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A47714 Reports and cases of law, argued and adjudged in the courts at Westminster, in the times of the late Queen Elizabeth, and King James in four parts / collected by ... William Leonard, Esq. ...; with alphabetical tables of the names of the cases, and of the matter contained in each part ; published by William Hughes ...; Reports and cases of law argued and adjudged in the courts at Westminster Part 1 Leonard, William.; Hughes, William, of Gray's Inn. 1687 (1687) Wing L1104; ESTC R19612 463,091 356

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this Court is especially named Wray This Proviso begins with Iustices of the Peace therefore it doth not extend to offences which are Treason and the meaning of this Statute of 23 Eliz. was to enlarge the Statutes of 1 5 Eliz. for where the offence against the Statutes before was to be enquired at the next Session and the other within six Months now by this Statute it may be enquired at any time within the year and day but it doth not extend to restrain the proceedings against offences of Treason for the words of the Statute are That such offences shall be inquired before Iustices of Peace within a year c. But in the next clause the Iustices of Peace may punish all offences against this Act but Treason by which it appeareth that no offences are restrained to time but those which the Iustices of the Peace have authority to hear and determine and that is not Treason Gawdy to the same purpose For all the Proviso is but one sentence and there the whole shall be referred to spiritual offences as the not coming to Church c. CCCXXIII Filcocks and Holts Case Mich. 32 33 Eliz. In the Exchequer Error Assumpsit IN an Action by Filcocks against Holt Administrator of A. the Plaintiff declared how that the Husband of the Defendant who died intestate was indebted to the Plaintiff in ten pounds by Bill and that the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff would permit the Defendant to take Letters of Administration and give to her further day for the payment of the said ten pounds promised to pay the said ten pounds to the Plaintiff at the day And upon a Writ of Error brought in the Exchequer upon a Iudgment in the Kings Bench in that case It was assigned for Error that here is not any consideration for by the Law she is to have Administration being wife of the Intestate and as to the giving of further day for the payment of the ten pounds the same will not make it good for it doth not appear that she was Administratrix at the time of the promise made and then she is not chargeable and then c. And such was the opinion of the Court. And it was said by Periam Iustice and Manwood chief Baron That the Bishop might grant Letters of Administration to whom he pleased if he would forfeit the penalty limited by the Statute ●atch 67 68. Also it was said where an Executor or Administrator is charged upon his own promise Iudgment shall be given de boni● propriis for his promise is his own act CCCXXIV Adams and Bafealds Case Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Action upon the Case AN Action upon the Case was brought and the Plaintiff declared That where such an one his Servant departed his service without cause or license the Defendant knowing him to be his Servant did retain him in his Service and so kept him Tanfeild The Action doth not lye for if my Servant depart out of my service and another doth retain him an Action doth not lye at the Common Law if he do not procure him to leave my service and afterwards retain him or immediately taketh him out of my service And this Action is not grounded upon any Statute See 11 H. 4. 176. 47 E. 3. 14. 9 E. 4. 32. Gawdy The Action lieth for here is damage and wrong done to the Plaintiff Fenner contrary For the wrong is in the departure and not in the Retainer and upon the Statutes it is a good Plea to say for the Defendant that the party was vagrant at the time of the Retainer and the sciens doth not alter the matter CCCXXV Nash and Mollins Case Mich. 32 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Prohibition 1 Cro. 206. Tithes NAsh and Usher sued a Prohibition against Mollins for that the Defendant had libelled against them in the Spiritual Court for Tithes of Wood growing in Barking Park in Essex the other did surmise that the Lands were parcel of the possessions of the Prior and Covent of Cree Church and that the said Prior and his Successors time out of mind c. had held the said Lands discharged of Tithes and held them so at the time of the Dissolution c. and the other part traversed it whereupon they were at Issue if the Prior c. held the Land discharged tempore Dissolutionis c. And now on the part of the Plaintiff in the Prohibition certain old persons were produced who remembred the time of the Monasteries and that they did not pay any Tithes then or from thence Exception was taken to the suggestion by Coke that here is nothing else than a Prescription de non Decimando for here is not set forth any discharge as composition unity of possession priviledge of order as Templarii Hospitiarii c. ●enner Iustice Spiritual persons may prescribe in non Decimando for it is not any prejudice to the Church Wray Although it is not set down the special manner of discharge yet it is well enough for we ought to take it that it was by a lawful means as composition c. or otherwise For the Statute is that the King shall hold discharged as the Abbot c. and we ought to take it that it was a lawful discharge of Tithes tempore dissolutionis And afterwards the Iury found for the Plaintiffs in the Prohibition But no Evidence was given to prove that the Defendant did prosecute in the Spiritual Court contrary to the Prohibition CCCXXVI Sheldons Case Mich. 32 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. SHeldon Talbot and two other four persons in all Indictment upon the Statute of 23 Eliz. were Indicted upon the Statute of 23 Eliz. of Recusancy the words of the Indictment were Quod illi nec eorum uterque venerunt to any Parish Church c. It was moved by Atkinson That the Indictment is not good for uterque doth refer unto one of them and not where they are many as here and so is an insensible word and so upon the matter there is no offence laid to their charge And the Iustices doubting of it demanded the opinions of Grammarians who delivered their opinions that this word uterque doth aptly signifie one of them Exposition of words and in such signification it is used by all Writers Gawdy I conceive that the opinions of the Grammarians is not to be asked in this case But I agree that when an unusual word in our Law comes in question for the true construction of it then the opinion of Grammarians is necessary But uterque is no unusual word in our Law but hath had a reasonable Exposition heretofore which we ought to adhere unto which see 28 H. 8. 19. Three bound in an Obligation Obligamus nos utrumque nostrum and by the whole Court uterque doth amount to quilibet And see 16 Eliz. Dyer 337 338. Three Ioyntenants in Fee and by Indenture Tripartite each of them
at my peril to procure notice Notice but if I be bound to you to make such assurance as your Counsel shall advise there notice ought to be given unto me It was adjorned CXLII Bear and Underwoods Case Mich. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN a Replevin it was agreed by the whole Court that the Plaintiff cannot discontinue his suit without the privity of the Court for as Leonard Custos brevium said the Entry is Recordatur per curiam Discontinuance of suit in court And if the Plaintiff would discontinue without moving the Court the Defendant may enter the continuance if he will. It was also holden that where an Original is discontinued the Defendant shall not have costs but if the Plaintiff be non-suit the Defendant shall have costs by 32 H. 8. 15. But after a discontinuance in a Latitat the Defendant shall have costs by the Statute of 8 Eliz. cap. 2. And in this case it was agreed that the Plaintiff may be non-suit after a Demurrer and so he was CXLIII Jerom against Neal and Clave Pasch 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. GEorge Jerom and Avice his Wife brought an Action of Trespass of Assault and wounding of the Wife Assault and Battery and the Action was laid in Midd. and brought against Neal and Cleave who pleaded that Salisb. is an antient City that within the same there is this custom that if any make an Affray and assault any Officer of the said City or any other person if he upon whom such assault is made complain unto the Mayor of the said City that the Mayor for the time being may send for him who made the Affray as a Iustice of Peace to make him to answer to it and shewed further that the said Jerom made an Affray within the said City of which complaint being made to the Mayor the said Mayor sent the Defendants being Constables to bring the said Jerom to him by virtue whereof they went to the House of the Plaintiff and signified to him the commandment of the said Mayor and would have brought the Plaintiff to him and the Wife of the Plaintiff did assault them and they moliter put their hands upon the said Wife Imprisonment not good which is the same assault battery and wounding c. upon which it was demurred in Law. Coke for the Plaintiff This custom is not good or reasonable See Magna charta 29. Nullus liber homo capiatur vel imprisonetur c. nisi per legale judiciam parium suorum vel per legem terrae therefore shall not be taken or imprisoned upon a bare suggestion and see 24 E. 3. Br. Com. 3. where a Commission issued to take all which were suspected notoriously for Frionies and Trespasses although they are not endicted and the same was holden against the Law and therefore it was revoked and see the Statute of 5 E. 4. 9. 25 E. 4. 13. 28 E. 4. 13. 28 E. 3. 3. 37 E. 3. 18. 42 E. 3. 3. 2. To be a Iustice of Peace doth not lye in Prescription For one Iustice of Peace was before the Statute of 1 E. 3. and then the Commencement being known prescription cannot be of it 3. Admit that the Mayor was Iustice of Peace yet he cannot determin any thing out of the Sessions 4. The Prescription is that the Mayor might send for him and doth not say within the City and it shall be an unreasonable Prescription to say that the Mayor might send for him in such Case in any place within England 5. It is not shewed that they of Salisbury have a corporation so as they might be enabled to prescribe 6. The wounding is not answered for moliter injicere manus cannot be taken for a wounding it may well answer the battery c. Fleetwood Recorder of London if the Statute of Magna Charta should be observed no Felon is duly handled at Newgate and here we have not pleaded by way of Prescription but of usage consuetudo and usage are all one 1 Cro. 268. And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiffs for the Plea in Bar was holden to be naught because the wounding is not answered and the Custom is too general and also for the 4th exception CXLIV Sir Julius Caesars Case Pasch 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. FLeetwood came to the Bar and shewed that Julius Caesar Iudge of the Admiralty had libelled against an Officer of the Mayor of Lond. Simon Nicholas for measuring of Coals at Wiggins Key in the Parish of St. Dunstan in the East and it was upon the Thames and prayed a prohibition because such measuring of Coals had always appertained to the Mayor of London for the Statute of 28 H. 8. 15. gave Iurisdiction to the Admiralty in Case of robbery and murder And that prohibition was grounded upon the Statutes of 13. 15 R. 2. 2 H. 4. 11. And it was said that this measuring whereof c. was in the body of the County And note that the said Julius Caesar being Iudge of the Admiralty had put in this Bill ex officio judicis upon which it was said by Wray Iustice that it was hard that he should be both Plaint and Iudge and that his Iurisdiction should be tryed before himself and afterwards it was moved by Egerton Solicitor who said he had spoken with the Lord Admiral who told him that the Mayor of Lond. used to take a Fine for measurage and had made an office of it and that he conceived the same is extortion and being made upon the water he conceived he is punishable in this Court for by the same reason the Mayor might take a Fine for the measuring of Corn Clothes c. Wray and Gawdy Iustices If it be extortion in the Mayor there is no remedy for it in the Court of Admiralty But in the Kings Court. Gawdy It shall be redressed here in a Quo warranto CXLV The Town of Sussex Pasch 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. THe Town of Green in Sussex was amereed for the escape of a Felon Amercement and the said Amercement was grounded upon an inquisition taken before the Coroner by whom the escape was found and it was moved for the Town that here is not any such escape found Escape for which the Town ought to be amerced for it is found that he who escaped 10 die Januarij 30 Eliz. circa horam quartam post meridiem with a Pitchfork mortally struck one A. which A. of the said stroak died at eight in the Evening of the same day and that then the other escaped for which escape being made in the Night the Town by the Law ought to be amerced for it is not Felony until the party dieth which see 11 H. 4. and Coles Case Pasch 23 Eliz. 401. And therefore the Town nor any other was chargeable with the offendor before that the party was dead Wray It should be hard that the Town should be amerced upon
of the Contract and being made at the time of the Communication and contract should charge the Defendant but if the promise were at another time it should be otherwise There was a Case lately betwixt Smith and Edmunds Two Merchants being reciprocally endebted the one to the other agreed betwixt themselves to deliver all their Bills and Bonds into the hands of one Smith who promised that he would not deliver them to the parties until all accounts were ended betwixt them and yet he did deliver them and for that an Action brought against him was adjudged maintainable yet there was not any consideration nor was it material for the action is grounded upon the Deceit and so is it here upon the Warranty And of that opinion were Clench and Wray Iustices but Gawdy was of a contrary opinion CCLXII Woodshaw and Fulmerstones Case Hill. 30. Eliz. Rot. 699 In the Kings Bench. WOodshaw Executor of Heywood brought Debt upon a Bond against Richard Fulmerstone and the Writ was dated October Mich. 29 30 Eliz. and the Condition of the Bond was That if Fulmerstone died before his Age of one and twenty years and before that he had made a Ioynture to A. his Wife Daughter of the Testator Heywood Then if the said Defendant caused one hundred pounds to be payed to the said Heywood within three months after the death of the said William that then the Bond should be void and the said William Fulmerstone died 30 September 30 Eliz. which matter he is ready c. The Plaintiff doth traverse absque hoc that the said Heywood died intestate Tanfield It appeareth of Record that the Plaintiff hath not cause of action for this one hundred pounds was to be paid within three Months after the death of William Fulmerstone 1 Cro. 271 325 565. as the Defendant hath alledged which is also confessed by the Plaintiff and this Action is entred Mich. October 30 Eliz. scil within a month after the death of William Fulmerstone and so before the Plaintiff hath cause of action and therefore he shall be barred Gawdy Where it appeareth to the Court that the Plaintiff hath not cause of Action he shall never have Iudgment as in the Case betwixt Tilly and Wordy 7 E. 4. But here it doth appear that the Plaintiff hath cause of Action for where a man is bound in an obligation the same is a duty presently Obligation and the condition is but in defeazance of it which the Defendant may plead in his discharge CCLXIII Windham and Sir Edward Cleers Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. ROger Windham brought an Action upon the Case against Sir Ed. C. declared that the said Ed. being a Iustice of Peace in the County of N. and where the Plaintiff was a loyal subject Action upon the Case of sclander 1 Cro. 130. and of good fame all his life time nor ever touched or reproched with any offence of Ro●ery c. the Defendant malitiose invide machinams ipsum Rogerum de bonis nomine fama et vita deprivare directed his warrant to divers Baylifs and Constables of the said County to arrest the said Plaintiff And it was alledged in the said Warrant That the Plaintiff was accused before him of the stealing of the horse of A. B. by reason of which the Plaintiff was arrested and so detained until he had entred into a Bond for his appearance c. whereas in truth he was never accused thereof nor ever stole such horse and whereas the Defendant himself knew that the Plaintiff was guiltless by reason of which he was greatly discredited c. And it was found for the Plaintiff And it was moved that upon this matter an Action doth not lye for a Iustice of Peace if he suspect any person of Felony or other such Offence may direct his Warrant to arrest him 14. H. 8. 16 Gaudy and Clench If a man be accused to a Iustice of Peace for Felony for which he directs his Warrant to arrest him although the accusation be false the Iustice of Peace is excused but if the party in truth was not accused before the Iustice it is otherwise It was a Case lately betwixt the Lord Lumley and Foord where Foord in a letter written by him had written It is reported That my Lord Lumley seeketh my life If it was not Reported an Action upon the Case lieth but if reported no Action lieth So here if he was accused no Action lieth but if not an Action lieth And afterwards in the principal Case Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCLXIV Isleys Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. ISley and others were Plaintiffs in an Ejectione firmae and upon the general Issue it was found for the Plaintiffs and 4 days after the verdict given was moved in stay of judgment a special ma●ter in Law whereof the Iustices were not resolved for the law but took advisement and gave day over and in the mean time one of the Plaintiffs died which matter the Defendant shewed to the Court in further stay of the Iudgment But by Coke the same is not any cause for the Postea came in Quindena Pasch which was 16 Aprilis at which day the Court ought to have given Iudgment presently but took time to be advised and the 19 of April one of the Plaintiffs died And the favour of the Court ought not to prejudice us for the Iudgment here shall have Relation to the 16 of April at which time he was alive and it was so of late adjudged in the Case of Derick James who died the day after the verdict and yet Iudgment was not stayed for the Court after verdict cannot examine surmises and they have not a day in Court to plead and in our case It was but a day of Grace and no entry is made of it Although no plea can be now pleaded after verdict yet as amicus curiae one may inform us of such matter And sometimes in such case Iudgment hath been stayed as 9 Eliz. and sometimes notwithstanding such Exception as 2 Eliz. So as I conceive the matter is much in the discretion of the Iustices And because the same was a hard verdict and much against the Evidence It is good discretion upon this matter to stay Iudgment and such was the opinion of the Court. CCLXV. Steed and Courtneys Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Error 1 Cro. 116. Owen 93. More 691. Prescription to levy a fine not good ERror was brought upon a Fine levied upon a Plaint in a writ of Covenant in the City of Exceter And two Errors were assigned First The Plaint was quod teneat convent de duobus tenementis Whereas in truth the word Tenement doth not comprehend any certainty for in the Word Tenement is understood Messuage Land Meadow Pasture c. and whatsoever syeth in tenure And 11 H. 6. 18. by grant of Lands and Tenements Rent or Common shall pass And an Ejectione firmae
Iustice It was a great offence in the Plaintiff but the same ought to be punished according to Law but the Constable cannot imprison a Subject at his pleasure but according to Law i. to stay him and bring him before a Iustice of the Peace to be there examined Wray If the Defendant had pleaded that he stayed the Plaintiff upon that matter to have brought him before a Iustice of Peace it had been a good Plea. Fennor The justification had been good if the Defendant had pleaded that the Plaintiff refused to carry away the Child so all the Iustices were of opinion against the Plea but they would not give Iudgment by reason of the ill Example but they left the parties to compound the matter CCCCLXIII Cole and Walles Case Pasch 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Ejectione Custodiae lieth not upon a Copy-hold Estate 1 Cro. 224. IN an Ejectione Custodiae the Plaintiff declared that A. was seised of the Manor of D. within which Manor are diverse Copyholds of Inheritance and that the Custom of the Manor is that if any Copy-holder of Inheritance of the said Manor dieth his heir within the age of 14 years that then the Lord of the Manor might grant the custody of his Body and Lands to whom he pleased and shewed that one Clevertie a Copyholder of Inheritance of the said Manor died his son and heir within the age of 14 years Hob. 215. Dyer 302 303. upon which the Lord of the Manor committed the custody of his Body and Lands to the Plaintiff and the Defendant did eject him and upon Not guilty it was found for the Plaintiff It was moved in arrest of Iudgment That this Action would not lye upon a Copyhold estate Quod tota Curia concessit and yet it was said that an Ejectione firmae lieth upon a demise of Copy-hold Land by Lease of a Copyholder himself but not upon a demise by the Lord of the Copyhold Quod fuit concessum and afterwards the Case was moved on the Plaintiffs side and it was said That this was but an Action upon the Case in the nature of an Ejectione firmae and this interest is not granted by Copy but entred only into the Court Roll so it is not an interest by Copy but by the Common Law for the words are Quod Dominus commisit custodiam c. and doth not say in Curia and afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCCCLXIV Bond and Bailes Case Trin. 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Judgment upon a Bond where satisfied before a Statute ● Len. 37● Roll. 926. BOnd brought a Scire facias against Bailes Administrator of one T. B. upon a Recovery had against the Intestate in Action of Debt The Defendant pleaded That before the said Iudgment given the Testator did acknowledge a Statute Staple to one C. and that the Son was not paid in the life of the Testator nor after and that they have not in their hands any goods of the Intestate beyond what will satisfie the said Statute upon which there was a demurrer in Law. And Coke argued That the Bar is not good for here is not pleaded any Execution upon the Statute and then the Iudgment the Statute being of things of as high nature that of which Execution is sued shall be first served and if this Action had been brought upon a Bond the Plea had not been good for although that Brian saith 21 E. 4. That Recognizances shall be paid by Executors before Bonds yet that it is to be intended when a Scire facias is to be sued upon it otherwise not And 4 H. 6. 8. in a Scire facias upon a Iudgment fully administred at the day of the Writ brought is a good Plea by which it appeareth That if the Executors had paid the Debt upon the Obligation before the Writ brought it had been good See 12 E. 3. Executors 73. in a Scire facias upon a Iudgment in Debt given against the Testator Enquiry shall be what goods the Executors had the day of the Scire facias and he said it was moved by Anderson 20 Eliz. in this Court. In Debt upon a Bond against Executors the Defendant pleaded that the Testator was indebted by Iudgment to A. and that they had not more than to satisfie the same and it was holden no plea if not that he pleaded further that a Scire facias was sued upon it Wray said The same is not Law and there is a difference when the Iudgment is given against the Testator himself and where against the Executors for where Iudgments are given against Executors the Iudgment which was given before shall be first executed but if two Iudgments be given against the Testator he who first sues Execution against the Executors shall be first satisfied because they are things of equal nature and before Suit it is in the election of the Executor which of them he will pay See 9 E. 4. 12. As if two men have Tallies out of the Exchequer he which first offers his Tally to the Officer shall be first paid but before that it is in the choice of the Officer which of them shall be first satisfied and therefore 19 H. 6. If the Lease enrolled be lost the Enrolment is not of any effect and Pasch 20 Eliz. our very case was moved in the Common Pleas in a Scire facias upon a Iudgment given against the Testator the Executor pleaded That the Testator had acknowledged a Statute before not satisfied Ultra quae c. and it was holden no Plea for a Statute is but a private and pocket Record as they called it and 32 Eliz. betwixt Conny and Barham the same Plea was pleaded and holden no Plea. Also if this Plea should be allowed Conny and Barhams Case great mischiefs would follow for then no Debts should be satisfied by the Executors for it might be that the Statute was made for performance of Covenants which Covenants perhaps shall never be broken and afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCCCLXV Crew and Bails Case Trin. 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. A Writ of Error was brought upon a Iudgment given in the Common Pleas Error 1 Cro. 216. in a Bill of priviledge brought by an Attorney of the said Court upon an Obligation and upon the said Iudgment issued forth process of Execution upon which the Defendant was Outlawed and the Error was assigned in this That upon that Iudgment process of Outlawry doth not lie for Capias is not in the original Action Priviledge and so was the opinion of the whole Court being upon a Bill of priviledge and the Outlawry was reversed and the Error was assigned in the first Iudgment because there were not fifteen days betwixt the Teste of the Venire facias and the return of it but that was not allowed for it is helped by the Statute of 18 Eliz. cap. 14. CCCCLXVI Wade and Presthalls Case Trin. 30 Eliz. In the Kings
Plaintiffs At another day the Case was moved again And then it was the clear opinion of the whole Court that the Action was maintainable although that the Plaintiff in the first Action had acknowledged satisfaction And it hath been adjudged here in this Court in the Case betwixt Hill and Hill that notwithstanding such satisfaction that the Action lieth See F.N.B. 130. b. for the payment after doth not take away the Action but mitigate the damages only for the Act of a third person shall not take away an Action once vested CCCXVII Greenliff and Bakers Case Mich. 32 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Assumpsit 1 Cro. 193. THe Plaintiff declared that whereas he was bound to the Defendant in an obligation of forty pounds for the payment of twenty pounds the Defendant the second of No. after in consideration that the Plaintiff at the Request of the Defendant had paid the said twenty pounds without suit at Law promised to deliver to the Plaintiff before such a day an Obligation by which one A. was bounden to the Defendant in forty pounds with a Letter of Attorney to demand the same of the said A. and to sue for it in the name of the Defendant which he had not done and in that matter the Plaintiff had Iudgment and thereupon the Defendant brought a Writ of Error First here is not any consideration for the payment of the mony is no more than he ought to do and which he was compeliable to do c. Secondly the same is no benefit to the Plaintiff but only a matter of charge to sue the said Bond against A. Thirdly upon the Venire facias the Sheriff returned but twenty three Iurors As to the first Error it was the opinion of Gawdy and Fenner Iustices that here is not any consideration for the Defendant hath not any benefit by it and the Plaintiff doth no more than he ought to do and the payment was in respect of the Debt and not of the Defendants Request And by Gawdy upon this promise an action doth not lye for the Plaintiff is not to have any benefit by it but travel Fenner contrary and that the Action lieth for that as to the third Error the same is helped by the Statute of 32 H. 8. and the Statute of 18 Eliz. of imperfect and insufficient return of any Sheriff Fenner Not only the return is naught but also the Pannel is insufficient And it was moved by Tanfield that it was adjudged in this Court Pasch 25 Eliz. betwixt Cook and Huet that where A. was bounden to B. in forty pounds B. promised to A. that if A. would pay the mony without suit he would deliver him the said Bond by which he is bound to the said B. and it was holden a good consideration Quod fuit concessum per totam Curiam but that is not like to the case at Bar and it was holden in the same Plea That if the Obligor pay the duty at the day and place that if the Obligee will not deliver the Bond yet the Obligor shall not have the Detinue for it CCCXII Guildfords Case Mich. 32 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Indictment upon the Statute of 23 Eliz. GUilford was Indicted upon the Statute of 23 Eliz. cap. 1. for withdrawing divers persons her Majesties Subjects from the Religion established in England to the Roman Religion and to promise obedience to the Church of Rome and for that he himself was with-drawn from the obedience of the Queen Coke took Exception to the Indictment because that the Indictment was not found within the year after the offence committed In the said Act there is a Proviso That all offences against the Act shall and may be enquired of within the year and day after the offence committed Popham Attorney General This case is not within that Proviso but doth depend upon other Statutes before viz. 1 5 13 Eliz. touching the acknowledging of her Majesties supream Government in causes Ecclesiastical or other matters touching the service of God or coming to Church or establishing of true Religion within this Realm shall and may be enquired as well before the Iustices of the Peace as other Iustices named in the said Statute within one year and a day after such offence committed And he said these words in the Proviso refer only to such offences contained in the said Act which toucheth the Supremacy and causes Ecclesiastical c. and such offences ought to be enquired within the year and day But this Indictment here doth consist upon other matter for withdrawing himself from the obedience of the Queen which is an offence out of the compass of the said Proviso and therefore the enquiry of it not restrained unto any time and the Statute of 13 Eliz. extends to Bills Writings Instruments c. and not to the words with-drawing by words which is supplied by 13 Eliz. with-drawing by other means and the restraint of the Enquiry at the time goes to the hearing of Mass and saying of Mass and not repairing to the Church but as to with-drawing the same is at large not restrained by that Statute And he said that this Indictment doth consist upon many offences some to offences within the Proviso and as to those the Indictment is void Some to other offences as Treason the offence of with-drawing the Enquiry of which is not restrained and therefore this Indictment shall stand Also it was the intent of this Statute not to restrain this Court but only the Iustices of Peace for they are specially named Coke conceived that this word Touching c. did not extend to any thing contained in the Statute of 23 Eliz. but only to offences within the Acts of 1 5 13 Eliz. which were incertain before also this Proviso is in the Disjunctive against this or against the Acts of 1 5 or 13 Eliz. so as that which follows is to be applied to the last Disjunctive and not to the whole sentence and always when a thing is named certain and after general things the words subsequent shall be referred to the general words and not to that which is certain Also if Touching c. doth refer to this Statute the sentence would have begun with it but here it begins with the Supremacy of which nothing is spoken in this Statute and therefore it ought to be referred to the Statute which begins it and that is 1 Eliz. and then it shall be preposterous to come after 23 Eliz. and these words shall and may ought to be so construed shall is restrictive of it self and may shall be referred to that which was restrained before as the proceedings upon the Statute of 1 Eliz. cap. 2. were restrained to the next Sheriffs And he conceived that this Court is as well restrained to Time as any other Court for the words are as well before Iustices of the Peace as before other Iustices named in the said Statutes and in the Statute of 5 Eliz.