Deputies under their Hands and Seals to search for and seize all Arms in the custody and possession of any Person or Persons whom the said Lieutenants or their Deputies shall judge to be dangerous to the Peace of the Kingdom and to secure the same and give account thereoâ to the said Officers but such search is to be made in the day-time only between Sun rise and Sun set and not otherwise unless it be in Cities and their Suburbs Towns Corporateâ and Market Towns or Houses within the Billâ of Mortality in which places search may be in the night if the Warrant so direct No dwelling house of any Peer of the Realm iâ to be searched unless the Warrant be from the Kings Majesty under his Sign-Manual or in the Presence of the Lieutenant or one of the Deputy Lieutenants of the said County oâ Riding And in all Places and Houses aforesaid where search is made in case of Resistance to enter with force and such Arms so seized where the Lieutenants or their Deputies or any two of them think fit may be restored to the Owners again 14 Car. 2. c. 3. The Constables by Warrant under the Hand and Seal of the Lord Lieutenant or any three or more of the Deputy Lieutenants are to levy such Sums Forfeitures Penalties and Payments as shall be charged upon any Person or Persons within their several Liberties for the furnishing of Arms Horse or Foot or Payment of Soldiers 14 Car. 2. c 3. 15 Car. 2. c. 4. And where sufficient Distress cannot be had then the Lord Lieutenants and their Deputies by like Warrant to the Constable may commit such Offender to prison until he shall make satisfaction according to the said Forfeiture Payment or Penalty ibid. CHAP. V. Articles which the High Constables are to return the Justices at their Sessions or their Monthly Meetings of the Divisions and to cause their Petty Constables c. in their several Liberties to make Return thereof unto them 1. THey are to return the Names Sir names Additions of Names and Qualities of all Popish Recusants as well House-keepers as Lodgers dwelling or residing in any of their said Parishes Liberties or Precincts 2. Such Persons as shall continue Drinking or Tipling in any Inns or Alehouses at any time and more especially upon the Lords Day or Holy Days and such Persons as they shall find Drunk and all such Inn-keepers and Alehouse-keepers as shall entertain them 3. Item the Names of such as shall prophanely Swear or Curse with the number of their Oaths immediately after the committing such Offence inform the next Justice thereof 4. Item they are to return such Victuallers or Alehouse-keepers as use Victualling or selling of Beer and Ale without License 5. Item such Persons as suffer any unlawful Games to be suffered in their Houses Backsides or Gardens and also the Names of such as shall play at any of the said Games 6. Item such Persons as refuse or neglect to do their Duty of Watching and Warding 7. Item such Persons as divide their Houses into several Tenements and such as do entertain Inmates who may be an Annoyance to their Neighbours or likely to bring charge upon the Parish 8. Item the Defaults of Petty Constables aâ Tythingmen c. for not causing Rogues Vâgabonds and Beggars to be duly apprehenâed punished and passed according to tââ Statute 9. Item all Masterless Men and Women ââving at their own Hands such as are Idle aââ will not Labour and can give no good aâcount how they get their Living all suspiââous Persons Whores Noctivagants or Nighâ walkers and Mothers of Bastards which mââbe chargeable to the Parish 10. Item the Names of such Persons as ââfuse to take Apprentices poor Parish Childrââ to Husbandry or other Callings according ãâã Law 11. Item all such as neglect to make dâââ Rates and Collections for the Relief of the Poââ in every Parish and that cannot or do not giââ a just account of the Imployment of the Reââ and Stock of the Poor 12. Item of the Defects in the High Way and Bridges with the Names of such as shouââ repair them and have neglected or refused ãâã do their Duty herein 13. Item such Scavengers as neglect to ãâã their Office in cleansing the Streets to be kepâ clean within their Liberties and the Name of such Persons as commit common Annoyances by laying of Dung Soil Dirt or Ashes ãâã the Street 14. Item the Names of all such Persons ãâã refuse to pave the Streets before their Houses where the said Streets have usually been paveâ formerly 15. Item the Names of all such Persons as âeep any Hogs to the common Annoyance of âis Majesties Subjects in or about such Liberââes Places and Precincts where Hogs ought âot to be kept 16. Item all such Bakers as put light Bread ãâã sale and the Weight thereof and such ârewers as sell Beer or Ale to unlicensed Alehouse-keepers all Forestallers Regrators and ââgrossers of any Corn Grain Butter Cheese âacon or any other kind of dead Victuals âhatsoever 17. Lastly All such Persons as can prove or ââstifie any of the said Offences are to be warnâd to appear before the said Justices at their âessions or Meetings aforesaid to testifie their ânowledge of such Offences of which they can ââve Information CHAP. VI. The Constables Office about Foreign Bone-Laces Cut-work Imbroidery c. and French Goods THE Constables upon Warrant to them directed from the Justices of Peace or Chief Officers of the Cities Towns Corpoâate c. are to search within their respective Counties Cities Towns c. in the Shops âeing open Ware-houses and Dwelling-house âf such Person or Persons who shall be suspected to have any Foreign Bone-Laces Cut-works Imbroideries Fringes Bandstrings Butâons or Needle-works make of Thred Silk or âny or either of them made in the Parts beyond the Seas and where they find any sucâââ to seize the same 14 Car. 2. c. 13. No French Wine Vinegar Brandy Linâââ Cloth Silks Salt Paper or any Manuââctures made of or mixed with Silk Threâââ Wool Hair Gold or Silver or Leather âââing of the Product or Manufacture of any ãâã Dominions of the French King shall after ãâã 24th of August 1689. during the Term of thââ Years or before the end of the first Session Parliament next after the expiration of ãâã said three Years to be imported into Englaââ Wales or Town of Berwick or Isles of Jersâ Guernsey Alderny Sark or Isle of Man miââ or unmixt with any Commodity of the Pââduct of any other Country such Importâââon and vending the said Commodities impoââed contrary to this Act being by the ãâã Act declared a common Nusance And suââ Goods are to be seized and carried inââ his Majesties Ware-house and if upon ãâã Information into the Exchequer the Juââ find that they are French Goods Judgmeââ shall be That the Wines and Brandy shall ãâã staved and spilt in some River Stream or Sââ near the place where they were seized
or shââ remain in the Ware-houses and the other Coâmodities publickly burnt and destroyed Tââ Importers to forfeit the value They in whoââ Hands they shall be seized or who sold theââ the like for the first Offence And for the ââcond Offence double the value and after Coâviction of the second Offence to be incapabââ to exercise or execute any Office or Imployment about any part of the Kings Revenue ãâã any other Office or publick Imployment whââsoever And if any Person not being a known Merââant Vintner or Shop-keeper shall sell or ââpose to sale any of the Commodities aforeâââd and be thereof convicted shall over and ââove the aforesaid Penalties suffer twelve âonths Imprisonment without Bail or Mainââze and all Ships and Vessels with their ââns Tackle and Furniture in which any of ââe said Goods shall be imported during the said ââerm and also every Bark Hoy Lighter âârge Wherry Boat or other Vessel whatsoever âât of which any of the said Goods shall be ââât on Shore shall be forfeited and the Maâââr or any other Person taking care of such ââip or Vessel shall forfeit 500 l. and also ââeing convicted thereof before a Justice of âeace by the Oaths of two Witnesses be comâitted to the next Goal for twelve Months âithout Bail or Mainprize And all Seamen âariners Watermen Carmen Porters Laââurers or other Persons whatsoever assisting ãâã unshipping carrying or conveying any of ââe said Goods upon Proof as aforesaid shall ãâã subject to like Imprisonment or be pubââckly whipt at the discretion of the Justice ãâã Peace And all Carts Wains Waggons âarriages Plough-Teams Horses or Oxen made ââe of in the Carriage or Conveyance of any of the said Goods shall be seized and upon Proof made before a Justice of Peace of the âounty where the same were so seized by ââe Oaths of two credible Witnesses that they âere assisting in the Carriage or Conveyance of âny of the said Goods the same shall be forfeited one half thereof to be disposed of to âhe use of the Poor of the Parish where the same shall be seized the other half to thââ use who shall seize the same The Informââ who after seizure or stay of the Goods frââdulently delays the Prosecution shall forfâââ 500 l. All Officers of the Customs Sheriffs Mayoâ Bailiffs Constables and other Officers are ââjoyned to be aiding and assisting in the due ââecution of this Act See 1 W. M. By 2 W. M. For the more effectual pââting in Execution the Act for Prohibiting ãâã Trade and Commerce with France it is Enaââed That if any Person after the first of Fâbruary 1690. shall sell or utter by retail ãâã Glass Bottles or in any other retail Measurâ not made of Pewter and sealed according ãâã Law any kind of Wine whatsoever or othââ Liquor exposed to sale for Wine or sell tââ same for a greater price than by the said Aââ is appointed and be convicted thereof by tââ Confession of the Party or the Oath of tââ credible Witnesses before one or more Jâstice or Justices of the Peace of the Countââ City or place where such Offence shall be coâmitted who are hereby required and iâ powered to adminster an Oath to that puâpose such Person being prosecuted withâ thirty days next after such Offence committeâ shall forfeit and pay for every such Offenââ the Sum of fifty shillings which if not paââ upon demand shall be levied by distress aââ sale of the Goods and Chattels of every sucâ Offender by Warrant under the Hand aââ Seal of the Justice or Justices before whoââ such Conviction shall be made which Warrant the said Justice and Justices are impoweââd and required to grant to the Constable âeadborough or Tythingman of the Parish ãâã Place where such Offence shall be commitââd who are required and authorised immeââately to levy the same rendring the overââus to the Owner thereof the said Penalty âorfeiture and Mony so levied to be given to ââe Informer CHAP. VII ââe Constables Office for providing necessary Carriages for his Majesty c. BY the Statute of 1 Jac. 2. it is Enacted That the Clerk or Chief Officer of his âajesty's Carriages shall three days at least ââfore his Majesty's Arrival by Warrant from ââe Green-Cloth give notice in Writing to ââo or more of his Majesty's Justices of the âeace next adjoyning to provide such a numâer of Carts and Carriages from the Places next ââjacent as his Majesty shall have present use ãâã expressing the certainty of that number ãâã also the time and place when and where ââe said Carts and Carriages are to attend âhich Carriages shall consist of four able Horses ãâã six Oxen or four Oxen and two Horses ââr each of which Cart or Carriage the reâpective Owners shall receive sixpence for each âââle they shall go laden and that in case âny of his Majesty's Subjects of this Realm ââall refuse to provide and furnish his Majesty âhat now is or his Queen that is or shall be ââr His or Her Houshold or her Majesty Catherine Queen Dowager or Her Houshold ãâã their Progress or Removals with such sufficâent and necessary Carriages for their Wardrobe or other Necessaries for ready Monlââ tendered to them or shall without just anâ reasonable Cause refuse to make their Appearance with such sufficient Carts and Carriage as are before exprest that then upon dâââ Proof and Conviction of such neglect or refusal by the Oath of the Constable or otheâ Officer or two other credible Witnesses before the said Justices of the Peace of thâ County or Mayor or other Chief Officer ãâã the City or Corporation where he or theâ Inhabit which Oath they shall have power tâ adminster the Party so refusing shall for sucâ his refusal and neglect forfeit the Sum of fortâshillings to the Kings Majesty's use to be forth with levied by distress and sale of his Gooââ and Chattels rendring to the Parties the oveâ plus upon every such Sale if there shall bâ any by Warrant from the said Justices of thâ Peace Mayor or other Officer No Horses Oxeâ Cart or Wain shall be enforced to travel aboââ one days Journy from the Place where theâ receive their Lading and that ready Paymeââ shall be made in Hand for the said Carriage at the place of Lading without delay according to the aforesaid Rates And in caââ any Justice of the Peace Mayor Officer oâ Constable shall take any Gift or Reward tâ spare any Person or Persons from making such Carriage or shall injuriously charge or grieââ any Person through Envy Hatred or Evil will who ought not to make such Carriage or shaââ impress more Carriages than he shall be directed from the Green-Cloth to do that then âpon due Proof and Conviction thereof the âarty so offending shall forfeit the Sum of ten âounds to the Party thereby grieved or any âther who shall sue for the same to be recoâered by Action of Debt in any of his Majeâây's Courts of Record wherein no
have given them an Account of the Burials and Certificates and of their levying the Penalties in pursuance of that Act 30 Car. 2. c. 3. Now if the Churchwardens or Overseers or any of them shall refuse to make and yield a true and perfect Account to the said Justices of all such Mony and of all such Stock as aforesaid any two Justices Quor unus may commit them to the common Gaol there to remain without Bail till they have made a true Account and satisfied and paid to the new Overseers so much of the said Sum or Stock as upon the said Account shall be remaining in his or their Hands c. And if they make a false Account they may be bound over to the Assizes or Sessions and there an Indictment may be preferred against them Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. 154. Also if any of the Churchwardens or Overseers shall refuse or deny to pay or deliver over to the new Overseers the Arrearages Sums of Mony or Stock which shall be in their Hands and due and behind upon their Account to be made as aforesaid any two such Justices of Peace may make their Warrant to the present and subsequent Churchwardens and Overseers or any of them to levy the same by distress and sale of the Offenders Goods rendring to the Parties the overplus and in default of such distress any two Justices of the Peace may commit him or them to the common Goal there to remain without Bail until payment or delivery of the said Sum Arrearages and Stock be made 42 El. c. 2. Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. 154. If any such Stock shall be in the Hands of any of the Poor to work and such Poor shall refuse to deliver the same two such Justices may make the like Warrant to levy the same by distress and for lack thereof may commit such Offenders to the Goal as aforesaid Dalt J.P. c. 73. ibid. And for these aforesaid and all other Negligencies of the Churchwardens and Overseers in the Execution of their Office about the Poor c. every of them for every Default he makes forfeits 20 s. which Default must be proved either by the Offenders own Confession or by Examination of Witnesses and it is to be levied by the new Churchwardens and Overseers or one of them by Warrant from two Justices as aforesaid by distress and sale of the Offenders Goods and for want of Distress two such Justices may commit Offenders to the Goal there to remain without Bail till the said Forfeitures shall be paid which said Forfeitures are to be imployed to the use of the Poor of the said Parish Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. 155. 43 El. c. 2. CHAP. VI. The Overseers Duty about Weights and Measures and Burying in Woollen THere shall be one Weight one Measure and one Yard according to the Standard of the Exchequer throughout all the Realm as well in places Priviledged as without and every Measure of Corn shall be striked without Heap And whosoever shall keep any other Weight Measure or Yard whereby any Corn Grain or other thing is bought or sold shall forfeit for every Offence five shillings being thereof convicted by the Oath of one sufficient Witness before any Justice of Peace or Head-Officer of the City Town or Place where the Offence is done to be levied by the Churchwardens or Overseers of the Poor of the Parish to the use of the Poor of the said Parish by Distress and Sale of the Offenders Goods and for want of Distress to be Imprisoned without Bail until payment And all Persons upon Suit against him or them for any thing done upon this Act to plead the General Issue and give the Act in Evidence and to have treble Costs if unjustly vexed Dalt J.P. c. 112. f. 246. 17 Car. 2. c. 19. No Corps shall be buried in any thing other than what is made of Sheeps Wool only or be put into any Coffin lined or faced with any thing made of any material but Sheeps Wool on pain of the Forfeiture of five pounds 30 Car. 2. c. 3. An Affidavit under the Hands and Seals of two Witnesses or under the Hand of the Magistrate or Officer before whom it was sworn for which nothing shall be paid must be brought to the Minister within eight days after the Party is interred that he was not buried contrary to this Act which shall be taken before some Justice of Peace Master of Chancery Ordinary or Extraordinary Mayor Bailiff or other chief Officer of the City County Borough c. where the Party was buried And if no such Affidavit be brought the Minister shall give notice thereof under his Hand to the Churchwardens or Overseers of the Poor who within eight days after shall repair to the Chief Magistrate in any Town c. if buried there else to a Justice of Peace who upon Certificate thereof from the Minister c. shall grant a Warrant for levying the Forfeiture by distress and sale of the Goods of the Party deceased or in default thereof of the Persons Goods in whose House the Party died or the Goods of any that had a Hand in putting such Party into any Shroud Coffin c. contrary to this Act or that ordered the same And if such Person were a Servant and died in the Masters Family the Masters Goods to be liable And if such Person died in his Parents Family the Parents Goods to be liable One Moiety of which Forfeiture shall be to the Poor of the Parish where the Party is buried the other to him that shall sue for the same 30 Car. 2. c. 3. Ministers Churchwardens and Overseers Justices of Peace or Chief Magistrates neglecting their Duty aforesaid shall forfeit five pounds for every Offence to be recovered by Action of Debt Bill Plaint c. wherein the Prosecutor shall recover his full Costs so as the Suit be commenced within six months after the Offence committed one fourth part of the Forfeitures to the King two fourth parts to the Poor of the Parish where the Offender dwells and one fourth part to the Informer 30 Car. 2. c. 3. Every Minister shall keep a Register of all Burials and Affidavits And where no Affidavit is brought as aforesaid shall enter a Memorial thereof against the Name of the Party interred and of the time when he notified the same to the Churchwardens or Overseers of the Poor And the Overseers when they give up their Accounts at the Sessions or to any two Justices at their monthly Meetings shall give an account of the Name and Quality of every Person interred since their former Account and of such Certificates and of their levying the Penalties and of their disposal thereof on pain of five pounds to be levied by distress and sale of Goods by Warrant from the said Justices or two of them and their Accounts shall not be allowed till they have accounted for their Burials 30 Car. 2. c. 3. No Penalty shall be incurred where the
Bridge and six yards in breadth in the wing of the Net or hath fished with two of those Nets fixed together or used any Net or Device for taking the Fry of Eels or whereby the Spawn of Fish shall be destroyed shall issue out Warrants under the Hands and Seals of any two of them in their respective Countles to the Under Conservators of the said River or to any Constable Tythingman or Headborough to search in the day-time in all suspected places for such unlawful Instruments and to seize them and bring them to the Quarter Sessions to be burnt or destroyed 30 Car. 2. c. 9. If any Ling Herring Cod or Pilchard fresh or salt dried or bloated or any Salmons Eels or Congers taken by Foreigners Aliens to the Kingdom of England shall be imported uttered sold or exposed to sale in this Kingdom in such case the Constable Headborough c. or any other Person may take and seize the same and one half thereof must go to the use of the Poor of the Parish where the same is so found and seized and the other half to the use of the Party that seizes the same 18 Car. c. 2. CHAP. XVI The Constables Office about forcible Entries c. IF a Constable or any private Person of the same County do refuse to attend and assisâ the Justices of Peace upon request to remove aââ Force or to convey the Parties to the Goal he may be imprisoned for his neglect and make Fineâ to the King 15 R. 2. c. 2. Dalt J.P. c. 22. f. 57. CHAP. XVII The Constables Office about Hedge-breaking c. SUch as are convicted before a Justice of Peace for cutting and taking away of Corâ growing robbing of Orchards breaking Hedges and their Procurers and Receivers knowing the same are to give the Party grieved such Satisfaction as a Justice of Peace shall think fit and iâ they cannot give such satisfaction then the Justice may commit the Offenders to the Constable to be whipped for the first Offence and the like pain for the second Offence and if the Constable or other Officer do not by himself or some other see the same done accordingly then the Justice may commit such Officer to the Goal there to remain without Bail until he procure the Offender to be whipped as aforesaid 43 El. c. 7. The Constables Headboroughs or other Person in every County City Town-Corporate or other Place where they shall be Officers and Inhabitants have power to apprehend or âause to be apprehended such Persons as they âuspect for having carrying or conveying any Burthen or Bundles of any kind of Wood Underwood Poles or young Trees or Bark of âny Trees or Gates Stiles Posts Rales Pales Hedge-wood Broom or Furze and any Conââable Headborough c. by Warrant under the Hand and Seal of one Justice may enter into the Houses Out-houses Yards Gardens or other Places belonging to the Houses of such Persons as they shall suspect c. and where they shall find any to apprehend the Parties suspected for cutting the same and those in whose âustody c. any such Wood or Underwood shall be found and carry them before a Justice of the Peace and if the Party cannot give a good account to the Justice how he came by the said Wood c. by the consent of the Owner or shall not within the time the Justice shall appoint prove who he bought it of then such Person shall be deemed convicted of the cutting and spoiling of Wood within the Statute of 43 Eliz. and for the first Offence shall give such satisfaction to the Owner within such time as the Justice shall appoint and pay over and above presently to the use of the Poor where the Offence is committed so much Mony as the Justice shall appoint not exceeding ten shillings And for default of performance hereof the Justice may commit the Offender to the House of Correction for so long time as he shall think fit not exceeding one Month or otherwise to be whipped by the Constable or other Officer and for the second Offence the Offender is to be sent to the House of Correction for one Month and there he ââ to hard Labour and if he be convicted thâ third time then to be punished as an incorââgible Rogue 15 Car. 2. c. 2. If any Person buy any Burthens of Wooâ Underwood Sticks c. of any who may jâââly be suspected to have come by the same ââlawfully upon complaint to a Justice Head Oâficer c. and if upon Examination by Oaââ it appears That the same were bought of suââ Person as aforesaid the Justice may order ãâã Buyer to pay the treble value thereof to hiâ from whom they were stollen and for noâ payment the Justice may grant his Warrant the Constable to levy the same by distress ãâã sale of the Offenders Goods rendring to tââ Owner the overplus and for want of such dâstress then to commit the Party to the Gââ at his own charge there to remain one Monâ without Bail Stat. ibid. None is to be punished by this Statute thââ have been punished by any former Law for thâ same Offence and all Offenders within thâ Statute must be prosecuted within six Weeââ after the Offence committed Highways See the Office of Surveyors of High-ways and Bridges CHAP. XVIII The Constables Office about Stoned-Horses NOne ought to put to feed upon Forests or Commons except they be Commons where Mares are not usually kept any stoned-Horse being above two years old and not fifteen hands high from the lower part of the Hoof to the upper part of the Wither every hand containing four Inches Standard measure on pain to forfeit the same Horse 32 H. 8. c. 13. If any Stoned-Horse of lesser Stature be put to feed in any such Common unless it be in Fen-grounds of the Isle of Ely and of the Counties of Cambridge Huntington Northampton Lincoln Norfolk or Suffolk where they need be but thirteen hands high any Man may seize them to his own use so that first by the assistance of the Keeper of the Ground or Constable Bailiff Headborough or other such Officer of the Parish adjoyning such Horse be brought to the next Pound and there by such Officer in the presence of three other sufficient Men he be measured and found lower than the Statute 32 H. 8. c. 13. 8 Eliz. c. 8. Wingates Abr. Stat. Tit. Horses Those that refuse to measure or to be present at measuring do foreit 40 s. a piece for every such default to be divided between the King and Prosecutor But note That an Horse that makes an Escape into such Common shall not be questioned so that he stay not above four days after notice thereof at the Owners House or in hââ Parish Church 32 H. 8. c. 13. Forests and Common Grounds must be driveâ yearly at Michaelmas or within fifteen days after by the Keepers Constables or other Officeâ abovesaid on pain of forty shillings and thâ have power
Peace and further shall be bound to Good Behaviour for one whole Year Wingââââ Stat. Tit. Plague 1 Jac. c. 13. Dalt J.P. c. â fol. 91. The Justices of Peace or any one of thâ and other Head Officers in Corporate Towâ ithin their several Limits may appoint Seaâers Watchmen Examiners Keepers and Bââers for the Persons and Places infected and any Person infected or dwelling and being in House infected shall contrary to the commitment or appointment of the Justice of Peace Constable c. wilfully attempt to go abroad to resist such their Keepers or Watchmen thâ may such Watchmen with Violence force thâ to keep their Houses and if any hurt happââ thereupon the Watchmen shall not be impeacâed therefore 1 Jac. c. 13. Dalt J.P. c. 39. f 9 Cromp. 122. b. Wingates Stat. Tit. Plague If the Constable or other Officer wilfully neglect to levy the Mony by Warrant from tââ Justices of Peace upon the Statute for Reliefâ any Town infected with the Plague by Distreââ and Sale of the Goods of such Persons as refuââ or neglect to pay then they forfeit for ever such Offence ten shillings to be imployed to thâ said Charitable Use Wingates Stat. Tit. Plaguâ 1 Jac. c. 31. Dalt J.P. c. 39. f. 91. CHAP. XXVII The Constables Office about conveying Prisoners to the Goal AN Offender which is to be conveyed to Goal must bear all Charges both of himself and of those that guard him if he be able and if he refuse to pay the Charges or shall not at the time of the Commitment discharge the same then upon a Warrant from a Justice of Peace the Constable of the Liberty or Town where the Offender hath any Goods being within the same County may sell so many of the Parties Goods as in the discretion of the Justice shall be thought sufficient to satisfie the said Charges the Apprizement to be made by four Inhabitants of the Parish where such Goods be and the overplus to be returned to the Owner 3 Jac. c. 10. Dalt J.P. c. 43. f. 104. And if the Offender have no Goods to defray the Charges then the Charge must be born by the Town or Parish where the Offender was taken which must be done by Tax made by the Constable Churchwardens and two or three other Inhabitants and where there are no such Officers then four of the principal Inhabitants of the Parish must make the Rate which being allowed under the Hand of a Justice of Peace every Inhabitant must pay their proportion according to the said Rate and if any refuse to pay the Constable Tythingman or other Officer by Warrant from a Justice of the Peace may levy the same by Distress and after Apprizement by four oâ the Inhabitants may sell the same rendringâ to the Party refusing the overplus if any be 1 Jac. c. 10. And if the Constable or other Officer thââ makes such Distress be sued he may plead Justification and upon a Verdict for the Defendant or a Nonsuit of the Plaintiff he shall recover treble Damages besides Costs of the Suit Purveyance See Carriages Chap. 7. fol. 23. CHAP. XXVIII The Constables Office about Quarter Many for Maimed Soldiers Prisoners c. THE Constables and Churchwardens are to levy by Distress and Sale of the Offenders Goods such Mony as is rated upon any Person within their Constablery for the Relief of poor maimed Soldiers and Mariners rendring the overplus to the Owner 43 Eliz 3. Wingates Stat. Tit. Captains and Soldiers And this Mony so collected is to be paid quarterly to the High Constable of the Hundred ten days before every Quarter Sessions or else the Constable and Churchwardens their Executors c. forfeit twenty shillings And the High Constable is to pay in the Collection Mony to the Treasurers appointed by the Justices every Quarter Sessions or otherwise he his Executors c. forfeits 40 s. which forfeitures are to be levied and employed by the Treasurer for the encrease of their Stock for the uses aforesaid 43 El. c. 3. Wingates Stat. Tit. Captains and Soldiers The High Constables are to make Quarterly Payment at every Sessions unto the Collectors appointed by the Justices of all such Sums of Mony as are raised in every Parish and paid to them by the Churchwardens or Constables for the Relief of the poor Prisoners in the Goal under pain of five pounds 14 El. c. 5. Wingates Stat. Tit. Prison and Prisoners The Constables and Churchwardens are to levy by Distress and Sale of the Offenders Goods so much Mony as is rated upon any Person within their Parish for the Relief of the Prisoners in the Kings Bench and Marshalsey and also of Hospitals and Almshouses and Relief of the Poor within their County rendring the overplus to the Owner and for want of such Distress the Justice of Peace may commit the Party to Prison there to abide till it be paid without Bail or Mâinprize which Mony the Churchwardens are to pay to the High Constable ten days before the end of every Quarter Sessions and if the Churchwardens their Executors c. fail to pay this Mony they forfeit ten shillings and if the High Constable his Executors c. fail to pay the Treasurers of the County the same Mony at the Quarter Sessions they forfeit twenty shillings which Forfeitures the Treasurers may levy by Distress and Sale as aforesaid and the Monies to be imployed to the uses aforesaid 43. Eliz. c. 2. Wingates Stat. Tit. Pââ People Dalt J.P. c. 53. fol. 135. CHAP. XXIX The Constables Office about Popish Recusants POpish Recusants above Sixteen years of aââ shall within forty days after their convictâon repair to their usual dwelling and not remoââ above five Miles from thence on pain to forsâââ all their Goods and Lands and Annuities duriââ Life and if they have no certain Abode thââ are they to repair to the Place where they weââ Born or where their Father and Mother dwelâ and within twenty days after their arrival theâ to give their Names in Writing to the Ministeâ Constables and Headboroughs which Minister to enter them in a Book to be kept for that purpose and he together with the said Constable and Headboroughs are to certifie the same to the next Quarter Sessions where the Justice of Peacâ must cause the same to be inrolled 35 Eliz. c. â Wingates Stat. Tit. Crown The Constables and Churchwardens of everâ Parish or the one of them if there be not such then the High Constables of the Hundreâ there are once every year to present at thâ General Sessions of the Peace the monthly absence from Church of every Popish Recusant and the Names of their Children being above the Age of nine Years abiding with their said Parents and of their Servants together with the Age of their Children as near as they can know them on pain to forfeit respectively for every such default twenty shillings which Presentment the Clerk of the Peace or Town Clerk shall Record without
is a Rout. And if they do act any such thing indeed then it is a Riot CHAP. XXXII The Constables Office about Rogues and Vagabonds THE Constable Tythingman or Headborough assisted by the Minister and one other of the Parish is to see or do it himself Rogues and Vagabonds which shall be taken begging stripped naked from the Middle upwards and openly whipped till their Body be bloody and then forthwith to be sent away from Parish to Parish or Tything to Tything the next streight way to the place of their Birth and if that cannot be known then to the plaâe where they last dwelt by the space of one whole year before such punishment and if that cannot be known then to the Town through which they last passed unpunished and when they come there if it cannot be discovered where they were born or last dwelt as aforesaid then are they by that Constable to be conveyed to the House of Correction or common Goal of that County to be imployed in Work or placed in some Service and so to continue by the space of one year or in case they be not able in Body that Town is to keep them till they may be placed in some Almshouse within the same County 39 Eliz. c. 4. Wingates Stat. Tit. Vagabonds Resolu Judges sect 717. Bolst 2 part Rep. fol. 258. After such punishment the Vagabond is to have a Testimonial under the Hand and Seal of the Constable Tythingman c. and the Minister of the place testifying the day and the place of his punishment the place to which he is to be âonveyed and the time limited for his passage âhither which time if by his own default he âxceeds he shall incur the like punishment ârom time to time till he arrive at the place ââmited The substance of the Testimonial is âo be entred by the Minister in a Register Book which he is to keep for that purpose on pain of 5 s. Dalt f. 129. The Form of a Testimonial for conveying a Rogue or Vagabond W. W. a sturdy vagrant Beggar aged about forty years tall of stature red haired and long lean visaged and squint-eyed was this 24th day of A. in the 22th year of the Reign of Our Gracious Sovereign Lord King Charles the Second c. openly whipped at T. in the County of G. according to the Law for a wandering Rogue and is assigned to pass forthwith from Parish to Parish by the Officers thereof the next streight way to W. in the County of B. where he confesseth he was Born and he is limited to be at W. aforesaid within twelve days now next ensuing at his peril Given under the Hands and Seals of C.W. Minister of T. aforesaid and of J.G. Constable there the day and year aforesaid A Justice of Peace alone may under his Hand and Seal make such Testimonial Lambert 206. If any Constable Tythingman or Headborough be found negligent in the due execution of the Act of the 39th of Eliz. aforesaid he forfeits ten shillings for every Default And such Persons as shall hinder the Execution of tââ Law upon Rogues forfeit five pounds and ãâã to be bound to the Good Behaviour And iâ Constable refuse to receive a Rogue and to coâvey him or her to the next Constable or if ãâã do receive him and not convey him to the neââ Constable he forfeits five pounds and may ãâã bound to the Good Behaviour 39 Eliz. c. Dalâon c. 47. fol. 128. Resolu Judges sect 1â 14. Every Person shall apprehend or cause ãâã be apprehended such Rogues as he shall ãâã or know to resort to his House to beg or râceive any Alms and him or them shall carââ or cause to be carried to the next Constable ãâã else shall forfeit for every such Default ãâã shilling and the Constable is to whip and coâvey such Rogues as before is directed on pâââ of twenty shillings 1 Jac. c. 7. Dalt c. 47. fââ 128. Resolu Judges sect 13 14. Two Justices of Peace one of the Quoâââ by Warrant under their Hands and Seals mââ cause to be levied by Distress and Sale of thâ Offenders Goods all the Fines and Forfeiture aforesaid after Conviction of the Party which must be either by Confession of the Party ãâã Proof of two Witnesses before the said Justices 39 Eliz. c. 4. Dalt c. 47. fol. 149. 1 Jââ c. 7. Constables or Tythingmen neglecting tââ search for Rogues upon the Justices Warrant or to appear at their Meeting to give an account what Rogues have been punished or sent to the House of Correction or if they neglect to convey such to the House of Correction as by Warrant are to be sent thither they are liable to such Fine as the Justices please not exceeding forty shillings 7 Jac. c. 4. Any Justice of the Peace may reward any Person or Persons who shall apprehend and bring before him any Rogue Vagabond or sturdy Beggar by granting to such Person a Warrant under his Hand and Seal to the Constable or Tythingman of the place through which the Rogue did pass unapprehended ordering the said Constable c. to give such Person two shillings for every Rogue so taken And if the Constable c. refuse to pay it the Justice of the Peace may proceed against such Officers according to the Stat. 1 Jac. 7. and compel him to pay his Forfeiture by the said Statute and to allow the said two shillings out of the said Forfeiture to such Person with such further Allowance for loss of time as the Justice shall think fit 1 Jac. 7. 14 Car. 2. c. 12. If any Person shall apprehend any Rogue at the Confines of any County which passed through any Parish of another County unapprehended then the Person so apprehending such Rogue must carry him to some Justice of Peace of the County through which he passed unapprehended who upon a Certificate under the Hand of some Justice of Peace of the County where such Rogue was apprehended is to grant his Warrant to the Constable c. to pay two shillings as aforesaid which if he refuse or neglect then the Justice is to proceed against the Constable c. and cause him to pay ten shillings to the Party or so much thereof for loss of time as the Justice shall think fit 14 Car. 2. c. 12. And also That whereas Constables Tythingmen c. are at great Charges in Relieving carrying with Passes and conveyinâ Rogues c. all Constables Tythingmen c. so out of Purse with the Churchwardens as Overseers of the Poor and other Inhabitanââ of the Parish may make a Rate and tax ãâã the Inhabitants of the Parish which aââ chargeable by the 43 of Eliz. which Rate moââ be confirmed under the Hands and Seals oâ two Justices of the Peace And if any Persoâ refuse to pay his Rate then the Constable ãâã Warrant from two Justices of Peace may Jeââ the same upon the Goods of the Party refusing rendring them the Overplus if
any remaiâ thereof 14 Car. 2. c. 12. All these Persons hereafter named are accounted and adjudged Rogues Vagabonds anâ sturdy Beggars That is to say All such Persons above the Age of seven years Man oâ Woman Sole or Covert that wander from their usual place of Abode abroad every where begging or if they do not beg yet ãâã they wander and loiter about without a lawfuâ Pasport and give no good account for their Travel are accounted Rogues 39 Eliz. c. 4. 17. 43 Eliz. c. 2. 1 Jac. c. 7. 21 Jac. c. 28. 7 Jac. c. 24. 5 Eliz. c. 4. Dalt c. 47. fol. 123 124 125. All Scholars and Seafaring men which beg wandring Persons that use unlawful Games subtil Craft or Plays or pretending themselves to have skill in Physiognomy Palmistry or the like or to be Fortune-tellers or Figure-casters All Proctors Patent-gatherers except for Fire Collectors for Goals Prisoners or Hospitals wandring abroad Fencers Bearwards those are Rogues in Grain common Players of Interludes and Fidlers or Minstrels wandring abroad All Juglers Hocus Pocus and Slight of Hand Artists Tinkers Pedlars and Petty Chapmen and Glass-men wandring abroad especially if they be not well known or have not a sufficient Testimonial all counterfeit Egyptians not being Felons all Persons delivered out of Goals which beg for their Fees or otherwise do travel begging such as go to âor from the Bâths and do not pursue their License Soldiers and Mariners that beg and counterfeit a Certificate of their Commanders All Labourers which wander abroad out of the Parish and refuse to work for Wages reasonably taxed having no living otherwise to maintain themselves and such as go with a General Pasport which is not directed from Parish to Parish All these are accounted Rogues Vagabonds and sturdy Beggars All Servants that depart out of their Service viz. out of one City Town or Parish to another or out of one Hundred or County to serve in another without a Testimonial or with a false one and such Persons as are sick of the Plague and wilfully go abroad in Company against the command of Officers are to be punished as Vagabonds but none are to be sent to the place of Birth or last Habitation but wandring Rogues Those which beg in their own Parish or in High ways withoââ the appointment of the Overseers are to bâ sent to the House of Correction A Wife and Children under seven years ãâã Age being vagrant must be placed with thâ Husband and if the Husband be dead theâ with the Wife where she was born or lââ dwelt and vagrant Children above seveâââ years of Age must be sent to the place ãâã their Birth and if the Vagrant Parents whâââ their Children under seven years of Age ãâã placed at the place of Birth of the Parents ãâã at the place of Dwelling if afterwards thâ Parents or either of them die or run away yet the Children once settled must remaââ there still and may not be sent to the place ãâã their Birth though afterwards they attain tâ the Age of seven years 39 Eliz. c 4. Dalt J. P c 47. fol. 135. Resolu Judges sect 4 5. The Wife being but a vagrant Rogue oughâ to be sent to her Husband though he be bââ a Servant in another Town or Parish and thâ Rogue whose place or dwelling cannot be knowâ having Wife or Children under seven years ãâã Age they must go with the Husband to the place where they were last suffered to pass through unpunished where the Children musâ be relieved with the Work of their Parents though their Parents be committed to the House of Correction CHAP. XXXIII The Constables Office about keeping the Sabbath THE Constable by Warrant from a Justice of Peace or the Chief Officer of any âity Borough or Town Corporate under âheir Hand and Seal against such as use unlawful âames on the Sabbath-day as Bull-baiting Bear-âaiting Enterludes or other unlawful Exercises âithin their own Parish or out of their own Paââsh at any such Sports whatsoever may levy the âenalty of three shillings and four pence by âistress and Sale of the Offenders Goods renâring the overplus to the Owners and in deâult of Distress the Constable is to set the Ofâenders in the Stocks by the space of three hours Note That the Party offending in these Games must be questioned within a month after the Ofâence committed 1 Car. 1. c. 1. Dalt J.P. c. 23. âol 63. If any one on the Sabbath-day keep or be âresent at any Wrestling Shootings Bowlings âinging of Bells for Pleasure Mask Wake Church Ale Dancing Games Sport or Pastime whatsoever they forfeit five shillings if he or âhe be above fourteen years of Age and if unâer that Age then twelve pence by him that âath the Government of the Party to be levied by Sale and Distress by the Constable by Warrant from a Justice of Peace or Chief Officer âs aforesaid and for want of Distress to be set âhree hours in the Stocks And every Carrier going with his Horses on this day or Wagoner Carrier or Waynman going with any Wagon Cart or Wayn or Drover with his Cattel forfeââ twenty shillings for every Offence to be leviââ also by Distress and Sale of his Goods if he ãâã questioned within six weeks after the Offenâââ done but there must be but one twenty shââlings forfeit for one Journy although they pâââ through several Parishes and this twenty shâlings that Parish shall have where the Distreâââ is first taken 3 Car. 1. c. 1. Dalt c. 50. â 134. And if any Butcher by himself or any for hiâ shall kill or sell any Victuals upon the Loââ day he forfeits six shillings and eight pence ãâã be levied by the Constable by Distress and Sâââ as aforesaid upon Warrant from a Justice Peace c. the Offence to be questioned wiââ six weeks after it is committed and the Partââ to be convicted before any Justice of Peace Mayor or Head Officer c. upon their owâ view proof of two Witnesses or more or tââ Parties own confession and the Justice Mayor c. may reward the Informer with the this part of the Penalty 3 Car. 1. c 1. Dalt J.P. c. 5â fol. 134. All Laws in force concerning the Observation of the Lords day shall be put in Execution none shall do any Work by Labour or Business that day Works of Charity and Necessity only excepted and the Offender if of the Age ãâã fourteen years or upwards shall forfeit finââ shillings none shall cry or expose to sale ãâã Wares that day on pain to forfeit them ãâã Drover Horse-Courser Waggoner Butcheââ Higler or their Servants shall travel on the Lords day on pain to forfeit twenty shillings no Person shall travel on that day with any Boaââ Wherry c. except on extraordinary occasion âo be allowed by a Justice of Peace or Head Officer of the place c. on pain to forfeit five shillings 29 Cap. 2. c. 7. The Justice of Peace or
to two Justices of the Peace within twenty eight days after new Scavengers are Elected and to pay what Mony remains in their Hands to the new Scavengers The Scavengers and Rakers for any of the said Parishes shall have liberty by the Order of the Justices in the Petty-Sessions or any two of them to lodge their Soil in such vacant places near the Streets or High-ways aâ shall be thought convenient by the said Justices for the accommodation of the Country Cartâ returning empty from the said Parishes they giving satisfaction to the Owners of such vacant places and in case of unreasonable Demands the Justices in their Petty Sessions may hear and moderate the same If any Persons find themselves aggrieved with the Rates made by virtue of this Act or any ways prejudiced by the determination of the Justices in their Petty-Sessions they may have recourse to the Justices at their General Quarter Sessions of the Peace And whereas there are many Common High-ways within the said Parishes which cannot be sufficiently repaired by means of the Laws now in force an Assessment may be made upon all the Inhabitants Owners and Occupiers of Lands and Houses or personal Estate usually ratable to the Poor within any of the said Parishes to be collected by such Persons as the Justices shall appoint at their General Quarter-Sessions the Mony so collected to be employed as the Justices shall direct towards repairing the said High-ways No such Rate shall exceed four pence in the Pound in any one year in the yearly value of Lands Houses or Tenements nor of eight pence for every twenty pounds in personal Estate No Person or Persons whatsoever shall suffer his Waggon Cart or Car to stand in the Hay-market near Pickadilly in the Parish of St. Martin in the Fields St. James within the Liberty of Westminster Borough of Southwark or any other place in the Parishes within the Weekly Bills of Mortality loaden with Hay or Straw to sell the same from Michaelmas to Lady-day after two of the Clock in the Afternoon and from Lady-day to Michaelmas after one in the Afternoon on pain to forfeit five shillings for every Offence and Neglect The Owners and Proprietors of any Cart Car or Dray the Wheels whereof shall not be made six Inches in the breadth or shall be shod with Iron or be drawn with above two Horses shall forfeit forty shillings for every time such Cart Car or Dray shall be used for the uses and to be levied as aforesaid This shall not extend to any Country Cart or Waggon that shall bring any Goods to the Cities or Places aforesaid or shall carry any Goods half a Mile beyond the paved Streets of the said Cities and Places One Justice of Peace upon View or Confession or Oath of one Witness may convict any of the Offences aforesaid If Conviction be upon proof one Moiety to the Overseers of the Poor for the Relief of the Poor of the Place where the Offence was committed the other Moiety to him that shall discover and prosecute the same But if the Conviction shall be by the View then one half to the Poor the other towards repairing and cleansing the Streets to be paid to the Scavengers of the Place to be levied by the Justices Warrant under Hand and Seal to the Constable by Distress and Sale or for want of Distress or Payment within six days after notice at the House to be sent to Goal without Bail uââââ payment No Person within the Cities of London and Westminster and Liberties of the same Borough of Southwark and Parishes aforesaid shall breed feed or keep any Swine in any Houses or Backsides of the paved Streets where the Houses are contiguous on pain to forfeit the same to the Churchwardens and Overseers of the Poor of the Parish where such Swine shall be kept to the use of the Poor The Churchwardens Chappel-wardens Overseers of the Poor Constables Beadles Headboroughs or Tythingmen of any the Parishes in the said Cities and Places respectively in the day-time with a Warrant under the Hand and Seal of the Lord Mayor or any other of their Majesties Justices of the Peace may search for such Swine and if any be found they may seize and carry them away and sell them for the best price that can be had and distribute the Mony to the Poor of the Parish where they were seized CHAP. VI. Several Cases about the Repairs of Bridges with the Names of the Statutes which concern particular Bridges WHere a Common Bridge in the Kings High-way is in decay and that it cannot be proved or known who nor what Lands are chargeable to the repairing thereof in this case four Justices of the Peace whereof one to be of the Quorum within the Shire or Riding wherein such decayed Bridges be and if they be in a City or Town Corporate then fort such Justices of Peace there may within the Limits of their several Commissions call before them the Constables or two of the most honest Inhabitants of every Town and Parish within the Shire Riding City or Town Corporate wherein such Bridge or any parcel thereof shall happen to be and the Justices upon the appearance of the Constables or other Inhabitants and with their Assents may Tax every Inhabitant in any such City Town or Parish within their Limits to such reasonable Sum of Mony as by their Discretions they shall think convenient as well for the repairing of such Bridge and also for the making and repairing of the High-ways by the space of 300 Foot next adjoyning to the Ends of any such Bridges 22 H. 8. c. 5. Dalt J.P. c. 16. f. 44. Co. 2 part Inst f. 701 702. But Note Where the Franchise City or Borough is a County of it self and hath not four or more Justices of the Peace whereof one or more are of the Quorum in this case no other Justices of the Peace of any Shire or County have any power to meddle there by this Act but such decay must be reformed by the Common Law by such Remedy as they were before the making of the Statute of 22 H. 8. Co. 2 part Inst f. 702. And note That this Taxation ought not to be made by the Justices without the Consent of the Constables or Inhabitants nor by them without the Justices and this Tax ought to be upon every Inhabitant in particular and not to be set upon the Hundred Parish Town c. for then one or two might be distrained upon for the whole Co. 2 part Inst f. 704. After such Taxation made as aforesaid the said Justices of Peace shall cause the Names and Sums of every particular Person so by them taxed to be written in a Roll indented in Parchment for every Hundred and sealed with their Seals Co. 2 part Inst fol. 704. Dalt J.P. c. 16. ibid. And the said Justices may make two Collectors of every Hundred for the Collecting of all such Sums of Mony by the said Justices set
c. 12. Upon complaint to one or more Justices of Peace the Proof shall lie upon the Defendant to make appear by Oath of one or more Witnesses that he or they did sell or buy according to this and the said former Act wherein if he fail he shall forfeit as by this Act is directed to be levied by distress and sale of Goods by Warrant under the Hand and Seal of one or more Justices before whom such Conviction shall be The Penalties to be distributed one half to the Poor of the Parish where the Offence shall be committed the other to the Informer 22 23 Car. 2. c. 12. DIRECTIONS to Treasurers for the Relief of Poor Maimed Soldiers and Mariners THE Justices of Peace are yearly at the Quarter Sessions about Easter to choose or appoint one or two Persons according to their Discretions of the County for the taking and distributing of the Monies collected for the Reâief of poor maimed Soldiers and Mariners And these Treasurers by the Words of the future ought to be Subsidy Men of 10 pounds ân Lands or 15 pounds in Goods and these Officers are to continue in their Office one Year and new ones then to be chosen in their Rooms 43 El c. 3. Wingates Stat. Tit. Captains Now for the raising of Mony for these Treasurers the greater part of the Justices in their Quarter Sessions have power to charge every Parish within their Limits towards a Weekly âelief of maimed Soldiers and Mariners so âhat no Parish pay Weekly above 10 pence nor ânder 2 pence nor any County which consists âf above 50 Parishes pay above 6 pence one âarish with another 43 El. c. 3. When the Tax is levied the Constables and Churchwardens are to deliver it quarterly ten days before every Quarter Sessions to the High Constables of their Division who must deliver to âhe Treasurers of the County at the same Quarter Sessions all the same Mony and if the Constables or Churchwardens their Executors c. fail in the payment to the High Constable within the time aforesaid then they are to forfeit 20 s. and if the High Constable fall to pay the Treasurers every Sessions then he forfeits 40 s. which Forfeitures as it seems the Treasurers may levy by Distress and Sale of the Offenders Goods without any Warrant rendring the overplus to the Owner And these Forfeitures are to go in Augmentation of the Treasurers Stock 43 El. c. 3. The maimed Soldier or Mariner which was Prest shall repair if he be able to Travel to the Treasurers of the County where he was Prest if he were not Prest then to the Treasurers of the County where he was Born or were he last dwelt by the space of three years at his Election but if he be not able to Travel then to the Treasurers of the County where he Lands and he is to bring with him a Certificate under the Hand and Seal of the Chief Commander or of the Captain under whom he served containing the particular of his Hurts and Service which Certificate shall also be allowed by the Muster-Master or the Receiver-General of the Rolls for the Muster under one of their Hands 33 El. c. 3. Then upon such a Certificate the Treasurerâ aforesaid may allow the Party Relief to maintain him till the next Quarter Sessions anâ then the major-part of the Justices may alloâ him a Pension which the Treasurers muââ pay him quarterly until it shall be revoked ãâã altered by the said Justices and this Allowancâ is not to exceed 10 l. per annum to a Commoâ Soldier not 15 l. to an Officer under a Lieutenant nor 20 l. to a Lieutenant 43 El. c. 3 Wingates Stat. Tit. Captains and Soldiers Where Soldiers and Mariners arrive far from the place where they are to receive Relief the Treasurers there shall give them Relief and a Testimonial whereby they may pass from Treasurer to Treasurer until they shall come to the place required and this shall be done upon the bare Certificate of the Commander and Captain although they have not as yet obtain'd any Allowance from the Muster-Master or Receiver-General of the Muster-Rolls Wingates Stat. Tit. Captains and Soldiers 43 El. c. 3. If any Soldier or Mariner beg or counterfeit a Certificate he shall be punished as a Common Rogue and shall lose his Pension if he have any 43 El. c. 3. Wingate ut supra When out of the County where the Party was Prest a fit Pension cannot be satisfied it shall then be supplied by the County where he was born or else where he last dwelt by the space of three years Wingate ubi supra 43 El. c. 3. The Treasurers are to Register all their Receipts and Disbursements and must enter the Names of the Parties relieved into their Book and also the Certificate by virtue whereof the Disbursements are made and where they disallow of a Certificate they are to set down the Reasons of their Refusal under the Certificate or on the back thereof 43 El. c. 3. Wingate Stat. Tit. Captains and Soldiers If any Treasurer wilfully refuse to give Relief in the Cases aforesaid the Justices of the Peace in their Sessions may set a Fine upon him which may be levied by Distress and Sale of his Goods Wingate ubi supra These Officers at the end of their Year within 10 days after Easter Sessions are to give ãâã a just Account to the succeeding Treasurers oâ all their Receipts and Disbursements within the time of their Office and then if they have any Mony in their Hands they are to deliver it to their Successors and if any such Officer his Executors or Administrators shall not give up such Account within the time aforesaid oâ shall be otherwise negligent in the Executioâ of his Office The Justices at the Sessions may assess what Fine they please upon him so thaâ it be not under five pounds but what theâ please above five pounds upon him his Executors or Administrators Wingate ubi supra 43 El. c. 3. In Corporations the Justices there are tâ put this Act in Execution and not the Justices of the County This Act is not to prohibit the City of London to make a Tax if neeâ require differing from that above limited iâ this Act so that no Parish pay above thrââ shillings Weekly nor under twelve penâ Weekly one Parish with another 43 El. c. 3. FINIS
Essoign ârotection or Wager of Law shall be allowâd And in case any Person or Persons shall resume to take upon him or them to impress âny Horses Oxen Cart Wain or Carriages for âis Majesty's Service other than the Person so âmpowered then he or they so offending ââall upon due Conviction of the said Offence ââcur and suffer the Punishment contained in ââe Act of 12 Car. 2. And it is further Enacted That the High âonstable or Constables the Mayor Bailiff ãâã other Chief Officer who shall be required ây this Act to warn the said Carts and Carââages as in the said Act directed do make a âeturn in Writing to the Clerk or other Ofââcer of the Carriages of the Names and Places ãâã Abode of every such Person who is so âarned to bring in his Cart or Carriage to ââe intent it may be known in case of any ââllure who is in default and the said Conââables and other Chief Officer or Officers apâointed by this Act to warn in the said Carââages as abovesaid may be discharged and ââdemnified and the Defaulters punished as ân this Act is provided 14 Car. 2. c. 20. For providing Carriages by Land and by Water for the use of his Majeâây's Navy and Ordnance Two or more Justices of the Peace by Warrant from the Lord High Admiral of England or two or more ãâã the principal Officers or Commissioners of thâ Navy or the Master of his Majesty's Ordnance or the Lieutenant of his Ordnance are tâ provide Carriages with Horses and Oxen oâ of the Country not being above twelve Milâ distant from the place of lading the Owneâ of which Carriages or their Servants are ãâã receive twelve pence a Mile for every Load ãâã Timber and eight pence a Mile for every Tâââ of other Commodities And all such Persons ãâã neglect or refuse to make their appearance uâon Oath thereof made before the Justices bâ the Constable or two Witnesses the Persoâ refusing or neglecting forfeits twenty shillingâ to be levied by Distress and Sale of his Goodâ by Warrant from the said Justices Mayor ãâã other chief Officer or from the principal Oâficers or Commissioners of his Majesty's Navâ or Master or Lieutenant of his Majesty's Orânance rendring to the Owner the overplus ãâã any be first deducting the Charge of Distraiâing No Horses c. or Land-Carriage shall ãâã forced to travel more days-journy from the place where they receive their Lading nor bâ compelled to continue longer in the Employment than the said Justices shall appoint anâ that ready Mony be paid to the Parties in hanâ at the place of Lading according to the Ratâ aforesaid Stat. ibid. The said Act of 14 Car. c. 20. 13 c. 8. are ãâã continue until the end of the first Session of thâ next Parliament and expired but revived bâ 1 Jac. 2. for 7 years from June 21 1685. and ãâã continue to the end of the first Session of the next Parliament CHAP. VIII The Constables Office about Irish Cattel ãâã any great Cattel Sheep or Swine or any ãâã Beef Pork or Bacon except such as is the necessary Provision of the respective âââps or Vessels in which the same be brought ãâã exposing the same or any part thereof ãâã sale shall by any wise whatsoever be ââââported or brought from Ireland or any âââer Part beyond the Seas into the Kingâââ of England Dominion of Wales or Town ãâã Berwick upon Tweed in such case the âââstable Tythingman Headborough Churchâââdens or Overseers of the Poor or any of âââm within their respective Liberties Paâââes or Places may take and seize the same ãâã keep the same during the space of ââânt and forty hours in some publick or âââvenient place where such seizure shall be ââde within which time if the Owner or ââners or any for him or them shall make âppear unto some Justice of Peace of the ââe County where the same shall be so seiâââ by the Oath of two credible Witnesses âât the same were not imported from Ireland from any other Place beyond the Seas exââât the Isle of Man then the same upon ãâã Warrant of such Justice of Peace is to be âââivered to the Owner or Owners without deâââ 18 Car. 2. c. 2. But in default of such Proof and Warrant ân the same to be forfeited and one half ââreof to be disposed to the use of the Poor of the Parish where the same shall be so fouââ and seized and the other part thereof to ãâã or their own use that shall so seize the samâ 18 Car. 2. c. 2. Such Cattel as are imported from the Iâââ of Man before excepted into England are not to exceed the number of six hundreâ in one Year and they are to be of no othââ Breed than of the Breed of the Isle of Maâ and all to be landed at the Port of Chester ãâã some of the Members thereof and not elsâwhere 18 Car. 2. c. 2. This Act was to continue for seven Yeaââ and from thence to the end of the first Sesââon of the next Parliament And is now by tââ Statute of 32 Car. 2. c. 2. revived and maââ perpetual But these former Remedies not proving effectual for the prevention of the Transpoââing of the Cattel aforesaid it is further prâvided That whensoever and as often as ãâã shall happen either through any fraudâlent Agreement or unfaithful Connivence ãâã any Constable Headborough Tythingmââ Churchwarden or Overseer of the Poor ãâã that it shall happen any otherwise howsoevââ that any great Cattel Sheep Swine Beâââ Pork or Bacon after the first Seizure ãâã them or any of them by Virtue of the aforâsaid Act shall be driven brought carriââ into or found in any other Parish or Placâ than where the same shall be first seized ãâã aforesaid That then and so often and froâ time to time it shall and may be lawful ãâã and for the Constable Tythingman Headbârough Churchwarden or Overseer of tââ Poor of every or any such other Parish or Place where such great Cattel Sheep Swine Beef Pork or Bacon shall be brought driven or carried into or found as aforesaid to seize âake and dispose of the same and every or any of them as forfeited The one Moiety thereof to the use of the Poor of such other Parish or Place where such Seizure shall be made the other to the use of such Officer or Officers who shall seize the same as aforesaid any other or former Seizure or Seizures in any other Parish or Parishes Place or Places notwithstanding Stat. 20 Car. 2. c. 7. And now by the Statute of 32 Car. 2. c. 2. ât is further provided That any Person may make such Seizures as well as the Constables or other Officers or Inhabitants And that to prevent fraudulent Seizures and Compositions the Seizors shall within six days after Conviction and Forfeiture cause the said Cattel Sheep and Swine to be killed and the âides and Tallow shall be to the Seizor and âhe Remainder to be
distributed by the Churchwardens and Overseers amongst the Poor of the Parish where any such great Cattel Sheep or Swine shall be imported or found The Seizor Churchwarden or Overseers sailing in his Duty shall forfeit forty shillings for every one of the great Cattel and ten shillings for every Sheep or Swine which should have been so killed and dristributed one Moieâty to the Poor of the said Parish the other to the Informer to be levied by Distress and sale of the Offenders Goods by Warrant from any one Justice of Peace and for want thereof the Offender to be committed to Goal for thâ Months without Ball. Mutton and Lamb imported shall be subjâââ to the like Seizure and the Importers and Sââlers to the like Penalties as for Importationââ Beef Pork or Bacon and the like of Butâââ and Cheese imported from Ireland If any great Cattel Sheep or Swine whâââ have been seized be found alive in any otâââ Parish or Place they are to be seized agâââ and killed to the Benefit of the Seizor ãâã the Poor of that Parish or Place in manâ aforesaid English or other Cattel intermixt with Iâââ Cattel shall be deemed Irish in all respeââ 32 Car. 2. c. 2. CHAP. IX The Constables Office about Conventicles BY the Stat. of 22 Car. 2. cap. 1. made agaiââ Seditious Conventicles every Constabââ Headborough Tythingman Churchwarden ãâã Overseers of the Poor are authorized and ââquired to levy the Fines assessed by the Justâââ of Peace upon those who shall be present at uâlawful Conventicles upon their Goods and Chââtels having first received a Warrant under ãâã Hands and Seals of one or more Justices or Châââ Magistrate and forthwith deliver the Mony âlevied to the same Justice of Peace or Chief Mâgistrate And by Warrant from one or more Jâstice or Justices or Chief Magistrate and respective Constables Headboroughs and Tythingmââ Overseers not named may with what aid force and assistance they think fit after refusal or denial to enter break open into any House or other Place where they shall be informed any Conventicle is held as well within Liberties as without and take into their Custody the Persons there unlawfully assembled to be proceeded against according to this Act. No Peers House is to be searched unless in presence of a Lord Lieutenant or two Justices of Peace whereof one to be of the Quorum If any Constable Headborough Tythingman Churchwarden or Overseer of the Poor shall know or be credibly informed of any Conventicle within his Precinct and shall not thereof ânform some Justice of the Peace or Chief Magistrate and endeavour the Conviction of the Parties but neglects his Duty he forfeits five Pound to be levied on his Goods And any Person sued for acting by this Law may plead the General Issue and give the special Matter in Evidence and shall recover treble Costs 22 Car. 2. c. 1. By the 1 W. and M. for Exempting their Majesties Protestant Subjects dissenting from the Church of England from the Penalties of certain Laws It is Enacted That all Persons that take the Oaths and make and subscribe the Declaration in the said Act mentioned to be taken shall not be liable to any Pains Penalties and Forfeitures of 35 Eliz. nor 22 Car. 2. But That if any Assembly of Persons dissenting from the Church of England shall be had in any Place for Religious Worship with the Doors locked barred or bolted during any time of such Meeting together all and every Person or Persons that shall come to and be at sucâ Meeting shall not receive any benefit froâ this Law but be liable to all the Pains anâ Penalties of all the aforesad Laws recited iâ this Act for such their Meeting And also That if any Person dissenting from thâ Church of England as aforesaid shall here after be chosen or otherwise appointed tâ bear the Office of High Constable or Petââ Constable Churchwarden Overseer of thâ Poor or any other Parochial or Ward Office and such Person shall scruple to take upoâ him any of the said Offices in regard of thâ Oaths or any other Matter or Thing required by the Law to be taken or done iâ respect of such Office every such Person shââ and may execute such Office or Employmeââ by a sufficient Deputy by him to be provided that shall comply with the Laws on this behalf CHAP. X. The Constables Office about Clothiers COnstables and other Officers upon request are to aid and assist the Wardens and Assistants for regulating the Trade of Worsteds and other Stuffs called Norwich Stuffs made in Norwich and the County of Norfolkâ 14 Car. 2. c. 5. They ought to be very vigilant in this Business for there never was such slight and unserviceable Stuffs as now are to the great Damage of his Majesty's Subjects In the West-Riding of the County of York âhe Constables are likewise by Warrant from âhe Justices of the Peace Master and Wardens âf the Corporation or any thirteen of them âo levy such Fines Penalties and Forfeitures ãâã shall grow due from any Clothier by virâue of the Statute aforesaid by Distress and âale of the Offenders Goods rendring the overâlus to the Owner upon demand 14 Car. 2. c. 5. Clothiers must pay their Spinners and other Workfolks their Wages in ready Mony and âot in Wares and shall deliver their Wool in âue weight on pain to forfeit six pence for âvery Default and the Carders Spinners Weaâers and other Workfolks are to do their Work faithfully on pain to forfeit double Damages to the Party grieved 4 E. 3. c. 1. Fitz. â P. 103. The Master or Head Officer in a Corporation where there is no Master and out of a Corporation every Justice of Peace High Constable and Stewards of Court-Leet shall hear ând determine the Complaints as well for non-payment of the Workfolks Wages as the Damages aforesaid by examining the Parties for which Damages they have Power to commit the Offenders to the Goal until the Party grieved be satisfied Stat. idem The Justices of Peace and High-Constables may search any House or other Place for Tenters Ropes Rings Headwrinches or other Engines for stretching of Cloth and if they find any to deface them and if the Owner use them again these Officers may take them away and sell them and give the Mony to the Poor 39 Eliz. c. 20. CHAP. XI The Constables Office about the Customs BY the 14 Car. 2. Such Person or Persons are authorized by Writ of Assistance uâder the Seal of his Majesty's Court of Exchequeâ are to take a Constable Headborough or othââ publick Officer inhabiting near the Place and the day-time are to enter and go into any Houââ Shop Cellar Warehouse Room or other Placâ and in case of Resistance break open tâ Doors Chests Trunks and other Packagâ there to seize and from thence to bring aââ kind of Goods Merchandize whatsoever prâhibited and uncustomed and to put and secâââ the same in his Majesty's Store-house in the Poââ next
Fee on pain of forty shillings Wingates Stat. Tit. Crown 3 Jac. ch 4. If the Minister Petty Constable and Church-wardens of any Parish or any two of them shall complain to any Justice of Peace of any Person justly suspected for Recusancy then any such Justice may tender the Oath of Allegiance to the Person so suspected and if he refuse to take it and be of the Age of eighteen years or above then the Justice may commit the Party to the Goal there to remain until the next Assises or Sessions of the Peace and if then the Party refuse again he incurs a Praemunire but if it he a Woman Covert she shall only be imprisoned there to remain without Bail till she take the said Oath Wingates Stat. Tit. Crown Dalt J. P. c. 45. fol. 108. 7 Jac. c. 6. 1 W. and M. No Papist or Reputed Papist refusing to make and suscribe the Declaration enjoyned by 30 Car. 2. and the Oaths enjoyned in an Act for removing and preventing all Questions c. about the Assembling and Sitting of this present Parliament shall at any time after the 15th day of May 1689. have or keep in his own Possession or in the Possession of any other to his use or at his disposition any Horse or Horses above the value of five pounds to be sold and that two or more Justices of the Peace by Warrant under their Hands and Seals may and shall Authorise any Person or Persons with the Assistance of the Constable or his Deputy or the Tythingman or Headborough who are required to be aiding and assisting to search for and seize for the usâ of their Majesties and their Successors all such Horses CHAP. XXX The Constables Office about distraining for Rent BY 2 W and M It is Enacted That from and after the first day of June 1690. Where any Goods or Chattels shall be distrained for any Rent reserved and due upon any Demise âease or Contract whatsoever and the Tenant or Owner of the Goods so distrained shall not within five days next after such Distress taken and notice thereof with the cause of such taking left at the Chief Mansion House or other most notorious Place on the Premisses charged with the Rent distrained for replevy the same with sufficient Security to be given to the Sheriff according to Law That then in such case after such Distress and notice as aforesaid and expiration of the said five days the Person so Distraining shall and may with the Sheriff or Under Sheriff of the County or with the Constable of the Hundred Parish or Place where such Distress shall be taken who are hereby required to be alding and assisting therein cause the Goods and Chattels so distrained to be appraised by two Sworn Appraisers whom such Sheriff Under Sheriff or Constable are hereby impowered to swear to appraise the same truly according to the best of their Understandings and after such Appraisement shall and may lawfully sell the Goods and Chattels so distrained for the best Price can be gotten for the same towards satisfaction for the Rent for which the said Goods and Chattels shall be distrained and of the Charges of such Distress Appraisement and Sale leaving the Overplus if any in the Hands of the Sheriff Under Sheriff or Constable for the Owners use And that it may be lawful for any Person or Persons having Rent arrear and due upon any such Demise Lease or Contract as aforesaid to seize and secure any Sheaves or Cocks of Corn or Corn loose or in the Straw or Hay lying or being in any Barn or Granary or upon any Hovel Stack or Rick or otherwise upon any part of the Land or Pound charged with such Rent and to lock up or detain the same in the place where the same shall be found for or in the nature of a Distress until the same shall be replevied upon such Secuâity to be given as aforesaid and in default of Replevying the same as aforesaid within the time aforesaid to sell the same after such Appraisement thereof to be made so as nevertheless such Corn Grain or Hay so distrained as aforesaid be not removed by the Person or Persons distraining to the Damage of the Owner thereof out of the Place where the same shall be found and seized but be kept there as impounded until the same shall be replevied or sold in default of replevying the same within the time aforesaid And that upon any Pound-breach or Rescous of Goods or Chattels distrained for Rent the Person or Persons grieved thereby shall in a special Action upon the Case for the Wroââ thereby sustained recover his and their treble Damages and Costs of Suit against the Offender or Offenders in any such Rescous or Pound-breach any or either of them or against thâ Owners of the Goods distrained in case thâ same be afterwards found to have come to hââ use or possession And it is provided That in case any such Distress and Sale as aforesaid shall be madâ by virtue or colour of this present Act fââ Rent pretended to be arrear and due wherâ in truth no Rent is arrear or due to the Person or Persons distraining or to him or theââ in whose Name or Names or Right such Distress shall be taken as aforesaid that then thâ Owner of such Goods or Chattels distraineâ and sold as aforesaid his Executors or Administrators shall and may by Action of Trespass or upon the Case to be brought againstâ the Person or Persons so distraining any or either of them his or their Executors or Administrators recover double the value of the Goods or Chattels so distrained and sold together with full Costs of Suit CHAP. XXXI The Constables Office about Riots and Routs SHeriffs Constables and all other the Kings Officers shall suppress Rioters and imprison them and all other Offenders against the Peace 27 R. 2. c. 8. Where three Persons or more shall come and assemble themselves together to the intent to do any unlawful Act with force or violence against the Person of another his Possessions or Goods as to kill beat or otherwise to hurt or to imprison a Man to pull down a House Wall Pale Hedge or Ditch wrongfully to enter upon or into another Mans Possession House or Land c. or wrongfully to cut or take away Corn Grass Wood or other Goods or to hunt unlawfully in any Park or Warren or to do any other unlawful Act with force or violence against the Peace or to the manifest Terror of the People if they only meet to such a purpose or intent although they shall after depart of their own accord without acting any thing yet it is an unlawful Assembly because of their Intention at first Bro. Tit. Riot 4 5. Co. 2 Part Institutes fol. 176. Dalt J. P. c. 85. fol. 217. And if after such Meeting they shall ride move or go forward towards the execution of such Act whether they put their intended purpose in execution or not this
Chief Officer of the City Borough c. before whom the Offender âs convicted by View Confession or Oath of âone Witness shall give Warrant to the Constaâles or Churchwardens to seize the Goods ââried or put to sale and to sell them and to âevy the other Penalties by distress and sale of Goods and in case of inability c. to set the Offenders in the Stocks for two hours the Penalties to be to the Poor of the Parish where the Offence âs committed saving that the Justice or Head Officer may reward Informers the Reward not exceeding a third part of the Penalties But Prosecution must be made upon this Act within âen days after the Offence committed 29 Car. 2. c. 7. Dressing of Meat in Families Inns Cooksâhops c. and crying of Milk before nine in the Morning or after four in the Afternoon are not prohibited by this Act 29 Car. 2. c. 7. No Writ Process Warrant c. shall be served on the Lords day except for Treason Felony or Breach of the Peace but the Service shall be void and the Party serving it shall answer Damages as if done without Warrant 29 Car. 2. c. 7. CHAP. XXXIV The Constables Office about profane Swearing IF any Person or Persons shall profanely Câââ and Swear for every time so offending theâ forfeit twelve pence the Offence to be proââ within twenty days after it is committed ãâã the Oath of two Witnesses or by Confession the Party before any Justice of Peace or Hââ Officer of any City or Town Corporate wââ thereupon may issue out their Warrant to thâ Constables and Churchwardens and Overseââ of the Poor of that Parish where the said Offenââ shall be committed and the said Constables oâ are to levy the Sum and Sums of Mony by ãâã stress and sale of the Offenders Goods rendrââ the overplus if any be to the Owner 21 Jââ c. 20. 3 Car. 1. c. 4. Wingates Stat. Tit. Sweariââ Dalt J.P. c. 55. f. 138. Note Where no Distress is to be had thâ Offender if above twelve years of Age shââ by Warrant as aforesaid be set in the Stocââ three whole hours but if the Offender be ââder the Age of twelve years and shall not forth with pay the said Sum of twelve pence per Oath then he or she is to be whipped by the Constableâ or by the Parent or Master in the Constable presence 21 Jac. c. 20. 3 Car. 1. c. 4. Dalt J.P. c. 55. fol. 138. CHAP. XXXV The Constables Office about Tobacco Planting ALL Sheriffs Justices of Peace Mayors Bailiffs Constables and every of them âpon Information or Complaint made to them ãâã any of them by any of the Officers of the âustoms or by any other Person or Persons âhatsoever that there is any Tobacco set sown âanied or growing within their Jurisdictions ãâã Precincts except such as is growing in any âhysick Garden of either University or in any ââher private Garden where the quantity of âround planted exceeds not one half of one ââble in any one Place or Garden they are withââ ten days after such Information or Complaint ãâã cause to be burnt plucked up consumed or ââterly destroyed all such Tobacco so set sown âanted or growing 12 Car. 2. c. 34. And if any Person or Persons shall resist or âake forceable opposition against any Person or âersons in the due execution of this Office as aâvesaid every Person or Persons for every such âffence shall forfeit the Sum of five pounds to ãâã recovered in any Court of Record and be so committed to the Common Goal of the âounty where the Offence was committed there ãâã remain without Bail or Mainprize until he ââe or they do enter into Recognizance to his âajesty his Heirs and Successors with two suffiââent Sureties in ten pounds Penalty not to do ãâã commit the like Offence again 12 Car. 2. c. 34. ââ Car. 2. c. 7. And now by the Stat. 22 23 Car. 2. It further provided That the Justice of Peace ãâã a month before every Quarter Sessions ãâã Warrants to High Constables Petty Constablâ and Tythingmen to make search what Toââââ is then sown planted or made and by whoââ and to make Presentment thereof in Wriâ upon Oath at the next Quarter Sessions whââ Presentment shall be a conviction in Law ãâã less the Party having ten days notice before ãâã Sessions traverse the same there and find Sâââties to prosecute his Traverse the next Quarâââ Sessions after such Traverse entred 22 ãâã Car. 2. c. 26. Constables Tythingmen and other pubââââ Officers shall from time to time within fourtâââ days after Warrant from two or more Justiââ of Peace calling to them such as they find cââvenient destroy all Tobacco planted or grââing in any Ground If such Tobacco be ãâã consumed fourteen days after receipt of ãâã Warrant such Constables Tythingmen or otâââ Officers respectively shall forfeit five shilliââ for every Rod so set or planted c. and pââportionably for a greater or less quantity ãâã moiety to the King the other to him that âât sue for the same 22 23 Car. 2. c. 26. Persons refusing to assist the Constable â being convicted before two Justices of Peacâ shall forfeit five shillings to be levied by distrâââ and sale of Goods and for want thereof shall ãâã committed for a week And Persons forcââââ resisting any Constable c. being convicted aforesaid shall forfeit five pounds to be levied aforesaid and in default thereof shall be coâmitted for three months 22 23 Car. 2. c. 26. Physick Gardens and Gardens for Chirurgery âxcepted as in the former Acts. Persons sued âor acting in Pursuance of any of these three Acts of Parliament may plead the General Issue ând give the special Matter in Evidence This Act is to continue nine years and from thence âo the end of the Session of Parliament then next ânsuing 22 23 Car. 2. c. 26. Continued 1 Jac. 2. for seven years and from âhence to the end of the next Session of Parliament CHAP. XXXVI The Constables Office about Weights and Measures ALL Cities Boroughs and Market Towns in England ought to keep common Weights and Measures sealed at which the Inhabitants may weigh freely and all Foreiners must pay for every Draught under forty pounds one Farthing for a Draught between forty and an hundred an Half-penny and for a Draught between an hundred and a thousand one Penny wherewith the Weights are to be maintained and the Officers which attend that Service are to be rewarded at the discretion of the Inhabitants 8 H 6. c. 5. Every City which wants such Weights and Measures forfeits 10 l. to the King every Borough 5 l. and every Market Town 40 s. and the chief Officers of such places upon request to them made are to Mark and Seal such Weights and Measures to any of the Kings Subjects taking for the marking of every Bushel one Penny and none ought to ãâã with any other Weights and Measures but sucâ as
Charity to be relieved in some reasonable proportion according to their several Wants and Necessities Dââ J.P. c. 73. f. ibid. Then lastly The thristless Poor as the riâtous and prodigal Person that consumes all wiââ Play or Drinking c. the dissolute Person as thâ Strumpet Pilferer c. the slothful Person thâ refuseth to work c. and the Vagabond thâ will abide in no place or service and for all theâ the House of Correction is the place where they are to be sent to and being of able Bodies theâ they are to be held to hard Labour and to maintain themselves by their Labour and Work without charging the Town or County for any Allowance 7 Jac. c. 4 Dalt J.P. c. 73. fol. 170. But it seemeth that if any of these last soââ Poor happen to prove impotent and also ãâã cases of manifest extremity then they are to be relieved by the Town Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. ibid. If the Parents be able to work and may have Work they are to find their Children by theiâ labour and not the Parish but if they be overcharged with Children they may help by having some of their Children put out Apprentices by the Overseers Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. 157. The Father Grandfather Mother Grandmother and the Children and Grandchildren of every poor impotent Person not able to work being of sufficient Ability shall relieve such poor Persons in such manner as the Justices oâ Peace of that County where such sufficient Person dwelleth at their General Quarter Sessionâ shall Assess and if such Person refuse to able the Order they forfeit 20 s. for every monââ to the Poor of the Parish which Forfeiture âs ãâã be levied by the Churchwardens or Overseers or one of them by Warrant from any two Justices of the Peace Quor unus within their Limits by distress and sale of the Offenders Goods and want of distress any two such Justices may commit the Offender to prison there to remain without Bail till the said Forfeiture be paid 43 El. 2. Resol Judges 16 17. Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. 156. But if a Man marry a Grandmother that hath no Estate the Grandfather in Law is not chargeable But if she hath an Estate caused without such Marriage or that comes after Marriage by descent or otherwise to her here he may be charged But where they have raised themselves an Estate by their own Industry there it is doubtful But in no case shall he be charged longer than his Wife lives and it seems also Bastard Children are not within this Law neither can the Justices do any thing therein against a Man that lives out of their County See Boulst ââp 2 part f. 245 246 247. No Poor may beg but in their own Parish and there by Licence of the Overseers of the Poor and they may not licence them to beg in the High-ways there and without the Licence of the Overseers they may not beg at all Res Judges 15. Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. 157. 39 El. 3. No Inhabitants may serve any Poor at their Door but those of their own Parish that have licence from the Overseers of the Poor to beg there under pain of 10 s for every time they do so 1 Jac. 7. Dalt J.P. c. 83. f. 20. These Officers are to make provision for a poor Man that wants an House but not for a common Herdsman or Sheperd with consent of the Lord of the Mannor first had in writing under his Hand and Seal either by themselves or with a Sessions Order may erect a Cottage upon any part of the Waste of a Mannor and lodge Inmates therein notwithstanding the Stat. 31 El. â But such Cottage may not be afterwards employed otherwise than to lodge impotent Persons there for if it be then it falls within the penalty of the 31 El. aforesaid 43 El. c. 2 Wingates Stat. Tit. Poor People All such Persons married or unmarried having no Means to maintain them using no ordinary and daily Trade of Life to get their Living by and such Persons also as can get no Work are to be set on Work by the Overseers and any one Justice of Peace may send to the House of Correction or Common Goal such as shall not imploy themselves to work being appointed thereto by the Churchwardens and Overseers of the Poor of the Parish 43 El. c. 2. Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. 143. And to this purpose the Churchwardens and Overseers of the Poor may by and with the consent of two or more Justices of the Peace Qââr unus c. Set up use and occupy any Trade Mystery or Occupation only for the setting on Work and better Relief of the Poor of the Parish Town or Place where they are Overseers c. 3 Car. 1 c. 4. Dalt J P. c. 73. f. 148. Wingates Stat. Tit. Poor People CHAP. III. The Duty of the Overseers about putting forth and binding of Apprentices with the Form of the Indenture for that purpose IN the putting out of Children Apprentices there ought to be regard had to the Master the Child and the Parents First to the Master that he be of Ability and Honesty otherwise by some device or hard intreaty they may provoke their Apprentices to depart or run away and regard is also to be had to his Trade or Faculty lest the Apprentice consume his time without learning any thing Secondly Regard is to be had to the Apprentices to put them out timely and while they are young and tractable so that they be above the Age of seven years otherwise by reason of their idle and base Educations they will hardly keep their Service or imploy themselves to work Then lastly Regard is to be had to the Parents to take away such from them as are brought up to live idly and loosly or else such as are a burthen and charge to their Parents Dalt J. P. c. 73. f. 150 151. The choice of these Apprentices are to be out of the poorest sort of Children whose Parents are the least able to relieve them and they are to be above 7 and under 15 years of Age when they are first bound 7 Jac. c. 3. Wingates Stat. Tit. Poor People And these Officers are to have the consent of two Justices of the Peace in the placing out of such Apprentices and they may bind the Man-child till 24 years of Age and the Woman-child till 21 years of Age or till she be married which shall first happen And these Apprentices ãâã be bound to Weavers Masons Dyers Fullers ãâã any other Trade as well as to Husbandry ãâã Housewifery See 43 El. c. 2. Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. 14â Wingates Stat. Tit. Poor People Now this placing of Apprentices may be ãâã any Man whom the Officers and Justices think ãâã to receive them within the same Parish or elââwhere in other Parishes within the same Hundred either with or without Mony therefore it is fit in this case to consider if the Child be young and the
Party to whom they place it is not very able then they may give Mony if they please as the Party and they shall agree ãâã Judges 1633. Quest 1. All Men that-have or may have use for Servants as Knights Clergy-men Gentlemen and Yeomen as well as Tradesmen are bound to take Apprentices yea though wealthy Men Table themselves or live so privately that they have no use for a Servant yet they may be compelled to take them or else to pay a Sum of Mony for putting them Apprentices elsewhere and if they refuse to pay the Sum imposed upon them two Justices of the Peace may make their Warrant to levy the same by distress and sale of the Offenders Goods Res Judges 1633. Quest. 4. Poââ 24. Dalt J P. c. 73. f. 151. Or the Refusers to take Apprentices may be presented and indicted for the same upon the Stat. 43 El. c. 2. at the Assizes or Sessions of the Peace Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. ibid. Res Judges 1633. Quest 7. An Apprentice put to a Man in respect of his Farm when his Lease expireth the Apprentice shall go still with the Farm if the first Master be so pleased otherwise it is where an Apprentice is put to a Man in regard of his Ability or for other Respects And where any differences are between the Officers and the Man that is to receive an Apprentice about Mony and what Mony shall be given or otherwise âhere the Justices thereabouts or in their Defaults the Sessions must end it Res Judges 1633. Quest 2. Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. 151. If the Parents of poor Children shall refuse to let their Children be put forth Apprentices without good cause shewed such Parents may be bound over by the Justices to answer their said Default and if the Children shall refuse the Justices may send them to the House of Correction there to remain till they be content to be bound and serve Dalt J. P. c. 73. 58. f. 153. 119. Note That this binding must be by Indenture and may not well be done by a verbal Agreement and the Indenture must be either between the Justices Churchwardens and Overseers or them and the Apprentice on the one part and him that takes the Apprentice of the other part as appears by the Form of the Indenture in the end of this Chapter and he must be named by the Name of Apprentice expresly or else he is no Apprentice though he be bound Cromp. 184. Dalt J.P. c. 5. f. 120. And this binding is as effectual to all purposes as if the Children were of full Age and did bind themselves by Indentures and Covenants and all such as are bound by the Overseers as abovesaid may safely be received and kept ãâã Apprentices by their Masters 1 Jac. c. 25. ãâã Jac. c. 28. Dalt J. P. c. 58. fol. 120. 3 Car. 1. c. â 5 El. c. 4. Cromp. 184. b. Such Mony as is given to put out poor Children Apprentices is to be employed in Corporate Towns by the Corporations and in other places by the Parson or Vicar together with the Constables Churchwardens and Overseers of the Poor or the most part of them who shall ãâã forbear to refuse to employ the same accordingly on pain to forfeit five marks each oâ them so making default to be divided betwiâ the Poor of the Parish and the Prosecutor 7 Jac. c. 3. Wingates Stat. Tit. Poor People The Party taking any Mony with such Apprentice shall give good Security by Obligation to repay it at the end of seven years next ensuing the date of the said Obligation or within the three months after the end of the said seveâ years and if such Apprentice shall die within seven years then within one year after his or her death and if the Master Mistress or Dame happen to die within the seven years then within one year after their death so as the Mony may be employed in placing the Apprenticâ with some other of the same Trade to serve out his time at the discretion of the Parties trusted as aforesaid 7 Jac. c. 3. And the Mony so given shall be imployed within three months after the Receipt thereof and if there shall not be apt Persons found in the places where it is given to the Apprentices it shall then be imployed in the Parishes next adjoyning by the Parties that are trusted with it in the place where it was so given and âhere also Bond shall be taken as afore is declared 7 Jac. c. 3. If the Master shall put his Apprentice into âpparel it is a Gift in Law and he cannot afterwards take it away though he should part with his Apprentice Br. Transgr 93. An Apprentice cannot be discharged from his Apprenticeship but by four Justices of the Peace ât the least and in open Sessions or else by âhe Agreement of the Master and Apprentice and under his Masters Hand in Writing Dalt J. P. c. 58. f. 121. The Form of these Indentures mentioned before is as followeth viz. THIS Indenture made the 29th day of September in the 20th Year of the Reign of Our most Gracious Sovereign Lord Charles the Second by the Grace of God of England Scotland France and Ireland King Defender of the Faith c. Annoque Dom. 1668. witnesseth that J. W. and G. R. Overseers of the Poor in the Town of Kirk-Leaventon and J. R. Churchwardens of the ââme Town by and with the consent of Sir J. P. Knight and Baronet and T. M. Esq two of his Majesties Justices of Peace for the North-Riding of the County of York have by these Presents âlaced and bound J. T. being a poor fatherless child as an Apprentice with E. H. of Kirk-Leaventon aforesaid Widow and as an Apprentice with her the said E.H. to dwell from the day of the ââate of these Presents until she the said J.T. shall âome to the Age of 21 years or be married which shall first happen according to the Statute in that âase made and provided by and during all which time and term the said J. T. shall the said E. â her Dame well and faithfully serve in all ãâã lawful Business as the said E. H. shall put ãâã the said J. T. unto according to her Power ãâã and Ability and honestly and obediently in ãâã things shall behave her self toward her said Daââ and Children and all the rest of the Family ãâã the said E. H. And the said E. H. for her ãâã promiseth covenanteth and agreeth that she ãâã said E. H. the aforesaid J. T. in the Art and Shâ of Housewifry the best manner that she can ãâã may shall teach and inform or cause to be taught and informed as much as thereunto belongeth and she the said E. H. knoweth and also during ãâã the said Term to find unto her said Apprentice Meat Drink Linnen Woollen Hose Shooes Wââing and all other things needful or meet for aâ Apprentice In Witness whereof c. Note If it be a Boy that is to be
bound Apprentice to Husbandry or any other Trade theââ he may be bound till 24 years of Age as ãâã shew'd before in this Chapter CHAP. IV. Several Cases about Settlements and also touching Bastards c. TOuching settling of poor People the Justices are to meddle with none but those who are impotent and such as are like to be chargeable to the place where they are Boulst Rep. 1 part 347. By 13 14 Car. 2. cap. 12. It is Enacted that upon complaint by the Churchwardens ââd Overseers of the Poor to any Justice of âeace within forty days after any poor Person âometh to settle in a Tenement under 10 l. ââr annum two Justices of Peace whereof one ãâã be of the Quorum may by Warrant remove ââch Person to the Parish where they were last ââgally settled for forty days unless they give ââcurity to be allowed by the said Justices for discharge of the Parish Persons aggrieved may âppeal to the Quarter Sessions But Persons having a Certificate from the âinister of the Parish and one Churchwarden ând one Overseer of the Poor declaring them inhabitants there may go into any Parish to âork and the not returning of such Persons âhen their Work is finished or falling Sick whilst they are at Work shall not be accounted ãâã Settlement If any return to the Parish from âhence they are removed a Justice of Peace âay send them to the House of Correction to ââe punished as Vagabonds or to a publick Work house to be imployed in Labour and if ââe Churchwardens and Overseers of any Parish to which any are removed refuse to resolve them and provide them Work c. a âustice of Peace may bind over such Officers to ââe Assizes or Sessions Churchwardens and Overseers for the Poor âhere any Bastard-Child shall be born may âize so much of the Goods and Profits of the âands of the Putative Father and Lewd Mother ãâã two Justices of Peace shall order towards âischarge of the Parish to be confirmed at the âessions who may make an Order for the Churchwardens c. to dispose of the Gooâ by sale or otherwise as they shall think ãâã and receive the Profits of so much of theââ Lands as shall be ordered by the Sessions The Poor in every Town-ship or Village ãâã Lancashire Cheshire Darbyshire Yorkshire Nâthumberland Bishoprick of Durham Cumberland and Westmoreland shall be provided for in thâ Township and Village where they inhabit ãâã were last legally settled And two or more overseers shall be chosen in every Township c. who shall execute all powers for the Belief of the Poor under the Penalties mentioned in 43 Eliz. c. 2. This Act of 13 14 Car. 2. c. 12. was ãâã continue no longer than to the end of the first Session of the next Parliament but revived by 1 Jac. 2. c. 17. to continue for seven years anâ to the end of the first Session of the next Parliament And whereas poor Persons at their first coming to a Parish do commonly conceal themselves the forty days intended by the said Act to make Settlement shall be accounted from the time of their deliveries of notice in wriâing of their House of Abode and the number of their Family if they have any to one of the Churchwardens or Overseers of the Pooâ of the said Parish 1 Jac. 2. c. 17. No Man but a Vagrant Begger ought to be sent out of any Parish to the place of his Birth or last Habitation for if any refuse to work in the Parish where he is settled or to work for the Wages assessed then he is by the Justiceâ to be sent to the House of Correction Co. 2 part Inst fol. 730. 7 Jac. c. 4. Resol Judges 9. Dalt â P. c. 73. f. 157. 39 El. c. 4. 1 Jac. c. 7. If a Scholar in the University or in a Grammar School begin to be suspect he may be or ãâã he doth become impotent and is like to âe a Charge to the Parish where he is he must âe sent to his Parents if he have any otherâise to the place where he was last legally ââttled before he came to School Res Judges 633. sect 32. If one be Born and live 20 years in A. and ââen go to B. and there live in a House and pay âis Rent and after he come to C. and there Works 20 Weeks as a Labourer in a Quarry of ââones where he breaks his Back and becomes ââpotent and there is taken vagrant and begââng in this case he must be sent to A. the ââace of his Birth and there must be provided âor Res Judges 14 Car. 1. If a Man that hath a Wife and Children take ãâã House in one Parish for a Year and during âis time he is illegally forced out of his Possession then he takes an House as Inmate in another Parish out of which he is put within two âr three days and then not having any place ãâã be in he gets into a Barn in the third place ând there his Wife is delivered of another âhild In this case they are all to be sent to the âarish out of which they were first illegally âârced Resol Judges 1633. sect 24. One Born in D. left that place for the space ãâã 20 years then lived in S. took an House and ââid Rent and left that place also six or seven âears and then came to L. in another County ând there was twenty Weeks did Work and there became impotent and did wander at beg in the same place and was taken as a Vagrant and it was ordered he should be passed and settled at D. where he was Born by thâ Judges at Worcester Assizes 14 Car. 1. Boulst Reâ 1 part f. 375. No Child under the Age of seven years shaââ be adjudged a Rogue within the Stat. 39 El. c. â But it seems such Children vagrant and begginâ must be sent and placed with the Father ãâã Husband of the Wife and if he be dead theâ with the Mother where she was born or laââ dwelt by the space of one year and such Children once thus settled or placed must theââ remain and not be sent from thence to theââ place of Birth though after their Parents die or run away or that the said Children groâ above the Age of seven years yea though thââ said Children after beg and prove vagrant iâ the Town for there they must be set to laboââ by the Overseers of the Poor Dalt J.P. c. ââ f. 209. But Children above seven years of Age going about vagrant or begging in the Couâtry shall be punished as Rogues and sent ãâã their place of Birth Dalt J. P. ch 83. f. 209. The Wife being a Vagrant Rogue must be sent to her Husband though he be but a Servant in another Town and where the Husband and Wife have an House though as an inmate and either of them Rogue about in this case they are to be sent to the place wherâ the House is Dalt J. P. c. 83.
Bastard Child and not the reputed Child of such an one and the Justices for the better discovery of the Matter may upon Oath examine the Mother her self concerning the reputed Father the time c. Dalt J. P. c. 11. fol. 40. 18 Eliz. c. 3. 7 Jac. c. 4. See Steels Rep. fol. 154 245 246 247 388. and see Pridgeons Case Hill 9 Car. 1. B.R. and Slaters Case Pasch 13 Car. 1. B.R. Cro. Rep. 1 part CHAP. V. The Overseers Office in making of Rates and passing Accounts THE Churchwardens and Overseers of the Poor or the greater part of them for the doing and performing of the things they have in charge may raise weekly or otherwise by Taxation of every Parson Vicar and other Occupier of Land House or Tithes Cole-mines or saleable Underwoods within the Parish Town c. such a Sum as they shall think fit and this Rate they must have allowed and confirmed under the Hands of two Justices Quor unus and then by Warrant from them or any other two Justices Quor unus they may levy by distress and sale of the Goods of the Party refusing to pay the said Tax rendring the overplus to the Owners and in default of Distress two such Justices may commit the Party to prison there to remain without Bail till he be discharged by him 43 El. ch 2. Dalt J. P. c. 73. f. 148. Wingates Stat. Tââ Poor People Now these Rates ought to be well and trââ made according to Mens visible Estates real iâ personal within the place only and not ãâã any Estate elsewhere at Lincoln Assises 9 Caââ by Justice Hutton and Crook Note That a Parish in Reputation shall be Parish within this Law so that if A. be ancient Parish that hath Officers in it and theââ be a Town within this Parish which for a long time hath been used and reputed as a Parish and hath all Parochial Rights as Churchwardens c. here this place may be rated as tâ Parish towards the Poor Huttons Rep. fol. 93. ãâã M. 3 Car. B.R. Hilton Pauls Case Cro. 3 pââ Rep. This Tax must be set upon the Tenants and Occupiers of Lands and not upon the Laââlords Living within or without the Parish ãâã the Tenant only is chargeable for the Land Bââstrods 1 part Rep. fol. 354. The Parson having a full tenth Part of the Profits of the Place may be rated to a tenth Part Resol Judges 1633. sect 33. He that doth occupy Lands in his own Hands lying in several Parishes he must be charged in every Parish for his Land lying therein only according to the proportion thereof and ãâã more but for his personal Estate it seems reasonable he should be charged for it in the place where his Person is All Lands Ancient Demesn Guildable and Copyhold are to be charged with these Rates which ought to be according to the value or by the pound and not according to the quantity Sed consuetudâ tollit Legem The Rate for Stock or Goods is thought reasonable to be set after the proportion of Lands viz. an 100 pound in Stock to be rated after 5 or 6 pound a year in Land Note That in some special Cases a Man may be rated beyond his Ability as where one brings a Charge upon a Parish or under any pretence brings in a Man that may be chargeable in a Parish he may if there be cause for this be raised in his Rate to the full value of his Estate and so was the Opinion of Sir Nicholas Hide Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. 167. Where the Inhabitants of any Parish are not able to relieve their Poor any two Justices Quor unus may tax other Parishes and Places within the Hundred yea the whole Hundred if need require and where that is not sufficient the Justices in their Sessions may tax the County in part or wholly at their discretion 43 El. c. 2. Wingates Abr. Stat. Tit. Poor People 14 Car. 2. c. 12. If any Persons find themselves aggrieved in any Tax or other-Act done by the Overseers or by the Justices of Peace they are to be relieved at the Quarter Sessions Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. 160. Wingates Abr. Stat. Tit. Poor People The Father Grandfather Mother Grandmother and Children of every poor Person shall be assessed towards their Relief as the Justices of the Peace in their Sessions of the Peace in the County where such Father c. dwells shall limit and appoint on pain to forfeit 20 s. a month to the use of the Poor to be levied by distress and sale as aforesaid and for want of distress to be committed to Prison till the Forfeiture be paid 43 El. c. 2. Wingates ãâã Stat. Tit. Poor People Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. 1ââ Head Officers in Cities and Corporate Towns and Aldermen of London have in their severaâ Precincts like Authority that Justices of Peace have in their Counties and no other Justiceâ of Peace are to enter and intermeddle there Wingates Abr. Stat. Tit. Poor People 43 El. c. 2. If any Parish shall extend into two Counties or part thereof to lie in any City or Corporate Town where they have Justices Then the Justices of every County c. are to intermeddle only within their own Limits and every of them respectively within their Limits are to execute this Law concerning the nomination of Overseers binding of Apprentices granting Warrants to levy Taxations taking Account of Overseers and committing such as refuse ãâã account or to pay their Arrearages and yet the Overseers shall without dividing themselves execute their Office in all places within the said Parish but shall give up Accounts to the Justices or Head Officers of both Places Wingates Abr. Stat. Tit. Poor People 43 El. c. 2. Dalt J.P. c. 73. f. 156. These Officers within four days after the end of their Year and that other Officers are nominated are to yield up a true Account to two Justices Quor unus of these things following 1. What Sums of Mony they have received or rated and not received 2. What stock of Ware or Stuff is in their Hands or is the Hands of any of the Poor 3. What Apprentices they have put out and bound according to the Statute 4. What Poor they have set to work or relieved 5. What Poor they have suffered to wander and beg out of their Town or in the Highways or in their Town without their directions 6. Whether they meet monthly to consider of the things belonging to their Office 7. Whether they made their Rates indifferent upon all Men according to their Ability 8. Whether they have endeavoured to gather and levy such Assessments 9. Whether they have neglected the Justices Warrants to them or any of them directed for the levying of any Forfeiture according to the Stat. 43 El. c. 2. Dalt J. P. c. 73. f. 153. By the Statute of 30 Car. 2. for Burying in Woollen the Justices are not to allow the Accounts of the Overseers of the Poor until they
impose Taxes upon Houses in proportion to the benefit they receive thereby and to levy the same by Distress and Sale of Goods is made perpetual together with the Powers thereby given and appointed to be executed And the sole Powers of ordering and regulating the keeping clear pitching and paving the Streets Lanes and Passages with the manner thereof and of making and cleansing Drains and Sewers in London is to remain in the Mayor Commonalty and Citizens to be executed by such as the Mayor Aldermen and Commons in Common Council shall appoint or seven or more of them being all Members of the said Court. And Persons imployed in any of the said Works are enjoyned to observe the Directions of the Persons in that behalf authorized 22 23 Car. 2. c. 17. Offenders may be proceeded against by Indictment at the next Sessions of the Peace in the said City and Liberties unless they submitted to the Censure of the Persons so authorized or any seven or more of them and pay the Mulct by them imposed to the Chamber of London to be imployed towards the Works in this Act mentioned 22 23 Car. 2. c. 17. The Persons so authorized may impose Taxes on the several Wards and Precincts and direct Precepts to the respective Deputies and Common Council Men to assess the same and like Precepts to Scavengers to collect the same And where any Church or Churchyard shall front or adjoyn to any of the said Streets Lanes or Passages they may assess a reasonable proportion upon the Parish to be paid by the Churchwardens of which Assessments the Deputies and Common Council Men shall return Duplicates with the Scavengers Names within twenty days after receipt of the Precepts And in default of the said Deputies and Common Council Men the said Persons to be authorized may rate the said Assessments And in default of payment within six days after demand the Scavengers may levy the same by distress and sale of Goods rendring the overplus besides the reasonable Charge of distraining And the Mony so collected shall be paid into the Chamber of London not to be issued thence but by order of the said Persons so to be appointed or seven or more of them 22 23 Car. 2. c. 17. Inhabitants aggrieved through defect or decay of Pavements or want of cleansing the Streets c. shall upon proof that such grievance is unreformed receive directions from the Persons so to be authorized or seven or more of them for redressing the same and a Warrant under their Hands and Seals to the Chamberlain of London to issue Monies for defraying the Charge thereof together with any Sum not exceeding ten shillings for encouragement of his or their Diligence who upon receipt of such Warrant shall pay the same accordingly And Persons aggrieved by any Charge imposed by virtue of this Act within five days after demand thereof may appeal to the Mayor and Court of Aldermen whose Order therein shall be final 22 23 Car. 2. c. 17. The Mayor Aldermen and Commons in Common Council may set out and purchase Ground for Laystals and places for publick Stores for receipt of Dirt and Rubbish carried out of the City and for other Materials and Commodities The Mony for the same to be paid out of the Monies arising by the Imposition upon Coals appointed for publick Uses of the City other than the Mony appointed for Building Churches 22 23 Car. 2. c. 17. No Persons by this Act made liable to be rated towards the altering mending or cleansing the said Vaults Sewers c. or cleansing c. Streets Lanes c. shall be otherwise charged or liable thereunto 22 23 Car. 2. c. 17. CHAP. V. Some Heads of the 2 of W. and M. for Paving and Cleansing the Streets in the Cities of London and Westminster Suburbs and Liberties thereof the Out-Parishes in the County of Middlesex the Borough of Southwark and other Places within the Weekly Bills of Mortality in the County of Surrey EVery Inhabitant inhabiting in the said Parishes and in the Town of Kensington shall twice every Week sweep before their Houses and Buildings and take up the Dirt ready for the Scavenger or other Officer or else for every Offence or Neglect forfeit 3 s. 4 d. If any throw or permit to be thrown Ashes Filth or Annoyance before his House Building or Wall shall forfeit 5 s. If before any Church Church-yard or publick Buildings or into any Sink or Way publick or private but shall keep it in their Houses and Yards until the Officers come to carry it away or else forfeit 20 s. Churchwardens House-keepers of White-hall or other the Kings Houses or of Noblemens Houses shall be subject to like Penalty so shall Ushers of Courts and Porters and Keepers of other publick Buildings Scavengers and Officers shall come every day except Sundays and Holidays and give notice that the Parties concerned may bring out their Dust c. or forfeit 40 s. for every neglect Every Housholder shall pave and keep repaired the Streets before their Houses and Ground unto the Channel or else forfeit for every Rod 20 s. and 20 s. every Week until at shall be sufficiently repaired Where new Streets and Ways are made which the Justices of Peace in their General Quarter-Sessions shall think fââ and convenient to be paved with Stone or Gravel and shall order the same to be done before every dwelling House or Building in such Street or Way Every Person neglecting shall forfeit forty shillings for every such Offence for every Perch and after that rate for a greater of lesser quantity and the like Sum for every Week till the same be paved and amended Where Streets Lanes or Allies have been by Custom otherwise repaired it shall be done by such Persons as are by Custom to do it under the Penalties aforesaid Upon Monday or Tuesday in Easter Week The Constables Churchwardens Overseers and Surveyors giving notice and calling such Inhabitants that have served that Office shall chuse two Tradesmen to be Scavengers who being allowed under the Hand of any two Justices shall within seven days take the Office or pay 10 l. and within seven days after such refusal they shall in like manner chuse another who shall accept or pay 10 l. which Penalties to be levied by Distress and Sale and for want of Distress or Payment within six days after notice at his House to be sent to the Goal until payment Within twenty days after such Election the Constables c. shall call such Inhabitants as have born the like Office and make a Tax by a Pound Rate which being confirmed by two Justices shall be quarterly paid upon demand made by the Scavengers or other Officers appointed to gather the same and being refused shall by Warrant of two Justices be levied by Distress and Sale and for want of Distress by Imprisonment of the Offender until payment The Scavengers are to account for the Mony by them Collected
and taxed which Collectors receiving the one part of the Roll indented have power thereby to collect all the Sums of Mony therein contained and if refusal be made upon demand then to distrain and sell such Distress rendring the overplus to the Owner if any be Dalt J.P. c. 16. f. ibid. 22 H. 8. c. 5. Co. 2 part Inst f. 705. The said Justices also are to appoint two Surveyors who shall see such decayed Bridges and Ways repaired and amended from time to time as often as need shall require to whose Hands the Collectors must pay the Monies by them received Dalt J.P. c. 16. ibid. 22 H. 8. c. 5. And the said Collectors and Surveyors and their Executors and Administrators and every of them shall from time to time make a true Account to the said Justices of Peace of the Receipts Payments and Expences of the said Sums of Mony and if any of them refuse so to do then the Justices of Peace from time to time by their Discretions may make out Process against the said Collectors and Surveyors their Executors and Administrators by Attachment Precept or Warrant under their Hands and Seals returnable at their General Sâssions of the Peace and the said Justices may allow such reasonable Costs and Charge to the Surveyors and Collectors upon their Accounts as to them shall seem convenient 22. H. 8. c. 5. Dalt J. P. c. 16. ibid. If any such Bridge be wholly in a City or other Corporate Town the Inhabitants of the said City or Corporate Town must repair it and where such Bridges lie out of such City or Corporate Town the same must be made by the Inhabitants of the Shire or Riding within which the same Bridge shall be and if part of the Bridge be in one Shire or Riding City or Corporate Town and part in another then every of them shall be charged to make and repair such part as shall lie and be within their own Limits 22 H. 8. c. 5. Co. 2 part Inst fol. 207. Dalt J.P. c. 16. fol. 45. But otherwise no Village or Freeman shall be compelled to make any Bridge but such as of old time and by right they were wont to make Magna Charta c. 15. By the Common Law some Persons were âound to repair Bridges Ratione tenurae suâ Terââram c. and this was binding into whose Hands soever the Estate did come but they which have Lands on the one side or on the other or on both are not bound in Common âight to repair the same 44 El. 3. 31. 21 E. 4. â6 5 H. 7. 3. Crompt 186. 8 H. 7. 5. b. Co. 2 part â â f. 700. If a Man which holdeth 100 Acres of Land âught to repair a Bridge by tenure of the same ãâã allen 20 Acres thereof to one Man and 10 âcres to another Man in such case every Owner ãâã Occupier of such Lands must be charged âroportionably for their said Lands Regist 268. o. â N. B. 235. b. Co. 2 part Inst f. 700. Again Some by the Common Law were bound ây prescription to repair a Bridge but herein âhere is a diversity between Bodies Politick or Corporate Spiritual or Temporal and Natural Persons For Bodies Politick c. may be bound by usage and prescription only because they are local and have a perpetual Succession and never die but a Natural Person cannot be bound by the Act of his Ancestor without Assets or some Profit to be taken therefore 21 E. 4. fol. 38. b. 27 Ass 8. Crompt 187. Co. 2 part f. 700. Dalt J.P. c. 16. f 45. By Common Right Bridges are to be amended by the whole County if it be not known who ought to do the same otherwise Pasch 19 E. 3. 28 29. Co. 2 part Inst. f. 701. Crompt 186. b. Tr. 10 Car. 1. the Case of Longford Bridge Rolls Cases 1 part f. 368. Cro. Rep. 3 part the same Case If a Man erect a Mill for his own particular Profit and cut a new Course for the Water to come to it and makes a new Bridge over the same and the Kings Subjects use to ride over the same as over a common Bridge such Bridge ought to be repaired by him who hath the Mill and not by the County because he erected it for his own Benefit 8 E. 2. B. R. adjudged for Bow Bridge and Channel Bridge against the Prior of Stratford Rolls Cases 1 part f. 368. Such as are chargeable to repair a Bridge may enter upon any other Mans Land or Soil adjoyning and lay their Stone Lime Timber or other Things necessary there for the repairing and amending thereof and the Owner of the Lands shall have no Action therefore for it is for the common Profit and the Party that is chargeable to repair a Bridge must also maintain the Way at each end thereof thougâ the Soil be to another and if the ends be brokeâ by the Water-course he must follow the Water-course and repair the Way c. Crompt 186. b. 43 Ass Dalt J.P. c. 16. f. 46. The Names of some Statutes for particular Bridges follow 8 H. 6. c. 28. For the making of Burford and Culhamford Bridge 18 E. 1. c. 7. 27 E. c. 25. For the maintenance of Rochester Bridge 18 El. c. 20. For repair of the Bridges within a Mile of Oxford 23 El. c. 11. For the maintenance of the Bridges over Tosse in Wales 39 El. c. 23. For making and repairing of Newport and Carlion Bridges over the River Usk. 39 El. c. 24. For building and maintenance of a Bridge at Wilton upon Wy near Ross in Herefordshire 43 El. c. 16. For erecting and repairing Edon and Presberk Bridges in Cumberland 3 Jac. c. 23. For making and repairing Chepstow Bridge By the Stat. 22 Car. 2 c. 12. It is Enacted That the Surveyors and Orderers of the Work of amendment of the High-ways shall be yearly chosen in Christmas Week according to the Stat. 2 3 P. M. c. 8. Which Persons so chosen shall take upon them that Office and shall appoint six days for providing Stones Gravel and other Materials and for working in the High-ways having respect to the Season of the Year and Weather and giving notice publickly some convenient time before the several days At which day all Persons liable to the said Work shall attend and work And the said Surveyors and Orderers shall make return of the Defaulters and every of them within one Month to some neighbouring Justice of the Peace of the same County DIRECTIONS for the Keepers of Fairs and Markets FAirs are accounted things of Franchise and Priviledge as well as of Profit and whether they be held and claimed by Charter of the King or by Prescription which supposes a former Charter they ought to be holden for no longer time than such Grant or Use will warrant And after such time what is done there is not warranted or justifiable nor amounts to more than a private Transaction and the Sheriff ought