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A31458 The laws of Q. Elizabeth, K. James, and K. Charles the First concerning Jesuites, seminary priests, recusants, &c., and concerning the oaths of supremacy and allegiance, explained by divers judgments and resolutions of the reverend judges : together with other observations upon the same laws : to which is added the Statute XXV Car. II. cap. 2 for preventing dangers which may happen from popish recusants : and an alphabetical table to the whole / by William Cawley of the Inner Temple, Esq. Cawley, William, of the Inner Temple. 1680 (1680) Wing C1651; ESTC R5101 281,468 316

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or principal Secretary for the time being to be one And if such person or persons live and reside in the Country distant above thirty miles from London then before the Lord Bishop of the Diocess or such other person or persons as the Lord Chancellor or Lord Kéeper of the Great Seal for the time being shall thereto by Writ of Dedimus potestatem Authorize The sworn Servants of the King Queen Prince c. And all and every the sworn Servants ordinary and extraordinary of your Highness the Quéens Grace or of the Houshold of the Prince of Wales and of the rest of your Highness Children before the Lord Steward the Lord Chamberlains and Vicechamberlains to your Highness and the Quéen the Treasurer and Controller of your Highness Houshold the Master of your Highness Horse the Dean of the Chappel and the Knight Marshal for the time being the Officers of the Gréen-cloth or any thrée of them Temporal Judges Ministers of Justices They which receive any Fée of the King All and every temporal Iudge Iustices of Peace Sheriffs Escheators Feodaries and other Officers and Ministers of Iustice in this present Act not specially mentioned and every other person or persons that doth or shall receive any Fée of your Highness your Heirs and Successors before the Lord Chancellor or Lord Kéeper of the Great Seal Lord Treasurer Lord Admiral Lord Warden of the Five Ports for the time being or one of them or before one of the Chief Iustices either of your Majesties Bench or of the Common Pleas or before Iustices of Assize of the same County where the parties reside or other such persons as the Lord Chancellor or Keeper of the Great Seal shall thereto Authorize Chief Officers of Cities and Towns Corporate And all Mayors Bailiffs or other chief Officers of Cities and Towns Corporate by what name soever they be called or known before such person or persons as usually administer the Oath to them at their first entrance into their said Offices And all and every the Knights Citizens Burgesses and Barons of the Five Ports of the Commons House of Parliament Stat. Sect. 2. Knights Citizens Burgesses and Barons of the Commons House of Parliament at any Parliament or Session of Parliament hereafter to be Assembled before he or they shall be permitted to enter into the said House before the Lord Steward for the time being or his Deputy or Deputies The King cannot dispence with any Member of the Commons House of Parliament from taking this Oath The Kings dispensation void For that he is here declared to be persona inhabilis until he take it Vaughan 355. Thomas and Sorrel's Case And the Master of the Ordnance Lieutenant of the Tower Stat. Sect. 3. Master of the Ordnance Lieutenant of the Tower c. of London and Mint-master there the four principal Officers of your Navy under the Lord Admiral before the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper of the Great Seal and the Lord Admiral for the time being or any of them And all the Officers Ministers Officers and Servants in the Tower Servants and others within your said Tower of London before the Lieutenant of the Tower And all the Vice-Admirals Captains Masters Officers Ministers and Souldiers in your Highness Ships or any of them before the said four principal Officers of your Navy or any two of them And all persons having charge of Castles Fortresses Captains of Castles and Souldiers Block-houses or Garrisons and all Captains who shall have Charge of Souldiers within this your Highness Realm before the Iustices of Assize of the same County or before two Iustices of the Peace of the same County City or Liberty where the same Castles Fortresses or Block-houses shall stand or the Charge of Souldiers shall be All Doctors Advocates and Proctors of the Civil Law Doctors Advocates and Proctors of the Civil Law and their Clerks before the Bishop of the Diocess where they shall for the most part dwell or reside And all and every person or persons Temporal that hereafter shall Sue Livery or Ouster le maine Suers of Livery and Ouster le maine out of the Hands of your Highness your Heirs or Successors before his or their Ouster le maine Sued forth and allowed before the Master of the Wards and Liveries or before the Surveyor and Attorney of your Highness said Court in open Court Sergeants at Law and the Judges Servants All the Sergeants at Law Servants to the Iudges in your Highness Courts at Westminster and all other in the Sergeants Inns before the Chief Iustice of your Majesties Bench the Chief Iustice of the Common Pleas and the Chief Baron of your Exchequer or some or one of them Gentlemen of the Inns of Court Principals and Treasurers of the Inns of Chancery All your Highness Subjects in the Inns of Court or that hereafter shall be admitted thereinto and the Principals and Treasurers of every Inn of Chancery before the Readers and Benchers of the several houses whereto they belong or four of them at the least in their open Halls All others of the Inns of Chancery All other your Majesties Subjects as well Ancients as other not being Principal or Treasurer that now are or hereafter shall be admitted into any Inn of Chancery before the Principal or Treasurer and Ancients of the several Inns of Chancery or four of them in their open Halls Prothonotaries Philizers Officers Attorneys Clerks All Prothonotaries Philizers Officers Ministers Attorneys and Clerks that now are or hereafter shall be admitted to write or practice in any of your Highness Courts at Westminster or in any other Court of Record before the Iudge or Iudges of the same Court Clerks and Officers of the Chancery All Clerks of the Chancery and all their under-clerks and all other Officers of the said Court of Chancery and their Clerks before the Master of the Rolls for the time being or before two of the Masters of the said Court of Chancery Parsons Vicars Curates persons in Orders Schoolmaster Usher All Parsons Vicars and Curats and all other persons Ecclesiastical taking Orders and all and every School-master or Vsher before the Bishop of the Diocess or other Ordinary in the same sitting in open Court The Vice-chancellors of both the Universities Heads of Colledges and Halls Proctors Beadles The Vice-Chancellors of both the Vniversities for the time being and the Presidents Wardens Provosts Masters of Colledges and Halls and all other Heads and Principals of Houses Proctors and Beadles of the Vniversities publickly in the Convocation before the Senior Masters there present Persons taking Degrees in School And all and every other persons whatsoever that is or shall be promoted to any Degrée in School before the Vice-Chancellor of the said Vniversity for the time being in the Congregation house Fellows and Schollers of Halls or Colledges All Fellows of Houses and all Schollers of Halls or
Inst 34. Which Iury shall or may c. proceed to Indict Who to Indict him So that the Jury is to Indict and not the Sheriff as is mistaken in the late additions to Dalton cap. 81. tit Recusants Sect. 11. And for stronger defence and maintenance of this Act Stat. Sect. 8. It shall be Treason the second time to maintain the Authority of the Bishop or See of Rome it is further Ordained Enacted and Established by the Authority aforesaid That if any such Offender or Offenders as is aforesaid of the first part or Branch of this Estatute that is to say by Writing Cyphering Printing Preaching or Teaching Deed or Act Advisedly and Wittingly hold or stand with to extol set forth maintain or defend the Authority Iurisdiction or Power of the Bishop of Rome or of his See heretofore claimed used or usurped within this Realm or in any Dominion or Country being of within or under the Queens Power or Obeysance or by any Speech open Deed or Act Advisedly and Wittingly attribute any such manner of Iurisdiction Authority or Preheminence to the said See of Rome or to any Bishop of the same See for the time being within this Realm or in any the Queens Dominions or Countries or be to any such Offender or offenders Abetting Procuring or Counselling or Aiding Assisting or Comforting upon purpose and to the intent to set forth further and extol the said usurped Power Authority or Iurisdiction After such Conviction and Attainder as is aforesaid do eftsoons commit or do the said Offences or any of them in manner and form aforesaid and be thereof duly convicted and attainted as is aforesaid Or to refuse the Oath And also that if any the persons abovenamed and appointed by this Act to take the Oath aforesaid do after the space of thrée months next after the first tender thereof the second time refuse to take and pronounce or do not take or pronounce the same in form aforesaid to be tendred that then every such Offender or Offenders for the same second Offence and Offences shall forfeit lose and suffer such like and the same pains forfeitures Iudgment and Execution as is used in Cases of High Treason What is an advised or witting maintenance Advisedly and wittingly Slade and Body were condemned in a Praemunire upon this Statute before Justices of Oyer and Terminer for extolling the Authority of the Bishop of Rome and remained in Prison for the space of two years and afterwards were brought to the Assizes and demanded whether they were still of the same Opinion To which they answered that they were and one of them said that if they had a thousand Lives they would lose them all in this Case upon which they were Indicted and Arraigned and Convicted upon this second Branch of the Statute for High Treason And it was Resolved by the greater part of the Justices that the words should be taken to be spoken Advisedly and Wittingly and were within the meaning of this second Branch Savile 46. 47. C. 99. Tender and refusal For tender and refusal Vide Stat. 7. Jac. cap. 6. Sect. 4. 5. postea Stat. Sect. 9. Provided always That this Act nor any thing therein contained nor any Attainder to be had by force and vertue of this Act shall not extend to make any corruption of Blood the disheriting of any Heir forfeiture of Dower No corruption of Blood disheriting of Heir or forfeiture of Dower for any Attainder by this Act nor to the prejudice of the Right or Title of any person or persons other then the Right or Title of the Offender or Offenders during his her or their natural Lives only And that it shall and maybe lawful to every person and persons to whom the Right or Interest of any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments after the death of any such Offender or Offenders should or might have appertained if no such Attainder had been to enter into the same without any Ouster le maine to be sued in such sort as he or they might have done if this Act had never been had ne made Provided also That the Oath expressed in the said Act How the Oath expressed An. 1. Eliz. 1. shall be expounded made in the said first year shall be taken and expounded in such form as is set forth in an Admonition annexed to the Queens Majesties Injunctions published in the first year of her Majesties Reign That is to say to confess and acknowledge in her Majesty her Heirs and Successors none other Authority then that was challenged and lately used by the Noble King Henry the Eighth and King Edward the Sixth as in the said admonition more plainly may appear And be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid In what Courts and places this Act shall be published That this Act shall be openly Read and Published and Declared at every Quarter Sessions by the Clerk of the Peace and at every Leet and Law-day by the Steward of the Court and once in every Term in the open Hall of every House and Houses of Court and Chancery at the times and by the persons thereunto to be limited and appointed by the Lord Chancellor or Keeper of the Great Seal for the time being And be it further Enacted Stat. Sect. 10. Every Knight Citizen and Burgess of the Parliament shall take the said Oath That every person which hereafter shall be Elected or appointed a Knight Citizen or Burgess or Baron for any of the five Ports for any Parliament or Parliaments hereafter to be holden shall from henceforth before he shall enter into the Parliament House or have any Voice there openly receive and pronounce the said Oath before the Lord Steward for the time being or his Deputy or Deputies for that time to be appointed And that he which shall enter into the Parliament House without taking the said Oath shall be deemed no Knight Citizen Burgess nor Baron for that Parliament nor shall have any Voice but shall be to all intents constructions and purposes as if he had never been Returned nor Elected Knight Citizen Burgess or Baron for that Parliament and shall suffer such pains and penalties as if he had presumed to sit in the same without Election Return or Authority The Kings dispensation void The King cannot dispence with any Member of the Commons House from taking this Oath For the reason given by the late Lord Chief Justice Vaughan in the Case of Thomas and Sorrell touching the Oath of Allegiance holds here viz. Because by this Statute he is persona inhabilis until he hath taken it Vaughan 355. Stat. Sect. 11. Where no temporal person of or above the degree of a Baron shall be compelled to take the said Oath Provided alway That forasmuch as the Quéens Majesty is otherwise sufficiently assured of the Faith and Loyalty of the Temporal Lords of her High Court of Parliament Therefore this Act nor any thing therein contained shall
the Feast of Pentecost next coming shall kéep or maintain any School-master which shall not repair to Church as is aforesaid or be allowed by the Bishop or Ordinary of the Diocess where such School-master shall be so kept shall forfeit and lose for every month so kéeping him ten pounds Provided That no such Ordinary or their Ministers shall take any thing for the said allowance The penalty on such School-master And such School-master or Teacher presuming to teach contrary to this Act and being thereof lawfully convict shall be disabled to be a Teacher of youth and shall suffer Imprisonment without Bail or Mainprize for one year Any School-master An Usher Usher or Assistant in teaching is a Master in the School and seemeth to be included within the word School-master And the following words here or Teacher explain who is intended viz. every Teacher of Youth A School-master conforms or is licensed either of them sufficient Stat. 1 Jac. 4. 14 Car. 2. What he must do by Stat. 14 Car. 2. Repair to Church as is aforesaid or be allowed This Clause being in the dis-junctive It seems That although a School-master doth not come to Church yet if he be licensed by the Bishop or Ordinary it shall excuse the penalty And this is not altered in that particular either by the Statute of 1 Jac. cap. 4. Sect. 9. quod vide postea nor by the Statute of 14 Car. 2. But then he must by that of 14 Car. 2. among other things for which Vide the Statute at large subscribe a Declaration or Acknowledgment that he will conform to the Liturgie of the Church of England as it is now by Law Established or he shall for the first Offence suffer three months Imprisonment without Bail and for the second and every other Offence shall suffer three months Imprisonment without Bail and also forfeit five pounds But if he be licenced and subscribe and do as aforesaid and so cannot be punished by this or either of the other said Acts yet now by the Statute of 17 Car. 2.2 unless he take the Oath there mentioned and frequent Divine Service established by the Laws of this Kingdom and carry himself there as in the said Statute is appointed he shall forfeit for every offence 40 l. So that now Conformity in repairing to Church is necessarily required of every such School-master No such Ordinary c. shall take anything Twelve pence for a Licence But now by the Statute of 14 Car. 2. there may be 12 pence taken for such Licence And be it likewise Enacted Stat. Sect. 7. What Justices may enquire of Offences done against the Stat. of 1 Eliz. 1. 5 El. 1. 13 El. 2. That all and every Offences against this Act or against the Acts of the first fifth or thirtéenth years of her Majesties Reign touching acknowledging of her Majesties Supream Government in Causes Ecclesiastical or other matters touching the Service of God or coming to Church or Establishment of true Religion in this Realm shall and may be inquirable as well before Iustices of Peace as other Iustices named in the same Statutes within one year and a day after every such Offence committed Any thing in this Act or in any other Act to the contrary notwithstanding Be it likewise Enacted That Iustices of Oyer and Terminer and Iustices of Assize and of Gaol delivery in their several limits shall have power to enquire hear and determine of all Offences against this Statute And Iustices of Peace in their open Quarter Sessions of Peace shall have power by vertue of this Act to enquire hear and determine of all Offences against this Act except Treason and misprision of Treason Within one year and a day Where the Indictment of the Offender was to have been within a year and day Stat. 1 Eliz. 1. 5 Eliz. 1. 13 Eliz. 2. This limitation of time extends not to any Offence made Treason by this Act but only to such Offences mentioned in this Act or those of 1 5 and 13 Eliz. as concern the Kings Supremacy in Causes Ecclesiastical the Service of God coming to Church or Establishment of Religion and for those touching Religion this Statute enlarges the time limited by 1 Eliz. cap. 2. which saith the party must be Indicted the next Sessions or if in a Corporation within fifteen days after Easter or Michaelmas for now he may be Indicted at any time within the year and day In what cases he may be Indicted afterwards But for absolving or withdrawing or for being absolved withdrawn or reconciled which are here made Treason no time is limited for the prosecution but the Offender may be Indicted at any time after the year and day For the latter part of this Clause speaks of those Offences of Treason which the Justices of Peace cannot hear and determine and there no time is limited although there be in the former part for those Offences which are inquirable by Justices of Peace Leonard 1. 238. C. 322. Guilfords Case Vide Stat. 1 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 9. infra Sect 9. touching the Informer Justices of Oyer and Terminer who Iustices of Oyer and Terminer and Iustices of Assize and of Gaol delivery c. and Iustices of Peace The Justices of the Court of Kings Bench are the Soveraign Justices of Oyer and Terminer and Gaol-delivery Co. 9. 118. Lord Sanchars Case and therefore may enquire of hear and determine the Offences against this Act although they be not here especially named Two Indictments before several Justices If an Indictment be preferred upon this Statute before Justices of Oyer and Terminer or of Assize for any offence not made Treason or misprision of Treason and there is an Indictment before Justices of Peace likewise for the same Offence The Judgment of the Justices who do first enquire hear and determine the same shall stand and the Judgment given by the other shall be void as was held in the like Case upon the Statute of Inmates Co. 2. Inst 739. Justices of Peace may hear and determine the Offence of not coming to Church Stat. 29 Eliz. 6. 3 Jac. 4. The power here given the Justices of Peace in their open Quarter Sessions to hear and determine the Offence of not coming to Church is in force at this day notwithstanding the Statute of 29 El. c. 6. which saith That every Conviction for not coming to Church shall be in the Kings Bench or at the Assizes or general Gaol-delivery and not elsewhere for the Statute of 3 Jac. cap. 4. hath given power to Justices of Peace in their general or quarter Sessions to enquire hear and determine of all Offences for not coming to Church according to former Laws in such manner as the Justices of Assize and Gaol delivery might do by former Laws in the Case of Recusancy for not repairing to Church which is clearly a reviver of the Power of Justices of Peace given to them by this
Parliament Assembled tending to the utter subversion of the whole State lately undertaken by the instigation of Iesuits and Seminaries and in advancement of their Religion by their Schollers taught and instructed by them to that purpose which attempt by the only goodness of Almighty God was discovered and defeated And where divers persons Popishly affected do nevertheless the better to cover and hide their false hearts and with the more safety to attend the opportunity to execute their mischievous designs repair sometimes to Church to escape the penalty of the Laws in that behalf provided For the better discovery therefore of such persons and their evil affections to the Kings Majesty and the State of this his Realm Stat. Sect. 2. to the end that being known their evil purpose may be the better prevented Be it enacted by the Kings most excellent Majesty the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament Assembled and by the Authority of the same That every Popish Recusant convicted or hereafter to be convicted which heretofore hath conformed him or her self or which shall hereafter conform him or her self and repair to the Church and continue there during the time of Divine Service according to the Laws and Statutes in that behalf made and provided shall within the first year next after the end of this Session of Parliament if he or she be conformed as aforesaid before the end of this Session of Parliament or within the first year next after that he or she shall after this Session of Parliament so conform him or her self and repair to Church as aforesaid and after the said first year shall once in every year following at the least receive the blessed Sacrament of the Lords Supper in the Church of that Parish where he or she shall most usually abide or be within the said year wherein by the true meaning of this Statute he or she ought so to receive The forfeiture of a conformed Recusant which doth not receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper yearly And if there be no such Parish Church then in the Church next adjoyning to the place of his or her such most usual abode And if any Recusant so conformed shall not receive the said Sacrament of the Lords Supper accordingly he or she shall for such not receiving lose and forfeit for the first year Twenty pounds and for the second year for such not receiving Forty pounds and for every year after for such not receiving thréescore pounds until he or she shall have received the said Sacrament as is aforesaid And if after he or she shall have received the said Sacrament as is aforesaid and after shall eftsoons at any time offend in not receiving the said Sacrament as is aforesaid by the space of one whole year that in every such Case the person so offending shall for every such offence lose and forfeit Threescore pounds of lawful English money the one moiety to be to our Soveraign Lord the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors and the other moiety to him that will sue for the same And to be recovered in any of the Kings Courts or Record at Westminster or before Iustices of Assize or general Goal delivery or before Iustices of the Peace at their general Quarter Sessions by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information wherein no Essoin Protection or wager of Law shall be allowed Popish Recusants Every Popish Recusant convicted Wingate tit Crowne numb 98. speaks indefinitely as if this extended to all Recusants whatsoever which is contrary to the express words of the Statute Conviction must be shewed in certain In an Information upon this Statute for not receiving the Sacrament the Conviction of the party for Recusancy ought to be shewed in certain before whom in what Court c. For before he is convicted of Recusancy he is not liable to the penalty inflicted by this Act for not receiving And yet if it be only generally shewed in the Information that the Defendant was convicted in due form of Law and the Defendant doth not demur thereto but pleads not guilty and it be found against him there Judgment shall not be stayed for this defect for he hath lost his advantage and by his Plea hath admitted the point of Conviction and at the Trial the only thing in issue was whether he had received the Sacrament and not whether he was convicted Tanfeild Chief Baron compared this Case to that of Debt upon an Obligation and in the Declaration no place is shewn That is not good But if the Defendant Pleads a Release he shall never afterwards take advantage of the Defect in the Declaration Cro. Hill 12. Jac. 365.366 Sivedale versus Sir Edward Lenthall Which shall hereafter conform him or her self Conformity generally shewed sufficient c. This conformity need not be set forth in the Information in every particular circumstance as when or before whom the Popish Recusant conformed himself For 't is sufficient if it be said that he went to Church and continued there during Divine Service and afterwards neglected to receive the Sacrament c. And upon such Conformity and neglect he is liable to the penalty inflicted by this Act although he never went before the Ordinary Ordinary Cro. Hill 12. Jac. 366. And for every year after for such not receiving thréescore pounds Note the Statute saith not that the Offender shall forfeit for the first second and third offence but for the first and second year and for every year after for if it had been said he should have forfeited Twenty pounds for the first offence Forty pounds for the second and Threescore pounds for the third he must have been convicted and have had Judgment of the first offence before he could have incurred the penalty for the second and of the second before he could have incurred the penalty for the third And every one of these offences must have appeared judicialiter which could not be ante Judicium But here where 't is said he shall forfeit Twenty pounds for the first year Forty pounds for the second and Threescore pounds for every year after it is otherwise And the Offender shall forfeit Threescore pounds for the third year although he was never convicted for the first or second year In an Information for the third year conviction for the first or second year not necessary And therefore in an Information brought upon this Statute for Threescore pounds against a Popish Recusant convicted for Recusancy who hath conformed and neglected to receive the Sacrament the third year after his Conformity It 's sufficient to set forth that he was a Popish Recusant and was convicted and conformed himself and went to Church c. two years before such a day and that after the said day he failed for a whole year to receive the Sacrament without mentioning what he did the first or second year after his conformity And so was the Information in
all causes where any Bishop or Iustices of the Peace may by force of this Act require and take of any Subject the Oath above mentioned That the Lords of the Privy Counsel for the time being or any six of them whereof the Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer or the principal Secretary for the time being to be one shall have full Power and Authority by force of this Act at any time or times to require and take the said Oaths before mentioned of any Nobleman or Noblewoman then being above the age of Eighteén years And if any such Nobleman or Noblewoman other then Women married shall refuse to take such Oath or Oaths that in every such Case such Nobleman and Noblewoman shall incur the pain and danger of a Praemunire Where any Bishop or Iustices of the Peace The Justices of Peace Justices of Peace have a twofold power given them by this Act in reference to the Oath of Allegiance 1. Out of Sessions and so any two Justices of Peace quorum unus c. may tender the Oath to any person eighteen years old or above other then Noblemen or Noblewomen 2. In their general or Quarter Sessions and there they may tender the Oath to any such person who hath before refused it or to any person whatsoever of or above that age other then Noblemen or Noblewomen Now whether the six Privy Counsellors Six Privy Counsellors here mentioned may require this Oath of Noblemen and Noblewomen in all Cases where the Justices of Peace may require the same of any Subject either in or out of Sessions or only in such Cases where they may require it out of Sessions seems to be a Question For if the power here given to the six Privy Counsellors be the same with that of the Justices of Peace in their Sessions they may by force of this Act tender it to any Nobleman or unmarried Noblewoman whatsoever above eighteen years old For the Justices of Peace in their Sessions may tender it there to any other person whatsover But if it be meant of the power given the Justices of Peace out of Sessions then the six Privy Counsellors can tender it by force of this Act to such Noblemen or unmarried Noblewomen only who stand Convicted or Indicted of Recusancy for not coming to Church or who have not received the Sacrament twice within the year next before or who passing through the Country unknown shall upon examination confess or not deny their Recusancy or that they have not so received the Sacrament To whom they may tender this Oath For the solving of which doubt it is to be considered 1. That the Bishop and not the Justices of Assize are here joyned with the Justices of Peace And these words where any Bishop or Iustices of Peace seem to bear this Construction viz. where any Bishop or Justices of Peace either the one or the other indifferently may require the Oath and that can be intended only of the power given out of Sessions For in Sessions the Bishop hath nothing to do But had the Justices of Assize been here added scilicet in all Causes where the Bishop Justices of Assize or Justices of Peace may require this Oath it had been clear that the Power here given the six Privy Counsellors was as extensive as that which is given the Justices of Assize or Justices of Peace in their Sessions and they might have required the Oath of any Nobleman or unmarried Noblewoman whatsoever of competent age so if the Justices of Peace only had been here named it had been clearly intended of the Justices of Peace in either Capacity either in or out of Sessions But Bishop seems here to be a restrictive word and to give the Privy Counsellors no more power in respect of the Nobility then the Bishop had in reference to any other Subject 2. These words in all causes where c. seem to be restrictive likewise and exclusive of some Causes But the Power of the Justices of Peace in Sessions extends to all Causes and Persons under the Degree of Nobility whatsoever which therefore cannot be here intended but only some particular Causes ejusdem generis which can be no other then the Causes before mentioned wherein the Bishop or two Justices out of Sessions may deal viz. where the party was before Convicted or Indicted or had not received the Sacrament or passed unknown and confessed c. And yet as 't is reported in Bulstrode 1. 197. the Case of the Lord Vaux Pasch 10. Car. 1. is to the contrary For 't is said there he was committed to the Fleet by the Privy Council for refusing this Oath and afterwards Indicted in the Kings Bench of a Praemunire for such his refusal he being then of the age of eighteen years and above And the said Oath being lawfully tendred c. All which was certified to the Court by divers of the Privy Council upon which Indictment he was attainted and no word in the Indictment of his standing Convicted or Indicted of Recusancy or not having received the Sacrament c. and yet the Indictment was grounded upon this Statute and not upon that of 7 Jac. 6. For by that Statute of 7 Jac. he could not have been Indicted of a Praemunire for the first refusal but must have been Committed until the next Assizes or Sessions and if he had there refused it the second time he might have been Indicted of a Praemunire and not otherwise But whether this Indictment were according to Law or only passed sub silentio Quaere Note by the Statute of 7 Jac. cap. 6. any Privy Counsellor Stat. 7 Jac. 6. or the Bishop of the Diocess may now require this Oath of any Baron or Baronesse of or above the age of eighteen years in all Cases And in some Cases three Privy Counsellors Quorum unus c. may require it of persons above the said Degree vide the Statute A Noblewoman by Marriage Noblewoman A Noblewoman who was such by Marriage only becomes a Widow and takes to her second Husband a person under the Degree of Nobility By this her second Marriage she hath lost her Nobility And if she again becomes a Widow the Oath shall not be tendred her by Privy Counsellors But the Bishop or two Justices of Peace quorum unus c. may by force of this Act require her to take it and upon her refusal may proceed against her as is above directed in the Case of a common person see more of this matter Stat. 7 Jac. cap. 6. Sect. 4. Age. Then being above the age of Eightéen years In this Case that day Eighteen years on which the party was born must be wholly elapsed for before this Oath cannot be tendred although the hour of his birth be elapsed For the Law rejects all Fractions and Divisions of a day for the incertainty Fractions of a day rejected which is always the Mother of Contention Co. 5.1 Claytons Case
Vide Rolles abridg tit Temps 521. Counsel and Trial by Peers Praemunire In the aforesaid Case of the Lord Vaux who was Indicted of a Praemunire for refusing this Oath the Court of Kings Bench denied him Counsel or Trial by his Peers And it was there held that the Trial of a Nobleman by his Peers is at Common Law in four Cases only viz. Treason Felony Misprision of Treason and Misprision of Felony but not to be allowed in the Case of a Praemunire for that in effect it is no more then a Contempt Bulstrode 1. 197 198 199. Stat. Sect. 32. Who shall take the Oath in the Cinque Ports Provided also and be it Enacted by Authority of this Parliament That where any person or persons shall go or pass out of the Cinque Ports or any Member thereof to any parts beyond the Seas to serve any Forreign Prince State or Potentate that in every such Case the Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports for the time being or any person by him in that behalf appointed or to be appointed shall have full Power and Authority by virtue hereof to take the Bond and minister the Oath to such Passengers as is above mentioned If the Warden of the Cinque Ports Warden of the Cinque Ports do take such Bond and minister such Oath and do not certifie them into the Exchequer this seems to be Casus omissus and not provided for by the Act For he shall not be liable to the penalty inflicted on the Customer and Controller For that although it be within the same mischief there are no express words here to reach him And penal Statutes shall not be taken or construed by Equity Lee 77. Bishop of Chichester versus Freeland Rolles 2. 420. Jones versus Lord Sheffeild Ratcliffe Yelverton 22. Brode versus Owen Plowden 17. Fogassa's Case Et 86. Partridges Case Co. 1. Inst. 238. Keilwey 96. Stat. iii Jac. cap. v. An Act to prevent and avoid dangers which may grow by Popish Recusants Stat. Sect. 1. WHereas divers Iesuits Seminaries and Popish Priests dayly do withdraw many of his Majesties Subjects from the true Service of Almighty God and the Religion established within this Realm to the Romish Religion and from their Loyal Obedience to his Majesty and have of late secretly perswaded divers Recusants and Papists and encouraged and emboldened them to commit most damnable Treasons tending to the overthrow of Gods true Religion the destruction of his Majesty and his Royal Issue and the overthrow of the whole State and Commonwealth if God of his goodness and mercy had not within few hours before the intended time of the execution thereof revealed and disclosed the same wherefore to discover and prevent such secret damnable conspiracies and Treasons as hereafter may be put in ure by such evil disposed persons if remedy be not therefore provided Stat. Sect. 2. The reward of him which discovereth a Popish Priest or Mass Be it Enacted by the Kings most Excellent Majesty the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament Assembled and by the Authority of the same That such person as shall first discover to any Iustice of Peace any Recusant or other person which shall entertain or relieve any Iesuite Seminary or Popish Priest or shall discover any Mass to have beén said and the persons that were present at such Mass and the Priest that said the same or any of them within threé days next after the offence committed and that by reason of such discovery any of the said Offenders be taken and Convicted or Attainted That then the person which hath made such discovery shall not only be fréed from the danger and penalty of any Law for such offence if he be an Offender therein but also shall have the third part of the forfeiture of all such sums of Money Goods Chattels and Debts which shall be forfeited by such offence so as the same total forfeiture exceéd not the sum of One hundred and fifty pounds and if it excéed the sum of One hundred and fifty pounds the said person so discovering the said offence shall have the sum of Fifty pounds only for every such discovery And such person so discovering the same after conviction of the offender shall have a Certificate from the Iudges or Iustices of Peace before whom such Conviction shall happen to be directed to the Sheriff or other Officer of the same County Limit or Place that shall seize the Goods or levy the said forfeiture commanding the said Sheriff or other Officer to pay the same accordingly to him that so discovered the same out of the monies to be levyed by vertue of the said forfeitures which Warrant and payment shall be effectual in the Law for that purpose and a sufficient discharge in that behalf for the Sheriff or other Officer upon his Accompt Within threé days next after the Offence committed Discovery within what time So that if three days next after the Offence committed elapse before the discovery is made the discoverer shall have no benefit by this Act. And therefore if the person discovering had no notice of the Offence till the three days expire although he discovers it presently upon such notice given him yet he comes too late much less shall he have three days after notice as Wingate tit Crowne numb 128. mistakes the meaning of this Clause Commanding the said Sheriff or other Officer to pay the same In the late additions to Dalton cap. 81. tit Recusants Who is to pay the discoverer Sect. 57. 't is said that the Sheriff is to grant his Warrant for the payment of the discoverer but that is a misrecital of the Statute for the Sheriff himself is to pay him And whereas the repair of such evil affected persons to the Court or to the City of London may be very dangerous to his Majesties person and may give them more liberty to méet Stat. Sect. 3. A Popish Recusant shall not come to Court consult and plot their Treasons and practices against the State then if they should be restrained and confined unto their private Houses in the Country For remedy hereof Be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That no Popish Recusant Convicted or to be Convicted shall come into the Court or House where the Kings Majesty or his Heir apparent to the Crown of England shall be unless he be commanded so to do by the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors or by Warrant in writing from the Lords and others of the most Honourable Privy Council of the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors or any of them upon pain to forfeit for every time so offending one hundred pounds the one moiety to the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors the other moiety to him that will discover and sue for the same by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any one of his Majesties Courts of Record wherein no Essoign protection or wager
Contents thereof or secretly deliver out such Books to others he knowing the Contents thereof unless in this last Case he be a Trader in them and deliver them out upon that Account without any act or attribution by conference or allowance he is an Offender within this Act by the words Hold and stand with to maintain c. and so is the receiver likewise if he afterwards Reads and Confers upon any such Book with any other person and in his Conference by any Words or Speeches allows the Book to be good or conveys it secretly to his Friend to the intent he should Read it and be perswaded to be of that Opinion or if a man hear of the Contents of such Book by the report of others and doth by any overt Speech commend or affirm it to be good In all these Cases the Person so doing especially he that reads it and then allows of it is an Offender within this Act and shall for the first Offence incur a Praemunire and for the second be Guilty of high Treason So likewise if any Book to that effect be made and Written within the Realm and sent over Seas as if it were made out of the Realm and be afterwards Bought Read or Conference be had thereupon ut supra such Offences are within the danger of this Law Dyer 11 El. 281. 282. vide Co. l. 6. Praefat ' Vpon purpose and to the intent The intent material A. was Indicted upon this Statute and that of 13 Eliz. cap. 2. of a Praemunire for aiding one B. knowing him to be a principal maintainer of the Authority and Jurisdiction of the Bishop and See of Rome contra formam Statut ' praedict ' and the Indictment was certified into the Kings Bench And it was held by the greater part of the Justices that the Indictment was insufficient for want of those words Vpon purpose and to the intent to set forth and extol the Authority c. And contra formam Statut ' will not supply that defect Trin. 20 Eliz. Dyer 363. Note in the Report of this Case the Statute of 1 Eliz. is mistaken for this of 5 Eliz. there being no mention of the intent in that of Primo Stat. 1 Eliz. 1. The intent is a hidden thing and lies in the Heart and therefore there must be some overt Act or Speech which declares the intent for the intent it self is not traversable What traversable but that by which it is made manifest as was adjudged in Boothes Case Co. 5. 77. And it is also Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. That as well Iustices of Assize in their Circuits as Iustices of Peace within Sect. 3 the limits of their Commission and Authorities What Justices may inquire of and certifie the Offences aforesaid or two of every such Iustices of Peace at the least whereof one to be of the Quorum shall have full Power and Authority by vertue of this Act in their Quarter or open Sessions to inquire of all Offences Contempts and Transgressions perpetrated committed or done contrary to the true meaning of the Premises in like manner and form as they may of other Offences against the Quéens Peace and shall certifie every Presentment before them or any of them had or made concerning the same or any part thereof before the Queén her Heirs and Successors in her or their Court commonly called the Kings Bench within forty days next after any such Presentment had or made if the Term be then open and if not at the first day of the full Term next following the said forty days upon pain that every of the Iustices of Assize or Iustices of the Peace The Penalty for default of Certificate of the said Offences before whom such Presentment shall be made making default of such Certificate contrary to this Statute to lose and forfeit for every such default One hundred pounds to the Quéens Highness her Heirs and Successors And it is Enacted by the Authority aforesaid The Justices of the Kings Bench may hear and determine the Offences aforesaid That the Iustices of the Kings Bench as well upon every such Certificate as by enquiry before themselves within the limits of their Authorities shall have full Power and Authority to hear order and determine every such Offence done or committed contrary to the true meaning of this present Act according to the Laws of this Realm in such like manner and form to all intents and purposes as if the Person or Persons against whom any Presentment shall be had upon this Estatute had beén Presented upon any matter of offence expressed in the said Estatute made in the said Sixteenth year of King Richard the Second All Offences c. contrary to the true meaning of the Premises That is the Offences in holding or standing with to extol c. the Jurisdiction of the See or Bishop of Rome or attributing such Jurisdiction c. or Procuring Counselling c. which is here for the first Offence made a Praemunire For these are the only Premises in the Act and this Clause extends not to the Oath of Supremacy or any Offence in refusing of it much less to all Offences against this Act as 't is mistaken in the late Additions to Dalton cap. 140. tit High Treason Sect. 11. Nor doth it seem to be the intent of the Statute to give the Justices of Peace any Power to inquire of any Offence made High Treason thereby The Power of Justices of Peace herein For the Power here given to the Justices of Peace is only to inquire of Offences contrary to the true meaning of the Premises and the Premises extend only to those Offences made a Praemunire And this clearly appears by the subsequent words viz. That the Presentment thereof shall be certified into the Kings Bench who shall hear and determine every such Offence as if the Offender had been Presented upon any matter in the Statute of 16 R. 2. Now that cannot be intended of High Treason And of Justices of Assize The like may be said of Justices of Assize for as they are meerly Justices of Assize they cannot by force of this Act inquire of either the first or second Offence in refusing the Oath of Supremacy nor of the second Offence in extolling the Bishop of Romes Authority only for the first Offence of this last kind they may inquire and take Indictments thereof and certifie them into the Kings Bench but then by their Commission of Oyer and Terminer they may not only inquire of the first or second Offence in extolling the Bishop of Romes Authority or refusing the Oath of Supremacy but may hear and determine them And accordingly were Slade and Bodye Indicted Arraigned and Tried in the County of Southampton of a Praemunire for the first Offence in extolling the Bishop of Romes Authority upon which they were Attainted and afterwards of Treason for the second Offence before Sir Roger Manwood and Justice
Periam Justices of Assize by vertue of their Commission of Oyer and Terminer For the Certificate here mentioned which is to be sent into the Kings Bench is required only of the Justices of Assize and Justices of Peace And of Oyer and Terminer But Justices of Oyer and Terminer upon Indictments taken before them may proceed to hear and determine as Manwood and Periam did in that Case as well for the first as second Offence Savile 46. 47. C. 99. For which first Offence in extolling the Bishop of Romes Authority it seems the Justices of Assize who have a Commission of Oyer and Terminer have their election either as Justices of Assize to inquire only and then they must certifie the Presentment or Indictment into the Kings Bench or to inquire hear and determine as they are Justices of Oyer and Terminer and then they are not bound to certifie For Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer are not within the meaning of this Branch of the Statute as was held in that Case of Slade and Bodye By what hath been said it appears that the question there put by Ayloffe scil how they could proceed upon such an Indictmen not certified into the Kings Bench within forty days was grounded upon a double mistake 1. That Justices of Oyer and Terminer were bound to certifie into the Kings Bench all Indictments for extolling the Authority of the Bishop of Rome taken before them 2. That Indictments for the second Offence were within the meaning of this Branch of the Statute For he speaks there of the second Indictment which was for High Treason Every Presentment Presentment what By Presentment here is to be understood not only that which is properly so called which the Jurors find and present to the Court without any former Indictment delivered them but also an Indictment which is drawn and ingrossed in form of Law and delivered to the Jurors to be inquired of which Indictment the Justices here named have power to take by force of the word inquire and is included within the word Presentment being a species of it For every Indictment found by the Jurors is a Presentment and the Record saith Juratores praesentant c. when they find an Indictment But every Presentment is not an Indictment Co. 2. Inst. 739. And as well the one as the other touching the Offences aforesaid must be certified into the Kings Bench. If the Term be then open First day of the Term. The Essoin day is the first day of the Term properly so called and on that day the Term is open At the first day of full Term. That is Quarto die post Full Term. which is the usual day of appearance and the first day of every Term in common reputation For the Essoin day is the first day of the Term only to some particular intents and 't is not full Term till quarto die post Savile 124. Co. 193. Matthew vers Harcourt So that if the Forty days expire on the day before the Essoin day the Presentment need not be certified until quarto die post Presentments when to be certified which is the day of appearance but if they expire on the Essoin day or afterwards and before the quarto die post the Justices here named must not stay till the quarto die post but are bound to certifie by the last day of the Forty days under the penalty here limited for the Term was then open Stat. Sect. 4. Who shall take the Oath set forth A● 1 E. 1. And moreover be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That as well all manner of Persons expressed and appointed in and by the Act made in the first year of the Quéens Majesties Reign that now is intituled an Act restoring to the Crown the antient Iurisdiction over the estate Ecclesiastical and Spiritual and abolishing all Forraign Powers repugnant to the same to take the Oath expressed and set forth in the same As all other Persons which have taken or shall take Orders commonly called Ordines Sacros or Ecclesiastical Orders have béen or shall be promoted preferred or admitted to any Degreé of Learning in any Vniversity within this Realm or Dominions to the same belonging And all Schoolmasters and publick and private Teachers of Children as also all manner of Person and Persons that have taken or hereafter shall take any Degreé of Learning in or at the Common Laws of this Realm as well utter Barristers as Benchers Readers Ancients in any House or Houses of Court and all principal Treasurers and such as be of the grand Company of every Inn of Chancery and all Attorneys Prothonotaries and Philizers towards the Laws of this Realm and all manner of Sheriffs Escheators and Feodaries and all other Person and Persons which have taken or shall take upon him or them or have béen or shall be admitted to any Ministry or Office in at or belonging to the Common Law or any other Law or Laws of to or for the Execution of them or any of them used or allowed or at any time hereafter to be used or allowed within this Realm or any of the Dominions or Countries belonging or which hereafter shall happen to belong to the Crown or Dignity of the same and all other Officers or Ministers of or towards any Court whatsoever and every of them shall take and pronounce a Corporal Oath upon the Evangelists before he or they shall be admitted allowed or suffered to take upon him or them to use exercise supply or occupy any such Vocation Office Degrée Ministry Room or Service as is aforesaid and that in the open Court whereunto he doth or shall serve or belong And if he or they do not or shall not serve or belong to any Ordinary or open Court then he or they shall take and pronounce the Oath aforesaid in an open place before a convenient Assembly to witness the same and before such Person or Persons as have or shall have Authority by common use or otherwise to admit or call any such Person or Persons as is aforesaid to any such Vocation Office Ministry Room or Service or else before such Person or Persons as by the Queéns Highness her Heirs or Successors by Commission under the Great Seal of England shall be named or assigned to accept and take the same according to the tenor effect and form of the same Oath Verbatim which is and as it is already set forth to be taken in the aforesaid Act made in the First year of the Queéns Majesties Reign Admitted to any Ministry or Office What Officers are to take the Oath of Supremacy All persons who are preferred to any such Ministry or Office whether of the gift of the King or of a Subject are bound to take this Oath and not only such as are preferred by the King as 't is restrained in the late Additions to Dalton Cap. 81. tit Recusants Sect. 9. Belonging to the Common Law
any other pain or penalty this Act or any thing therein contained to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding Next Justice of Peace To the next Iustice of Peace If the person to whom such Agnus Dei c. is offered do bring the Offender to any Justice of Peace of the County where the offer is made although he be not the next Justice yet it is good enough and satisfies the intent of the Act For the word next is put in such Cases into Acts of Parliament but for conveniency and the more speedy execution of Justice Vide Styles 246. Maine and Sergeants Case The respective Justices of Peace here intended To any Iustice of Peace The Statute provides for the discovery of the Offender in Order to his punishment in three Cases 1. If any such superstitious thing be offered and the party be able to apprehend him that offers it he must bring him to the next Justice of Peace of the County where the offer is made 2. But if he cannot apprehend him he is to disclose his name and place of aboad or resort to the Ordinary of that Diocess or a Justice of Peace of that County where the person to whom the offer was made is resident and that within three days after such offer made 3. But if he receives the thing offered then he is not to apply to the Ordinary but is strictly tied to deliver it within a day after to some Justice of Peace of that County where he who received it shall then be resident or happen to be and in this last Case if he receives it with an intent to use or wear it and keeps it above a day or delivers it to any other person or Justice of Peace of any other County he incurs a Praemunire But these Justices of Peace are strangely confounded as well in Dalton V. cap. 89. tit High Treason as in Wingate tit Crown numb 37. And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 8. A Pardon to them that shall bring in to be cancelled th●se Bulls which they received That all and every person and persons which at any time since the beginning of the first year of the Quéens Majesties Reign that now is have brought or caused to be brought into this Realm any such Bulls Writings or Instruments or Reconciliation only as are abovementioned and now have any of the same Bulls Writings or Instruments in his or their hands or custody and shall and do within the space of thrée months next after the end of any Session or Dissolution of this present Parliament bring and deliver all such Bulls Writings and Instruments which they or any of them now have in his or their Custody to the Bishop of the Diocess where such Absolution hath been given and received to the intent that the same Bulls Writings and Instruments may be cancelled and defaced and shall openly and publickly before such Bishop confess and acknowledge his or their Offence therein and humbly desire to be received restored and admitted to the Church of England shall stand and be clearly pardoned and discharged of all and every Offence and Offences done or committed in any matter or cause concerning any of the said Bulls Writings or Instruments for or touching such Absolution or Reconciliation only And that all and every person or persons which have received A Pardon of all those who have been reconciled to the Bishop of Rome and do confess it and submit themselves or taken any Absolution from the said Bishop of Rome or his said Sée of Rome of any Reconciliation unto the said Bishop or to the said Sée of Rome sithence the said first year of the Reign of our said Soveraign Lady the Queen and shall within the said space of three months next after any Session or Dissolution of this present Parliament come before the Bishop of the Diocess of such place where such Absolution or Reconciliation was had or made and shall publickly and openly before the same Bishop confess and acknowledge his or their Offence therein and humbly desire to be received restored and admitted to the Church of England shall likewise stand and he clearly pardoned and discharged of all and every Offence or Offences done or committed in any matter or cause concerning the said Bulls Writings or Instruments for or touching only receiving of such Absolution or Reconciliation and for and concerning all Absolution or Reconciliation had or received by colour of any of the said Bulls Writings or Instruments only Provided also Stat. Sect. 9. The penalty of a Justice of P. not disclosing an Offence declared to him and be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any Iustice of Peace to whom any Matter or Offence before mentioned shall be uttered shewed or declared as is aforesaid do not within the space of xiv days next after it shall be to him shewed or uttered signifie or declare the same to some one of the Queéns Majesties Privy Counsel that then the same Iustice of Peace shall incur the danger pain and forfeiture provided by the said Statute made in the said sixtéenth year of King Richard the second As is aforesaid So that if the Offence be not declared as is aforesaid No Praemunire incurred that is to such Justice of Peace as is appointed in the foregoing Clause but it shall be declared to any other Justice of Peace of a wrong County that other Justice of Peace shall not incur a Praemunire if he doth not signifie or declare it to a Privy Counsellor One Privy Counsellor sufficient To some one of the Queéns Majesties Privy Council Here 't is plain that any one Privy Counsellor sufficeth and the Justice of Peace is not bound to signifie the Offence to the Privy Council as Wingate tit Crown numb 138. misrecites the Statute Stat. Sect. 10. Trial of a Nobleman by his Peers Provided also and be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any Nobleman being a Peér of this Realm shall at any time hereafter happen to be Indicted for any the Offence or Offences aforesaid That then every such Nobleman and Péer of this Realm shall have his Trial by his Péers as in cases of High Treason and Misprision of Treason hath heretofore béen accustomed or used A saving of the right of others Saving to all and every person and persons bodies Politick and Corporate their Heirs and Successors and the Heirs and Successors of every of them other then the said Offenders and their Heirs claiming only as Heir or Heirs to such Offenders and such person and persons as claim to any their uses all such Rights Titles Interests Possessions Leases Rents Reversions Remainders Offices Fées and all other Profits Commodities and Hereditaments as they or any of them shall have at the day of committing such Offence or Offences or any time before in as large ond ample manner to all intents and purposes as if this Act
Recusant was absent from Church from the 10 of September 15 Jac. unto the 9 of Sept. 16. Jac. and demanded Two hundred and twenty pounds for eleven monthes upon non culp pleaded it was found against the Defendant And it was resolved that although the Informer had demanded less then by his own shewing was due for the time mentioned in the Information was thirteen months compleat except one day yet the Information was well enough For the Recovery shall be intended to be for the eleven months when the Recusant was first absent and the addition of more time is not material Cro. Pasch 17 Jac. 529. 530. Rolles 2. 90. Parker versus Sir John Curson and his Wife And this is not like the Case of Bawderock versus Mackaller where the Informer Qui tam c. upon the Statute of Symony demanded less than the penalty and the Court seemed to be of Opinion that although it was good enough for the King notwithstanding that misprision yet it was not so for the Informer and compared it to the Case of Agard and Candish where an Information was brought upon the Statute of Liveries after the year and it was Adjudged to be good for the King but not for the Informer Cro. Mich. 9. Car. 331. For upon the Statute of Symony which gives one intire penalty for the offence if less be demanded the Statute is not pursued And there is a clear variance between that and the Information But in the Case of Recusancy when he demands Two hundred pound for eleven moneths the Statute is pursued and though it appears by the Information that the Recusant was absent for a longer time yet the Informer is at liberty whether he will demand the penalty for his absence during that supernumerary time The Informer demands for 13 months and the Jury find for 12. If it be shewed in the Information that the Recusant was absent from Church from a day certain to a day certain which in all makes 13 months and the penalty is demanded for that time and the Jury find the party guilty for 12 months It hath been held by some that the Verdict shall be good for 12 months But whether for the first 12 months is a question For in Sir J. Cursons Case supra the demand was but for 11 months And when the Jury finds the Defendant guilty it shall be intended to be for the 11 months for which the penalty is demanded and that shall be accounted from the 10 of September which was the first day of absence alledged in the Information and the rest of the time to the ninth of September following after the first eleven months is to be accounted as Surplusage But in this Case where the Jury abridges the time for which the penalty is demanded it may be questioned whether the Verdict shall be intended to be for the first twelve months of the thirteen And the Judges of the Kings Bench to salve a question of the like nature in an Information brought by Donner against Smith upon the Statute of Liveries seemed to be of Opinion That it is not material which were the twelve months wherein the party offended Cro. Trin. 43 Eliz. 835. But if that Opinion be Law it must follow that the party can never be punished for the thirteenth month but that must be remitted to him because it 's left uncertain which of the thirteen shall be accounted the month not found by the Jury And it rather seems for this reason That the Verdict is void for the uncertainty which twelve months of the thirteen the party offended unless it shall be intended of the first twelve Mr. Shephard in his Sure Guide cap. 6. Sect. 5. raises this Question viz. Stat. 1 Eliz. 2. This Statute having reference to that of 1 Eliz. cap. 2. which saith every one shall come to Church every Sunday and Holy-day whether he that is not at Church every Holy-day doth not rigore juris forfeit 20 l. a month by force of this Statute of 23. But this Question seems altogether needless The forbearance from Church must be for a whole month or no forfeiture of 20 l. For 't is clear by the express words here that it must be a forbearance from Church contrary to 1 Eliz. for a whole month together that makes the party liable to the forfeiture of 20 l. and if he comes to Church on any Sunday or Holy-day within the month he is freed from the penalty of 20 l. although not from the twelve pence by 1 Eliz. for the days of his absence if he comes not every Sunday and Holy-day both Be bound Some have made a question Recusants where to be bound to the good behaviour and among them Mr. Shephard in his Sure Guide cap. 6. Sect. 5. by whom or in what Court the Recusant shall be bound to the good behaviour by force of this Statute For that the Court is not expresly mentioned And Wingate in his Abridgment of this Clause tit Crown numb 44. hath stumbled upon a Conceit That after Certificate made into the Kings Bench a Justice of Assize Goal delivery or Peace shall bind the party to the good behaviour and misrecites the Statute accordingly But it seems That the intention of the Law-makers was that he should be bound in the Kings Bench and of that Opinion is Dalton V. cap. 75. title Good Behaviour For where any proceedings are appointed to be upon or after a Certificate sent to any Court there by common Intendment the proceedings are to be in that Court to whom the Certificate is sent if no other Court be named And it cannot be presumed by any reasonable construction of this Act That the Certificate into the Kings Bench is to any other end than for the Justices there to proceed in such manner as the Act directs to be done after such Certificate as no question they may in this Case as well as upon Certificate of a Presentment or of refusal of the Oath of Supremacy against the Statute of 5 Eliz. cap. 1. Stat. 5 Eliz. 1. quod vide supra And 't is a rule in construction of Statutes that where the intention plainly appears the Law ought to be advanced according to its end though the words be short and imperfect especially Laws made for Religion as is held in Colt and Glovers Case Hobart 157. and Magdalen Colledge Case Co. 11. Vide Bulstrode 2. 155. the Case of Griffith and others Popish Recusants convict not sufficient sureties Sufficient sureties Popish Recusants convicted are not to be reputed sufficient sureties and therefore were refused by the Court of Kings Bench in the Case of Griffith and other Recusants who were brought thither to be bound to their good Behaviour Bulstrode 2. 155. And be it further Enacted That if any person or persons body Politick or Corporate Stat. Sect. 6. The forfeiture for keeping of a Schoolmaster not repairing to Church or allowed by the Ordinary after
Statute to proceed against Recusants and taken from them by 29 Eliz. nor doth that following Clause in 3 Jac. touching Conviction by Proclamation impeach this or restrain the Justices of Peace to proceed to Conviction upon Proclamation only and default of appearance no more than the Justices of Assize or Gaol delivery are restrained thereby or by 29 Eliz. which gives them likewise Authority to proceed by Proclamation For both these Clauses of 3 Jac. are in the Affirmative viz. First That the Justices of Peace shall have power to hear and determine the Offence of not coming to Church according to former Laws in such manner as Justices of Assize and Gaol delivery might do And those Justices might hear and determine that Offence according to this Statute of 23 Eliz. 23 Eliz. 1. And then comes the next Clause of 3 Jac. That the Justices of Peace shall have power to convict by Proclamation which is purely Affirmative also and therefore abrogates no part of the power given them by the former Clause And this agrees with what Sir Edward Coke saith lib. 12. fol. 13. That if a man be Indicted for Recusancy at the Assizes or Sessions of the Peace the Court may waive the proceedings by Proclamation upon the Statute of 3 Jac. 4. and may still if they please proceed against the party by Process upon this Statute of 23 Eliz. Upon this Stature In which Case the Process must be by Venire facias capias c. as in Indictments of Trespass And if saith he the party be fugitive in another County the Indictment may be removed into the Kings Bench and then Process may be there made out against him into any County of England In their open Quarter Sessions of Peace What is meant by Quarter Sessions By Quarter Sessions is intended here only the Sessions of the Peace held at four times of the year and not any other although it be a general Sessions And therefore the Justices of Peace in London who hold a Sessions every month cannot take Indictments upon this Statute at any of them unless it be the Quarter Sessions For that their Authority is given them only at a certain time as was resolved in the like Case upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. cap. 9. of Perjury Mich. 17 Jac. B.R. Palmer 44. Taylors Case Stat. 5 Eliz 9. 3 Jac. 4. And the Statute of 3 Jac. c. 4. which gives Justices of Peace Power to take Indictments of Recusancy at their General or Quarter Sessions for so the word said there imports having reference to the General or Quarter Sessions mentioned before about Presentments yet doth not enlarge the Power of the Justices of Peace in this particular nor enable them to take such Indictments at any Sessions but their four Quarter Sessions For although it be put there dis-junctively General or Quarter yet the latter word is but Explicative of the former and shews what General Sessions are meant as appears by the said Statute of 3 Jac. 4. and that other of 7 Jac. cap. 6. touching the Oath of Allegiance 7 Jac. 6. For in 3 Jac. 4. 't is said That if the party refuse the Oath he shall be committed to Goal until the next Assizes General Quarter Sessions and General or Quarter Sessions or General or Quarter Sessions And if he refuse the Oath tendred him by the Justices of Assize and Goal delivery in their open Assizes or by the Justices of Peace in their said general Quarter Sessions he shall incur a Praemunire And in 7 Jac. 6. That the party refusing shall be committed to Goal until the next Assizes or general Quarter Sessions and if he refuse the Oath tendred him by the Justices of Assize and Goal delivery in their open Assizes or Goal delivery or the Justices of Peace or the greater part of them in their general or Quarter Sessions he shall incur a Praemunire which clearly shews that the same thing is intended by general Quarter Sessions and General or Quarter Sessions And that all general Sessions which are not Quarter Sessions are excluded out of the meaning of those Statutes Vide Stat. 3 Jac. cap. 4. Sect. 11. 7 Jac. cap. 6. Sect. 5. Indictments only here intended To enquire hear and determine The Justices named in this Branch of the Statute are hereby impowered to proceed by Indictment only and no other way For they are to hear and determine after Inquiry And the word enquire implies an Indictment and is always so to be expounded And so are the other words hear and determine where other proceedings are not specially named as here they are not For the Action of Debt Information c. in any Court of Record is given to the Informer Qui tam c. afterwards in a distinct Branch by it self without any reference to this so that by this Statute and before that of 35 Eliz. cap. 1. Stat. 35 Eliz. 1 which gave the Queen an Action of Debt c. The Queen had no other remedy to recover the entire forfeitures given hereby but by Indictment only Co. 11. 60. Rolls 1. 93. C. 41. Dr. Fosters Case Vide Jones 193. For that and the Suit by the Common Informer are the only ways appointed by this Statute and the subsequent Clause of Submission which names the Justices before whom the party is to submit viz. the Justices before whom he is Indicted Arraigned or Tried shews what proceedings are meant which are to be had before the Justices here named that is by Indictment Hobart 205. Pie versus Lovell Offence and Penalty by two several Statutes Talbot and Shelden were Indicted for Recusancy Contra formam Statuti 23 Eliz. in which Indictment the penalty was demanded and in a Writ of Error the Judgment was reversed For the Offence is made by the Statute of 1 Eliz. cap. 2. Stat. 1 Eliz. 2 and the penalty is given by this Statute and therefore it should have been Contra formam Statutorum Owen 135. Wests Case Feme Covert when chargeable If a Feme Covert be Indicted at the Kings Suit for an offence within this Act she may be charged with the penalty after her Husbands death but the Husband is not chargeable nor shall pay the penalty for that he is no party to the Judgment And this was one of the causes of making the Statute of 35 Eliz. cap. 1. Stat. 35 Eliz. 1 By which Statute the King may have an Action of debt and recover the forfeiture against the Husband Rolles 1. 93. 94. Roy versus Foster Savile 25 C. 59. Except Treason and misprision of Treason This exception of Treason and misprision of Treason extends not to the Justices of Oyer and Terminer or of Assize and Goal delivery as Wingate hath mistaken in his Abridgment of this Clause tit Crown numb 46. Where the Justices of Peace cannot meddle but only to the Justices of Peace who are not to meddle in those two Cases
Sunday be not dies Juridicus so as to award a Judicial Process or enter a Judgment of Record on that day yet an Information may be exhibited in Court on that day and good Jones 156. 157. Bedoe versus Alpe Information delivered In the Common-Pleas an Information may by the course of that Court be brought in and delivered to one of the Judges there out of Term No antedate Stat. 18 Eliz. 5. and shall be dated then For the Statute of 18 Eliz. cap. 5. forbids all antedates Rolls 2.33 Smith versus Carter Conviction on Indictment pending the Information An Information is brought by an Informer Qui tam c. upon this Statute for Recusancy and pending the Information the Recusant is convicted at the Kings Suit upon an Indictment for the same absence the Question is what remedy the Recusant hath in this Case that he may not Bis puniri pro uno delicto And to this it was Answered by Coke Chief Justice B. R. in the Case of Dr. Foster that he may plead this Conviction puis le darreine continuance to discharge himself of the Information Rolles 1. 95. C 41. But as the Reporter there well observes the Informer when he hath begun his popular Action hath appropriated the Action to himself And if it shall be admitted that the King can devest him of this Action when he pleases Action appropriated by Indictment at his own Suit this would prove very mischievous to Informers Quaere therefore how in this Case the Recusant shall defend himself from being doubly punished for one and the same Offence But if the Recusant be once convicted at the Kings Suit either by Indictment upon this Statute or according to the Statutes of 29 Eliz. cap. 6. Stat. 29 Eliz. 6 3 Jac. 4. or 3 Jac. cap. 4. upon Proclamation the Informer Qui tam c. cannot afterwards charge him but is barred for ever after Informer barred For the intention of this Statute is that the Informer may exhibit Informations against such only as are concealed or not charged at the Kings Suit so that the Informer is neque falcator neque messor but spicelegus a gleaner And that in such Cases only where the King doth not prosecute pardon or release before the Informers Action is commenced Co. 11. 65. Dr. Fosters Case Bridgman 121.122 Parker against Sir John Webb and his Wife Lane 60. But whether this Rule be general and will not admit of an exception in the Case of a Feme Covert Feme Covert is a Question for by some Opinions if a Feme Covert be Indicted and Convicted of Recusancy that shall not Bar the Informer of his popular Action upon this Statute against her and her Husband for the Recusancy of the Wife Because upon the Conviction by Indictment she cannot be compelled to pay the forfeiture of Twenty pounds per month while her Husband lives nor can it be levied of her goods and lands For that during the Coverture she hath nothing of her own to forfeit but all is her Husbands Vide Bridgman 122. 123. Parker versus Sir John Webb and his Wife Vide Stat. 3 Jac. cap. 4. Sect. 6. The Condemnation or Acquittal of the party at the Suit of the Informer is a good Barr against the King and all others Bar. Co. 11. 66. Before the Statute of 4 H. 7. cap. 20. Popular Action by Covin it seems that if a popular Action had been brought by Covin and with the consent of the Defendant and the Defendant was for want of Evidence or other Cause found not guilty and the Covin appeared to the Court yet Judgment should have been given thereupon against the King and it should have been a good Barr against all others 9 E. 4. 4. But now by that Statute of H. 7. Stat. 4 H. 7. 20 If any person sue with good Faith any Action popular and the Defendant plead a Recovery in an Action popular in Barr or that before that time he had barred the Plaintiff in such Action the Plaintiff may aver such Recovery or Bar was by Covin and upon such Covin found the Plaintiff shall have Judgment and the Defendant so attainted or condemned of Covin shall have Imprisonment for two years by process of Capias or Outlawry as well at the Kings suit as any other and the Release of the party shall not avail the Defendant which Covin may be averred generally Vide Wymbishe and Talbois Case Plowden 49 50 54 55. If a man bring upon a penal Statute an Action of Debt tam pro Domino Rege quam pro seipso Who is to reply in a popular Action of debt and the Defendant pleads thereunto the party Plaintiff may reply without the Kings Attorney And in Princes Case in an Action of Debt upon this Statute the Defendants demurred and the Plaintiff qui tam c. joined in Demurrer without the Kings Attorney and held to be good Cro. Trin. 1 Car. 10 11. Lionel Farringtons Case But in an Information tam c. quam And who in a popular Information c. the Kings Attorney ought to reply Rolles 2.33 Smith versus Carter And this difference between an Action of Debt and an Information was taken in the aforesaid Case of Farrington versus Arundell Hutton 82. But yet if in an Information the Defendant plead a special Plea and the Kings Attorney will not reply and prosecute for the Kings part the Informer shall be admitted to reply and prosecute for his part as was adjudged in the Case of Stretton and Taylor Co. 11.65 Dr. Fosters Case Co. 3. Inst 194. Where the King may pardon or release the penalty The King before any Information or other popular Suit commenced may pardon or release the whole penalty incurred and it shall be a good Bar against all men Co. 11.65 66. Dr. Fosters Case Co. 3. Inst. 194 195. 37 H. 6. 4. 2 R. 3. 12. Termes de la Ley 102. Decies tantum 1 H. 7. 3. And if the Defendant in the Information do not take advantage of such pardon or release by his Plea but is condemned in the Suit and the Kings share of the penalty be put in the Pipe in magno rotulo yet he may then discharge himself thereof upon a Compertum fuit in magno rotulo by shewing forth the whole matter by way of Plea and shall not lose the effect of his pardon or release Vide Savile 23. C. 56. Tirringhams Case And where not But when once the Informer hath brought his popular Suit the King cannot discharge it and if he then pardon or release or his Attorney enter an ulterius non vult prosequi this is good for the Kings part only but is no Bar quoad the Informer who may proceed notwithstanding for his part of the penalty And therefore neither can the Kings Attorney discharge the Jury when they come to deliver their Verdict Hutton 82. Vaughan 343. Thomas versus
c. Jones 193. And such a construction hath been made of those words Court of Record upon several Statutes Stat. 4 5 Ph. Mar. 5. as that of 4 5 Ph. Mar. cap. 5. of Woollen Cloathes Co. 6. 19 20. Gregories Case 21 H. 8. 13. Moore 600. C. 827. The same Case Stat. 21 H. 8. cap. 13. Of Non-residence Cro. Mich. 4. Car. 146. Greene versus Guy 23 H. 8. 4. Stat. 23 H. 8. cap. 4. of Brewers Cro. Trin. 4. Car. 112 113. Farrington versus Keymer Hutton 99. the same Case Stat. 7 E. 6. cap. 5. 7 E. 6. 5. of Selling Wine without Licence Styles 340. Buckstone against Shurlock 5 Eliz. 4. Stat. 5 Eliz. cap. 4. of Trades and Apprentices Cro. Hill 42 Eliz. 737. Barnabee versus Goodale Cro. Trin. 17 Jac. 538. Millers Case Styles 383. Hodges Case the Statutes of Tanning of Leather Moore 421. C. 581. and divers others It was held Mich. 6 7 Eliz. by all the Justices but three That where a Statute appoints a penalty for any Offence made thereby which was not an Offence at the Common Law to be recovered in any of the Queens Courts of Record by Action of Debt and no other Court is appointed The Statute intends the four ordinary Courts of Record at Westminster and the offence and penalty cannot be punished and determined by Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer in Patriam Dyer 236. But Dyer makes a Quaere hereupon and Sir Edward Coke in Scarlets Case 10 Jac. lib. 12.98 saith That the Opinion of Catlin Sanders and Whiddon which were the three dissenting Justices before mentioned is at this day held for good Law And the Opinion aforesaid of the rest of the Justices that any Courts of Record are restrained to the Ordinary Courts of Record at Westminster is not held for Law Continual experience saith he being against it For that Justices of Assize in respect of their Commission of Oyer and Terminer have always enquired of Offences where the penalty is appointed to be sued in any Court of Record as upon the Statutes of 33 H. 8. 9. of unlawful Games 35 H. 8. 17. of Woods 5 E. 6. 14. of Forestallers 33 H. 8. 9. 35 H. 8. 17. 5 E. 6.14 Ingrossers and Regrators and other Statutes But under favour although Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer may take Indictments for the doing of that which is made malum prohibitum by a Statute Law yet that part of the Opinion in Dyer which relates to the Action of Debt and the Courts of Record where such Action must be brought is good Law and where only Courts of Record are named such Action cannot be brought in any other Court than the four ordinary Courts of Record at Westminster as appears by the several Cases and Resolutions before recited By the Statute of 21 Jac. cap. 4. it is enacted 21 Jac. 4 That all Offences to be committed against any penal Statute for which any common Informer or Promoter may lawfully ground any popular Action Bill Plaint Suit or Information before Justices of Assize Justices of Nisi prius or Goal delivery Justices of Oyer and Terminer or Justices of Peace in their General or Quarter Sessions shall be prosecuted tried and determined by way of Action Plaint Bill Information or Indictment before the said Justices of the Counties or Liberties where such offences shall be committed in any of the Courts places of Judicature or liberties aforesaid respectively and not elsewhere save only in the said Counties or places usual for those Counties or any of them And that in all Informations Bills Counts Plaints and Declarations in any Action or Suit by or on the behalf of the King or any other concerning any Offence committed against any penal Statute the Offence shall be laid alledged to have been committed in the County where such Offence was in truth committed and not elsewhere But this Act shall not extend to any Information or Suit grounded upon any Law against Popish Recusants Suits against Recusants there excepted or such who do not frequent the Church and hear Divine Service nor to any Information or Suit for other Offences named in the said Statute of 21. but that such Offences may be laid or alledged to be in any County at the pleasure of any Informer Sir Edward Coke 3. Inst 193. and 4 Inst 174. saith That this Exceptiom of Recusancy in the said Statute of 21 Jac. doth not extend to the Courts wherein the Informer is to sue but only to the County where the Offence is to be laid so that notwithstanding that exception the Kings Bench Chancery Common Pleas Exchequer or Exchequer Chamber cannot receive or hold Plea of any Information for Recusancy either by the Kings Attorney or any common Informer but the matter shall be heard and determined before Justices of Assize Nisi prius Goal delivery or Oyer and Terminer or Justices of Peace in their general Sessions according to this Statute of 21 Jac. But the Informer if it be for Recusancy may by force of that Exception lay or alledge such Offence in what County he will For the said Exception extends only to the County and not to the Courts where the Informer is to sue Which Opinion of his touching the extensiveness of the Exception is probable enough viz. That it shall extend only to the County and not to the Courts where the Informer is to sue for the latter part of it speaks only of the County But this is unaptly applied to popular Informations upon this Statute of 23 Eliz. for Recusancy for they are not within the meaning of that Branch of 21 Jac. touching the Courts where the Informer is to sue For that part of the Statute which speaks of the Courts In what Courts an Informer may sue meddles not with Informations upon those penal Laws which give the Informer no other remedy for recovery of the penalty but by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in the Courts of Record at Westminster nor doth it give the Justices of Assize or other Justices there named any new or further power than they had before but only appoints that where Informations might have been brought before them or in the Courts of Westminster at the Election of the Informer now they shall be brought before Justices of Assize Nisi prius Goal delivery or Oyer and Terminer or at the Sessions of the Peace in the County where the Offence was committed for the ease of the Subjects who are Defendants and not in the Courts at Westminster Cro. Trin. 4 Car. 112 113. But in our Case of Recusancy there is no such Election given the Informer by this Statute of 23 Eliz. or any other Statute but he is strictly tied to take his Remedy by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in one of the Courts at Westminster and therefore 21 Jac. extends not to it in that branch touching the Courts where the Informer is to
the Reign of our most gracious Soveraign Lady the Quéens Majesty Entituled An Act to retain the Queens Majesties Subjects in their due Obedience Be it Enacted by Authority of this present Parliament That every Feoffment Gift Grant Conveyance Alienation Estate Lease Incumbrance and Limitation of use of or out of any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments whatsoever had or made at any time since the beginning of the Quéens Majesties Reign or at any time hereafter to be had or made by any person which hath not repaired or shall not repair to some Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer but hath forborn or shall forbear the same contrary to the tenor of the said Statute and which is or shall be revocable at the pleasure of such offender or in any wise directly or indirectly meant or intended to or for the behoof relief or maintenance or at the disposition of any such offender or wherewith or whereby or in consideration whereof such Offender or his Family shall be maintained relieved or kept shall be déemed and taken to be utterly frustrate and void as against the Queéns Majesty for or concerning the levying and paying of such sums of money as any such person by the Laws or Statutes of this Realm already made ought to pay or forfeit for not coming or repairing to any Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer or for saying hearing or being at any Mass and shall also be seized and had to and for her Majesties use and behoof as hereafter in this Act is mentioned Any pretence colour faigned consideration or expressing of any use to the contrary notwithstanding Stat. Sect. 2. Conviction of Recusancy shall be certified into the Exchequer And further be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That every Conviction heretofore recorded for any Offence before-mentioned not already estreated or certified into the Quéens Majesties Court of Exchequer shall from the Iustices before whom the Record of such Conviction shall be remaining be estreated and certified into the Queéns Majesties Court of Exchequer before the end of Easter Term next coming in such convenient certainty for the time and other circumstances as the Court of Exchequer may thereupon award out Process for seizure of the Lands and Goods of every such Offender as hath not paid their said forfeitures according to the Laws and Statutes in such Case provided In what Courts Conviction of Recusancy shall be And that every Conviction hereafter for any offence before mentioned shall be in the Court commonly called the Kings Bench or at the Assizes or general Goal delivery and not elsewhere and shall from the Iustices before whom the Record of such Conviction shall remain be estreated and certified into the said Court of Exchequer before the end of the Term next ensuing after every such Conviction in such convenient certainty as is aforementioned Sir Edward Coke in Dr. Fosters Case lib. 11. 61. saith That by this Clause as hath been well observed the Statute of 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Stat. 33 Eliz. 1 In what Courts the Informer Qui tam c. may sue is altered in a material point viz. That whereas by 23. the Informer might sue the Recusant for the penalty in any Court of Record he is now by this Statute of 29. restrained from suing in the Common Pleas or Exchequer But this is utterly denied to be Law as the constant practice and experience ever since the making of this Statute sufficiently testifies And the Lord Chief Justice Hobart in his Report of Pie and Lovells Case saith That that Observation was made as he takes it by Sir Edward Coke himself But however this passage or observation as he calls it came to be inserted by Sir Edward Coke into his Report Sergeant Rolles in his Report of that Case of Dr. Foster lib. 1. 93. C. 41. brings him in speaking in another Language and more consonant to Law viz. That the Conviction here mentioned is intended of Convictions upon Indictments only and that no other sort of Convictions or proceedings upon the Statute of 23 Eliz. are mentioned or intended throughout this whole Act of 29. And if so then the Informer is not concerned in this Act nor restrained thereby as to the Courts wherein he is to sue but that he may sue still in the Common Pleas or Exchequer And so was it resolved in point in that Case of Pie and Lovell Hobart 204 205. where the Opinion of Sir Edward Coke reported by Rolles touching what sort of Conviction is meant here is confirmed and allowed for Law this Statute being made only for the benefit of the Queen in her Suits by Indictment and that other Opinion in the 11 Report exploded And the true reason is there given why those negative words and not elsewhere were added here viz. not to exclude the Informer out of the Common Pleas or Exchequer but to restrain Justices of Peace from proceeding to convict any person upon Indictments for Recusancy or for saying hearing or being at Mass which they were enabled to do by 23 Eliz. but again disenabled by those negative words in this Act and the hearing and determining of those offences committed only to the Justices of the Kings Bench Assizes and general Goal delivery But for Informations by a common Informer they were never intended here and the Justices of Assize and Goal delivery cannot hold Plea of such Informations as was resolved by the Judges Mich. 4 Car. 1. Jones 193. And yet this Statute did not wholly abrogate the power of the Justices of Peace Justices of P. may take Indictments for some offences against 23 El. 1 or of any other Justices to whom Authority was given by the Statute of 23 Eliz. in relation to the Offences of Recusancy or of saying or hearing Mass but that they might after this Statute of 29. take Indictments notwithstanding the negative words here For this Statute restrains them only from proceeding to Conviction but not from taking Indictments as was held in Edward Plowdens Case cited in Dr. Fosters Case Co. 11. 63. And now by the Statute of 3 Jac. cap. 4. And hear and determine the offence of not coming to Church Stat. 3 Jac. 4. The power of Justices of Peace to hear and determine the Offence of not coming to Church is again restored to them Vide that Statute Sect. 5. And be it also Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 3. At what time the money forfeited for not going to the Church shall be paid That every such Offender in not repairing to Divine Service but forbearing the same contrary to the said Estatute as hath beén heretofore convicted for such Offence and hath not made submission and béen conformable according to the true meaning of the said Statute shall without any other Indictment or Conviction pay into the Receipt of the said Exchequer all such sums of money as according to the Rate of twenty pounds for every month sithence the same
Verdict pass against him these are Convictions in Law but yet by these Convictions he forfeits nothing until Judgment nor shall the penalty of 20 l. per month run on or be appropriated to the King until Judgment be given By Convicted therefore is here to be understood convicted by Proclamation and Default or convicted by Verdict Confession c. and adjudged for so the word is here to be taken viz. for adjudged or attainted unless it be in Case of Conviction upon Proclamation And in such a sense it is to be taken in divers other Cases Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 Vide Stat. 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 5. When the 20 l per month is to be paid In such of the Terms of Easter or Michaelmas That is the Term of Easter or Michaelmas which shall first happen and not the next Easter and Michaelmas Terms both For the Recusant ought to pay the whole penalty for the time contained in the Indictment in the very first of those Terms next after his Conviction See for this Stat. 3 Jac. 4. Stat. 3 Jac. 4. Sect. 6. From what time the said penalty shall run on Stat. 23 Eliz. 1. 3 Jac. 4. For every month after such Conviction For what time the penalty of 20 l. per month shall run on after the Recusant is indicted and convicted and in what Cases the Informer and all others but the King shall be barred after such Conviction Vide Stat. 23 Eliz. cap. 1. antea Stat. 3 Jac. cap. 4. Sect. 6. postea Office Take seize and enjoy But as to Lands and Tenements there must first be an Office found for the King for regularly before the finding of such Office Lands or Tenements cannot be seized into the Kings hands Co. 2. Inst 573. Co. 8. 169. Paris Stoughters Case Bro. tit Office 17. 55. Plowden 486. Nicholls Case By this Statute the Queen was to have and enjoy two parts of the Recusants Lands and Hereditaments nomine poenae or districtionis The two parts not satisfactory of the twenty pounds per month until he had in some other manner satisfied her of the whole forfeiture of the Twenty pounds per month incurred for his Recusancy And the profits of those two parts should not have been accompted to go to the payment of any part of the said debt or forfeiture For the Statute inflicted this forfeiture upon him meerly as a farther penalty for his neglect of payment of the Twenty pounds per month as was resolved by the two Chief Justices and Chief Baron Trin. 43 Eliz. in Gages Case Cro. Eliz. 845. 846. and by all the Judges The Law now altered in that point 3 Jac. at Russell House Jones 24. Standen versus Vniversity d'Oxon Whitton But now the Law is altered in this point by the Statute of 1 Jac. cap. 4. Vide the Stat. infra Sect. 4. Stat. 1 Jac. 4 All the goods A Recusant is Indicted and Convicted Recusants goods when forfeited and then fails of payment of the Twenty pounds per month yet his goods are not forfeited to the King by this Statute before seizure For the King hath his Election whether he will seize them or no. By Coke Chief Justice B. R. 12. Jac. Rolles 1. 7. C. 8. Cullom versus Sherman A Recusant lends money Recognizance forfeited and for security hath a Rent-charge granted him in Fee by Deed indented with condition of redemption and takes likewise a Recognizance for performance of Covenants in the said Indenture The Recognizance is forfeited and afterwards he is Indicted and Convicted of Recusancy and fails of payment of the Twenty pounds per month In this case the King shall have the Recognizance by force of this Act for when forfeited to the Recusant it is but a chattel personal What is given to the King by this word Goods and shall pass to the King by this word goods For in an Act of Parliament where the Offenders goods are given to the King all debts and personal Chattels and Actions are thereby given him as well as goods in possession And here in this Act as take and seize refer to two parts of the Recusants Lands and Tenements so enjoy refers to goods And the King shall enjoy the debt due by the Recognizance Nor doth it alter the Case for that the Recognizance was acknowledged for performance of Covenants in an Indenture concerning a Rent-charge in fee which seems to savour of the realty for it was originally for the loan and forbearance of money which is personal Co. 12. 1. 2. Ford and Sheldons Case If a man who is a Recusant take such a Recognizance in the name of another Recognizance taken in anothers name forfeited the King upon his Conviction shall have the Recognizance for when the Recusant was such at the time of taking the Recognizance and so continued until the time of his Conviction it shall be intended that it was done by Covin and that he took it in the name of another with an intent to prevent the King of the levying of the forfeiture and such Covin shall not bar the King Co. 12. 2. 3. the same Case The Kings grant If a Recognizance or Obligation be forfeited to the King by force of this Act he may grant it over as he may any other Chattel in Action under his private Seal Rolles 1. 7. C. 8. Cullom versus Sherman Hereditaments Rent Advowson in gross Hereditaments A Rent of Inheritance and an Advowson in gross are comprehended under this word But whether the King may seize such an Advowson as part of his two parts and present by vertue thereof since the Stat. of 3 Jac. c. 5. which gives the Presentation to the Universities Stat. 3 Jac. 5 Vide that Stat. infra Sect. 19. All other the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments liable to such seisure or to the penalties aforesaid It hath been much disputed whether Copyhold Lands are within this Branch of the Statute Copyhold Lands if seizable for regularly in Acts of Parliament which are Enacted for forfeiture of Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Copyholds shall not be forfeited but only Lands Tenements and Hereditaments which are such at the Common Law and not those which are such by custom only as Copyholds are And it was agreed in Heydons Case Co. 3. 8. That where an Act of Parliament alters the service or tenure or other thing in prejudice of the Lord there general words in the Act shall not extend to Copyholds Vide Savile 67. C. 138. And if the King should seize them by force of the general words here viz. Lands Tenements and Hereditaments the Lord would during the time they are in the Kings hands lose his Seigniory Customs and Services But yet it was held by Manwood Chief Baron and Baron Clark in the Case of Sulherd and Everet Mich. 30 Eliz. That Copyholds are within this Act and although Manwood seemed to grant that they are not within
the Exchequer in the Case of Sir Edward Lenthal Cro. Hill 12 Jac. 365. Shall for every such offence lose and forfeit Thréescore pounds Receiving the Sacrament and neglecting it afterwards If a Popish Recusant once receive the Sacrament after his Conformity and afterwards neglect so to do within the time prescribed by this Act and is guilty of such neglect for two years together although he was never convicted for the first year yet an Information lies against him and he shall forfeit Threescore pounds for the second year For he is liable to pay so much for every offence that is for every year wherein he neglects to receive the Sacrament after he hath once received it The Informer may sue for any year and the Informer is at his liberty for which offence or year he will inform whether for the first second c. And the reason of this is because here are no steps or gradations to increase the penalty for the second or third offence but the penalty is equal and a like in this Case for every offence It is observable that the Popish Recusant who after his conformity receives the Sacrament and afterwards neglects so to do for the space of one or more years is in worse Condition then he who conforms and receives it not at all For in this last Case he shall forfeit but Twenty pounds for the first and Forty pounds for the second year But if he once receive the Sacrament and afterwards neglect it for the space of two years he shall forfeit for each of those years Threescore pounds To him that will sue for the same An Information upon this Branch of the Statute must be brought by an Informer Qui tam c. within a year after the offence or neglect Within what time he must sue or he can take no advantage thereof For such an Information is within the Statute of 31 Eliz. cap. 5. Stat. 31 Eliz. 5 Cro. Hill 12 Jac. 366. Vide Statute 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 9. Before whom a Common Informer cannot sue Or before Iustices of Assize c. Note that notwithstanding these words an Information on this Statute by an Informer Qui tam c. for not receiving the Sacrament cannot be brought before Justices of Assize or Goal delivery or Justices of Peace For no Common Informer can sue for the King and himself before any of those Justices but must sue in one of the Courts of Record at Westminster as was resolved Mich. 4. Car. 1. Jones 193. Vide Stat. 23. Eliz. cap. 1. Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 Sect. 9. Stat. Sect. 3. Presenting the monthly absence from Church of a Recusant And be it further Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That the Churchwardens and Constables of every Town Parish or Chappel for the time being or some one of them or if there be none such then the chief Constables of the Hundred where such Town Parish or Chappel is or shall be or one of them as well in places exempt as not exempt shall once in every year present the monthly absence from Church of all and all manner of Popish Recusants within such Towns and Parishes and shall present the names of every of the Children of the said Recusants being of the age of nine years and upwards abiding with their said Parents and as near as they can the age of every of the said Children A Recusants Children and Servants as also the names of the Servants of such Recusants at the general or Quarter Sessions of that Shire limit division or liberty Of all and all manner of Popish Recusants Whose monthly absence from Church must be presented and whose not As this Act is penned it seems that the Churchwardens and Constables are not bound thereby to present the monthly absence from Church of any of the Children or Servants of a Popish Recusant although such Children or Servants be Recusants unless they are Popish Recusants And that 't is sufficient to satisfie the Statute to present their names without taking any notice of their absence from Church But if they be Popish Recusants they fall within the general words of the Act and their monthly absence ought to be presented as well as that of their Parents or Masters Wingate in his Abridgment of this Statute tit Crown numb 100. hath clearly mistaken the meaning thereof in this particular for he tells us that the monthly absence of all the Children and Servants of a Popish Recusant ought to be presented At the general or Quarter Sessions General or Quarter Sessions Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 What is meant by those words vide Stat. 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 7. And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 4. The presentments recorded That all such presentments shall be accepted entred and recorded in the said Sessions by the Clerk of the Peace or Town-Clerk for the time being or his Deputy without any Fée to be had asked or taken for the same And in default of such presentment to be made the said Churchwardens Constables or High Constables respectively shall for every such default forfeit twenty shillings And in default of such accepting entring and recording without Feé as aforesaid the said Clerk of the Peace or Town-Clerk shall for every such Offence forfeit and lose forty shillings And that upon every Presentment of such monthly absence as aforesaid The reward of the Church-wardens and Constables whereupon such party so presented shall after happen to be Indicted and Convicted not being for the same absence before presented Then the said Churchwardens Constables or High Constables respectively so making such Presentments shall have a reward of forty shillings to be levied out of the Recusants Goods and Estate in such manner and form as by the more part of the said Iustices shall be by Warrant under their Hands and Seals then and there ordered and appointed Stat. S●ct 5. What Justices shall hear and determin these Offences And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That the Iustices of Assize and Goal delivery at their Assizes and the said Iustices of Peace at their said Sessions shall have Power and Authority by virtue of this Act to enquire hear and determine of all Recusants and Offences as well for not receiving the Sacrament aforesaid according to the true meaning of this Law as for not repairing to Church according to the meaning of former Laws in such manner and form as the said Iustices of Assize and Goal delivery do or may now do by former Laws in the Case of Recusancy for not repairing to Church And also shall have power at their Assizes and Goal delivery and at the Sessions in which any Indictment against any person either for not repairing to Church according to former Laws or not receiving the said Sacrament according to this Law The effect of the Proclamation shall be taken to make Proclamation By
she should not be doubly punished both that way and at the Suit of the Informer And for the same reason it was urged that this Information would not lye against the Husband and Wife for after the Husbands death she would be liable to pay into the Exchequer all the arrears after the rate of Twenty pounds per month from the time of her Conviction and her goods and two parts of her Lands might be then seized for non-payment thereof And if the Husband and Wife should in the mean time at the Suit of the Informer pay Twenty pounds per month for part of the same time for which the Wife was liable to pay after the Husbands death this would be a double punishment for one and the same offence and it was further said that it was usual where the Wife was Indicted and Convicted for Recusancy Seizure of the Wives Lands and Leases to seize by Exchequer Process the Lands and Leases which the Husband had in her right and one Woods Case was cited to this purpose which proves that a Feme Covert is within the meaning of the Act and therefore after she is once Convicted upon Indictment shall be no more subject to the Informers popular Suit then a Feme sole Cro. Pasch 16 Jac. 481.482 But this last point is much to be questioned for the Lands and Leases of the Wife are the Husbands during the Coverture and 't is a general rule that his Goods or Lands cannot be seized for the forfeiture or penalty where the Wife only is Indicted and Convicted of the Offence See more of this matter antea Stat. 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Stat. 23 Eliz 1 Sect. 9. A Recusant is Indicted for absenting himself from Church for 12 months and afterwards is Convicted upon that Indictment Where an Informer may sue after Conviction upon Indictment Quaere whether nevertheless the Informer Qui tam c. may not sue him for his absence for the months intervening between the time laid in the Indictment and the time of his Conviction For these words here viz. after such Conviction seem to relate to the proximum antecedens every month and to imply that the penalty here appropriated to the King is only the penalty due for the months which incur after such Conviction upon Indictment at the Kings Suit but not to hinder the Informer after Conviction from suing for the months incurred before Conviction Except in such Cases where the King shall c. refuse the same The King may seize two parts presently after Conviction If a man be Indicted and Convicted of Recusancy the King is not bound to stay till the next Easter or Michaelmas Term to see whether the Recusant will tender twenty pounds for every month contained in the Indictment and incurred after such Conviction for the King having his Election whether he will accept thereof or seize two parts of the Recusants Lands A Commission for seizure of the Lands may issue out presently if the King will wave the twenty pounds per month For he may take his Election as soon as he will after Conviction By Jones Justice in the Case of Standen and the University of Oxford Jones 24. Stat. Sect. 7. Every Conviction shall be certified into the Exchequer And that every Conviction recorded for any Offence before-mentioned shall from the Iustices before whom the Record of such Conviction shall be remaining be certified into the Kings Majesties Court of Exchequer before the end of the Term following such Conviction in such convenient certainty for the time and other circumstances as the Court of Exchequer may thereupon award out Process for the seizure of the Lands and Goods of every such Offender as the Cause shall require And if default shall be made in any part of any payment aforesaid contrary to the form herein before limited that then and so often the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors shall and may by process out of the said Exchequer take seize and enjoy all the Goods and two parts as well of all the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Leases and Farms of such Offender as of all other the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments liable to such seizure or to the penalties aforesaid by the true meaning of this Act leaving the third part only of the same Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Leases and Farms to and for the maintenance and relief of the same Offender his Wife Children and Family Timber Trees All the Goods A Recusant convicted is Tenant for Life the Remainder to a Stranger in Fee He in the Remainder with the Recusants assent cuts down Timber Trees and sells them In this Case the King can be no ways intitled to the Trees Bulstrode 1.133 Vide Stat. 29 Eliz. cap. 6. Sect. 4. Aswell of all the Lands c. Leases and Farms of such Offender Lease in trust for another Elizabeth Bowes was convicted of Recusancy and she standing so Convicted a Lease was made to her in trust which she conveyed over according to the trust The question was whether the King might seize this Lease And the reason given in Lane 39. why the King should have the Term is because the Recusant after she was Convicted was not capable of any trust and therefore the Conveyance made by her was as if it had been voluntary without relation to the Trust Tamen quaere by what Law a Recusant meerly for the matter of Recusancy is incapable of any Trust although Convicted All other the Lands c. liable to such seizure Copyhold Lands Stat. 29 Eliz. 6. or to the penalties aforesaid Whether Copyholds be liable to such seizure vide Stat. 29 Eliz. cap. 6. Sect. 4. Lands are conveyed to A. in trust for B. a convicted Recusant Lands in trust for a Recusant Quaere whether the King may seize such Lands for the Recusants non-payment of the twenty pounds per month for if he make his Election and accepts of two thirds in lieu of the twenty pounds per month there is no question but such Lands are liable to seizure For the words of the subsequent Clause are That the King may seize two parts of all Lands that shall come to any other person to the use of or in Trust for such Recusant But in this Clause which relates to the seizure of two parts for non-payment the words seem to be more restrictive Vide Lane 105. 106. Halseys Case And whereas by an Act made in the Session of Parliament holden by Prorogation at Westminster in the thrée and twentieth year of the Reign of the late Queén Elizabeth entituled Stat. Sect. 8. The Stat. of 23 Eliz. 1. touching a Recusants monthly forfeiture An Act to retain the Subjects of the said late Quéen in their due Obedience It was amongst other things Enacted by Authority of the said Parliament That every person above the age of sixtéen years which should not repair to some Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer
one as conceals his true Name or Quality or cannot give a good Accompt what he is For so it must be reasonably intended and not of all Travellers through the Country as Wingate tit Crowne numb 106. mistakes for it appears by the other qualifications here enumerated that the intent of the Act is that it shall be offered by the Bishop or two Justices to such only of whom there is any just cause of suspition Stat. Sect. 11. Refusal of the Oath And be it further Enacted That if any such person or persons other than Noblemen or Noblewomen shall refuse to answer upon Oath to such Bishop or Iustices of Peace examining him or her as aforesaid or to take the said Oath so duly tendred unto him or her by such Bishop or two such Iustices of Peace out of Sessions that then the said Bishop or Iustices of Peace shall and may commit the same person to the common Goal there to remain without Bail or Mainprize until the next Assizes or General or Quarter Sessions to be holden for the said Shire Division Limit or Liberty where the said Oath shall be again in the said open Assizes or Sessions required of such person by the said Iustices of Assize or Iustices of Peace then and there present or the greater number of them And if the said person or persons or any other person whatsoever other then Noblemen or Noblewomen of the age of Eightéen years or above shall refuse to take the said Oath being tendred unto him or her by the Iustices of Assize and Goal delivery in their open Assizes or the Iustices of Peace or the greater part of them in their said general Quarter Sessions every person so refusing shall incur the danger and penalty of Praemunire mentioned in the Statute of Praemunire Praemunire made in the sixtéenth year of the Reign of King Richard the Second except Women Covert Women Covert who upon refusal of the said Oath shall be by the said Iustices of Assize in their open Assize or Iustices of Peace in their General or Quarter Sessions for the said Offence committed only to the common Goal there to remain without Bail or Mainprize till they will take the said Oath There to remain without Bail or Mainprize Sureties cannot be taken The Bishop or two Justices cannot take Sureties of him who refuses the Oath for his appearance at the Assizes or Sessions as Wingate tit Crowne numb 107. mistakes but must commit him immediately to Goal nor can any other Court or Justices Bail him in this Case Vntil the next Assizes or General or Quarter Sessions This being in the Disjunctive Commitment till Assizes or Sessions the Bishop or two Justices have their election to commit the party refusing the Oath either until the next Assizes or until the next Sessions as they shall think fit For some may be more aptly committed until the next Assizes and some until the next Sessions Co. 12. 131 132. What Sessions is here meant Sessions Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 Vide Stat. 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 7. And if the said person or persons or any other person whatsoever c shall refuse These words any other person whatsoever are exclusive of the said person or persons who are committed for refusal For 't is here in the disjunctive To whom the Oath may be tendred so that it seems that if any person whatsoever of the age of eighteen years or above and under the degree of a Nobleman or Noblewoman be at the Assizes or general Quarter Sessions of the Peace whether voluntarily or brought in upon Process on an Indictment of Recusancy or for any other matter and be there tendred this Oath and refuse to take it although it were never tendred to him before yet upon his refusal there he incurs a Praemunire And in this respect this Statute is more extensive then that of 7 Jac. cap. 6. Stat. 7 Jac. 6. where there must be a Prior tender and refusal of this Oath otherwise a refusal of it at the Assizes or Sessions doth not make a Praemunire by that Act. Vide Co. 12. 131. Shall incur the danger and penalty of Praemunire If a man be committed by the Bishop or two Justices of Peace for refusal of this Oath and the tender and refusal be expressed in the Mittimus the Justices of Assize or Justices of Peace in their Sessions are bound to take notice of this tender and refusal and after they have there made the party a second tender of the Oath and he refuses it Indictments of Praemunire upon this Statute by which he incurs a Praemunire the Indictment against him to convict and attaint him of a Praemunire must contain all the special matter viz. that he stood Convicted or Indicted of Recusancy or that he had not received the Sacrament twice within the year next before or that passing through the Country and unknown being examined upon Oath he confessed or denied not c. as the Case is and that the Oath was tendred to him by the Bishop or two Justices of Peace Quorum unus c. and he refused it and that it was again tendred to him in open Court and he again refused it For in this Case the Mittimus Mittimus is the ground upon which he must be proceeded against at the Assizes or Sessions But if the first tender and refusal be not expressed in the Mittimus or Warrant of commitment there although there was a tender and refusal of the Oath before the Bishop or two Justices yet the Justices of Assize or Justices of Peace in their Sessions can take no notice of it But they must there tender him the Oath without reference to any Prior tender which they may do by force of the said general words any other person whatsoever and if he refuse it he incurs a Praemunire And in this Case the Indictment may be short and general scil that he was tendred the Oath in open Court and refused it c. And so it must be in all Cases where in truth there was never any Prior tender and refusal Co. 12. 131 132. Stat. 7 Jac. 6. Justices of Peace Vide the Statute of 7. Jac. cap. 6. whereby the power of the Justices of Peace is in some particular Cases inlarged in reference to this Oath Stat. Sect 12. The Oath of Allegiance The form of which Oath hereafter followeth I A. B. do truly and sincerely acknowledge profess testifie and declare in my Conscience before God and the World That our Sovereign Lord King James is Lawful and Rightful King of this Realm and of all other his Majesties Dominions and Countries and that the Pope neither of himself nor by any Authority of the Church or See of Rome or by any other means with any other hath any Power or Authority to depose the King or to dispose any of his Majesties Kingdoms or Dominions or to Authorize any Foreign Prince to
so the word taken is to be expounded and the like Exposition hath been made of the Statutes of 2 3 E. 6. cap. 2. of Soldiers and 1 Jac. cap. 11. of having two Wives living Stat. 1 3 E. 6. 2 1 Jac. 11. Hutton 131. If the Offence be committed out of this Realm yet it cannot be tried upon the Statute of 35 H. 8. cap. 2. Stat 35 H. 8. 2. of Trial of Treasons committed out of the Realm For this Act hath prescribed a special form of a Trial in this Case which must be observed And if such Offender be a Peer of England Indictment of a Peer the Indictment cannot be taken before any others then the Justices of Assize and Goal delivery in the County where he is imprisoned or the Justices of the Kings Bench Hutton 131. Lord Digbies Case Stat. Sect. 22. Trial of Peers Provided always That if any Peér of this Realm shall happen to be Indicted of any Offence made Treason by this Act he shall have his Trial by his Péers as in other like Cases of Treason is accustomed Stat. Sect. 23. And be it further Enacted That if any Subject of this Realm at any time after one month next after the end of this present Session of Parliament shall not resort or repair every Sunday to some Chuch Chappel or some other usual place appointed for Common Prayer and there hear Divine Service according to the Statute made in that behalf in the first year of the Reign of the late Q. Elizabeth that then it shall and may be lawful to and for any one Iustice of Peace of that Limit Division or Liberty wherein the said party shall dwell upon proof unto him made of such default by confession of the party or Oath of witness to call the said party before him and if he or she shall not make a sufficient excuse and due proof thereof to the satisfaction of the said Iustice of Peace That it shall be lawful for the said Iustice of Peace to give Warrant to the Churchwarden of the said Parish wherein the said party shall dwell under his Hand and Seal to levy twelve pence for every such default by distress and sale of the Goods of every such Offender rendring to the said Offender the Overplus of the money raised of the said Goods so to be sold and that in default of such distress it shall and may be lawful for the said Iustice of Peace to commit every such Offender to some Prison within the said Shire Division Limit or Liberty wherein such Offender shall be inhabiting until payment be made of the said sum or sums so to be forfeited which forfeiture shall be imployed to and for the use of the Poor of that Parish wherein the Offender shall be resident or abiding at the time of such Offence committed Provided That no man be impeached upon this Clause Within what time the Offender shall be impeached except he be called in question for his said default within one month next after the said default made And that no man being punished according to this Branch But once punished for one Offence shall for the same Offence be punished by the forfeiture of twelve pence upon the Law made in the first year of the late Quéen Elizabeth If any Subject of this Realm By a Subject of this Realm Subject of this Realm who here meant is to be understood a natural born Subject or an Alien naturalized here by Act of Parliament or made a Denizen of England by the Kings Letters Patents And who not But these words here are exclusive of two sorts of Subjects 1. Of an Alien inhabiting in this Realm who oweth to the King a local Subjection or Ligeance and is neither naturalized or made Denizen For the word Subject is as a mark of distinction and must be necessarily exclusive of some persons or other within this Realm and therefore cannot be supposed to take in meer Aliens who if neither naturalized or made Denizens are only local Subjects and of the lowest form For if no person inhabiting within the Realm were here intended to be excepted the word Subject would be idle and to no purpose 2. An Alien Naturalized by Act of Parliament in Scotland or Ireland or made Denizen of either of those Kingdoms by the Kings Letters Patents is for the same reason out of the meaning of this Branch although he live in England For it seems that such a person is still an Alien here and shall not partake of any priviledges in England by his being Naturalized or made Denizen in Scotland or Ireland Their Acts or Laws not being Obligative or concluding to us in England Vide Vaughan 278 279 280 285 287. Craw versus Ramsey And therefore the power here given any one Justice of Peace to levy the twelve pence per Sunday doth not extend to either sort of these Aliens An Alien within Stat. 1. Eliz. 2 but yet they may forfeit twelve pence per Sunday for their absence from Church upon an Indictment of the Statute of 1 Eliz. cap. 2. and that by force of the general words there Every person and persons inhabiting within this Realm so that what is said in Dr. Fosters Case Co. 11.63 viz. That this Statute gives a more speedy remedy for the Recovery of the twelve pence is not to be understood of all persons within 1 Eliz. but only of the Subjects of this Realm in the sense of this Branch of the Statute And if a man be born within any of the Kings Dominions which were such and united with England in their subjection at the time of his birth although he be not born within England Natural Subjection not local yet if he live here he is a Subject of this Realm within the intent of this Act For Natural Subjection and Ligeance are not local or confined to that Kingdom or Country where he was born But he is a natural Subject in any of the Dominions belonging at the time of his Birth to the Prince under whom he was born And upon this ground it was resolved in Calvins Case Co. lib. 7. Postnati That a man born in Scotland after the Union of the two Kingdoms should inherit in England So that a man born in Scotland or Ireland or any other of the Kings Dominions which were such and so united at the time of his birth if he live in England is punishable by this Act and any one Justice of Peace may grant his Warrant to levy the twelve pence for his absence from Church vide antea Sect. 19. Morning and Evening Prayers Every Sunday This repairing to Church every Sunday must be as well to Evening Prayers as to Morning Prayers For it ought to be an entire day and an entire Service By Hutton and Berkley Justices Dalton V. cap. 45. tit Recusants To the satisfaction of the said Iustice of Peace In this Case the Justice of
shall forfeit nothing for keeping or harbouring him A Sergeant at Arms Pursevant Messenger Sergeant at Arms Pursevant Gaoler c. who keeps his Prisoner in his House or a Gaoler if he keeps his Prisoner in his own House which is no part of the Prison shall not forfeit any thing by force of this Act although he suffers him to go abroad in the day time at his pleasure and he forbears to come to Church For that such Prisoner was committed by Authority to his custody And be it further Enacted by Authority of this present Parliament That upon any lawful Writ Warrant or Process Stat. Sect. 27. Breaking a House to take a Recusant Excommunicate awarded to any Sheriff or other Officer for the taking or apprehending of any Popish Recusant standing Excommunicated for such Recusancy it shall be lawful for such Sheriff or other Officer Authorized in that behalf if need be to break open any House wherein such person Excommunicate shall be or to raise the power of the County for the apprehending of such person and the better Execution of such Warrant Writ or Process Standing Excommunicated This extends to an actual Excommunication only For although by the Statute of 3 Jac. cap. 5. Stat. 3 Jac. 5. Excommunication A Popish Recusant after conviction shall be disabled as an Excommunicated person yet to other intents he shall not be reputed as a person standing Excommunicated Vide that Statute Sect. 12. For such Recusancy For Recusancy So that if a Popish Recusant stand Excommunicated for any other Cause then for Recusancy this Branch of the Statute doth not affect him And be it further Enacted Stat. Sect. 28. That all and every offence to be committed or done against this present Act shall and may be enquired of In what Courts the Offences shall be heard and determined heard and determined before the Iustices of the Kings Bench Iustices of Assize and Gaol delivery in their several Assizes and Gaol deliveries And all offences other then Treason shall be enquired heard and determined before the Iustices of Peace in their General or Quarter Sessions to be holden within the Shire Division Limit or Liberty wherein such offence shall happen General or Quarter Sessions Stat. 23 Eliz. 1. Trial where part of the offence happened General or Quarter Sessions What Sessions are here meant Vide Stat. 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 7. Wherein such offence shall happen If a man serves or goes to serve a Forreign Prince State or Potentate without first taking the Oath of Allegiance or if of that Quality entring into Bond although part of the offence was done out of the Realm yet for that other part thereof viz. his going or passing over the Seas was done in the Realm he shall be tried in the County where that part of the offence happened that is where the Haven or Port is from whence he went or passed over For a Statute is to be so expounded ut verba accipiuntur cum effectu Co. 3. Inst. 80. Provided always and be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 29. Attainder of Felony no forfeit of Dower or corruption of Blood That any Attainder of Felony made Felony by this Act as is aforesaid shall not in any wise extend to take away the Dower of the Wife of any such person attainted or be any bar for recovery of the same nor shall make or work any corruption of Blood or disherison of any the heir or heirs of any such person or persons so attainted This Act or any thing therein contained to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding The Plea to an Action brought for doing any thing by force of this Statute And be it further Enacted That if any Action or Actions shall at any time hereafter be commenced or brought against any person or persons doing committing or commanding any Act or Thing for or concerning the Execution of this present Statute or any Article or Clause therein contained That then every Defendant in such Action and Actions may plead the general Issue and be received to maintain the same by any Evidence that shall prove his doings and proceedings warrantable by this Law The Authority of the Ecclesiastical Court reserved Provided always That neither this Act nor any thing therein contained shall extend to take away or abridge the Authority or Iurisdiction of the Ecclesiastical Censures for any Canse or Matter but that the Commissioners of his Majesty his heirs and Successors in Causes Ecclesiastical for the time being and the Archbishops Bishops and other Ecclesiastical Iudges may do and procéed as before the making of this Act they lawfully did or might have done Any thing in this Act to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding Provided always and be it Enacted Stat. Sect. 30. No forfeiture for the Wives offence That no person shall be charged or chargeable with any penalty or forfeiture by force of this Act which shall happen for his Wives offence in not receiving the said Sacrament during her Marriage nor that any Woman shall be charged or chargeable with any penalty or forfeiture by force of this Act for any such Offence of not receiving which shall happen during her Marriage With any penalty or forfeiture by force of this Act. Feme Covert not receiving the Sacrament But yet a Married Woman may be punished by force of any other Act for not receiving the Sacrament during her Marriage Co. 11.64 Doctor Fosters Case And therefore if she be a Popish Recusant convict and receive not the Sacrament within the year next before her Husbands death she shall forfeit the profits of two thirds of her Jointure and Dower and be further disabled as the Statute of 3 Jac. cap. 5. appoints Stat. 3 Jac. 5. And unless she receive the Sacrament after Conviction she cannot be Plaintiff with her Husband in any Action but is disabled by that Statute And if she receives it not within three months after her Conviction she may be imprisoned by force of the Statute of 7 Jac. 6. unless the Husband pay to the King as is there appointed 7 Jac. 6. For any such offence of not receiving Feme Covert punishable Wingate in abridging this Clause tit Crowne numb 125. quite mistakes the meaning of it For a married Woman is not exempted from all penalties by force of this Act but only from the penalty for not receiving the Sacrament during her marriage And there is no question but she may be imprisoned if she refuses the Oath of Allegiance and an Indictment of High Treason lies against her upon this Statute if she be absolved or withdrawn from her obedience to his Majesty or be reconciled to the Pope or See of Rome or promise obedience to the said See c. Provided also and be it Enacted by Authority of this Parliament Stat. Sect. 31. Who may take the Oath of a Nobleman or Woman That in
Recusant not Convicted who hath no certain place of aboad as of the Popish Recusant Convicted And the benefit of having Licences from the King or three Privy Counsellors by force of this Act is intended as well to the one as the other although the Convicted only are mentioned in the recital and this will plainly appear first by the following words here which impower the Justices of Peace to grant Licences and expresly extend to all persons confined by vertue of the said Statute that is the Statute of 35 Eliz. now it cannot be presumed that the makers of the Law intended any difference between the persons to be licenced by the King or Privy Counsellors and the persons to be Licensed by the Justices of Peace the only difference being in the manner of granting the Licence the power given to the King or Privy Counsellors being more absolute and not under such precautions as is that which is given to the Justices of Peace For the King or Privy Counsellors may grant a Licence to the Recusant to travel without any particular cause shewn in the Licence or the assent of any other person and without any Oath to be made by the Recusant which the Justices of Peace cannot do And there is no reason to think that the Power here given to the King or Privy Counsellors which in all other particulars is so much more absolute and extensive then that given to the Justices of Peace should be yet less extensive as to the persons to be Licensed Secondly It were absurd to think that the Makers of the Law intended to confer a greater priviledge upon the Recusant convicted whose Offence appears upon Record then to such as are not convicted Et ealis interpretatio in ambiguis semper fienda est ut evitetur inconveniens absurdum But if by such Recusant should be meant only such as are mentioned in the recital viz. those Convicted and not all who are Confined by 35 Eliz. It would follow that the Convicted Recusant who is the more notorious Offender may have a Licence without any cause shewn or Oath made But he who is not Convicted is barred of that priviledge and can apply himself only to the Justices of Peace for a Licence clogged with divers circumstances which are not required in a Licence granted by the King or the three Privy Counsellors Shall not impeach 35 El. 2. Much less shall this Recital of the Statute of 35 Eliz. impeach the express words of that Statute as if no other Popish Recusants were intended to be confined thereby but only such as are Convicted because no other are mentioned in the Recital For the Recital of an Act of Parliament in another Act of Parliament being only by way of Preface or Introduction cannot add to or diminish the Act recited or make it liable to any other construction then what shall naturally flow from the Act it self Vide Co. 4. Inst 331. Vide Stat. 35 Eliz. cap. 2. Sect. 3. Without any other cause to be expressed Here is one difference between a Licence by the King or three of the Privy Counsel Necessary business where requisite to a Licence where not and a Licence by Justices of Peace For by these it ought not to be granted unless the Popish Recusant hath necessary occasions or business But the Kings or Privy Counsellors Licence may be granted in any Case at the Recusants request Seals and Subscription Vnder the Hands and Seals An Indictment was brought upon the Statute of 35 Eliz. 2. for travelling out of the compass of five miles The Recusant pleaded a Licence under the Seals of four Justices of Peace and exception was taken to the Plea For that the Licence ought to have been under their Hands as well as their Seals Cro. Mich. 12 Jac. 352. Maxfeilds Case And this is a good exception for a Licence by Justices of Peace although in Writing is not sufficient without Seals and Subscription both Rolles 1. 108. C. 47. Mucclefields Case Four Justices Peace Of four of the Iustices of Peace And a Licence from less then four will not now serve since the repeal of the aforesaid Branch of 35 Eliz. touching Licences Stat. 35 Eliz. 2 and therefore the Case of Mucclefield Mich. 12 Jac. in Rolles 1. 108. C. 47. is misreported in that particular For there mention is made of a Licence from two Justices of Peace as if no more were then requisite and that Case could not be grounded upon the Proviso in 35 Eliz. which required only two Justices as well for the distance of time being nine years after the Repeal of the said Proviso as for that in the said Case of Mucclefield there is mention of a Licence under the Seals of the Justices of Peace and of the Oath to be taken by the Recusant neither of which was appointed by the said Proviso in 35 Eliz. but by this Statute of 3 Jac. which must therefore necessarily be there intended and not any Statute of 1 Jac. which is another mistake in the Report of that Case Vide the Case and the objections urged against the Licence there in question With the privity and assent in Writing of the Bishop c. the Lieutenant or of any Deputy Lieutenant An Information was brought against a Popish Recusant Convict for removing above five miles from the place of his confinement who pleaded a Licence from four Justices of Peace but the Plea was disallowed saith the Reporter because he did not set forth that the Licence was granted with the privity of the Bishop or Lieutenant Mich. 12 Jac. Moore 836. C. 1127. Mansfields Case Assent of a Deputy Lieutenant sufficient But yet if it had been granted with the assent of any Deputy Lieutenant residing in the County there 's no doubt but it had been good enough The Bishop Lieutenant or Deputy Lieutenant Five persons viz. four to Licence and one to assent who gives his assent must be a distinct person from the Justices of Peace who grant the Licence And therefore if one and the same person be a Justice of Peace and Deputy Lieutenant he cannot Act herein in both Capacities For una persona non potest supplere vicem duarum And if he Sign and Seal the Licence as a Justice of Peace the assent of some other Deputy Lieutenant or of the Bishop or Lieutenant must be had thereto or the Licence is void Cro. Mich. 12 Jac. 352. Maxfields Case Moore 836. C. 1127. Mansfields Case Rolles 1. 108. C. 47. Mucclefields Case And although the Rule be Quando duo jura concurrunt in una persona aequum est ac si essent in diversis yet that Rule holds not in such Cases where distinct persons are necessarily required by the Law Co. 7. 14. Calvins Case and here four persons are necessarily required to grant the Licence and another person to assent to it In Maxfields Case B. R. one exception to the Licence was Licence and
resembles the Case of 9 10 Eliz. in the Court of Wards cited in the Case of the Chancellor c. of the University of Oxford Co. 10. 57. Tenant in Capite makes a Feoffment to the intent to deceive his Creditors And this fraudulent intent was found quod nulla alia Causa aut Collusio viz. ad defraudandam Reginam c. de custodia haeredum vel terrarum c. There it was resolved That although in truth by the event the Queen was by the Feotfment defrauded of the Wardship of the Body and Lands of the Heir yet because the fraud was found only to one particular intent scil to deceive Creditors it should not be extended to another intent scil to defeat the Queen of her Wardship A man seized inter alia of an Advowson in gross Where the King shall Present becomes a Popish Recusant Convict The King seizes the Advowson as part of his two parts The Church becomes void In this Case it was held by Justice Hutton That the University and not the King shall Present But Justice Jones held strongly to the contrary and that notwithstanding this Act the King shall have the Presentation Stat. 3 Jac. 4. For the Statute of 3 Jac. cap. 4. saith That the King may take and seize two third parts of a Recusants Hereditaments under which word an Advowson is comprehended And although the power or liberty of Presenting is here given the University yet that is to be intended only in such Cases where a Popish Recusant Convict is Patron But when the King hath seized the Advowson as part of his two parts the King is Patron and not the Recusant nor shall the Title the King hath to the Advowson by the Act of 3 Jac. 4. be devested by another Act of Parliament unless it had been there given away from the King in express terms And Hobart Chief Justice and Winch Justice declared they were of the same Opinion with Jones in the main point Jones 17. c. Standen al' versus University d' Oxon Whitton Obj. To this it hath been objected That when this Statute disables the Recusant to grant any Avoidance it disables him to grant it to the King as well as to any other person But if the Recusant may forfeit the Advowson to the King he may forfeit the Avoidance to the King And every forfeiture being a Grant or Gift in Law as is held in Hales Case Plowden 260 263. the Recusant by consequence may grant the Avoidance contrary to the express Letter of this Act Answ But to pass by the questions whether by the Recusants being disabled to grant any Avoidance generally he is disabled to grant an Avoidance to the King or whether the forfeiture of the two thirds by the Recusant can be properly called a Grant or Gift from the Recusant and not rather from the Law which creates the forfeiture It s enough for our purpose here to distinguish between voluntary Acts and Acts by compulsion For this Statute which disables the Recusant to Present or to grant any Avoidance was intended only to restrain his voluntary Acts But when he forfeits the Avoidance to the King although the offence viz. his Recusancy be voluntary yet the Conviction and Forfeiture thereupon are involuntary And the Recusant is therein potius patiens quam agens Jones 21. A Popish Recusant Convict seized in fee of an Advowson in gross is attainted of Felony or Praemunire Felony Praemunire and the Church becomes void In this Case Hutton held That the Interest which accrued to the University upon the Conviction for Recusancy should not be devested by the Attainder And that if a man seized of such an Advowson Statute Merchant acknowledge a Statute Merchant and afterwards becomes a Popish Recusant Convict and then the Statute is extended the Interest of the University shall not be devested by the extent But Jones seemed to be of a contrary Opinion in the Case of Treason or Praemunire Jones 20.26 If the King seize two parts of a Mannor belonging to a Popish Recusant Convict Advowson follows the Mannor for non-payment of the forfeiture of twenty pounds per month to which Mannor an Advowson is appendant The two parts of the Advowson shall follow the two parts of the Mannor and the King shall Present and not the University notwithstanding this Act For after such seizure the King is Patron of the Advowson and not the Recusant and in this Case the King shall present alone Hobart 126 127. The King shall Present alone Chancellor c. of Cambridge versus Walgrave al' Moore 872. C. 1214. the same Case As shall then have any other Benefice with Cure of Souls And not as is already beneficed as Wingate tit Crown numb 140. mistakes For a sine Cura is a Benefice Sint Cura and yet the University may Present or Nominate him who hath a sine cura A Donative of the Kings may be cum cura animarum Donative cum cura And so is the Church of the Tower of London Cro. Mich. 9. Car. Mackaller versus Todderick And the University cannot Present or Nominate him that hath such a Donative Notwithstanding what is said by Sir Edward Coke 3. Inst 355. Deanry Archdeaconry Prebend c. It seems that a Deanry Archdeaconry Prebend c. are not Benefices with Cure of Souls nor had they been comprehended under the name of Benefices with Cure of Souls within the Statute of 21 H. 8. Pluralities Stat. 21 H. 8. of Pluralities Although the special Proviso in that Act had been omitted For that Proviso is ex abundanti and there is no such to except them out of the Statute of 13 Eliz. cap. 12. Stat. 13 El. 12. of reading the Articles and yet if a Dean Archdeacon or Prebendary read not the Articles within the time limited by 13 Eliz. his promotion is not void by that Statute And the reason is because 't is not a Benefice with Cure of Souls The Opinion of Justice Tirrell at Lincoln Assizes in Lent 1668 9. Who in the Case of Dr. Sanderson denied the Archdeacon of Lincoln to be lawful Archdeacon For that he had not read the Articles within the time so limited and affirmed an Archdeaconry to be a Benefice with Cure within 13 Eliz. being contrary to Law and to the received meaning of that Statute And as for a Prebend the reason given for the Opinion in Bland and Maddox Case B. R. Mich. 29 30 Eliz. is expresly against what is said by Sir Edward Coke For it was there agreed that a Layman may be presented to a Prebend quia non habet curam animarum Cro. Eliz. 79. And for the same reason a Dean Archdeacon Prebendary c. may be in this Case presented or nominated by the University for their promotion is not a Benefice with Cure of Souls Stat. Sect. 21. Moreover because Recusants Convict are not thought
meét to be Executors or Administrators to any person or persons whatsoever nor to have the Education of their own Children much less of the Children of any other of the Kings Subjects nor to have the marriage of them Be it therefore Enacted by the Authority aforesaid A Recusant shall not be Executor or Administrator That such Recusants convicted or which shall be convicted at the time of the death of any Testator or at the time of the granting of any Administration shall be disabled to be Executor or Administrator by force of any Testament hereafter to be made or Letters of Administration hereafter to be granted Or Guardian nor shall have the custody of any Child as Guardian in Chivalry Guardian in Socage or Guardian in nurture of any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments being Fréehold or Copyhold but shall be adjudged disabled to have any such Wardship or Custody of any such Child or of their Lands Tenements or Hereditaments being Fréehold or Copyhold as aforesaid Who shall have the Wardship And that for the better Education and Preservation of the said Children and of their Estates the next of the kin to such Child or Children to whom the said Lands Tenements or Hereditaments of such Child or Children cannot lawfully descend who shall usually resort to some Church or Chappel and there hear Divine Service and receive the holy Sacrament of the Lords Supper thrice in the year next before according to the Laws of this Realm shall have the Custody and Education of the same Child and of his said Lands and Tenements being holden in Knights Service until the full age of the said Ward of one and twenty years And of his said Lands Tenements and Hereditaments being holden in Socage as a Guardian in Socage And of the said Lands Tenements and Hereditaments holden by Copy of Court Roll of any Mannor so long as the Custom of the said Mannor shall permit and allow the same and in every of the said Cases shall yield an Accompt of the profits thereof to the said Ward as the Case shall require And that if at any time hereafter any of the Wards of the Kings Majesty or of any other shall be granted or sold to any Popish Recusant Convict such Grant or Sale shall be utterly void and of none effect Convicted at the time of the death of any Testator or at the time of the granting of any Administration Granting of Administration These words are to be construed reddendo singula singulis viz. That the Recusant shall be disabled to be Executor if he be convicted at the time of the death of the Testator or to be Administrator if he be Convicted at the time of the granting of Letters of Administration For so these words at the time of the granting of any Administration are here to be understood And therefore if a man makes his Will and therein appoints a Recusant Convict to be his Executor Executor where not disabled and before the Testators death the Conviction is removed by Reversal of the Judgment or avoided or discharged for some defect in the Indictment Proclamation or other proceedings and then the Testator dies In such Case the Recusant is not by this Act disabled to be Executor For although the naming of an Executor is in Law a granting of Administration And if a man by his last Will grants the Administration of his Goods and Chattels to J. S. without more saying thereby J. S. is made his Executor Dyer 290. So that the naming of an Executor and the granting of Administration seem to be the same thing yet this is not a granting of Administration within the meaning of this Act Administration here relating only to an Administrator and not to an Executor besides the naming of an Executor amounts not to a compleat grant of Administration until the Testators death For then and not before the Will becomes in force And if the party stands not then convicted he is not disabled Much less shall he be disabled to be Executor who is not convicted at the time of the Testators death although he be convicted at the time of the Probate of the Will For if these words granting of Administration should relate to an Executor as well as to an Administrator which in truth they do not yet the power given to the Executor by the Ordinary or Ecclesiastical Judge upon the probate of the Will cannot be called a granting but only a committing of Administration Committing of Administration What the Ordinary grants to an Executor according to the Will of the deceased And in such Case all that the Ordinary or Ecclesiastical Judge can grant are Letters testifying what the Testator hath already given to the Executor and a Power or Authority to execute the Will As Guardian in Chivalry Although the Recusant seized in Chivalry and Convicted could not have been Guardian yet if he had granted the Seigniory Seigniory granted over to one who was no Recusant the Grantee should have been Guardian notwithstanding this Act for the mischief here intended to be prevented was removed when the Seigniory was granted to another who was no Recusant By Jones Justice C. B. Hill 20. Jac. Jones 19. So if the King had seized Seized by the King the Recusants Seigniory as part of his two parts the King should have had the Wardship and not the next of kin for the same reason Jones 21. Stat. Sect. 22. Popish Books And be it further Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That no person or persons shall bring from beyond the Seas nor shall Print sell or buy any Popish Primmers Ladies Psalters Manuels Rosaries Popish Catechisms Missals Breviaries Portalls Legends and Lives of Saints containing superstitious matter Printed or Written in any Language whatsoever nor any other superstitious Books Printed or Written in the English Tongue upon pain of forfeiture of Forty shillings for every such Book one third part thereof to be to the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors one other third part to him that will sue for the same and the other third part to the Poor of the Parish where such Book or Books shall be found to be recovered by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any of the Kings Majesties Courts of Record wherein no Essoin Protection or Wager of Law shall be admitted or allowed and the said Books to be burned Stat. Sect. 23. Popish Reliques and Books And that it shall be lawfull for any two Iustices of Peace within the Limits of their Iurisdiction or Authority and to all Mayors Bailiffs and Chief Officers of Cities and Towns Corporate in their Liberties from time to time to search the Houses and Lodgings of every Popish Recusant Convict or of every person whose Wife is or shall be a Popish Recusant Convict for Popish Books and Reliques of Popery And that if any Altar Pix Beads Pictures or such like Popish Reliques or any Popish Book
or Books shall be found in their or any of their Custody as in the Opinion of the said Iustices Mayor Bailiff or Chief Officer as aforesaid shall be thought unméet for such Recusant as aforesaid to have or use the same shall be presently defaced and burnt if it be méet to be burned And if it be a Crucifix or other Relique of any price the same to be defaced at the General Quarter Sessions of the Peace in the County where the same shall be found and the same so defaced to be restored to the owner again Shall be thought unmeét for such Recusant So that the Justices of Peace are not bound by this Act to deface all Reliques of price or to burn or deface Not all to be defaced or burnt all other Reliques or Popish Books as Wingate tit Crown numb 144. misleads them in this particular Unmeet sense of it here And although herein much is referred to the discretion of the Justices of Peace yet where the Husband is a Protestant and only the Wife a Popish Recusant it seems by these words that they are not to consider what is unmeet for the Husband but what is unmeet for the Recusant viz. the Wife and that it was not intended that they should seize burn or deface any Books of the Husbands though Popish unless such whereby the Wife might be aided or confirmed in her Superstition so that in this Case Books written in a Language or Stile unintelligible to the Wife are not within the meaning of this Act nor ought by colour thereof to be taken from the Husband who is no Popish Recusant At the General Quarter Sessions Vide Stat. 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 7. General Quarter Sessions Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 And be it also Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 24. A Popish Recusants Armour shall be seized That all such Armour Gunpowder and Munition of whatsoever kinds as any Popish Recusant Convict within this Realm of England hath or shall have in his House or Houses or elsewhere or in the hands or possession of any other at his or their disposition shall be taken from such Popish Recusants or others which have or shall have the same to the use of such Popish Recusant by Warrant of four Iustices of Peace at their General or Quarter Sessions to be holden in the same County where such Popish Recusant shall be resident other than such necessary weapons as shall be thought fit by the said four Iustices of Peace to remain and be allowed for the defence of the person or persons of such Recusants or for the defence of his her or their House or Houses and that the said Armour and Munition so taken shall be kept and maintained at the Costs of such Recusants in such places as the said Four Iustices of Peace at their said Sessions of the Peace shall set down and appoint And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid The forfeiture for not delivering it That if any such Recusant having or which shall have any such Armour Gunpowder and Munition or any of them or if any other person or persons which shall have any such Armour Gunpowder and Munition or any of them to the use of any such Recusant shall refuse to declare or manifest unto the said Iustices of Peace or any of them what Armour he she or they have or shall have or shall lett hinder or disturb the delivery thereof to any of the said Iustices or to any other person or persons authorized by their Warrant to take and seize the same then every such person so offending contrary to this Statute in this behalf shall forfeit and lose to the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors his and their said Armour Gunpowder and Munition and shall also be imprisoned by Warrant of or from any Iustices of Peace of such County by the space of thrée months without Bail or Mainprize General or Quarter Sessions Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 Where such Arms cannot be seized At their General or Quarter Sessions Vide Stat. 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 7. In the same County where such Popish Recusant shall be resident A Popish Recusant lives in one County and his Arms are kept in another County by one who is no Popish Recusant such Arms cannot be seized by force of this Act by the Justices of Peace of either County not by the Justices of the County where the Arms are kept for the seizure or taking is here limited to be by Warrant at the Sessions in the County where the Recusant resides and the Statute must be strictly pursued in that particular nor by the Justices of the County where the Recusant is resident for the Arms are in another County where they have nothing to do Power of a Justice of Peace out of his County And although in some Cases where a Statute appoints a Justice of Peace to do a thing he may do it out of his County Power of a Justice of Peace out of his County as to take an examination upon the Statute of Winton of a Robbery as was resolved in the Case of Helier and the Hundred of Benhust Pasch 7. Car. 1. B. R. Jones 239. Cro. Car. 213. yet he cannot exercise any coercive power out of his County as was resolved in that Case for his potestas Jurisdictionis is confined to his County as well as that of a Bishop is confined to his Diocess Vide Palmer 473. Ascuithes Case And here the taking of the Recusants Armor is a coercive Act and therefore can be executed by Warrant of the four Justices of Peace in that County only where they are Justices So that this is clearly Casus omissus and not provided for by this Act. Vide postea Four Justices In such places as the said four Iustices of Peace c. shall set down and appoint And not where one Justice shall appoint as is mistaken in the late additions to Dalton cap. 81. tit Recusants Sect. 40. Imprisoned by Warrant of or from any Iustices of Peace Any two Justices may grant their Warrant for Imprisoning the Offender Two sufficient and 't is sufficient in this Case for pluralis numerus est duobus contentus But a Warrant from any one Justice will not serve contrary to Wingate tit Crowne numb 145. Of such County County That is of the County where the Popish Recusant is resident for no other County was named before In what Case the party cannot be imprisoned A Popish Recusant lives in one County and his Arms are kept in another County by one who is no Popish Recusant The Justices of Peace of that other County cannot by force of this Act imprison him that keeps them for they are not named here but the power in this Case is expresly limited to other Justices and no other can intermedle therein neither will the Warrant of the Justices of Peace of the County where the Recusant is resident reach
Colledges that now are or hereafter shall be received into the same being under the Degrée of a Baron before the President Master Provost Warden or other head or chief Governour of that Colledge Hall or House whereinto he shall be received and in the open Hall And all Doctors of Physick Doctors and Practisers of Physick and all other who practise Physick that now are or hereafter shall be admitted into the Colledge of Physitians in London before the President of the same Colledge for the time being And all Aldermen Sheriffs or Vnder-Officers whatsoever of the Cities and Towns Corporate Aldermen Sheriffs Under-Officers and Freemen of Cities and Towns Corporate and all such as hereafter shall be made Fréemen of the said City or Town Corporate before the Mayor Bailiffs or other Chief Officer of the said City or Town in the open Hall And to the intent that due execution may be had of the premisses without delay When the said persons shall take the said Oath It is further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all the persons beforenamed who have any certain time limited or expressed when to take the aforesaid Oath shall at the time therein prescribed take the same and the rest within six months next after the end of this present Session of Parliament And be it further Enacted by Authority of this present Parliament Stat. Sect. 4. Who may tender the said Oath and to whom That it shall and may be lawful to and for any one of the Privy Council of your Highness or of your Heirs and Successors and to and for every Bishop within his Diocess to require any Baron or Baroness of the age of Eightéen years or above to take the said Oath and to and for any two Iustices of Peace within any County City or Town Corporate whereof one to be of the Quorum to require any person or persons of the age of Eightéen years or above under the Degrée of a Baron or Baroness to take the said Oath And if any person or persons of or above the said age and degrée now stand or hereafter any time shall stand and be Presented Indicted or Convicted for not coming to Church or not receiving the Holy Communion or Sacrament of the Lords Supper according to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm before the Ordinary or other having lawful power to take such Presentment or Indictment Then thrée of the Privy Council of your Highness your Heirs and Successors whereof the Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer Lord Privy Seal or Principal Secretary to be one upon knowledge thereof shall require such person or persons to take the said Oath And if any other person or persons whatsoever of and above the said age and under the said degrée now stand or at any time hereafter shall stand and be Presented Indicted or Convicted for not coming to Church or receiving the Holy Communion or Sacrament of the Lords Supper according to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm before the Ordinary or any other having lawful power to take such Presentment or Indictment Or if the Minister Petty Constable and Church-wardens or any two of them shall at any time hereafter complain to any Iustice of Peace near adjoyning to the place where any person complained of shall dwell and the said Iustice shall find cause of suspition That then any one Iustice of Peace within whose Commission or Power such person or persons shall at any time hereafter be or to whom complaint shall be made as aforesaid shall upon notice thereof require such person or persons to take the said Oath For any two Iustices of Peace within any County City or Town Corporate c. The two Justices of Peace may require this Oath of any person that shall happen to be within their Jurisdiction although his habitation be in another County or Liberty For the Oath of Allegiance sequitur personam non locum This Oath sequitur personam non locum Bulstrode 2. 155. The King against Griffith al' To require any person or persons This is an enlargement of the power given to two Justices of Peace Power of Justices of Peace enlarged by 3 Jac. cap. 4. For thereby they could have required the Oath but only in some particular Cases vide that Statute Sect. 10. But by this Statute they may require it of any person whatsoever of competent age and under the degree of a Baron or Baroness Warrant to bring the party The Justices of Peace in this Case or the Justice of Peace in the following Case may make his or their special Warrant to the Constable to bring the party before the said Justice or Justices to take the Oath For the Statute by giving them power to require the Oath doth implicitely authorize them to make such a Warrant Quando lex aliquid alicui concedit conceditur id sine quo res ipsa esse non potest And it is against the Office of the Justices of Peace and the Authority hereby given them to go and seek the party Co. 12. 130. But the Constable cannot by virtue of such Warrant break the House Breaking the House where the party is For he is no Offender before he refuse the Oath or commit some Contempt to the King Ibid. And if any person or persons of or above the said age and degreée That is of the said age and above the said Degree of a Baron Persons above the degree of a Baron or Baroness For so the words must be taken viz. conjunctively and not of such who are of the degree of a Baron or Baroness and no more For the precedent words appointed that the Oath may be tendred to such by any Privy Counsellor or the Bishop of the Diocess in all cases although they were never Convicted Indicted or Presented But to such Noblemen or Noblewomen as are above that degree it cannot be tendred by virtue of this Act unless they have been before Convicted Indicted or Presented for not coming to Church or not receiving the Sacrament And in those Cases no less then three Privy Counsellors Quorum unus c. can tender it Co. 12. 130 131. And if any other person or persons whatsoever c. under the said Degreé A Baroness or any Woman above that Degree Noblewoman by Marriage who is not Noble by birth but only by Marriage becomes a Widow and takes a second Husband under the Degree of Nobility and is Convicted Indicted or Presented of Recusancy or complained of by the Minister c. to a Justice of Peace who finds cause of suspition The Justice of Peace may require her to take this Oath although she were once Noble For by her second Marriage she hath lost her Nobility and name of Dignity together with the priviledges of her Nobility Quando mulier Nobilis nupserit ignobili desinit esse Nobilis which is to be understood of Nobility acquired by Marriage For that which was gotten by
to any person or capable of any Legacy or Deéd of Gift or to bear any Office within the Realm and shall lose and forfeit all his Goods and Chattels and shall forfeit all his Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Rents Annuities Offices and Estates of Fréehold for and during his natural Life Stat. Sect. 2. He that conforms shall not incur the penalties aforesaid Provided always That no person sent or conveyed as aforesaid that shall within Six months after his Return into this Realm conform himself unto the present Religion established in this Church of England and receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper according to the Statutes made concerning conformity in other Cases required from Popish Recusants shall incur any the penalties aforesaid Within Six months after his return And not within Six weeks as Wingate tit Crowne numb 157. erroneously Stat. Sect. 3. What Justices shall hear and determine these offences And it is Enacted That all and every of the offences against this Statute may be inquired heard and determined before the Iustices of the Kings Bench or Iustices of Assize or Goal delivery or of Oyer and Terminer of such Counties where the Offenders did last dwell or abide or whence they departed out of this Kingdom or where they were taken Or of Oyer and Terminer Justices of Peace Justices of Peace here excluded cannot take an Indictment upon this Statute for no inferior Court shall take Authority by any Statute unless it be specially named Savile 135. C. 212. Agard and Candish And although Justices of Peace have in their Commission an express Clause ad audiendum terminandum and by that are Justices of Oyer and Terminer yet forasmuch as there is a Commission of Oyer and Terminer known distinctly by that name and the Commission of Peace is known distinctly by another name they shall not be included under the general words of Justices of Oyer and Terminer as was adjudged Hill 30 Eliz. B. R. in the Case of Richard Smith who was Indicted at the Sessions of the Peace in the County of Oxon upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. cap. 14. Stat. 5 Eliz. 14 of forging Deeds which impowers the Justices of Oyer and Terminer to inquire of hear and determine that offence and yet the Indictment before the Justices of Peace was quashed as taken coram non Judice Co. 9.118 Co. 3. Inst. 103. Cro. Eliz. 87. vide Cro. Mich. 39 40 Eliz. 601. Wilsons Case Ibid. Mich. 41 42 Eliz. 697. Hunts Case Or where they were taken Vide Stat. 3 Jac. cap. 4. 3 Jac. 4. Sect. 21. Provided also That if any person or Child Stat. Sect. 4. In what Case the offenders Lands shall be restored again so passing or sent or now being beyond the Seas shall after his return into this Realm conform himself to the present Religion established in this Church of England and receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper according to the Statutes made for or concerning conformity in other Cases required from Popish Recusants for and during such time as he or she shall so continue in such conformity and obedience occording to the true intent and meaning of the said Laws and Statutes shall have his or her Lands restored to them again Addendum Stat. xxv Car. ii c. ii An Act for Preventing Dangers which may happen from Popish Recusants FOR preventing Dangers which may happen from Popish Recusants and quieting the minds of His Majesties good Subjects Be it Enacted by the Kings most Excellent Majesty by and with the Advice and Consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by Authority of the same That all and every person or persons as well Péers as Commoners that shall bear any Office or Offices Civil or Military or shall receive any Pay Salary Fée or Wages by reason of any Patent or Grant from His Majesty or shall have Command or Place of Trust from or under His Majesty or from any of His Majesties Predecessors or by His or their Authority or by Authority derived from Him or them within the Realm of England Dominion of Wales or Town of Berwick upon Tweed or in His Majesties Navy or in the several Islands of Jersey and Guernsey or shall be of the Houshold or in the Service or Imployment of His Majesty or of his Royal Highness the Duke of York who shall inhabit reside or be within the City of London or Westminster or within Thirty miles distant from the same on the first day of Easter Term that shall be in the year of our Lord One thousand six hundred seventy threé or at any time during the said Term all and every the said person and persons shall personally appear before the end of the said Term or of Trinity Term next following in His Majesties high Court of Chancery or in His Majesties Court of Kings Bench and there in publick and open Court between the hours of Nine of the Clock and Twelve in the Forenoon take the several Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance which Oath of Allegiance is contained in the Statute made in the third Year of King James by Law established and during the time of the taking thereof by the said person and persons all Pleas and Procéedings in the said respective Courts shall cease And that all and every of the said respective persons and Officers not having taken the said Oaths in the said respective Courts aforesaid shall on or before the First day of August One thousand six hundred seventy thrée at the Quarter Sessions for that County or place where he or they shall be inhabit or reside on the Twentieth day of May take the said Oaths in open Court betwéen the said hours of Nine and Twelve of the Clock in the Forenoon And the said respective Officers aforesaid shall also receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper according to the Vsage of the Church of England at or before the First day of August in the year of our Lord One thousand six hundred and seventy thrée in some Parish Church upon some Lords day commonly called Sunday immediately after Divine Service and Sermon And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all and every person or persons that shall be admitted entred placed or taken into any Office or Offices Civil or Military or shall receive any Pay Salary Fée or Wages by reason of any Patent or Grant of his Majesty or shall have Command or Place of Trust from or under his Majesty his Heirs or Successors or by his or their Authority or by Authority derived from him or them within this Realm of England Dominion of Wales or Town of Berwick upon Tweed or in his Majesties Navy or in the several Islands of Jersey and Gernsey or that shall be admitted into any Service or Imployment in his Majesties or Royal Highnesses Houshold or Family after the First day of Easter Term aforesaid and shall inhabit be
185. Actions Popular see Informations Acts of Parliament See Statutes Administration and Administrators See Excommengement Executor Probate Recusants Who is disabled to be an Administrator 212. 234 235. 258. 263. The Mother shall administer before the Brother or Sister 225. Advowson See Covin Recusants Vniversity An Advowson is comprehended under the word Hereditament 106. 171. 172. It may be seized for Recusancy 106. 171 172. Where the King hath seized the Advowson of a Popish Recusant whether the King or University shall present 172. 231 232. By the Kings seizure of two parts of a mannor two parts of an Advowson appendant are seized by consequence 172. 233. In such case the King shall present alone by his Prerogative 172. 233. His two parts shall not pass from him by general words 173. Where upon reversal of an utlawry the Patron of an Advowson shall be restored to his Presentment and where not 180. Age 198. Agnus Dei c. Where the bringing in offering delivering or receiving of an Aguns Dei c. is a Praemunire and where not 51 52 53. Where the offender must be apprehended or his name disclosed and to whom 53 54. The Penalty for concealing the offenders name 55 56. Aid see Notice Aiders Maintainers Relievers c. of offenders where and how punishable 12. 17. 34 35. 42. 47. 50 51. 59. 90 91. 93 94. 184 185. Alien An Information lies against an Alien and a Writ of Error for him 76. An Alien though indenized or naturalized is no natural Subject 185. Indictment of High Treason against an Alien by birth 185. It shall not be contra naturalem Dominum 185. An Alien indenized or naturalized in Scotland or Ireland is still an Alien here 189. Where an Alien shall forfeit 12 d. per Sunday or Holiday for not coming to Church and where not 190. Allegiance see Oath of Allegiance Appearance See Baron Feme What appearance upon Proclamation shall save the Recusants default and what not 108. 164 165. Where he cannot appear by Attorney 164. His Remedy if his Appearnce be not recorded 164. Appropriation Where the King may make an Appropriation 7. Archbishop See Bishop Archbishop of Canterburies concurrent jurisdiction abrogated 5. Armour See Iustices of Peace Where the Arms of a Popish Recusant convict may be seized by force of 3 Jac. 5. and where not 237 238. The penalty for refusing to discover or hindring the delivery of such Arms 237. A Popish Recusant Convict shall maintain his Armour 239. Arraignment See Witnesses The party must be first arraigned and convicted before he can be fined and imprisoned at the Kings pleasure 97. Assent see Licence Attainder see Vniversity Attorney see Appearance Audita Querela Audita Quaerela against the Informer 148. It lies not against the King 148. Averment See Covin Indictment Iointure Licence Quare Impedit Bail SPecial Bail where not necessary 75. Baptism The penalty where the child of a Popish Recusant convict is baptized contrary to 3 Jac. 5.222 223. Baron Feme See Conformity Covin Custom Oath Plea Sacrament A married woman is liable to the Penalties for Recusancy 26. 68. And may 〈◊〉 imprisoned for non-payment thereof 86. 252 253. She ought in such case to have hard and close imprisonment 86. Where the Husband may save her imprisonment by paying 10 l. per month or yielding the thirds of his Lands to the King 252 253 254 255 256. Where the Husband is chargeable for the Wives Recusancy and where not 68. 75 76. 79. 122 123. 167. And may be imprisoned for non-payment of the Forfeiture 86. 253. Where the Wife cannot appear or plead without her Husband 75. The penalty by 7 Jac. 6. of a married woman convicted as a Popish Recusant if she conforms not 252. Where she shall forfeit the profits of two thirds of her Jointure and Dower and be otherwise disabled if she conform not in her Husbands life time 212 213. 214. Of what Dower she shall not forfeit any profits 215. Where a Woman may have Jointure and Dower both 213 214 215. Whether the Conviction of the Wife on an Indictment of Recusancy shall bar the King of his action of Debt and the Informer of his popular suit 79. 167. 254. A Feme Covert is within 1 Eliz. 2. of depraving c. the Common Prayer 24. And punishable by 35 Eliz. 1. of Conventicles and by 35 Eliz. 2. of Popish Recusants save as to Abjuration 123 124. 146. In what cases she may be punished upon 3 Jac. 4. and in what cases not 195. Where the Wife of a man abjured may sue without her Husband and shall have her Dower or Jointure in his life time and where not 124 125. Where the Husband of a Popish Recusant convict shall not bear any office 111 112. The penalty on a Popish Recusant convict who is married contrary to 3 Jac. 5. 220 221 222. In what case the Recusant so married cannot be punished by 3 Jac. 5. 222. Bar. See Baron Feme Informers King Good Behaviour see Recusants Benefice See Cura animatum Nomination Recusants Birth Birthright is Character indelebilis 247. Bishop See Archbishop Conformity Ecclesiastical Iurisdiction Excommengement Ordinary Before whom Archbishops and Bishops shall take the Oath of Supremacy 8. And the Oath of Allegiance 241 242. To whom an Archbishop or Bishop may tender or minister the Oath of Supremacy 39. 186. Where an Archbishop or Bishop may associate himself to the Justices of Over and Determiner or of Assise 29. But they 〈◊〉 associate themselves to Head-officers of Corporations 30. Where a Schoolmaster may be license● 〈◊〉 allowed by the Archbishop or Bishop 64 65 1●5● Submission to an Archbishop or Bishop in what case 95. Submission and Conformity before the Bishop of the Diocess in what cases 69. 92. 186. The Penalty on an offender who is required by the Bishop of the Diocess and yet refuses to conform and submit himself 118 135 138. Where 〈…〉 and Conformity must be certified to the Bishop 119. 145. Where the Bishop of the Diocess nay 〈◊〉 and ●●●●●ter the Oath of Allegiance and to whom 174 175. 186. 196 197 198. 242 243 244 245. And may commit the Party refusing it 174. 250. Where he may imprison a married woman convicted as a Popish Recusant and where not 252 253 254. Where his assent to a licence for a Popish Recusant to travel out of his compass of five miles is good and where not 206. 208 209 210. Blood See Corruption of Blood 〈◊〉 What they ought to do who are to be restored in Blood ●40 Books Books maintaining the Authority of the Bishop or See of Rome 34. Popish Books prohibited and the penalty for bringing them in c. 236. Bulls The effect of Bulls brought from Rome 49. Getting ●● putting them iniure is High Treason 49 50. Bull why so called ●● 〈◊〉 The Penalty if a Popish Recusant be buried contrary to ● Jac. 5.223 Ceremonies Who may ordain Ceremonies and Rites of the Church 31
go out of the compass of five miles if required to appear before the Privy Councel 141. Three Privy Councellors may grant him a Licence to travel out of that compass 206 207 208. The nature of such Licence 207 208. The Privy Councel may send for a Popish Recusant confined to come to Court 201. To whom Privy Councellors are to give the Oath of Allegiance 195 196 197. 242. 245 246 247. They may commit the party to Prison for refusing it 250. Where a Privy Councellor may commit a married Noble woman convicted as a Popish Recusant and where not 252 253. County See Iustices of Peace Trial. Court see Recusants Courts See Certiorari Ecclesiastical Courts Informers Iustices Courts of Record what Courts are meant 82 83. 85. What Courts are the Kings Courts 142. In what Courts the King may sue for the penalties given him by 23 Eliz. 1. 122. Court of Kings Bench. See Informers Marshalsie The Justices of the Kings Bench are the Soveraign Justices of Oyer and Terminer and Goal-delivery 66. What offences they may hear and determine 35 36. 94. 188. 193 194. 258. To whom they may give the Oath of Supremacy 261 262. To whom they may tender and give the Oath of Allegiance 251. 261 262. Court of Exchequer see Exchequer High Commission Court Taken away by Act of Parliament 8. Cura animarum A Donative may be cum Cura animarum 233. A Deanry Archdeaconry Prebend are not Benefices with cure of Souls 233. Custom Custom for the Wife to have a part of the husbands goods where in force 222. Day FRactions of a day rejected in Law 198. Death see Recusants Default See Appearance Conviction Denizen Who 128. Naturalization includes Denization 128 129. Deprivation See Notice Pardon Deprivation ipso facto 12. 22 23. Sentence declaratory by the Ecclesiastical Judge where not necessary 22 23. Where a sentence of Deprivation by the Ecclesiastical Judge ought not to be questioned by the temporal Judge 31. Deputy see Officers Deputy Lieutenant see Licences Dignities Ecclesiastical see Cura animarum Disability See Plea Recusants A Popish Recusant convict is disabled as a person Excommunicate 193. 215 216. 223. Is disabled to sue 215 216 217 218 219 220. Such Disability is but quousque c. 216. Disabled to bear office 211 212. To be Executor 212. 234 235. Or Administrator 212. 234 235. Or Guardian 234. To be a witness 216. Or surety for the good behaviour 64. To present or nominate to a Benefice or Donative or to grant the next avoidance 226 227 228 229. Where disabled to be Tenant by the Courtesie 220. Or to have Dower 220. Or Jointure 220 221. Or any Goods by Custom 212 213. 220. 222. The Husband of a Popish Recusant convict where disabled to bear Office 211 212. A Recusant convict to what intents disabled 211. Disabilities inflicted on such as go beyond Seas without Licence 223 224. Or educate their Children in the Popish Religion or are so educated 264. Or send any person beyond Seas to be so educated or are so sent 257 258. Or who refuse the Oath of Supremacy 10. 43 44. Or the Oath of Allegiance 243. 251. Or execute any Office without taking the Oaths and Test injoined by 25 Car. 2.2.263 264. Discharge See Conformity Indictments Seizure Discontinuance see Informations Discovery See Iustices of Peace The reward of him who discovers the entertainer or reliever of a Jesuite or Popish Priest or Mass to have been said c. 200 201. To whom and within what time the discovery must be made 200 201. How the Reward shall be recovered 201. Disjunctive Where a Disjunctive shall be taken for a Copulative 184. Dispensation Dispensation by the King where void 44.243 Distribution see Penalty Donative See Recusants A Donative may be cum cura animarum 233. Dower See Baron Feme Dower in what cases saved 43.124 194. Where a woman shall be disabled to have any Dower 220. Ecclesiastical Courts and Iurisdiction See Church Deprivation Heresie King Parish FOrraign Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction abrogated 4 5. The Ecclesiastical Judge ought not to usurp upon the Temporal Law 6. The nature of his offence if he so usurps 6. The Queen might grant Commissions for the exercise of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction 7 8. And that without the aid of 1 Eliz. 1.8 Archbishops and Bishops shall punish absence from Church and other offences against 1 Eliz. 2. by Ecclesiastical Censures 28. 30. Ecclesiastical Court not restrained by 1 Eliz. 2.31 Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction saved to Archbishops Bishops c. 88. 194. 239. Ecclesiastical Laws see Laws Ecclesiastical Persons See Common Prayer Clericus what it implies 21. Every Priest or Minister is Clericus 45. Election See Executors King Enquiry See Iustices What is meant by Enquire 68. Equity see Statutes Examination see Iustices of Peace Error see Alien Exchequer Principal Officers of the Court of Exchequer who 71. Principal Officers of the Receipt of Exchequer who 71. Excommengement See Recusants Where the Sheriff or other Officer may break the House to take one Excommunicated for Recusancy 193. Recusant Excommunicate i. e actually Excommunicate 223. Excommunication cannot be pleaded by the Bishop who Excommunicated the party and the reason of it 217 218. A person Excommunicate cannot sue as Executor or Administrator 218. Executors See Excommengement The offender hath his Election to pay the Forfeiture or be imprisoned and dies Quaere whether his Executors shall be charged 25 26. A man grants the Administration of his Goods and Chattels to J. S. thereby J. S. is made Executor 235. Who is disabled to be an Executor 212. 234 235. 258. 263. Failer of Records WHere Judgment shall be given on Failer of the Record 217 Where the not having the Record at the day shall be no Failer of the Record 217. Felony 90 91. 117. 139 140. 181 182 183. 194. See Vniversity Feme see Baron Feme Fine see Iustices Forfeiture See Abjuration Baron Feme Copyholds Penalty Recusants Forfeiture how a gift in Law 232. Forfeiture given without saving to whom shall be to the King 61. 70. Forfeiture in a Praemunire 46. 152. Forfeiture for Treason 152. Forfeiture of Lands generally shall not include intailed Lands 46. 152. Forraign see Iurisdiction Fraud See Covin Recusants Fraudulent Conveyances void 86 87. 99 100. 105. 231. Gaol see Imprisonment Goods See Seizure What is included within the word Goods 105. Grants by the King see King Grants by a Recusant See Covin Recusants Guardian See Kin. Recusants Who is disabled to be a Guardian 234. 263. Who shall be Guardian where the Recusant is disabled so to be 234 235. Heir Where there shall be no disherison of the Heir 42. 124. 194. Where the Conformity of the Heir of a Recusant shall discharge the arrears incurred in the Ancestors life time and where not 148 149 150. Hereditament What passes by Hereditament 106. 171 172. Heresie What the Ecclesiastical Commissioners might adjudge to be Heresie 16. What shall not be deemed Heresie or
Schisme 16. House Where a man may keep a Recusant in his house and where not and the Penalty 191 192 193. Ieofailes Informations on penal Laws within which Stat. of Jeofailes and within which not 73. Iesuite See Iustices of Peace Seminary Priest Imprisonment See Baron Feme Covin Imprisonment in what cases 12 13 14 15. 21 22 23 24 25 26. 59. 64. 70. 79. 86. 96 97. 107. 114. 162 163. 174 175. 182. 189. 193. 198. 211. 216. 237. 250 251 252 253 254. Incapacity see Disability Incertainty see Informations Indictments See Alien Conformity Iustices of Peace Parish Péers Recusants Sessions Witnesses Where 't is necessary that the Indictment for the second offence domention the first Conviction and where not 22. Two Indictments before several Justices for the same offence the first Judgment shall stand 66. Where an Indictment must conclude contra formam Statuti and where contra formam Statutorum 65. 125 126. Indictment for refusing the Oath of Supremacy 40 41. Indictment of Praemunire for refusing the Oath of Allegiance where it must be special and where it may be general 176. It must be directed by the Mittimus 176. Indicting a man of High Treason where actionable 58. Indictment for Recusancy the form of it 107. 129. It need not mention that the party was within the Realm 107. Where such Indictment or the Proceedings thereupon may be avoided or discharged without Conformity and where not 179 180 181. Existens aetatis 16. annorum shall refer to the time of the offence and not of the Indictment 60. In an Indictment on 1 Eliz. 2. for not coming to Church not necessary to aver that the party is an Inhabitant within this Realm 26. Or that he had no lawful or reasonable excuse 26 27. Informers Informations Actions Popular c. See Alien Audita Querela Baron Feme Conformity Ieofailes Plea Sunday In an Information tam c. quam c. Conviction thereupon is a sufficient Conviction within the intent of 23 Eliz. 1. 60 61. In what Courts an Informer Qui tam c. may sue and in what not 82 83 84 85. 100 101. 122. 160. Where an Informer may sue by Bill in the Kings Bench and where not 85 86. Within what time an Informer Qui tam c. must sue 73 74. 122. 160. Popular suit when depending 76. Where a Popular Action or Information becomes appropriated to a particular person 76. 78. Such Suit may be appropriated before Process 76. Two Informations for the same offence 76 77. The Defendant in an Information pleads that a prior Information is depending but mistakes the day of exhibiting it and yet good 76 77. Two Informations supposing the same offence to be done at several times where the first may be pleaded in bar of the second 77. How that case differs from the case of Recusancy 77. Two Informations exhibited the same day for the same offence are both void 78. When an Information may be delivered 78. When it must be dated 78. Action Popular brought by Covin no bar 79. Tam pro Domino Rege c. material 71. In an Information for Recusancy what the Informer is to demand for himself 71. His demand must be certain 72. He demands less then appears to be due yet good 62. He demands for 13 months and the Jury find for 12. Quaere whether the verdict be good or void for incertainty 62 63. Judgment of one moiety to the King and another to the Informer good 72. Where an Information may conclude contra formam Statuti and where it must be contra formam Statutorum 72. Where the particular Statute must be named 71 72. Where upon the demise of the King the proceedings in a popular Suit shall be discontinued and void and where not 80 81. Scire facias against an Informer 82. Where an Informer shall pay Costs 82. But he shall not find Sureties for Costs 82. In an Information for not receiving the Sacrament after Conformity the conviction of the Recusant must be shewed in certain 158 159. Where the Defendant may lose his advantage in that case 158 159. But his Conformity may be shewed generally 159. An Information lies in that case for the third year although the party were never convicted for the first or second year 159 160. Where an Informer is barred and where not 76 77 78 79 80. 163. 166. 167 168 253 254 255. An Informer Qui tam c. may be nonsuited 81. Inquisition see Office Inquiry see Enquiry Intent In what cases material 35. 52 53. Iointure See Baron Feme Where it may be averred that the Lands were for Jointure and where not 214. Where a woman shall be disabled to have a Jointure and what Jointure 220 221. What is a good Jointure within 27 H. 8. cap. 10. and what not 213 214. 221 222. Ireland See Alien Laws Treason Issue See Plea General issue where it may be pleaded 194. Iudgment See Conformity Conviction Failer of Records Informations The Judgment on 1 Eliz. 2. of the Common Prayer 25. The Judgment in a Praemunire 46. The Judgment on 23 Eliz. 1. shall be absolute 86. Where Judgment must be given for the first offence before the party can be punished for the second offence and where not 25. 159 160. Iurisdiction See Archbishop Ecclesiastical Iurisdiction King The penalty on him who holds with or maintains any forraign Jurisdiction within this Realm 11 12 13. 33 34. 36. 41 42. Within what time the offender must be prosecuted on 1 Eliz. 2.13 14 15. Iustices See Indictments Trial. The Justices shall fine and imprison the offender 97. Iustices of Assize and Gaol-delivery To whom they may tender and give the Oath of Allegiance 175 176. 242. 250. What offences they may hear and determine 28 29. 65. 107. 158. 162. 188. 193 194. 258. What offences Justices of Assize can only enquire of 35 36 37. Iustices of the Kings Bench. See Court of Kings Bench Iustices of Oyer and Terminer See Iustices of Peace What offences Justices of Oyer and Terminer may hear and determine 28 29. 36. 65. 258. Iustices of Peace Justices of Peace shall not be comprehended under the general name of Justices of Oyer and Terminer 258. What offences Justices of Peace may hear and determine and what not 65 66. 162. 193 194. 258 259. They may hear and determine the offence of not coming to Church 66. 162. What offences they can only enquire of 35 36. 65. 101. Where they cannot meddle 68. An Informer Qui tam c. cannot sue before Justices of Peace 82 83 84 85. 160. What Acts a Justice of Peace may do out of his County and what not 238 239. 249. His Potestas Jurisdictionis is confined to his County 238 239. The power of Justices of Peace in reference to the Oath of Allegiance twofold 196. Their power inlarged by 7 Jac. 6. 176. 245. The Justice of Peace impowred to tender and give the Oath of Allegiance may grant
University 231 232 233. The King is Patron in that case 232 233. And shall present alone 172. 233. Difference between a Bond to the King and a Bond to the Kings use 182. Licences by the King 116. 139. 155. 206. 223. Dispensation by the King where void 44. 243. Fine and Imprisonment at the Kings pleasure by whom to be inflicted 97. Lapse see Notice Laws See Ecclesiastical Iurisdiction Statutes What is meant by the Kings or Queens Laws 95. The Ecclesiastical Laws are the Kings Laws 5 6. Ecclesiastical and Temporal Laws are to be administred distinctly 6. The Laws of Scotland or Ireland not obligative to England 189. Lease See Confirmation Trust Licence See Abjuration Bishop Councel Iustices of Peace King Schoolmaster What Licence a Popish Recusant may have to travel out of the compass of five miles and from whom 206. 208. To what Popish Recusants such Licence may be granted 206 207. What is a good Licence and what not 206. Where it may be granted without any particular cause shewed and where not 206 207 208. 210. Where it ought to be averred that the cause contained in the Licence is true 211. Where the Licence must be under hand and where under hand and seal both 206 207 208. Where there must be a person to assent as well as persons to Licence and where not 206 207 208 209 210. Where the Lieutenant or a Deputy Lieutenant may assent to such Licence and where not 206 208 209 210. They who Licence and he who assents must be all distinct persons 209. The Licence and Assent may be both in one writing 209. The person assenting must be resident in the County 209 210. Where the Recusant Licenced must take an Oath and what Oath and before whom and where not 206 207 208 210 211. Lieutenant see Licence Ligeance see Subjection London see Recusants Mayor see Corporations Mansion See Recusants Mansion-house what 173. Marriage see Baron Feme Marshalsie Is the ordinary Prison of the Court of Kings Bench 251. Masse Saying and hearing of Masse and the Penalties 24 25 26. 45. 59. 200 201. Miles How to be accounted 130 131. Minister See Common Prayer Ecclesiastical Persons Misprision of Treason 51. 59. Mittimus see Indictments Month. How to be accounted 13 14. 61. Mortgage see Chattels Mother See Administration Kin. Naturalization See Alien Naturalization is a Fiction in Law 185. It s effect 185. It includes Denization 128 129. What they ought to do who are to be naturalized 240. Natural King Natural King and natural Subject are Correlatives 185. Next of Kin see Kin Nobility See Councel Nobility by Birth is Character indelebilis 247. Nobility gotten by Marriage may be lost by marriage 198. 247. Where a Nobleman or Noblewoman may be committed to prison for refusing the Oath of Allegiance 250 251. Nomination See Recusants Vniversity The Presentment is in him who hath the right of Nomination to a Benefice 229. He is in effect the Patron and may have a Quare Impedit 228. Nonsuit See Informers King Notice Aiders or Relievers of an offender not punishable unless they had notice of the offence 17. Where a lapse will incur upon Deprivation without notice to the Patron 23. All men are bound to take notice of an Act of Parliament 23. To what cases only the clause in 13 Eliz. 12. of notice to the Patron extends 23. Number Pluralis numerus est duobus contentus 238. Oaths See Bishop Councel Indictments Iustices of Peace Nobility Oath of Abjuration see Abjuration and Coroner Oath of Supremacy 9. Called the Oath of Obedience 147. How to be expounded 43. Who must take it and before whom 8 10 11. 38 39 40. 43 44. 92. 95. 149. 186. 240. 261 262. 264. 266. The Penalties for refusing or neglecting to take it 9 10. 40. 42 43 44. 263. see Disability He that hath an Office of Inheritance if he refuse it and afterwards take it shall be restored 11. The penalty for not certifying the refusal of it 40. Where the party refusing it is to be tried 41. Where the Refusal of it upon the second tender is not Treason 45. Who not bound to take it 44. Oath of Allegiance 176 177 178 179. Sequitur personam non locum 246. 249. Who is to give it and who must take it and in what cases 173 174 175 176. 181 182 183. 186. 195 196 197 198. 215. 224. 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248. 261 262. 264. 266 267. Where the party taking it must set to his name or mark 179. Where and whither the taking of it is to be certified and the Certificate recorded 174. 249 250. The penalties for refusing it or not taking it 174 175 176. 181 182. 195 196. 215. 224. 243. 250 251. 263. see Disability The party refusing it shall be committed to Gaol and by whom 174 175. 250 251. He may be committed either until the Assizes or Sessions at the discretion of him who tenders it 175. In that case sureties cannot be taken 175. Where a married woman refusing it shall be imprisoned till she takes it 175. 250. What tender and refusal of it shall be binding and what not 251 Refusal of any word of it is a refusal of the whole 179. Serving or going to serve a forraign Prince c. without first taking the said Oath is Felony 181 182. What service is there meant 182. Who shall give the Oath in that case 183. 198. The penalty for not certifying it and on whom 183 184. 198 199. The penalty for not certifying the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance taken by a person submitting 186. Certificate of Oaths taken by a Jesuite c. or a person returning from a Seminary see Conformity An Office of Inheritance saved to him who takes not the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance 265 266. Where and before whom persons who are to be restored in Blood or naturalized are to take the said Oaths 240. Oath by a Popish Recusant licenced to travel 206 207 208. 210 211. Obedience See Oaths Perswading or withdrawing the Kings Subjects from their Natural Obedience or being perswaded or withdrawn is High Treason 57 58. 184 185 186. What is Natural Obedience 185. A Jesuite c. submitting must continue in his due Obedience 95. Obligation See King Service Offence see Iudgment Office Where necessary before seizure 104. Offices and Officers See Excommengement Oaths Port. Recusants Where the Husband of a Popish Recusant convict shall not bear any Office 211 212. Officers of the Exchequer 71. Officers shall answer for their Deputies 184. What persons are disabled to bear office and in what cases 10. 43 44. 211 212. 243. 251. 257 258. 263 264. The penalty on him who executes any Office and doth not receive the Sacrament and take the Oaths and Test injoined by 25 Car. 2. 2. 263 264 265. A saving of some Offices 265 266 267. Ordinary See Probate Ordinary who 45. The King is supream Ordinary 6 7. The name c. of
King Presentation See Advowson Nomination Recusants Vniversity Vtlawry Presentment Presentment what 37. What Presentments of Offences against 5 Eliz. 1. are to be certified into the Kings Bench 35 36. The penalty for not certifying them 35. Where Popish Recusants are to be presented 160 161. see Recusants Priest Every Priest is Clerieus 21. 45. And is bound celebrare coenam Dominicam c. 21. Popish Priest see Seminary Printers 34 Prison See Imprisonment To what Prison the Justices of the Kings Bench use to commit him who refuses the Oath of Allegiance 251. Privy Councel see Councel Probate Upon Probate of a Will Administration is committed not granted 235. What is granted by the Ordinary upon Probate of a Will 235. Process see Informations Proclamation See Appearance Conviction Seminary Proclamation for Recusancy where it may be waved 67. 162. In what case the Recusant cannot be proclaimed 122. Proclamation of the Recusant where erroneous 163. To whom the Recusant is to render himself upon Proclamation 107. 162 163 164. Prohibition In what cases 6. 28. Proof See Witness What proof allowable 47. Protection See Praemunire Protection natural and Protection legal 47. Protection by the Law of nature whether indelebilis immutabilis 47. Punishment A man shall not be twice punished for the same offence 31. 189. 253 254 255. Quare Impedit See Nomination Vniversity Recital Where a Statute need not be specially recited 24. Imperfect recital of a branch of 35 Eliz. 2. 206 207. Imperfect recital of an Act of Parliament shall not impeach the Act recited 208. Recognisance See King Recusants Recognisance in anothers name forfeited 105. Reconciliation see Rome Record See Certiorari Failer of Records Courts of Record what Courts are meant 82 83. 85. Recusants See Church Iustices of Peace King Parish Abjuration by a Popish Recusant see Abjuration Seizure of the Advowson of a Popish Recusant see Advowson An Alien Recusant see Alien A Recusants appearance upon Proclamation see Appearance Arms of a Popish Recusant see Armour Baptism of the Child of a Popish Recusant see Baptism Married women Recusants see Baron Feme Bishop Councel Licences to a Popish Recusant see Bishop Councel Licences Burial of a Popish Recusant see Burial Conformity of a Recusant or of the Husband of a Popish Recusant see Conformity Conviction of Recusants see Conviction Forfeiture of Copyholds for Recusancy see Copyholds Covin by a Recusant see Covin Recusants Excommunicate see Excommengement Indictment for Recusancy see Indictments Information for Recusancy see Informations Plea in disability of the Recusant see Plea Proclamation of a Recusant see Proclamation Seizure of a Recusants Lands or Goods see Seizure Trées Rendring a Recusants body to the Sheriff see Sheriff Trust of or for a Recusant see Trust Presentatlon where the Patron is a Popish Recusant convict given to the University see Vniversity Wast in a Recusants Lands see Wast What is Recusancy 129. To what time it shall have relation 228. It consists in omitting not committing and no place need be alledged 60. 73. And yet in some sense it may be said to be committed 74. Recusancy is not within 31 Eliz. 5. of laying the offence in the proper County 60. The penalties for Recusancy see Church The Recusant may forfeit for 13 months in the year 61. Where and when the penalty of 20 l. per month for Recusancy shall be paid into the Exchequer 102. 104. 165 166. Where it shall run on for the time to come after Conviction and where not 103 104. 166 167 168. 219. 252. 254. Where a Recognisance and all debts and personal chattels and actions are Goods and forfeited by the Recusant 105. But not before seizure 105. A Rent or Advowson may be seized for Recusancy 106. 171 172. The third part of a Recusants Lands shall be left to him 102. 268. His chief Mansion house shall be left to him as part of his two parts 173. By 29 Eliz. 6 the profits of the two parts of his Lands should not have gone towards satisfaction of the 20 l. per month 105. 110. 151. The Law altered in that point 105. 110. 150 151. Assurances of a Recusants Lands made bona fide are not to be impeached 211 112. A Recusant outlawed is not within that Branch of 23 Eliz. 1. touching fraudulent conveyances 87. In what cases the death of the Recusant shall discharge the arrears of the 20 l. per month and in what not 109 110 111. 148 149 150 151 152 153. see Commission The forbearance from Church must be for a whole month or the 20 l. are not forfeited 63. Divine Service in a mans house in what case it shall excuse him from the penalty for Recusancy 86. Where the Recusant forfeits nothing before Judgment 104. At what Sessions a Recusant may be indicted 67. Recusants are to be bound in the Kings Bench to the good Behaviour 60. 63. But Popish Recusants Convict are not to be taken for sureties 64. What Offices and Functions a Recusant convict is disabled to exercise 211. The penalty if he exercise such Office or Function 211. Where he cannot be Executor Administrator or Guardian 234 235. What Conviction disables or incapacitates him 216. The penalty for keeping or maintaining Recusants 191 192 193. see Service Where it must be averred that the party is Papalis Recusans 129. Presentments of Popish Recusants where and by whom and what the Officers are to present and what not 160 161. The penalty for omitting it 161. The penalty on the Clerk of the Peace or Town-Clerk not entring and recording such Presentments 161. The Officers reward for making such Presentments 161 162. Popish Recusants may be punished on 35 Eliz. 1. of Conventicles save as to Abjuration 114 115. What Popish Recusants are to be confined within five miles and what not 128. 130 131 132 133. 136. What a Popish Recusant confined must do 134. Where and what he shall forfeit and where not 128. 131. 134. Where he may travel above five miles and where not 141 142. 206 207 208 209 210 211. What Proviso of 35 Eliz. 2. giving him leave to travel is repealed by 3 Jac. 4. and what not 205. To what intents a Popish Recusant convict shall be as a person Excommunicate and to what not 193. 215 216. 223. Whether a Popish Recusant convict may qua such be attached upon a writ of Excommunicate capiendo 216. Where he is disabled to sue and where not 215 216 217 218 219 220. Or to be a Witness 216. Or to exercise any Office 211 212. A Popish Recusant convict is disabled to present or nominate to a Benefice or Donative or to grant any Avoidance 226 227 228 229. And yet where his grant of such Avoidance shall be good 228. Notwithstanding such disability the Recusant is still Patron 230. And may grant the Advowson in see or tail or for life or years and good 230 231. Such disability respects his voluntary acts only 232. The Kings Wards are not to