then is the appeale by bill commenced in the county which is but as a plaint vntill after it be remoued for it is a common course in the K. Bench when an appeale is depending there by Writ to send for the appeale cōmenced by bill in the county and yet if the appellant be nonsute in his appeale depending in the county his Writ shall abate 86 In an appeale brought against two Pleading of one in appeale against two one of them may plead 21. E. 4. 71. 7. H. 4. 27. that his companion that was named with him in the Writ died at such a place before the Writ purchased Or that there was none such in Rerum natura as the other which was named with him in the Writ the day of the Writ purchased for if he that doth appeare should not plead these pleas there is none to plead them and in the foresaid cases and in all other cases of appeales against seuerall persons if the appeale doth abate against one of them 9. H. 4. 2. it doth abate against them all 87 In an appeale if the def do plead that the plaintife is misnamed The plaintife misnamed 9. H. 5 1 if the plaintife will confesse it the couin shal be examined viz. whether he doth it by couin betwéene him and the plaintife or not But if it be proued true that the plaintife is misnamed the appeale shall abate 88 In an appeale the defendant may haue two or thrée pleas to the writ Two or thrée pleas to the writ as the tenant shal haue in an assise But he must take care that one of them be not contrary to the other 89 To make a barre in appeale Barres in appeale is to run ouer the foresaid title to whom appeales be giuen and according thereunto to frame his plea in barre for if an appeale be commenced by one that hath no title to maintaine it that is good matter to plead in barre against the appellant As if a woman doe bring an appeale of the death of her husband it is a good plea to plead 28. E. 3. 9. 27. Ass p. 3 50. Ed. 3. 15● that after the death of her husband she hath married another husband Appeale of death brought by the wife Or that shee was neuer accoupled in lawfull marriage to him of whose death shee doth bring the appeale 90 If an appeale of death be brought by the heire Barres in appeale of death
whereof he pleadeth that he was attainted but of that felony wherof he is attainted he shall not answer any more after that he hath the K. pardon thereof 52 A man attainted of felony is he Who is sayd attainted and who conuict of felonie which vpon his arraignement submitting himselfe to be tried by the country is found guilty of felony by the verdict of xij men or doth confesse the felony in court of Record before the Iudge vpon his arraignment or is indicted of felony and for default of apparance is outlawed and in any of the said thrée cases hath his iudgement of death A man conuict of felonie is he who being indicted of felonie vpon his arraignement doth submit himselfe to be tried by the country and is found guiltie of felonie by the verdict of twelue men and then before iudgement praieth his clergie and hath his clergie and is burned in the hand This difference there is betwéene a man attainted of felonie and a man cōuicted of felony as touching their arraignments againe for other offences for a man attainted of felonie shall not be arraigned againe of any other offences whatsoeuer whether clergy were allowable in them or not vnlesse it be in some speciall cases before declared because there can no more be recouered of him than is recouered neither can he forfeit more than he hath forfeited But because of a clerke conuict there may be more recouered than is recouered he may forf more than he hath forfeted therfore by the stat of An. 8. El. 18. El. it was ordaind St. 8. El. 4. St. 18. El. 6. S. Appeales 56. 57. That euery person which shal vpon his arraignment for any felony be alowed his clergie shal answer to all former felonies as though no such admission of clergie had béene If a man that is indicted of piracie doth stand mute or wil not answer directly or c. whereupon iudgement of paine for t dure is giuen against him but hée is not put to execution and after by a generall pardon by act of parliament 14. El. Dyer 308. all contempts pains and executions be pardoned but all piracies bee except in this case the same party may be indicted and arraigned againe for another robberie vpon the sea or piracie committed vpon the sea at the same time that hée did the first ❧ Mainprise and Bayle 1 WHen the defendant in case of felony is taken and arrested he will ofttimes desire to be let to baile or mainprise and therefore it is to be considered in what cases the prisoner by the law is mainpernable and in what not In what case a prisoner is mainpernable in what not There be two sorts of offendors in felony viz. the Principall and the Accessory The Accessorie is repleuisable by the common law vntil the Principall be attainted but not after as it appeareth by Bracton Britton and diuers iudgements But sithence that time the law hath bin put in vre to the contrary 40. E. 3. 42 43. Ed. 3. 17. 27 Ass p. 10 2. 3. P. M. Dy. 120 St. 3. E. 1. 15 viz. That after plea pleaded notwithstanding the principal be attainted yet the accessorie shal be let to mainprise The accessory let to mainprise and though it be in appeale of death And the reason is because the stat of W. 1. affirmeth expresly That they which be indicted of receit of théeues or felons or of commandement or force or aid of the felony committed shal be let out by sufficient suertie which stat is expounded so fauorably towards the accessory that those be vsed to be let to baile which be indicted of abetment consent or procuremēt And yet such accessories be not expresly contained in the said stat Register fo 270. And so the accessorie as well in case of the death of a man as in other felony is to bee let to mainprise 25. E. 3. 44. 44. E. 3. 38. 21. E. 4. 71. 21. Ed. 4. 25. 2 The principall in case of the death of a man is not to be let to mainprise The principal in death either by the common law nor by the stat but in some speciall cases for if an appeal of death be commenced which is not grounded vpon an indictment but is suggested to be begun vpō malice and that some others were indicted of the same persons death yet because the appeale was of the death of a man and the malice suggested was not confessed of the K. or appellants part the Iust wold not let the appellée to mainprise 48. E. 3. 22. And so it séemeth that notwithstanding it bée an appeale of death yet if there be no indictment to affirme the same appeal The principal in appeale of death let to mainprise the Iust vpon the consideration aforesaid 2. 3. P. M. Dy. 120 or such like may let the defendant to mainprise though he be appealed as principall 3 An Appeale of death was remooued out of the countie into the K. Bench by a Certiorari 48. Ed. 3. 22. a Scire fac ' was sued against the plaintife in the appeal which was returned Nihil and so it was returned vpon the Sicut alias And thereupon the Iust considering that it was a mischiefe to the plaintife to loose his suit and to yéeld damages whereas he was neuer warned and peraduenture hath somewhat in another countie and on the other side it was inconuenient for the appellée to remaine continually in prison The principall in appeale of death let to mainprise therefore they awarded another Scire fac ' against the appellant returnable at a certaine day before which day they would bee aduised what was by law to be done and in the meane time they did let the appellée to mainprise Excommunication in the plaintife 4 If in an Appeale the def do plead Excommunication in the plaintife the appellee shal be let to mainprise from day to day vntil the plaintife be absolued 3. As p. 12. 13. E. 4. 8. though it be in an Appeale of death or otherwise the appellée should remain in prison vntill the pl. were assoiled which peraduenture will neuer be And in respect of this mischiefe it was ordained by the stat of 3. H. 7. St 3. H. 7. 1. That he which is within the yeare acquited of murder at the K. suit shal be sent to prison againe or otherwise let to baile vntill the end of the yere within which time the partie is to haue an Appeale if he will 5 Because Sherifs and others did take kéepe in prison some persons accused of felony and presently did let out to baile such as were not repleuisable and kept in prison such as were mainpernable to the intent to get of the one and to grieue the other And forasmuch as it was not before determined which persons were mainpernable Not bailable by the common law and which were not
there shall be assigned good lawfull men in euery Countie to keepe the peace and at the said assignements mention shal be made that such as shal be indited or taken by the said wardens shal not be let to mainprise by the Sherifs nor by any other if they be not mainpernable by the law Nor that such persons indited shal be deliuered Bailement of offendors by sherifes and others but according to the course of the common law And the Iustices assigned to deliuer the gaoles shall haue power to deliuer the Gaoles of those that be indited before the gardeins of the peace And the same gardeins shall send before the said Iust their inditements And the same Iustices shall haue power to enquire of Sherifes Gaolers and others in whose custodie such persons indited shal be if they deliuered or let to mainprise any so indited which be not mainpernable to punish the same Sherifes Gaolers and others if they haue done any thing contrarie to this Statute This statute of 4. E. 3. doth make no mention that the Iustices of Gaole deliuerie shall punish sherifs and others according to the foresaid statute of West as the other statute of 27. E. 1. doth but ordaineth generally that they shal be punished without determining in what maner And yet it is to be intended that they shal be punished according to the forme of the said Stat. of West 1. And moreouer the said Iustices of Gaole deliuerie may punish them by the common law 25. E. 3. 39. for a negligent escape Where mainprise is a negligent escape for it is a negligent escape to let one to maineprise who by law is not mainpernable And one Iustice did in that case set a fine vpon the Sherife for the like Bailement a hundred shillings 16 In all cases where a statute doth ordaine that an offendors bodie shal be imprisoned at the Kings pleasure Imprisonmēt at the Kings pleasure the prisoner cannot be deliuered or let to maineprise vntil the King hath signified his pleasure of him As if one be imprisoned for going or riding armed contrary to the Statute of Northampton made Anno 2. E. 3. 3. 24. Ed. 3. 42. 17 There is a difference betwéene bailement in felonie and bailement in a personall action The differēce betwéene bailement in felonie and in a personall action for in felonie the bailement shall containe a certaine summe of money to be forfeited if the prisoner doe not appeare at a day prefixed And in a personall action it is but fineable 21. H. 7. 20. And the bailement in felonie is Ad standum rectum de latrocinio praedicto secundum legem consuetudinem regni nostri Angliae as it doth appeare by the writs of Manucaptione in the register which doe imply as much as they that haue him to baile shall not onely cause him to appeare but also to answer 18 If one doe find mainprise in Court it is presently matter of Record Mainprise is matter of Record 8. Ed. 4. 5. though it be not entered into the Roll vntil the next Terme Confession of the Offence WHen a prisoner is appealed or indited of treason or felonie and brought to the barre to be arraigned thereof and his inditement is read vnto him he is asked by the Court what he will say vnto it Then either hée doth confesse the offence and the inditement to bée true or he estrangeth himselfe from the offence and pleadeth Not guiltie An offendour pleadeth one of thrée pleas or else hée doth answer indirectly and so in effect he standeth mute and maketh no answer Of the which later two I will intreate héereafter 2 And therefore beginning with the prisoners Confession of the offence vpon his arraignement That confession may be made in two sorts Confession in two sorts and to two seuerall ends whereof the one is he may confesse the offence whereof he is indited openly in the Court before the Iudge and that he hath committed that act whereof he is indited and arraigned and submit himselfe to the censure and iudgement of the Lawe Which Confession of the offence by the prisoner himselfe in person is the most assured answer and best satisfaction that can be deliuered to the Iudge to condemne the offendour and to all the hearers to giue approbation thereof So that the said Confession do procéede fréely and of his owne good will without menace Confession must be trée and without menace threats rigor or other extreamities For if the Iudge doe perceiue that the offendors confession doth growe vpon either of those extreamities he ought not to record the confession but to cause the prisoner pleade to the offence not guiltie As a woman was indited for the felonious stealing of bread to the value of two shillings 27. As p. 40 and being arraigned thereof she confessed the felonie and saide that she did it by the commaundement of her husband and the Iudges for pitie would not record her confession but caused her to pleade not guiltie to the felonie whereupon a Iurie being charged it was found that she did steale the bread by the compulsion of her husband against her will by which meanes she was discharged And in like sort if the Iudges doe perceiue that the offendour doth confesse the offence in mistaking of the Lawe they may shew him that fauour as not to record his confession but cause him to pleade to the inditement not guiltie As a man being indited of the death of another man pleaded that he and one B. hauing a quarrell 22. As p. 71 and fighting each with the other the party of whose death he was indited came betwéene them to part the fray and he against his will by misfortune gaue him a blowe whereof hée died For though by the Lawe this was felonie in him being fighting and intending to hurt or kill B. yet he did mistake the Lawe therein and did not take it to be so for that his quarrell was not towardes him which he slue but to B. who had no hurt And further this confession of the Offence is not so penall to the prisoner though he doth it fréely and without menace or other extreamitie that he is thereby presently attainted or condemned of that felonie but in many cases he may be saued from death the most bitter rigour of the Lawe by the benefit of his cleargie or by the Kings pardon He that confesseth doth become an Approuer 3 The other kinde of confession of felonie that is made by a prisoner at his arraignement openly in court before the Iudge is when the prisoner doth confesse the inditement to be true and that he hath committed the offence whereof he is indited and then doth become an approuer viz. an accuser of others who haue committed the same offence whereof he is indicted or other offences with him and then doth request the Iudge to haue a Coroner assigned vnto him to whome hée
may make relation of those offences and of the whole circumstances thereof Confession before the Coroner 4 There is also a third kinde of confession made by an offendor in felonie which is not in Court before the Iudge as the other two be but before the Coroner in a church or priuiledged place whereupon the offendor by the antient Lawe of this Realme is to make his abiuration out of the Realme Of which approuing and abiuration I will write in the two next chapters Approuer AN Approuer is a felon that hath committed a felonie Who is an Approuer and after confesseth the same and then doth appeale and accuse others who were helpers or coadiutours with him to commit the same felonie which thing being done he is thereby called an Approuer who in latine is termed Probator for that he must prooue that which is contained in his appeale or accusation And the proofe must be by battell or by the verdict of twelue men at the choice of him who is appealed And if he doe prooue it the kings of this Realme haue vsed to graunt him pardon of his life Britton because he doth fight for the peace of the Realme and doth deliuer the countrie of malefactors for he is to make couenant or promise to the Iudge who will be sutor to obtaine his pardon how many offendors he will conuince and accordingly he is to vanquish them in battell attaint them by verdict or cause them to flée and so by that meanes to become outlawes But yet he shall be banished the Realme Bracton de coron̄ c. 34. and not continue therein An Approuer banished though he would finde pledges for his good abearing 19. H. 6. 47. 12. Ed. 4. 10 Fi. Cor. 231 387. 2 A man imprisoned for felonie may approue of treason if he will Of what offēces approuement may be and in like sort he that is imprisoned for treason may approue of felonie if he wil for when the Iustices doe admit him to approue they doe sweare him vpon a booke to approue of all felonies and treasons that he doth knowe And yet many doe affirme that approuement must be onely of the thing whereof the approuer is indicted Bracton de coron̄ c. 33. 25. Ed. 3. 39 and of none other and of that treason or felonie which he himselfe with others did commit and that approuement of all other offences is voide As if one will appeale an other for robbing of him viz. of the Approuer it is voide Or if one will appeale an other for procuring the saide approuer to commit a felonie Or that where he the saide Approuer had committed a felonie the appellée knowing thereof did feloniously receiue him and comfort him 10. E. 4. 14. 40. Ass p. 39 it is voide because those offences hée could not commit for he could not robbe himselfe nor be accessorie to himselfe Sed de hijs quaere Quaere Séeing the approuer is sworne to approue of all the felonies and treasons that he doth know Approuement in an Indictment and not Appeale 3 A man may approue in an indictment of felonie 11. H. 7. 5. Fi. Cor. 113 but not in an appeale of felonie for if he should approue in an appeale of felonie he should thereby delay the Plaintife in the appeale to haue execution of him And in like sort if one that is indicted of felonie doth become an approuer and after an appeale is sued against him vpon the same indictment Fi. Cor. 442 in this case he shall surcease to procéede any further in his approuement But vpon an indictment of felonie the prisoner which is arraigned may confesse the felonie pray a Coroner and so approue And though some haue thought that if a prisoner be not indicted but doth stand at the barre as one that is to be deliuered by Proclamation if he will refuse the benefit thereof confesse a felonie Fi. Cor. 231 and pray to become an approuer that he shall be thereunto receiued And some others haue béene of opinion that if a man be in prison but for suspition of felony he may confesse the felony before a Coroner and become an approuer But that cannot be by the Lawe for a man cannot be attainted by his confession if he be not indicted or appealed thereof before and it is alwaies requisite for him which shal become an approuer An Approuer must confesse the felonie that his confession be made vpon such matter vpon which the Iudge at all times at his pleasure may giue iudgement to attaint him Before whom one may approue 4 One may become an approuer before those who haue authoritie to assigne him a Coroner as the Iustices of the Kings Bench the Iustices in Eire and the Iustices of gaole deliuerie But so can not Iustices of Peace and therefore a man can not become approuer before them 2. H. 4. 19. 9. H. 4. 1. Neither can a man become an approuer in a Court Baron before the Steward and Sutors Nor in the Countie court before the Shirife and Suitors Nor before any other speciall Iudge vnlesse his Commission doth extend thereunto How an Approuer shall vse himselfe 5 He that will become an approuer must when he is at the barre before the Iudge confesse the felonie whereof he is arraigned and pray that a Coroner may be assigned vnto him to heare his approuement or appeale against others for without confession of the offence whereof he is arraigned Fi. Cor. 441 2. H. 7. 3. 21. Ed. 3. 18 19. H. 6. 47. Fi. Cor. 440 he cannot pray a Coroner No approuement after pleading And this confession must be at the beginning before hée hath pleaded any plea to the contrary therof For if he will pleade not guilty he cannot after waiue that plea and confesse the felonie and pray a Coroner And the reason is because it cannot be intended that hée will proue that which he hath affirmed against others when he hath shewed himselfe so false and vnconstant in his answer before for he is called an Approuer viz. Probator to the intent that he shall prooue that which he alleadgeth against others whereof there is small hope to be conceiued when in the beginning he hath made a lie of himselfe for if he will haue his approuement allowed for good An Approuer must tell truth he must alwaies be found to speake trueth without any lying And when the Court doth perceiue that he hath made a lie 25. Ed. 3. 42 they presently take his approuement from him and giue iudgement that he shall be hanged As an approuer did appeale diuers and the Shirife and Coroners did testifie that there were none such in that countie and without further inquirie the approuer was adiudged to be hanged And if vpon the appeale of an approuer 21. H. 6. 34 processe be awarded against those which he doth appeale and the Shirife returneth non sunt inuenti
iudgement shall be giuen that the approuer shall be hanged And in like sort it is Fi. Cor. 456 if an approuer doe appeale seuerall persons in seuerall counties and processes be awarded against them vntill some of them be attainted and some of them depend in processe not attainted and the Iustices be informed by credible persons of the same countie wherein they were appealed that there be no such men to their knowledge in rerum natura the approuer shall be hanged An approuer did appeale two men in London and proces was awarded against them and it was returned that there were no such men dwelling in the city of London and the approuer agréeing to the same returne Fi. Cor. 460 saide that they were dwelling within the city of Lincolne and he was not thereunto receiued but was adiudged to be hanged So that if there be any falshood or lying in the approuer be it before his approuement or after and that the court do perceiue it they will take his appealing from him and adiudge him to be hanged And if they do otherwise Approuement after pleading not guiltie it is more of fauour than of right 12. Ed. 4. 10 for of fauour the court may allow the prisoner to waiue his plea of Not guiltie and to confesse the felonie and to become an approuer 21. H. 6. 35 And if an approuer doe appeale one who by his owne confession is out of the Realme he shall be hanged for the appellée cannot be attainted at his sute for though he should be outlawed yet he may reuerse it at his returne for that cause 6 When a prisoner vpon his arraignement doth confesse the felonie An Approuers othe and praieth a Coroner which is assigned vnto him by the court he must be sworn in the same court before his departing to appeale of all felonies and treasons which he doth knowe and the court shall appoint him a number of daies wherein to make his appeale in the which daies and in euery of them hée ought to appeale for if thrée dayes be appointed and in two of them he doth appeale 12. Ed. 4. 10. 26. As p. 19. Fit Cor. 439 and the third day he will affirme to the Coroner that he can say no more and the Coroner doth report the same to the court iudgement shall be giuen that he shall be hanged 7 An approuer shall haue wages of the King euery day that is assigned him by the court to approue in viz. a penny a day And some do affirme An Approuers wages that he shall haue no wages Fi. Cor. 439 vntill he hath made his proofe by vanquishing some appellée in battell or by conuicting him by verdict and then he shall haue wages of the King for euery day 8 When a Coroner is assigned to an approuer An Approuer set at liberty the approuer must he let out of prison to the intent that hee may approue or appeale of his owne frée will being at liberty without any dures for if it be by dures when he commeth againe before the Iustices hée may rehearse his appeale and disauow it for that cause which shal be tried by the examination of the Coroner vpon his othe Fi. Cor. 118 169. 255. And if the Coroner do say that the same appeale was not by dures the appeale shall stand and the approuer shall be hanged And when the approuer hath made his appeale before the Coroner he shall come againe before the Iustices and rehearse his appeale before them for they will not reade his appeale vnto him and if hée doe faile in the rehearsall of his appeale 26. As p. 19 in anie word otherwise than the Coroner hath recorded it he shall be hanged as if in his rehearsall he doe say that there was a blacke horse stollen where it it was recorded by the Coroner a redde Horse An Approuers appeale must be certaine For the Approuer must declare the thing certainely with all the circumstaunces thereof without any varying or alteration Bracton and he must know the person whom he hath appealed when hée is brought into question for if he know him not it is to be presumed that they were neuer companions Processe against the appellees 9 After an Approuer hath made his appeale before the Coroner if the appellees be dwelling in the Countie where the appeale is made the Coroner hath authoritie to award processe against them vntill the Exigent and to direct his processe to the Shirife to serue But so he cannot doe 29. Ed. 3. 42 if the appellées be dwelling in another countie for then he must not award processe against them but referre it to the iustices before whom he is to record the same appeale And they may award processe as the Iustices of the Kings bench and Iustices in Eire may do who may award processe by the common law and Iustices of Gaole Deliuerie by the statute De Appellatis made Anno 28. Ed. 1. which hath ordained St. 28. Ed. 1. That whosoeuer shal be appealed by any Approuers remaining in the Gaoles which the Iustices of Gaole deliuerie shall deliuer in what places soeuer of the Realme the persons appealed shall remaine immediatly the Shirife of that countie where such persons appealed be conuersant or may be found shall be commaunded by the Kings Writs vnder the testimonie of the same Iustices that he shall apprehend those persons appealed and conuey them to the Gaole where the approuers by whose appeale they be apprehended be imprisoned And the Shirife or Gaoler of that prison shall receiue them and there they shall answer before the same Iustices And if they put themselues vpon the country the Iustices shall send by a iudiciall Writ to the Shirife of the Countie where the felonie was committed that hée shall returne an Enquest before them at the place where the approuers do remaine at a certaine day Pleas for the Appellee against the Approuer 10 It is a good exception for the appellée in his owne defence to alleage against the approuer that the approuer is a person attainted of treason 11. As p. 27. Fi. Cor. 387 443 21. Ed. 3. 17 or felonie and to shew how viz. either by verdict outlawrie or abiuration or in any other manner for such a person is out of the Lawe and so disabled to appeale or accuse others And the same lawe is if the approuer be a clerke conuict for hee commeth now too late to confesse a felonie 17. Ed. 3. 13. when hée hath pleaded not guilty thereunto before which was found false at his owne sute and therefore it cannot be intended that the thing hée saith now is true And although hée had his clergie vpon confession of the felonie An Approuer conuict of felonie yet hée shall not now become an approuer for that he saide nothing at that time when hee ought to haue approued and therefore the Lawe cannot intend that hée hath
the sayd auntient law for they would not deliuer the prisoner vnto the Ordinarie vntill hée was indicted and also arraigned and that it was enquired by an Enquest of Office whether hée were guiltie or not In which case if he were found not guiltie they would discharge him and if he were found guiltie his goods should bée forfeited his lands taken into the Kings hands and his bodie deliuered to the Ordinarie And the cause of chaunging this law was that the Ordinarie might take greater charge of the prisoner being now indicted than before and to benefit the King by the forfeiture of the prisoners goods and to bréed a greater feare in Clerkes after that they should not offend Which alteration was obserued for law vntill the raigne of King Henry the sixt at which time the Iudges would not admit a prisoner to demaund his Clergie vpon his arraignment but put himselfe first to answer to the Felonie and if hée were found guiltie of the Felonie at his owne suit then to heare him demaund his Clergie and not before 3. H. 7. 1. 12. which is a more reasonable law than the former for before hee should haue forfeited his goods vpon an Enquest of Office whereunto hée could haue no challenge and now he shal be tryed at his owne suit and shall haue his challenge to the Enquest and then if he be found guiltie hée shall forfeit his goods and for the sauing of his life and his lands hée is to pray his Clergie Which hath bin vsed euer sithence and is obserued for law at this time vnlesse the prisoner himselfe will refuse the benefit thereof and pray to haue his booke without hearing the verdict As if a prisoner after an Enquest is charged vpon him Clergy demanded before verdict and before their returne againe will say that he is a Clerke and desire his booke at his perill in this case the Court hath allowed him his Clergie and yet after hath receiued a verdict as well in fauour of life as in fauour of the King for if he be found not guiltie the prisoner shall be discharged and if he bée found guiltie the King shall haue his goods as forfeit And the request of his booke in that case is more for the prisoners disaduantage than the Kings for it may bée a meane that the Iurie vnderstanding thereof will the rather find him guiltie of the felonie than otherwise they would haue done 26. Ass p. 19 33 If a prisoner doe say that hée is no Clerke Denying to be a Clerke and yet is yet after if before iudgement hée doe pray his Clergie where Clergie is allowable by the law and then doth read as a Clerke hée shall haue his Clergie notwithstanding his former words But it hath béene a question Whether clergie is allowable without request whether the Iudges ought to allow any man his Clergie without praying of it though the offendor be indicted by the name of Priest Fi. Cor. 254 Clerke c. or that by some other meanes the Iudges themselues doe know that hée is a Clerke or that without praying of his Clergie they shall giue iudgement of death against him And in this case some doe affirme that if the prisoner doth not pray his Clergie hée shall not haue it though the Iudge doth vpon his owne priuat knowledge vnderstand that hée is a Clerke for the Iudge must in those cases procéed according to his iudiciall knowledge and as by record things bée found proued and tryed before him and not according to his owne naturall knowledge And they bée the rather so induced to thinke by the words of the aforesayd statute of 1. Edw. 6. St. 1. E. 6. 12 which ordayned That a Péere of the Realme shall vpon request haue the benefit of his Clergie and so inferre that without request he shall not haue it nor any other without request which is to haue it vpon request 34 The temporall Court shall be Iudge to allow or disallow of Clergy Who shall allow of clergy and not the Ordinary 15. H. 7. 9. for it was entred into the roll of the court legit vt Clericus ideo tradatur Ordinario by which words it doth appear that the court doth giue allowance therof for the felony being the act which is cōmitted is temporal and the Iudge which did commit him to the Ordinary is temporal so is the authority wherby he did commit him And the Ordinary should haue bin punished if before the stat of 18. Eli. St. 18. El. 6. he had letten to baile or at liberty any prisoner cōmitted to him or if he had imprisoned him too straitly or too easily or would not haue suffered him to haue made his purgation and in that case the king might haue sent his Writ vnto the Ordinarie commaunding him to suffer his prisoner to make his purgation or might haue pardoned him or set him at liberty Fitz. Cor. 44. 17 without making his purgation and if one read as a Clerke and yet the Ordinarie will refuse him notwithstanding hee shall haue the benefite of his Clergie and on the other side if the Ordinarie will say that hee doth read as a Clerke whereas in truth hee doth not read as a Clerke the Court must giue iudgement that hée shall bee hanged and cause execution to bee done of him And further to prooue that the Temporall Court is Iudge of the reading the Court doth appoint the verse or place to the prisoner to read and not the Ordinarie And also doth set a fine vpon the Ordinary 34. H. 6. 49. 21. Ed. 4. 21. 9. E. 4. 28. for saying that the prisoner doth read as a Clerk where he doth not which the court could not do if the reading were referred to the Ordinarie A felon doth read vnder the gallowes 35 If a felon doth not read as a Clerke before the Iudge at the time of his arraignment whereupon he is adiudged to be hanged yet in fauor of life 34. H. 6. 49. if hée arraignment whereupon he is adiudged to be hanged yet in fauor of life if hée do demand it at another time vnder the gallows if any of the Iudges do passe that way and doth read as a Clerke he shall haue the benefit of his Clergie although there be no Ordinary there to demaund him But this is in case where the felon is arraigned and iudged before the Iust of the K. Bench 3. 4. El. Dy. fo 205. or else in case where he is arraigned and iudged before the Iust of gaole deliucrie and it is entred by the Court non legit vt Clericus and then for some cause he is repried vntill the next Session and then againe he is demanded if he can read and then he can and doth read in this case he shall haue his Clergy in fauor of life And though he was taught to read in the gaole this shall saue his life but the
gaoler shal be punished for it 36 The Court vpon the suit of the prisoner may allow him the priuiledge of his Clergie in the absence of the Ordinarie or without the aduice of the Ordinarie or without demanding of the Ordinary vtrū legit vt Clericus an non 9. E. 4. 28 and so the court néed not expect the presence of the Ordinary if he faile of his attendance for the court doth vse the Ordinary but as a minister in this cause to confirme their iudgement in allowance of Clergie and to heare his opinion if the prisoner be worthy of Clergy or not To what vse the Ordinarie is imployed Because the maner and order is for the Ordinary to deliuer a booke to the Iust who open it and assigne the verse that the prisoner shall read and the Ordinary receiuing the booke of the Iustices doth come to the prisoner and command him to read that verse which béeing done the court doth demand of the Ordinary vtrū legit vt Clericus an non and the Ordinarie doth answer legit or non legit and then the court doth allow that which the Ordinarie saith if it be true or otherwise not And moreouer the Ordinarie was in former times vsed by the Iustices to another purpose viz. to know if the prisoner were within orders or not which the temporall court could not take knowledge of for if he were within orders he should haue had the priuiledge of the church whether he did read or not by shewing the letters of his orders or by the Ordinaries certificat vntill the stat of anno 28. H. 8. St. 28. H. 8. 1 was made by the which it was ordained That such as be within holy orders shal be and stand vnder the paines and damages for their offences and be vsed and ordered to all intents Clerks within Orders shal be vsed as others be as other persons not being within holy orders shall be And further it may be that the offendor hath bin a committer of sacriledge an heretike or an Apostata or some other grieuous offendor so that the court hearing the Ordinary willing to refuse him would also refuse him What is reading as a Clerke 37 There is a difference of reading for it may be that the prisoner may read two or thrée words of the verse that is assigned vnto him by the court but not the whole verse which is a kind of reading 9. Ed. 4. 28. but not such a reading as a Clerke ought to make for if hée will read as a Clerke hée must read the whole verse But although at the first hée beginneth with spelling and after doth read as a Clerke yet in fauour of life he shal be allowed for a Clerke and the forme of entry vpon request of Clergie 4. Eliz. Dyer 215. is Et tradito ei libro legit vt clericus 38 Though the Court may giue allowance of Clergie in the Ordinaries absence yet that shall not excuse the Ordinary of his attendance The Ordinaries attendāc● in proper person or by his deputie vpon paine of a fine to be assessed vpon him by the Court which deputy ought to haue and bring with him sufficient letters of the Ordinarie vnder his seale testifying the authoritie which the Ordinary hath giuen him 25. E. 3. 40. And though his warrant be but to challenge Clerkes arraigned and not Clerks conuicted yet the warrant is good ynough and shal be allowed Contention who is Ordinarie And if two seuerall persons do claime to be Ordinaries the Court ought not to allow either of them but must write to the Metropolitan to make certificat who of right ought to be Ordinarie Fi. Cor. 432 39 He that is indicted by the name of a Clerke A Priest shall haue ●o fetters or appeareth to the Iudge to be a Priest shall not vpon his arraignment stand at the bar in fetters And so was the law in antient time for euery prisoner as Britton Britton reporteth 40 Bigamie in times past was a counterplea to clergy viz. to alledge that he who demandeth the priuiledge of his clergy was maried to such a woman at such a place within such a dioces and that the said woman dyed and that he maried another woman in such a place in the same or another dioces and so hée is Bigamus Or if he hath béene but once maried to say that she which hée maried was a widow and before had bin the wife of such a man which allegation should haue bin tried by the bishop of the dioces where the mariage was alledged to be solemnized And it being certified by the bishop that he was Bigamus the prisoner should haue béene put from his clergie Which was by a Constitution made at the Counsell of Lions as it appeareth by the stat of Bigamie made anno 4. Ed. 1. St. 4. Ed. 1. 5. for before that Counsell of Lions euery man that had bin twice maried or had maried a widow should haue had the priuiledge of clergie But that law was sithence altered by the stat of anno 1. Ed. 6. St. 1. E. 6. 12 wherby it is enacted Bigamus shal haue his Clergie That if any person or persons by this stat or by any other stat or lawes of this realme S. Br. 24. ought to haue or to be admitted to the benefit of his or clergie that the same person or persons shal be from henceforth admitted and allowed to haue his or their clergy although they or any of them haue bin diuers and sundrie times maried to any single woman or single women or to any widow of widowes or to two wiues or mo Any law statute or vsage to the contrarie notwithstanding And though some haue affirmed that the foresaid stat of 1. Ed. 6. St. 1. Ed. 6. was abrogated by a braunch of a stat made 1. 2. P. M. 8. which did repeale all stat prouisions and articles made against the sea of Rome since the xx yere of K. H. 8. and the Pope by his decretals brought in the same exception of Bigamy which was obserued and obeyed as a common law vntill the said stat of 1. E. 6. But that foresaid stat of 1. 2. P. M. 8. was also after repealed by the stat of an 1. El. 1. for the which and some other causes it is agréed and holden for law 3. Eliz. Dyer fol. 201. that the before rehearsed stat of 1. Ed. 6. doth stand and remaine in force and Bigamus shall haue his Clergie 41 It is a good counterplea to him who demaundeth his Clergy to say Another time conuict that he had another time the benefit of his Clergie when he was arraigned of another felony and shew the certainty therof when and where he was arraigned and had his Clergie to demaund iudgement if hée shall haue his Clergie againe Which counterplea was ordayned by the statute of Anno
Coroners will answer He that hath a pardon shal find sureties for his good abearing that he from thenceforth shall beare himselfe well and lawfully And the maineprises shal be sealed and returned into the chancerie within thrée moneths after the end of the said thrée moneths And if hée which hath such Charter will ayd himselfe thereby and hath not found such mainprises or after such mainprise found doth beare himselfe otherwise against the peace than he ought his charter shal be accounted void of no force The good behauiour broken after a pardon 14 A prisoner that was indited outlawed of felonie 3. H. 7. 7. pleadeth the Kings pardon of the same felonie and outlawrie but shewed no writ of allowance testifying that he had found suretie in the Chauncerie according to the foresaid Statute of 10. Ed. 3. neither did he make mention in his plea that he had foūd suretie according to that Statute nor yet did he vouch the Record thereof in the Chauncerie therefore the Iustices had no cause to allow of his Charter of pardon And the same offendor after his pardon graunted was indited before the Iustices of peace of the countie where he dwelt that he did beat and woūd A.B. against the Kings peace and thereof was conuict before the same Iustices of peace by his owne confession which Record of his conuiction was sent into the Kings Bench by the said Iustices of peace and for that he had borne himselfe otherwise than he ought toward the peace his charter of pardon was adnulled he had iudgement of death and was hanged A pardon must agree with the inditement 15 A Charter of pardon ought to agrée with the Indictment in the name surname and addition of the partie to whom the same Charter is graunted to the intent that he may be knowne to be the same person which is indited or otherwise it is not allowable sauing in some speciall cases As 11. H. 4. 3● in appeale of death where the plaintife was non-suit after declaration and the defendant was arraigned at the Kings suit vpon the declaration whereunto he pleaded the Kings pardon which did not agrée with the appeale in the name of him that was slaine Where a charter may vary from the indictment nor in the day but agréed with the inditement in the death of the selfe same man to the which inditement this pardon had before time bin pleaded and allowed And for that it may well be intended of the same death séeing one man cannot haue two deaths it was allowed notwithstanding the variance Two men were outlawed in appeale of murder 28. 29. H. 8. Dy. 34. and they purchased their pardon and had a Scire facias against the Plaintife in the appeale and also a Scire facias against the Lords mediate or immediate and the pardon did not agrée with the inditement in the additions but the parties tooke an auerment that they were the same parties which were indited and an exception was taken to the pardon for the words of the pardon were Pardonauimus c. W.B. L.B. omnes omnimodas vtlagarias versus praefatos W.B. L. B. seu versus eorum alterum promulgatas which words in the premisses of the pardon be ioynt where they should haue been Pardonauimus c. W.B. L.B. eorum alteri because that euery felonie is seuerall and for these seuerall felonies they should haue had seuerall pardons And yet the pardon was allowed If a man be indited of felonie by the name of A.B. yeoman and after the King doth pardon him by the name of A. B. gentleman esquire 20. H. 7. Kel fol. 58. knight or c. all manner of felonies he may plead this pardon and auerre that A. B. yeoman and A. B. gentleman or c. be one person and this pardon will discharge him for it may be he was a yeoman at the time of the inditement and after made gentleman by the King or by some office 4. E. 4. 10 16 When after non-suit in appeale the Kings pardon is allowed it is vsed to enter the pardon and alowance vpon the bill of appeale The pardon and alowance entred vpon the appeale and th●refore if there be any inditement of the same felonie against the defendant it shalbée good for him to cause these words to be entred and indorced vpō the indictmēt viz. Cesset processus faciendus super indictamentum eo quod defendens acquietatus recessit ab Appello 4. Ed. 4. 10 17 All this matter of pardons is in effect to be referred to indictments because the Kings pardon is no plea to the parties appeale A pardon no plea to an appeale for the felon shalbée put to death notwithstanding that But it is a good plea against the King when the appeale is determined And if it be determined by act in law and not by the act of the partie the pardon shall not be allowed without warning of the partie as in appeal the plaintife doth pursue it vntill he hath outlawed the defendant in this case by the Outlawry the appeale is determined and yet if the king doe pardon the defendant the pardon shall not bée allowed vntill hée hath sued a Scire facias against the party at whose suit he was outlawed And if at the day of the Scire facias returned the partie doe appeare the Appellant may pray execution of him notwithstanding the pardon but if the Appellant be returned warned and doth make default the Charter shal be allowed without further suit Co. l. 50. 100 3. El. Dyer 201 261 The Kings pardon of burning in the hand In an appeale of murder the defendant pleaded not guiltie vpon his arraignment and by the enquest was found guiltie of manslaughter and then prayed and had his Clergie Whereupon by force of the Statute of an̄ 4. H. 7. 13. St. 4. H. 7. 13 he being a conuict person ought to bée marked by the Gaoler openly in the Court which marking or burning in the hand the king did and may pardon though it be in an appeale for burning in the hand is no part of the iudgement but onely a meane to notifie to the Iudge vpon an offendors second conuiction that he once before had his Clergie vpon a former conuiction And for that it was ordained by the Statute of an̄ 18. El. 6. St. 18. El. 6 That after Clergie allowed and burning in the hand the prisoner shall be forthwith enlarged and deliuered out of prison which act doth extend as well to the case of the Appeale as to the case of an Indictment Therefore the King hauing pardon the burning in the hand the partie was also discharged of his imprisonment 2. R. 3. 8 18 A Scire facias vpon a Charter of pardon may be graunted against an appellant Vpon a pardon a Scire facias against an appellant though the appellée which doth pray it sheweth
Confederacies of the same committed vpon the land within this Realme And if any person happen to be indicted for any such offence done vpon the Seas or in any other place aboue limitted then such order proces iudgement and execution shall be vsed and made to and against euery such person so indicted as against Traytors Felons and Murderers for Treason Felony Robbery Murther or other such offences done vpon the land and such as shal be conuict of any such offēce by verdict confession or proces shall suffer such paines of death losse of lands goods and cattels as if they had bin attainted and conuicted of any of the said offences done vpon the land No pennance for high Treason 5 The foresaid statute of West 1. maketh mention only of felons and felonies and therefore in high Treason whether it be by indictment 15. E. 4. 33 M. 3. 4. El. Dy. 205 300 or by any other meanes whatsoeuer the offendor shal not haue the said iudgement of pennance viz. of paine grieuous and durable but shall haue another iudgement that is to say as of a Traitor conuict No pennance for a man before attainted 6 If a man that is attainted of Felony be brought to the barre 8. H. 4. 2 26. As p. 19 and asked what cause he can shew why he should not be put to death and he will stand mute in this case he shal be hanged and not put to his penance for hee cannot put himselfe vpon an Enquest of felonie because he was attainted thereof before and so he is out of the case of the stat 7 If a man vpon his arraignement doth confesse the felony Standing mute after confession and before iudgement at another day he will stand mute by fraud and so it is found in this case he shal be hanged 14. E. 4. 7. and not put to his penance for his iudgement shall be giuen vpon his confession And so it is Demurring in law if he do demur in law vpon any point which is adiudged against him he shal be hanged for in both those cases he is out of the puruiew of the foresaid stat of West 1. And in like sort he shal be hanged and not put to his penance if he be indicted and arraigned for a murder or manslaughter committed within the Kings Palace or where hée doth abide according to the stat of Anno 33. H. 8. St. 33. H. 8. 12. if he do stand mute or will answer indirectly 8 In all cases where a man vpon his arraignement doth stand mute Inquirie of him that standeth mute before he shal be hanged put to his penance or otherwise suffer death it shal be inquired if he do stand mute by fraud or by the act of God for if it bee by the act of God 43. Ass p. 30 the Court ex officio ought to inquire if he be the same person and of all other pleas that he might haue pleaded if hée had not béene mute to haue staid execution M. 8. H. 4. 1. And this inquirie is but of office and shall be made by the Marshals seruants and others But if it be in case where an issue is ioyned by the consent of the parties and after when the Enquest doth come the prisoner doth stand mute there the Court shall charge the Enquest which appeareth therewith without putting any of the Marshals seruants vnto them and so change that which was a Iurie by the consent of the parties to an Enquest of office And their charge shall be to enquire of the time when he did speake and if he be mute of malice or in delay of his execution or by the act of God But this charge or inquirie ought not to be made or giuen where the prisoner did speak to the Court when he was at the bar and after the same day because he would not ioyne issue or challenge peremptorily aboue the number appointed to him by the law be adiudged to his penance for then it doth appear to the court that he doth it of malice 10. E. 4. 19 And the same law is if a prisoner after his confession or attainder hath continually remained in prison and is brought before the same Iustices before whom hée did confesse his felonie or was attainted to answer why execution should not be done of him and he will stand mute in this case there néedeth no inquirie to be made if he be the same person or not for that doth appeare to the Iustices by his continuall remaining in prison But it is otherwise if he goe at libertie after his attainder by abiuration outlawrie and such like 4. E. 4. 11. 14. Ed. 4. 7. 8. H. 4. 2. 9 The iudgement in the sayd penance The Iudg●ment in penance viz. in the said paine heauie and grieuous is That the prisoner shall be sent to the prison from whence hée came and put into a meane house stopped from light there shal be laid vpon the bare ground without any litter straw or other couering and without any garment about him sauing something to couer his priuie members and that he shall lie vpon his backe and his head shal be couered and his féet bare and that one of his armes shall be drawne with a cord to one side of the house and the other arme to the other side and that his legges shall be vsed in the same manner and that vpon his bodie shal be laid so much yron and stone as he can beare and more and that the first day after he shall haue thrée morcels of barlie bread without any drinke and the second day he shall drinke so much as he can thrée times of the water which is next the prison doore sauing running water The forfeiture without any bread and this shal be his diet vntil he die Fitz. Escheat 10. And he against whom this iudgement of penance shal be giuen shall forfeit to the king his goods but he shall forfeit no land Iudgement and Execution in Treasons Felonies c. HAuing written of Treasons Felonies shewed who be principals and who be accessories therein how the offendors therein are to be pursued by Appeales or inditements what pleas they may plead how they are to be tried that the truth of each persons innocency or guiltinesse may appeare I am now to treat of the iudgement execution which by the lawes statutes of this Realme must follow therupon As first Iudgement where the prisoner is acquit if he that is arraigned of treason or felonie be acquit thereof there is none other iudgement but that the Court doth discharge him paying his fées 2 The iudgement of a man attainted of high Treason is Iudgement in high treason of a man that he shall bée led backe againe to the place from whence he came and from thence be drawn vpon a hurdle to the place of execution and there be hanged by the necke
nothing for that they be discharged of their charge and seruices which they did hold by which was as much as they receiued of the tenant perauaile And if they held of the King by lesse rent than their tenant perauaile held of them they shall haue the surplusage of that which was holden of them of the king by the way of petition Fitz. Assise 124. Fitz. Petition 19. And if the king doe not kéepe the land so escheated vnto him in his hands but will assure it to another hée must reuiue the tenure in the Mesne Lord to hold of them of whom it was holden before the attainder It appeareth by the statute of Praerogatiua Regis cap. 12. That the Kings and whole Court of Parliaments meaning was at that time when it was published and established by Parliament which were the Prerogatiues royall annexed to the Crowne of England by the common law That of such lands as did escheat to the King the seruice of the Lord of the fée should be reserued for the words of the Statute bee these viz. St. 17. Ed. 2. 12. The King shall haue escheat of the lands of Normans to whose sée soeuer they belong Sauing the seruice appertayning to the chiefe Lordes of the same Fée And King Henrie the third gaue the Escheates of Normans landes to bee holden of the chiefe Lordes of the Fee by Seruices and Customs due and accustomed thereunto Some of which Normans dwelling in Normandie at that time had lands in England and were subiects to the King of England and did forsake their obedience to the King of England and became subiects to the K. of Fraunce the King of Englands enemie and therby did forfeit those lands which they had in England by the common law and they did escheat to the king 48 In Petit Treason Who shal haue the forf in petit treason and felony and Felony the king shal not haue the escheat of the offendors land vnlesse it be holden immediatly of him but the king shal haue the profits of the said offendors land by the space of a yeare and a day and the land shall be wasted and destroyed in the houses woods and gardeins and in all things belonging to the same and then it shall bee deliuered to the chiefe Lord of the fée of whom the same land is immediatly holden And yet in some cases the King shall haue the forfeiture of the land of him which doth commit Petit Treason or Felonie though the land be holden of others and not of him St. 17. E. 2. 14. as it appeareth by the Statute of Praerogatiua Regis which hath ordained That the king shall haue the escheates of lands of Archbishops and Bishops fréeholders when such tenants be attainted of Felony committed in time of vacation whilest their temporalties were in the Kings hands to bestow in what sort it shall please him Sauing to such Prelats the seruice that to them is due and accustomed And therefore sauing in the cases aforesaid the mesne Lords of whom the lands be immediatly holden shall haue their escheats of their fréeholders lands that haue committed Petit Treason or Felonie which land after the King hath hath had the yere day and wast thereof they must haue deliuered vnto them out of the kings hands by suing out of a writ S. Br. 39. 49 If any stranger The Lords remedy for lands escheated vnto him or other sauing the King doth intrude into that land whereof the felon attainted was seised at the time of the felony committed the immediat Lord of the fée of whom the same land is holden may enter vpon him and put him out or else he may haue his writ of Escheat against him In the which writ he must rehearse the iudgement giuen against the person attainted viz. if he were attainted by outlawrie to alledge Eo quod praedictus A. feloniam fecit pro qua vtlagatus fuit and if he were attainted by abiuration to say Pro qua regnum nostrum abiurauit and if he were attainted by confession or verdict to say Pro qua suspensus fuit and if hee doe alledge one of those iudgements Fitz. Escheat 14. Fitz. Escheat 8. Fitz. Escheat 6. in the stead of another his writ shall abate And yet he néed not rehearse the manner of the felonie in his writ nor in his count but generally that he committed felonie And though there be error in the iudgement yet the Lord shall haue a writ of Escheat and the tenant shall not falsifie the iudgement by the errour 46. E. 3. 4. 50 Island escheat to the auncestor The heirs remedie for land escheated to his auncestor because his tenant was attainted of felonie and the auncestor dyeth before he doth bring his writ of Escheat or doth enter In this case the heire may haue a writ of Escheat and suppose that the partie attainted did hold of his auncestor Fitz. Escheat 17. 51 If a lease of land be made for the terme of life reseruing to the lessor a rent and the lessor payeth his seruices to the chiefe Lord and then the lessor is attainted of felonie Where the Lord shall haue his writ of Escheat and where he may enter and after the tenant for terme of life dyeth In this case the Lord paramount may haue a writ of escheat of the land for the rent which was reserued vpon the lease doth come in stead of the land and so in the consturction of law he died seised of the land But if no rent had béen reserued the Lord might haue entred into the land as escheated vnto him 6. H. 7. 9. but could not haue recouered it by a writ of Escheat no more than if his tenant being disseised had bin attainted of felony in which case his only remedy is to enter The forme of a 〈◊〉 of Escheat 52 This is the forme of the writ of Escheat Rex vicecomiti B. salutem Praecipe A. quod iuste sine dilatione reddat B. decem acras terrae cum pertinentijs in N. quas C de eò tenuit quae ad ipsum B. reuerti debent tanquam Escaeta sua eò quod praedict ' C. feloniam fecit pro qua suspensus fuit vt dicitur Vel pro qua vtlagatus fuit vt dicitur vel pro qua regnum abiurauit vt dicitur Et nisi c. And though the indictment was executed in other maner than is rehearsed in the writ yet the writ shall not abate Register fo 165. as if he were Decapitatus non suspensus for the execution of the iudgement is not material so that he had such a iudgement for the action is true though the writ be not true The K. remedie for land escheated to him 53 In all cases of felony if the king ought to haue the escheat he must haue an office found for him before he can enter for vntill the office found the king hath but a
doth acquite himselfe either at the appellants suit or at the Kings suit This suit of the K. is alwaies intended vpon an appeale when the def is arraigned vpon an appeale after that the appellant hath declared in his appeale and is Nonsute for if the def were acquite at the kings suit vpō an indictment of the same Felony yet he shall recouer no dammages And the manner how he shall recouer dammages being acquite at the kings suit doth somewhat vary from recouering of dammages at the parties suit for when it is at the kings suit he shall not recouer his dammages though he be acquite vntill he hath sued a Scire facias against the appellant to bring him into the Court againe being out of the Court before by his Nonsute But if he be acquit at the appellants suit he shall haue his iudgement to recouer dammages without suing of any further Proces And if a woman that is appellant be Nonsute and after doth take a husband Fit Damag 77. the Scire facias shall bée awarded against the wife onely B. What Iustices may inflict the penalty vpon the appellant 8 And though the foresaid statute of West 2. hath prouided St. 13. E. 1. 12 That the Iustices before whom the said appeale shal be heard and determined shall punish the appellant by a yeares imprisonment that punishment cannot be inflicted by the Iust of Nisi prius and yet by the statute of Anno 14. H. 6. St. 14. H. 6. 1 the Iustices of Nisi prius haue power to giue iudgement in Treason and Felony tried before them and that as well where the defendant is acquite as where he is attainted But yet they be not such Iustices as this statute doth meane 2. 3. P. M. Dy. 120. 14. E. 4. 14. 22. E. 4. 18. For that all the plea of Appeale was not heard before them but a parcell viz. the triall onely The dammages for seueral persons assessed seuerally 9 And whereas the said statute of West 2. would haue the Iustices in assessing of dammages for the defendant in an appeale St. 13. E. 1. 1● to haue respect to his imprisonment arrest slander Therefore in an appeale brought against diuers if they be all acquite the dammages shal be taxed seuerally that is to say 8. H. 5. 6. Fi. Dam̄ 77. euery of the defendants shall haue his dammages taxed by himselfe for it may bée that one hath cause to recouer more then the other as if one were appealed as principall and the other as accessory or that the one were a gentleman or a man of greater estate and the other of a meaner degrée But yet this Recouery of dammages must be intended in one who is by the law enabled to recouer dammages for if an appeale be brought against a woman couert onely Fi. Cor. 276. without her husband as it must be vnles the husband committed felony with his wife the wife shall not recouer dammages though she be acquite And yet if the appeale be brought against the husband and wife together they be both acquite Fitz. Iudg. 108. then the dammages shal be seuerally taxed that is to say the husband shall recouer for his owne imprisonment and the husband and wife shall recouer iointly for the imprisonment of the wife St. 13. E. 1. 12 10 Though the foresaid statute of West 2. doth ordaine Where the appellant shall pay a fine to the king That the appellant shall be grieuously fined to the king yet that is to be intended where the appellant shall yéeld dammages to the defendant 9. H. 5. 1 for if the case be such as that the appellant shall not render dammages to the def then he shall not pay a fine to the K. but shal be amerced only as where an appeale doth abate by misnaming the appellant shal be only amerced And yet if the appellant be Nonsute after declaration 41. Ass p. 8. he shal pay a fine to the king and the Court will award proces against him for the same fine and though the defendant be after acquite at the kings suit by which meanes he shal recouer dammages against the appellant yet the appellant shall not pay a new fine to the king for that he hath paied it before And if the defendant be found guilty when he is tryed at the kings suit the appellant hath no remedy to recouer the fine which he hath paied before for by the common Law the plaintife in an appeale should haue paied a fine for his Nonsute which is the cause that a fine shal be paied by the appellant presently vpon his Nonsute St. 13. E. 1. 12 11 And for that the words of the said statute of West 2. be In what case inquiry shal be of the abettors If the appellants be not able to recompence the dammages inquiry shal be made by whose abetment the appeale was commenced by those words it is to be gathered that if dammages be not to be recouered against the appellant there shall neuer any inquiry be made of the abettors as in the cases aforesaid And where the words of the statute be If the appellant be not able to recompence the dammages it is intended all the dammages for if the appellant be sufficient to render part of the dammages 8. H. 5. 6. 8. Ed. 4. 3. but not the whole inquiry shal be made of the abettors and they shall pay the residue St. 13. E. 1. 12 12 The foresaid statute doth ordaine That inquiry shal be made of the abettors if the appellée do desire it so that the Court of Office ought not to inquire thereof but at the appellees request And if an appeale be brought against two and one of them is acquit by verdict if the Court do inquire of the abettors at the request of the same defendant and the Enquest doth find that there be no abettors and after the other defendant is arraigned and also acquite and if he do request also that inquiry may be made of the abettors the verdict of the former Enquest wherunto he was not priuy neither against which he shall haue any remedy being but an Enquest of Office shall not bind him but according to the words of the said statute inquiry shall be made againe at his request of the abettors for though it be commonly inquired of the abettors by the same Iury which doth trie the def yet their inquiry therein is but an Enquest of office for if they do find abettors the abettors when they doe appeare may trauerse all that the Enquest hath found As if they haue found that the appellant was not sufficient What pleas the abettors may plead or that such a man or such a one were abettors 8. Ed. 4. 3. because they that be supposed abettors may say by protestation not confessing the felonie for their plea that the appellant is sufficient or that they were no abettors for
the words of the Statute be And if they bee lawfully conuict of such abetment by malice which doth proue that they shal haue their answer to that which was found by the Enquest And also it is a good answer for him that is charged to be an abettor to shew sufficient matter to proue Fi. Cor. 386 that the defendant ought not to recouer his damages against the appellant or that the defendant was not lawfully acquit but erroniously But if the abettors would take exception to the inquisition found for that the enquest did not find at what day Fi. Cor. 45 M. 22. E. 4. yeare and place the abetment was made that is no good exception for in that they haue found the abetment they haue performed the words of the statute which be That inquirie shall be made by whose abetment and that they haue found And touching the yeare day and place the defendant in the Appeale must adde to the inquisition and so supply that which wanteth Proces against the abettors 13 Because the said statute hath ordained St. 13. E. 1. 12 that after by an Enquest an abettor is found he shal be distrained by a iudiciall writ at the appellees suit to appeare before the Iustices Therfore it is to be gathered by words of the said statute that the proces against abettors is distresse infinit for this proces of distresse is alwayes pursued by him that is acquit who for his spéedie remedie may prosecute it although the apppellant be not in the Court as where the Appellant was nonsuit in the Appeale and the defendant was arraigned at the Kings suit and acquit and his damages taxed and the abettors found Fi. Dam̄ 77. in this case the defendant shall haue proces against the abettors presently although the iudgement of damages shal be suspended vntill a Scire facias shall be awarded and returned against the appellant Nonsute in the proces against the abettors And the defendant who is acquit in an Appeale may be nonsuit in the proces which hee doth pursue against the abettors and begin againe if he will for that nonsuit is not peremptorie to him Fit Co. 386 A Writ against the abettors by the appellee 14 There is an originall writ to be purchased by the Appellée who is acquit by verdict against the abettors for their abetment Fitz. Act. sur stat 28. wherein he may count abettors of greater damages than were assessed by the Iustices in the Appeal for of those damages taxed in the Appeale there will lye no attaint because the inquirie touching them is but of office And the defendant in the Appeale cannot compell the Iustices to increase those damages and therefore it is reason that he should releeue himselfe by this action Procurors of indictments for suits in spirituall Courts 13 The same remedie which is giuen by the foresaid stat of West 2. to the def in an appeale of Felony if he be acquite is giuen by the stat made An. 1. R. 2. to him who is falsely indicted for pursuing in a spirituall Court a matter pertaining to the temporall iurisdiction after that he is acquite thereof St. 1. R. 2. 13 The words of which stat be these The Prelates Clergy of the realme do greatly complaine for that people of holy Church suing in the spirituall court for their tithes other things which ought of right and of auncient time were wont to appertaine to the same spirituall court that the Iudges of spirituall courts other persons dealing therein according to the Law be maliciously and vnduly for that cause indicted imprisoned and by the secular power horribly oppressed and also enforced by violence by oathes by grieuous obligations and by many other meanes vnduly compelled to desist and vtterly to leaue off from the things aforesaid contrary to the liberties of the holy Church Wherefore it is enacted That all such Obligations made or to be made by duresse or violence shal be of no value And touching those which do procure by malice such indictments themselues to be indictors after that the same indictées be thereof acquite such procurors and indictors shall haue and incurre the same paine which is contained in the statute of West 2. touching those which do procure false appeales to be made And the Iustices of Assise or other Iustices before whom such persons indicted shal be acquite shall haue authority to inquire of such indictors and procurors and to punish them duly euery person according to his desert ❧ A Writ of Conspiracie Where a writ of Conspiracy doth lie 1 A Writ of Conspiracy doth lie where two or thrée persons or more of malice and by co● in doe conspire and deuise to indict another person falsely and after he which is so indicted is acquited in this case he shall haue a writ of Conspiracy against those who did so conspire to indict him But this writ doth lye against two persons at the least 28. Ass p. 12 11. H. 4. 2. which doe so conspire for if one person of malice and his own false imagination doth labour and cause one to be falsely indicted the party which was so indicted shall not haue a writ of Conspiracy but an action vpon ●he case against him who caused him to be falsely indicted 2 At the common law a writ of Conspiracy did lie as well vpon an acquitall in an appeale as it doth at this day on an acquitall vpon an indictment But there hath growne a question thereof sithence the stat of West 2. was made St. 13. E. 1. 12 Registrum for that in the writ of Conspiracy in the Register it is noted for a rule and also it is affirmed by some others That a writ of Conspiracy doth not lye vpon an appeale for that the said stat of West 2. gaue to the def dammages against the appellant and the abettors Fit Na. Bre. 114. and so in a sort prouided for him another remedy But to say generally that the def shall not haue a writ of Conspiracy vpō an acquital in an appeale for that he may haue damages against the appellant and the abettors is no sufficient reason for the said stat doth not giue to the def inquiry against the abettors but vpon his owne request and therefore if he will omit to desire it he shal haue the remedy ordained by the common law which law is not changed by the foresaid stat of West 2. that is in the affirmatiue doth not restraine the benefit giuen by the common law And it may be that the damages assessed by the enquest of office will not be so beneficiall vnto him as the damages which wil be giuen by a Iury that is taken at the parties suit whereunto he shall haue his challenges and an attaint if they giue a false verdict Also in a Writ of Conspiracy proces is to be awarded by Capias and Exigent which proces is not to
And Stewards and Bailifes of great Lords who by their seigniory office or power doe vndertake to maintaine or vphold other quarrels or suites then such which concerne their Lords or themselues A conspiracie must be by more then one 7 The foresaid statute doth define conspirators to be those St. 33. E. 1. which bind themselues by oath c. By which words it doth appeare that a conspiracy cannot be committed by one person alone but by two at the least and therefore this Writ of Conspiracy will not be maintained against one alone though it were begun against diuers for as soone as it shal appear 28. Ass p. 12 22. Ass p. 77 11. H. 4. 162 that all but one be discharged therof by their discharge that one shal also be discharged But this discharge ought to be such a one as may be a discharge to all intents as acquitall of all by verdict sauing one is an acquitall of that one also And so it is if al but one be discharged by matter in Law as if they plead that they were indictors or such like matter in Law which will discharge them for in those cases they be acquit of the conspiracie to all intents But if in a writ of Conspiracie sued against two 14. H. 6. 25. one of them is attainted and the other doth barre the plaintife by a demurrer in law yet that shall not discharge the other which is attainted Where one only charged in Conspiracy if the barre both not containe matter to proue that he did not conspire or could not conspire And so it is if in a writ of Conspiracy brought against two the one doth appeare plead and his plea is found against him in this case iudgement may be giuen against him 24. E. 3. 34. though the other be not attainted and yet in that case some doe affirme 27. E. 3. 80. that in a writ of Conspiracy against two one of thē shall not answere vntill his companion doth appeare for the inconueniency which may ensue viz. that the one may be foūd guilty and the other after may be acquit of the same conspiracy But if he that did first appear wil plead without his companion though the law doth not inforce him thereunto and that the verdict do passe against him and he found guilty of the conspiracy iudgement shal be giuen against him as is aforesaid though after his companion be acquited of the same conspiracy Nam volenti non fit iniuria 8 As a writ of Conspiracy will not lie against one person only no more wil it be maintained against two who do represent but one person No writ of Conspiracy against the husband and wife as the husband and wife 40. Ed. 3. 19. 38. E. 3. 3. for a writ of Conspiracy is not to be brought against them séeing the husband and wife by common intendment ought to haue but one will which will of the wiues is or should be subiect to the will of the husband So that when they conferre and speake together all shall be intended the spéech and act of the husband and nothing of the wife But it is otherwise if she do any act alone without her husband as if she doe commit Treason or Felony c. But a writ of Conspiracy will lye against the husband Fi. N.B. 116. L. his wife and a third person 9 The common forme of the writ of Conspiracy in the Register is this The forme of the writ of Conspiracie viz. Register fo 134. Rex vice comiti N. Salutem c. Si A. fecerit c. tunc pone c. B. C. quod sintcoram nobis c. ostensuri quare conspiratione inter eos apud M. praehabita praefatum A. de quodam equo furtiue apud R. capto abducto indictari ipsum ea occasione capi in prisona nostra N. quousque in curia nostra coram dilectis fidelibus nostris I. S. iusticiarijs nostris ad Gaolam nostram N. deliberandam assignatis secundum legem consuetudinem regni nostri acquietauts fuisset detineri falso malitiose procurauerunt ad graue damnum ipsius A. contra formam ordinationis in huiusmodi casu prouisae Et habeas ibi nomina plegiorum hoc breue Teste c. Which foresaid writ is founded vpon a verdict but if it be a writ of Conspiracy founded vpon the plaintifes Nonsute in an appeale then the words of the writ be these viz. Quousque idem A. per considerationem curiae nostrae inde quietus recessit Though in the Writ of Conspiracie it is not alledged 35. H. 6. 46 that the place where the Conspiracie was deuised was within the Countie and within the iurisdiction of those Iustices before whom the plaintife was acquit yet the writ is good notwithstanding the omission of that allegation for it shal be intended to be made within the same county vntil the contrarie shal be shewed But it must néeds be expressed in the writ before which Iust the acquitall of the pl. was 3. H. 6. 52. but not the manner of the acquitall nor how hée was acquited And neither in this writ nor in other writs of Conspiracie mentioned in the Register all the indictment néed not to be rehearsed 19. H. 6. 34. 47. Ed. 3. 16. but briefly the substance thereof and it is sufficiently in forme if the writ of Conspiracie doe agrée with the indictment which it ought to do 10 In the Register there is a writ of Conspiracie for the Accessorie A writ of conspiracy for the accessorie in felonie when hée is acquit by verdict and another writ for him vpon the acquital of the Principall if his life were put in ieopardie by the same Enquest that acquited the principall but yet these two writs doe differ in forme for the first is Quousque coram praefatis Iusticiarijs nostris inde secundum legem consuetudinem nostram acquietatus fuit And the other is Quousque principal ' secundum legem c. acquietatus fuisset idem accessorius quietus recessit And it is sufficient 33. H. 6. 1. if in the writ brought by the accessorie hee make mention of his owne imprisonment and not of the principals And this forme of quietus recessit is vsed also when a writ of Conspiracie is brought vpon an acquitall in an Appeale at the Kings suit after the parties nonsuit 22. H. 6. 49. In a writ of Conspiracie the plaintife may suppose that the conspiracie was made in two Townes Conspiracy in two townes because in one day the Conspirators may meete in seuerall Townes Barres in conspiracie 11 In a writ of Conspiracie it is a good plea for the defendants to plead in barre of the Action a concord betwéene the plaintife and them And so it is to plead any matter which will proue the acquitall of the plaintife erronious 21. H.
of the stat of 18. El. 14 Maintenance Champertie buying of titles Embracery haue bin accounted so offensiue professed enemies to the iustice peace of the realm that though by the stat of an 18. El. it is ordained Stat. 18. El. 5 That euery informer vpon any other penall stat shal exhibit his suit in proper person pursue the same onely by himselfe or by his Atturney in court and that none shal be admitted to pursue against any person vpon any penall stat but by way of information or originall writ and not otherwise nor shall haue any deputy at all And that vpon euerie such information which shal be exhibited a speciall note shall be made of the very day moneth yere of the exhibiting therof into any office or to any officer which lawfully may receiue the same without any maner of antedate to be made thereof And that vpon euery such proces shal be indorced aswel the parties name that pursueth the same proces as also the stat vpon which the information in that behalfe made is grounded and that no Informer or plaintife shall compound or agrée with any person that shall offend or shal be surmised to offend against any penal statute for such offence but after answer made in court vnto the information or suit in that behalfe exhibited or prosecuted nor after answer but by the order or consent of the court in which the same information or suit shal be depending Yet in the said stat of 18. El. there is a prouiso That it shal be lawfull for any person or persons grieued by means of any maintenāce chāpertie buying of titles or other embracery to pursue vpō any stat prouided against maintenance champerty buying of titles or embracery as he or they might haue done before the making of the said act Which prouiso was made to the end that all persons grieued by reasons of any maintenance champertie buying of titles or embracery should be left at libertie to pursue chasten the offendors therin by all such means as former laws haue authorised thē not be restrained by any of the ordinances or articles before rehearsed for that the said offēces were by the makers of the said stat adiudged to be greater impedimēts obstacles to the execution of iustice than other penal stat were 15 As the policie of the realme hath deuised the foresaid popular actions and suits to enable euery person that will Assurances to haue mainte void in diuers cases to pursue prosecute maintainors champertors buyers of pretenced rights c. to the intent the sooner to root out extirpat those offendors who indeuor to wrest the execution of lawes out of their due course to subuert iustice thereby to hinder the peace of the realme so hath it in some cases gone further ordained that some assurances made for maintenance shal be presently void as it appeareth by the stat of an 8. St. 8. H. 6. 9 H. 6. wherby it was enacted Lands gotten by force assured to haue maintenance That if any person after his entry into lands or tenements holden with force do make a feoffement or other discontinuance to any Lord or other person to haue maintenance or to toll defraud the possessor of his recouerie in any wise If alter in an Assise or other action thereof to be takē or pursued before the Iust of Assise or other the kings Iustices whatsoeuer they be by due inquiry therof to be taken the same feoffements and discontinuances may be duly proued to be made for maintenance as is aforesaid that then such feoffements or other discontinuances so as before made shall be void St. 4. H. 4. 8. holdē for none And by the stat made an 4. H. 4. it was established That if any man great or small of what estate or condition they be Lands forcibly gotten by maintenance make any forcible entry in his own right or to his own vse or in anothers right to his vse by the way of maintenāce therof is attained at the suit of the party grieued he shal be one yere imprisoned pay to the partie grieued his double dammages And also he shall answer to the partie grieued damages for his goods cattels if vpon the said forcible disseisin he tooke away any 16 As by the before mentioned stat maintenance champerty What maintenance is punishable and what iustifiable embracerie buying of titles be in generall termes deciphered together with their seuerall penalties so haue the learned Iudges Sages of the law expounded the particular branches of euery of those stat as they grew in question were prosecuted in suit before them also resolued what maintenance is punishable and what iustifiable who may pursue an action writ bill or information c. of maintenance champerty c. against whom the same is to be brought for what offēce or cause the same is maintenable what pleas are to be pleaded to the writ or in bar of the said actions writs informations c. what iudgemēt shall ensue thereupon As euerie champertie is an vnlawful maintenāce prohibited by the foresaid stat of West 1. West 2. 9. H. 6. 64. St. 28. E. 1. 11. and punishable according to the before rehearsed stat of An. 28. E. 1. and euerie chāpertie is a maintenance the partie grieued may haue aswel a writ of Maintenance as of Champertie for by that meanes the champertor hauing bargained to haue part of the land or thing in question doth ofttimes moue further the suit suborneth witnesses corrupteth the Iurie and so subuerteth iustice but there must be a suit depending before it can be adiudged maintenance in any sort for if one man wil giue money to another to beginne and prosecute a suit against a third person 3. H. 6. 55. 8. H. 5. 8. 10. Ed. 4. 19. 30. Ed. 3. 3. this is no maintenance for that this mony was giuen when there was no suit depending and if there be a writ brought and neuer returned it is no maintenance No maintenance in a Iuror for giuing his verdict 17 If there be a suit depending betwéene two and they do ioyne an issue 18. E. 4. 2. 28. H. 6. 6. which is tried by xij men found for the plaintife in this case the defendant cannot haue an action of maintenance against the said Iurors or any of them for this verdit giuē for that they gaue their verdit according to their euidence and their knowledge of the truth of the matter and besides they did not thrust thēselues into that cause but were compelled to appeare by an ordinarie course of law being impanelled returned by the Sherife or some other lawfull officer Maintenance by a Iuror suing for iudgement but if after the verdit giuen any of the Iurie wil solicit or labor to the Iudge or Iudges of the court where the said suit
is depending to giue iudgement for the plaintife then the def may haue an action of Maintenance against him for that the same iudgemēt is a thing wholly belonging to the office of a Iudge and not of a Iuror therfore he doth therin intermeddle with another mans office and another mans cause more than he hath to do or may iustifie and so hath committed vnlawfull maintenance Maintenance in a Iuror 18 If a Iurie be charged to inquire of a matter in issue 17. E. 4. 5. 18. Ed. 4. 4. one Iuror may persuade his cōpanions or any of them to passe for the plaintife or def as he conceiueth the truth of the cause to be or as their euidence doth induce them this is no maintenance but if one of the Iurors will giue or promise money to another of his fellowes to giue his verdit for the pl. or def this is vnlawfull maintenance though he doth wage him to giue his verdit according to truth and right of the cause in issue Maintenance by speaking of words 19 If a man of great authoritie in a country will in the presence of a Iurie 22. H. 6. 5. 13. H. 4. 19. and the standers by at the tryall of an issue say openly that he will spend mony in the cause in question in the behalfe of the pl. or the def or that hee will giue money to labour the Iury or wil speake other great or high words in fauor of one of the parties this is vnlawful maintenāce in him though he do spend no mony in that cause nor doth labor the Iury therin for it may be that whē the Iury do by his words know his meaning they dare not in respect of his authoritie or greatnesse in that coūtie giue their verdit otherwise thā he would haue them None shall sit with the Iust of Assise on the bench And for the preuention of that kind of maintenance by a stat made An. 20. R. 2. it was ordained That no Lord or other of the country great or small St. 20. R. 2. 13. shall sit vpon the bench with the Iust of Assise in their Sessions in any of the Shires of England vpon paine of a great forfeiture to the King neither the Iustices shall suffer the contrarie to bée done Maintenance in comming to the barre with one of the parties And in like sort if a man of great authoritie in the Countie where an Issue is to be tried hauing nothing to doe in that cause doth come to the barre with the plaintife or defendant 22. H. 6. 6. that is one of the parties to an Issue that is then to bée tryed and standeth by him this is an vnlawfull maintenance in him though hée neither doth nor yet speaketh any thing in the matter for his presence and companie with the one partie doth shew to the Iurie his particular affection to the same partie and doth ofttimes induce them to fauour as much as labour and persuasion by words could doe And though the Iurie doe not respect him but giue their verdict for the other partie to that suit according to their euidence and the truth of the cause in question yet he hath done what in him lyeth to the contrarie 21. H. 6. 15. 22. H. 6. 5. 28. H. 6. 7. Dyer fo 95. 20 And so it is if two be in suit and do ioyne in issue Maintenance by giuing of money to labour a Iurie and the Master of one of the parties to that issue or any other will deliuer money of his owne to a stranger to labour the Iurie impanelled to try that issue to giue their verdit for his said seruant or friend this is maintenance vnlawfull in the Master or other though the partie to whom the money was giuen did neuer deliuer it to the Iurie nor did not labour vnto them in such sort as hée was directed or though the Iurie did giue their verdict against his said seruant for when the Master had deliuered the money to the stranger and told him to what purpose he should vse it he had done as much as he could do in that suit to hinder the course of iustice though his direction tooke no successe according to his desire And also it is vnlawfull maintenance if one giue money to a man that is impanelled of a Iurie to giue his verdict on the one side though that partie impanelled doth not appeare or do appeare and is drawne out by challenge or otherwise 22. H. 6. 6. And it is maintenance vnlawfull if one do threaten to kill or beat a Iuror if he do not giue his verdict for the one part to that issue which hee doth name though the same Iuror do otherwise 28. H. 6. 6. 21 If a Iurie do come to a mans house What is maintenance in a witnesse and what not and desire him to informe them of the truth of a matter whereof they do doubt and he doth informe them therof this is iustifiable But if one do come to a Iurie or of himselfe do labour to informe them of the truth of a cause in question this is maintenance vnlawfull and therefore punishable And so it is if the Court be informed by the plaintife or defendant when an issue is to be tryed that there is a man at the bar or in that place who doth know the truth of the matter in issue and doth desire that the same man may be examined by the Court to testifie the truth of that cause in question to the Iurie and the Court doth cause him to be called to testifie his knowledge therein and he at the commaundement of the Court deliuereth that which he doth know in that matter this is maintenance iustifiable But if the same partie will come to the barre of his owne head and testifie for the plaintife or the defendant this is vnlawfull maintenance and hée may be punished therefore 22. H. 6. 6. 22 If one man do labour to indict another by force whereof he is indicted Maintenance by procuring of an indictment in this case hee that is indicted may haue a writ of Maintenance against the procurer of that indictment and yet this is no quarrell but it is a taking of a part St. 1. E. 3. 14. and so prohibited by the stat of anno 1. E. 3. and it is in the nature of an action betwéene the King and the partie indicted and the foresaid statute is generall that it shall not be lawfull to any person great or smal to maintain quarels or to take parts to the let or disturbance of the Common law What is maintenance in a mainpernor 23 If a man be arrested indicted or sued 34. H. 6. 25. 14. H. 6. 6. 18. E. 4. 12. so that he is compelled to become bound with mainpernors for his apparance the mainpernor may come into the Court and sée the apparance of the same partie recorded and iustifie the